LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 37


Chapter 37 – First Bow to Heaven and Earth


“White really knows his stuff.” As if he hadn’t noticed the other’s intention to leave, Shao Zhan continued the previous topic with a light tone.

Of course, his outward calm didn’t mean he actually felt that way. Inwardly, he harshly despised himself—using the tricks he’d picked up from years of working with his uncle in the business world… on this person, of all people.

“Back then, when China was helping build infrastructure in South Africa, the local kids got introduced to games through the staff there. They even formed a team. White was among the first batch of players.”

Shao Zhan sharply picked up on the past-tense phrase ‘back then’ and asked, “What happened afterward? Why didn’t he keep playing?”

“That,” Yang Sa tapped the dark red wine glass lightly with his long fingers, “is a long story.”

“I’ve got all the time in the world,” Shao Zhan nearly said, but held himself back. He casually pointed in a direction, though his eyes never left the man in front of him. “That guy in blue…”

“He’s a die-hard Avatar fan. He’s one-quarter Native American and firmly believes he’s a descendant of indigenous people. Back when American colonizers carried out mass slaughter against Native Americans, the survivors were forcibly relocated to the barren western deserts. Blue believes that Pandora represents the former Americas. Sadly, there’s no kind-hearted Jake Sully in the real world.”

“So… he painted himself blue?” Shao Zhan gestured as he asked.

“Not exactly,” Yang Sa’s lips curved into a smile. “He had dermatitis for a while and needed to avoid the sun. Turned out, painting himself blue worked better.”

On the field, throwing a teammate under the bus was a tactical move. Off the field, Yang Sa had never once betrayed a friend. He had never shared these things with anyone else before. And yet—strangely—when it came to this person, he just couldn’t hold it in.

Shao Zhan took the opportunity to bring up another member. “That tall guy—he seems really into radio calisthenics.”

“Calligraphy, qigong, radio calisthenics… he thinks everything in the mysterious East holds some kind of inexplicable power.”

A trace of a smile still lingered on Yang Sa’s face. But when he caught a glimpse of his reflection in the glass, he withdrew the emotion. A cool light shimmered in his eyes as he turned slightly, preparing to leave.

Shao Zhan quickly followed beside him, speaking with a hint of urgency, afraid the man in front of him might slip away like the wind. “What about you?”

“Me?”

What kind of food do you like? What books do you read? Who’s your favorite director? How many sugars do you take in your coffee? What do you do when you’re not gaming…

He wanted to know it all.

But he also knew—he couldn’t rush it.

Shao Zhan deliberately changed to a more casual tone. “Yeah, you… are you planning to go pro?”

Yang Sa lifted his eyelids, faint blue veins showing beneath his skin. “That’s a trade secret.” With that, he turned to leave.

Shao Zhan’s heart skipped. He lowered his voice and asked the retreating figure, “Did you… cover your tracks?”

He had thrown down several teams’ offers right on the spot. To fans, it looked like a refusal to associate with Silver Emperor’s shady dealings.

Shao Zhan had only grabbed his wrist—he knew how messy the club’s inner workings were. If it got investigated, things could get serious.

He didn’t care about himself. He only asked whether he had taken care of everything.

Yang Sa clenched his fist and slowly pulled his hand back. The sharp line of his jaw lifted, his features cold and distant like they were covered in frost. “I don’t understand what you’re talking about.” He turned again, but two wide, pudgy figures stepped in his way.

Tangyuan one shook his head like a rattle drum. “No, no, no. That’s not it. That’s not how it goes.”

The slightly smaller blue-haired one blinked his big, innocent eyes and tugged on the other’s hand, eagerly calling out, “Bow to Heaven and Earth! Let’s bow together!”

“No!” Tangyuan fumed, stomping his foot. “That’s not it! That’s called sworn brotherhood! We’re becoming sworn brothers!” He shot a pleading look at Yang Sa, silently begging him to explain and clarify things.

The blue-haired guy nodded with the utmost seriousness, joyfully calling out to his newly sworn brother, “Bow to Heaven and Earth! Bow to Heaven and Earth!” His sparkling eyes gleamed with a pure and innocent kind of stupidity.

