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A journey to the throne of Miyamoto Musashi

Miyamoto Musashi was also a bronze player, how did he grow from a rookie and a peak samurai in this long season of his life through his own efforts and learning step by step?

A journey to the throne of Miyamoto Musashi

The King glory Miyamoto Musashi character wears the Overlord Maru skin

Martial arts will not be without inheritance, just as people must learn and hone to grow. Miyamoto Musashi learned a lot of swordsmanship and martial arts from his father since he was a child, but he wanted to become a king, and he still had to play qualifying. If he wants to become a top samurai, he needs to improve himself through one contest after another, duels, and win the recognition of the public and even high society through victory.

A journey to the throne of Miyamoto Musashi

Historical portrait of Miyamoto Musashi

It's just that his starting point, like all players, must start with a rookie and a bronze player. And according to his account, he had fought his first duel since he was thirteen, won, won again at sixteen, and then said that from the age of thirteen to twenty-nine, he had not lost a single qualifying match in more than 60 qualifying matches.

A journey to the throne of Miyamoto Musashi

Glory of Kings Qualifying Stage (starts with Bronze Stage at Lower Left)

I think here that he may have played in another matchmaking. A rookie directly participates in qualifying, and the amateur does not practice through other competitions to hone himself and fail, it is impossible to have an undefeated game, directly from bronze to the king. There's also the possibility that Miyamoto Musashi is purely a trumpet (it's just that you don't seem to have seen an undefeated trumpet either, right?). Or he's an artificial intelligence (AI) that has been computed countless times and has powerful computing power. The victory of artificial intelligence is also obtained by accumulating human failures.

I discovered his indecency through his qualifying match with Kojiro Sasaki, so players who know the development of obscenity must need a considerable amount of game experience. Miyamoto Musashi was quite powerful, but after he became king, he covered up many qualifying failures and thought it was a matchmaking match. I really can't stand that. So at this point, I understand a lot of people, the reason for canceling his title of qualifying king.

A journey to the throne of Miyamoto Musashi

Statues of Miyamoto Musashi and Sasaki Kojiro

Such a proud and conceited qualifying player, he obviously violated the rules of qualifying! You have to play qualifying yourself, and you have to do your own GM (Game Master). Well, you play as a player, play well, play qualifying well. Losing is losing, winning is winning, losing more, occasionally playing matchmaking matches, as a kind of adjustment and practice, this is completely allowed. His problem is that the qualifying game he loses is considered to be a matchmaking match, and if he goes on like this, others really don't want to play with him, and this kind of person can't afford to lose.

So he has been bragging, saying that he is undefeated, has been playing qualifying, all the way from bronze straight to the king, this kind of thing you believe?

When we look at history, we must also analyze it appropriately. It's true! We can't be absolutely sure that because he's famous and has won a lot of games, we can't be absolutely sure that a person, brainless worship, will really kill a lot of people.

Compared to Miyamoto Musashi, who has never been defeated, I believe in another king player, and he is Yanagi Soyen. He never said that he had not failed, and he admitted that he had failed in bronze, gold and even platinum and diamonds.

A journey to the throne of Miyamoto Musashi

Nara Tenseki Shrine, which is said to be a stone split by Yanagi Seizun

So, if you let me choose who is the real king. Between Miyamoto Musashi and Yanagi Jongyō, I prefer to recognize the position of King Yanagi Jongyō. A true king should grow up through continuous failure and blood and tears. No one has ever been born a king, and everyone has grown up step by step from a rookie.

From this point of view, I feel that "Sanada Yukimura's gun" is more real and brave than "Miyamoto Musashi's sword".

A journey to the throne of Miyamoto Musashi

The place where Sanada Yukimura died in battle

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