“I’m speaking proper Northeastern dialect—we’re sworn brothers!” Tangyuan, red with frustration, jumped three feet high on the spot and pointed at Shao Zhan and Yang Sa. “They’re the ones doing the ‘Bow to Heaven and Earth’ thing…”


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 36


Chapter 36 – The Not-So-Familiar Blind Date


“It’s not that serious, is it?” Jiang Ranan, noticing something was off, tried to persuade him to let it go.

“It is that serious,” Tangyuan said, wrapping his arms around Jiang Ranan and Zhuang Bai. “The three of us should just take that old bast*rd out, then split the club evenly. What do you think?”

“You’ve got some imagination. Then what, play cards in prison?” Shao Zhan’s offhand comment mercilessly killed the plan.

“Almost forgot the old bast*rd has super hearing,” Tangyuan cursed silently in his heart.

Shao Zhan almost burst out laughing. “Try not to look so obviously pissed, or I’ll give you extra training tonight.”

Tangyuan scuffed his fat feet on the ground, puffed his cheeks, and stared up at the sky, eyes on nose, nose on heart.

LAP’s interview went by the book. Apart from a special thanks to the organizers for hosting the tournament, they didn’t say anything shocking—assuming you ignored the three weirdos beside them enthusiastically doing calisthenics.

Anyone who went through nine years of compulsory education would have a deep-seated hatred for those morning exercises. Probably only foreigners would be fascinated by such a mysterious art from an ancient land.

After finishing the interview with Yang Sa, the host clearly let out a sigh of relief. It was obvious that LAP, currently in the spotlight, had brought quite a bit of pressure to the organizers.

Following the script, the host asked Shao Zhan for his thoughts on the match and handed the mic to Xinhai’s team.

Shao Zhan thanked the Silver Emperor Club and acknowledged the strength of their opponents. Since it was a friendly match between teams, he kept it brief and passed the mic to a teammate.

Tangyuan, who suddenly found himself holding the mic, couldn’t believe his luck. He smoothed his hair and immediately teared up as he took the microphone.

As he turned around to wipe his tears, a light comment drifted from his team: “So dramatic.”

Tangyuan, in the middle of working up his emotions, was instantly cut off and couldn’t cry anymore. Instead, he formed a heart gesture toward the cheering fans, belly wobbling. “Honestly, it’s been a tough journey all these years. They’ve always disliked me—said I eat too much, take up too much space.”

He paused to dramatically wipe away a non-existent tear. “They say I never improve my skills, only grow my belly. But today, I’ve proven myself with strength alone. Anyone with a dream can be amazing. Let’s end weight discrimination—starting with me…”

Maybe fed up with the melodramatic act, Zhuang Bai leaned toward the mic. “I’ll keep working hard,” he said, then passed it to Jiang Ranan.

Suddenly handed the mic for no apparent reason, Jiang Ranan looked blankly at his teammates, then turned mechanically to the fans.

Whether it was the host’s questions, his teammates’ speeches, or even when he held the mic himself, Shao Zhan’s attention remained fixed in the same direction.

From beginning to end, a certain young man stood coldly in a corner of the stage, his whole demeanor exuding aloof detachment. What surprised Shao Zhan was the barely perceptible tension radiating from the LAP team members.

While they had put on the most exaggerated performance possible when it was their turn to speak for their own team, those same people stood as quiet as mice on the other side of the stage while the Xinghai team was speaking.

But if they were keeping a low profile, acting polite and indifferent to everything around them—

why were their shoulders subtly tensed?

Could it be disappointment over losing the match?

That didn’t quite make sense. It wasn’t a major tournament, and they weren’t from a top-tier team.

The only explanation was: for LAP, the “battle” wasn’t over yet.

Under the spotlight, Shao Zhan lowered his gaze, masking the glint in his eyes and quietly hiding his thoughts.

To build publicity, the entire match had been livestreamed—including the post-match interviews.

Even though Silver Emperor’s team had declined and the club itself was on the verge of collapse, the official livestream gained unexpected popularity thanks to the intense competition and the star players of Xinghai.

As per usual practice, there was to be a celebration banquet after the match. Although fewer teams had attended this time, the formalities still had to be followed.

Team captains from Weiguang, Jie Ao, and a few other clubs showed up in person—partly to show support for their brother club, but also, admittedly, to observe Xinghai’s evolving strategies.

Just as the interview was drawing to a close, a discordant note shattered the calm.

The stadium doors were suddenly flung open, and five or six middle-aged men stormed in, dragging banners and shouting angrily. They accused the Silver Emperor Club of illegally firing employees and withholding pay. The black-and-white banners declared the team’s boss, Xiao Jiangtao, a “deadbeat.”

Silver Emperor staff on-site immediately stepped in to negotiate—it was clear they recognized the men who had barged in.

The commotion escalated as the intruders refused to be mediated, demanding an explanation. The leader wore a strip of white cloth tied around his forehead, with two glaring red characters scrawled in shaky handwriting: “Unpaid Wages.”

Security, acting on orders, moved in to contain the disruption. The scuffle grew as people got mixed together and tensions rose rapidly.

The livestream cameras set up around the venue quickly cut to a replay of the earlier match as soon as the disturbance began.

But from the seating area, hundreds—possibly thousands—of audience members raised their phones, recording everything.

Now, even people outside of the esports scene knew about it.

The tournament organized by Silver Emperor didn’t go viral because of the gameplay—but because of this incident, it had shot straight to the trending charts.

Soon after, a mid-level executive from Silver Emperor arrived at the scene.

He ordered the official livestream to be resumed and personally addressed both the former employees on-site and the livestream audience, promising that the truth would be investigated and that both the staff and the public would be given an explanation.

“The truth? The truth is that you illegally fired employees, withheld wages, and evaded taxes…”

Following the principle of “divert rather than block,” the Silver Emperor staff reopened the official livestream, never expecting the other side to be so aggressive.

Not only did they refuse to back down—they started dropping bombshells one after another.

Silver Emperor had assumed these guys just wanted money. It wasn’t their first time dealing with this sort of thing. The team had its own legal department—just pull up the contracts and see if any rules were broken.
What the ex-employees thought was reasonable didn’t matter. What mattered were the terms signed at the time.

If there were no violations, sue them for defamation. Give them a little hush money—if anything, they’d be the ones getting prosecuted for fraud.

If there were issues, just pay them off. A bit more money to shut them up—problem solved.

Now that the incident had already gone public, they might as well take advantage of the buzz to paint the club as generous and down-to-earth. Wouldn’t cost much, they figured.

What they didn’t count on was that these men wouldn’t budge.

Tax evasion wasn’t something you could just wave off with empty words.

One of the managers stepped in to play the bad cop, sternly warning them not to talk nonsense.

But the ex-employees were ready. One of them threw printed evidence right in his face.

The senior executive clenched his back teeth, trying to stay composed. Finally, he waved for others to handle the situation and take the men away.

Amid the shouting, papers flew everywhere—colorful documents scattering like hail…

After the “uninvited guests” were escorted out, the host pulled off an impressive display of crisis management, quickly wrapping up the remaining segments and bringing this very unusual post-match awards ceremony to an end.

Originally, the organizers had planned to host a dinner for the attending teams after the invitational match.
But after the chaos, everyone tacitly began packing up their things, ready to leave.

Surprisingly, Silver Emperor’s boss emerged quickly from backstage, hurrying over to invite those preparing to leave to the hotel they’d booked for the gathering.

After sending off the last player, Xiao Jiangtao, the owner of the Silver Emperor team—who had hoped to use the tournament to generate some buzz—stood alone in the now-empty venue and closed his eyes.

“This time… it’s over.”

The banquet was buffet-style, and they had even invited a trending idol group to liven things up.

But after the chaos of the event, no one was really in the mood to celebrate.

Qin Chuan had an upset stomach, so he greeted everyone briefly and headed back to the team early.
Tangyuan, who had previously planned to livestream the dinner just to extend the stream time, slinked off to Weibo to post an apology.

Live-streaming under these circumstances—after what Silver Emperor pulled—would’ve been totally inappropriate.

That said, to be fair, while the tournament was a mess… the food was actually pretty good.

Tangyuan grabbed a pair of tongs and started eating as he filled his plate.

Just as he was enjoying himself, a cool voice came from behind:

“You seriously don’t know how much you weigh? Keep eating like that and you won’t fit in a single esports chair.”

Tangyuan awkwardly put the half-rack of lamb ribs back into the pot, muttering defiantly under his breath:
“If none fit, I can get one custom-made. That’s a chair problem, not my problem.”

He peeked at the person behind him and, taking advantage of Shao Zhan being distracted, snatched two lamb ribs and scurried off like a guilty raccoon.

While hiding behind the chocolate fountain and gnawing on a rib, he felt a tap on his shoulder.

Tangyuan turned around with his cheeks stuffed, only to see Jiang Ranan holding up his phone.

“Where’d Shao Zhan go?” he asked. “Coach tried calling him, but his phone’s off.”

Tangyuan flipped his hair and naturally took the call, lowering his voice into something overly serious:
“Hello, Lao Du? This is Tang Yuanyuan, acting captain of Xinghai Team One. Our former captain is currently MIA. If there’s anything, you can speak with me…”

He hadn’t finished playing the part when he held up his greasy finger and said, “He hung up.”

Then added with mock sadness, “Our teammates… so coldhearted.”

“Cut it out,” Jiang Ranan pulled the phone back, ignoring his antics. “Where is the captain?”

“He was just here a moment ago,” Tangyuan replied, scratching his head as he headed toward the meat station with his empty plate. “Who knows which poor soul the old beast’s off terrorizing now.”

A barely audible cough gave away Shao Zhan’s location. Somewhat awkwardly, he picked up the pale blue cocktail in front of him. His gaze dropped slightly, masking the momentary fluster in his eyes.

Yang Sa lifted his eyes and looked at their reflections in the glass. Between him and Shao Zhan stood a water-blue tower of champagne glasses—just for a moment, he felt frozen in place.

There weren’t many people at the drinks station. Before Yang Sa could collect himself, the quiet area was already down to just the two of them.

He instinctively wanted to turn away, but the way the other approached—so open, so direct—made it impossible to ignore.

Shao Zhan stopped at an arm’s length, just outside the edge of the patterned carpet—a respectful distance, carefully calculated to avoid creating pressure. He raised his glass slightly.

“LAP is strong,” he said, taking a sip of his drink, the tone light—as if smiling. “Very… colorful, too.”

In the reflection, the man who kept a gentlemanly distance was staring at him steadily. Yang Sa sighed inwardly, then turned around, maintaining a polite smile and a distant tone: “Xinghai’s first place—well deserved.”

Shao Zhan stepped forward just slightly. He had so many questions he wanted to ask—

Why did you leave back then?

Where did you go?

What did you go through?

Were you hurt?

Were you bullied?

Did you ever… think about me?

Countless questions swirled in his chest, but what came out was: “Do you like lemons?”

There wasn’t much to talk about in the drinks section, and unfortunately, the only thing left on the platter were lemon slices meant for garnish.

The other tilted his head thoughtfully, then replied earnestly: “They’re… okay.”

The moment looked exactly like two awkward blind date partners, forced to make conversation by overenthusiastic parents.

If this were being livestreamed, viewers would probably be curling their toes from secondhand embarrassment.

Shao Zhan put the lemon slice down. Clearly, it wasn’t a great conversation starter. “Do you like Chinese food?” he asked instead. “I noticed your friend—”

He turned slightly and spotted Tangyuan and Xiao White fighting over the last lamb chop. Casually, he turned back, “—seems to be really into it.”

Yang Sa’s gaze fell on the lemon slices on the porcelain plate. The shadow of his eyelashes cast a faint darkness beneath his eyes. “White grew up in South Africa. He’s very into food.”

A moment passed in silence. Yang Sa turned to leave—only to find his path blocked by someone casually standing just outside the carpeted area.

From a distance, all one could see were two tall, slender figures, standing closely together in the corner.

Strangely, the whole scene felt… vaguely intimate in a way he couldn’t explain.


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 35


Chapter 35 – The Show’s Only Just Begun


His face darkened, but his hands stayed steady on the controls. He tilted his head slightly, listening carefully for the sound of footsteps around him.

That man still hadn’t shown himself—yet every move of his team was already within the man’s grasp.

“Sa, hang in there.”

Black, who had just pulled off a high-speed escape and taken down an enemy blocking his path, was now racing back to regroup. “Three minutes.”

“We won’t make it in time,” Yang Sa thought grimly. On this battlefield, that man would never make the same mistake he had. He wouldn’t leave room for a repeat.

Yang Sa stuck close to the building’s cover, skillfully circling around the nearby footsteps.

But still…

Where was that man who once ruled PUBG like a god?

To control the flow of the match, to strike a fatal blow at the most critical moment—

Where was he now?

He had moved through several positions—it took a fair bit of time. After all, without teammates, he tried his best to avoid unnecessary engagements.

On the other side, teammate Little White’s journey into the city didn’t seem to be going as smoothly as expected either.

He rushed through several locations only to find them empty, with enemies hot on his tail. Yang Sa gripped a grenade and slowly approached the tightly shut door.

Whether it was or wasn’t — he had to take the gamble.

However, the moment he opened the door, a grenade flew out in a graceful arc.

Too late!

At the same time he threw his own grenade, Yang Sa abandoned standard tactics. Instead, he made his character leap forward. The incoming grenade brushed his shoulder and spiraled back behind him.

As he lunged into the room, he opened fire in a sweeping motion amid the erupting blast.

But unfortunately, the man behind the flames—who had been in control the whole time—wasn’t about to give him that chance.

[Starcraft-Mars used MK74 to knock down LAP-Killer]

[Starcraft-Mars used MK74 to kill LAP-Killer]

Yang Sa stared at the grayscale screen as the man walked toward him. He wiped his face, told Little White to play solo and keep farming, then rested his chin on his curled fingers and chuckled quietly in the dimly lit ops room.

Running from the zone, Little White nearly choked. He shot a glance at Little Blue, who was spectating from the other side, as if to ask, Did he go nuts?

Little Blue couldn’t be bothered with the idiot:

“Figures. Just a fool who’s good at doing warm-up stretches.”

Busy with a game of Chinese idiom matching, Little Black looked up at the remark and reminded his colorful friend that he was spectating the same fool.

“I can’t live like this,” Little Blue grumbled, yanking off his headset. He understood—and Yang Sa understood even better.

Even if Little White managed to survive until the very end, with three Xinghai players still alive, this match was already over.

On the scoreboard, Starcraft’s points were still climbing. The lead LAP had worked so hard to build was rapidly slipping away.

But for the LAP team, it wasn’t just the end of a round—

It was the end of something more.

The opposing team was different. Under that man’s lead, Xinghai was like a steel-clad beast—unyielding and indestructible. No matter the circumstances, they followed their pre-planned routes with unwavering precision, advancing with a belief in crushing all resistance. They held onto their advantage without suspense, all the way to the end.

After Game Five, Xinghai ranked first, with a commanding lead in points.

The outcome was sealed. LAP’s team members half-heartedly began packing up their peripherals.

Little Blue stretched his neck like a toy doll, eyes fixed on the dark swirl in Yang Sa’s hair.

“Sa… that was my mistake…”

Yang Sa slung his gear bag over his shoulder and cut him off: “The real show is just getting started.”

As his hand touched the doorknob, scenes from the game inevitably replayed in his mind.

The moment he stepped out, the door across from him also began to slowly open…

Swept by the sudden light, Shao Zhan squinted slightly.

Behind the tall, vividly dressed figure ahead, a slender silhouette emerged at a slow pace.

There was still a trace of youth left in his features, but the eyes beneath his black hair were cold and unreadable.

For a split second, Shao Zhan wanted to reach out—stop the man whose gaze hadn’t paused on him even for a moment—and ask:

Where have you been all these years?

Have you been doing okay?

But he only stood there silently, listening to the fading footsteps—just like he had three years ago.

“Captain,” Tangyuan nudged the person in front of him with his belly. The post-match interview was coming up—they couldn’t linger here.

Shao Zhan got the message. He walked a few steps with his peripheral bag slung over his back, but still couldn’t resist glancing back:

“Fatty, your stomach…”

Tangyuan sucked in his belly and tiptoed forward like a ballet dancer, gliding past Shao Zhan as lightly as a snowflake, as soft as a tuft of down…

But he had clearly underestimated someone’s sharp tongue.

All they heard was Shao Zhan dialing the team manager Qin Chuan: “Some team members’ waistlines have grown again. People who know we’re esports players might understand, but outsiders probably think Buddha himself visits our base daily.”

On the other end of the call, the manager promised to immediately contact a health coach to create a specialized training plan for the team members.

Tangyuan felt his vision go dark—utterly hopeless about the road ahead. After a few half-hearted attempts at comfort from his teammates, he felt even more aggrieved.

“The captain doesn’t love me anymore… I was already behind Lao Du and Bage in his heart, and now there’s this new overpowered guy. He never used to mind that I was fat. Don’t you think… maybe he’s not planning to love me anymore?”

Jiang Ranan tried to hold back, really tried, but in the end, he couldn’t: “Have you considered the possibility… that maybe he never loved you to begin with?”

In a mix of disillusionment and self-sabotaging despair, Tangyuan waddled up to the front desk, belly out. But the moment he was met with enthusiastic cheers from fans, he lost himself in the adoration.

Nudging the always-silent Zhuang Bai, he whispered smugly: “See? Someone still loves me.”

But the next second, as Shao Zhan walked into the venue, the crowd erupted in perfect sync: “Mars! Mars!”

Even the LED signs shifted instantly like a battlefield turning tide.

Tangyuan could only stare as his own round, chubby fan sign was tossed onto a backseat—completely ignored.

He quietly shuffled over next to Zhuang Bai and began searching on his phone: “How to kill and dismember someone without leaving evidence…”


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 34


Chapter 34 – Three-Way Ambush


At the same time, in another operations room just one wall away, laughter and cheers filled the air.

“Hahaha, I didn’t die! I’m still alive! D*mn, I’m actually still alive—hahahaha…”

“Oh my god,” muttered White, the dark-skinned player, as he rubbed his forehead and glanced sideways at the blue figure on screen. “Can someone please kill this idi*t already?”

Black, a tall white guy, tried to calm him down. “As the ancient saying goes, ‘Heaven cherishes all living things.’ What that means is, when a child is born, they are very precious…”

White looked constipated. Just as he was about to snap back with a string of curses, Yang Sa cut their childish bickering short.

The flamboyant blue player who had been driving and looting finally sat up straight in front of his screen, dropping the joking demeanor. He glanced sideways at the others. “Ambush?”

Yang Sa shook his head, eyes calculating the distance between the last reported kill and their current location on the map. “He’s here.”

“Who?” asked the blue-haired driver, still confused.

Yang Sa placed a still-dazed White into the Dacia they had just claimed, and mapped out the next route. He turned to the driver: “Turn around. We’re going to intercept Xinghai’s second squad.”

White, now on guard duty, switched to a light machine gun with lower kill potential. Meanwhile, Blue listened intently for any sound cues, following Yang Sa’s instructions to avoid combat and conceal their movements as much as possible.

The team set up an ambush around the puzzle buildings near P City. This was the optimal route for anyone chasing LAP, and the area lacked any serious structures for cover. The next step was for Starsea’s vanguard to swing by this route, which would be the perfect setup for a triple-sided ambush. Yang Sa was certain they’d stop here to resupply.

Unfortunately, luck wasn’t on their side—the team that drove into P City turned out to be a full squad.

“Sa, what now?” asked Blue nervously as he filled up the gas tank.

“Get down. Drop your supplies at the door, and move into the small room.”

Before entering the city, Yang Sa had specifically reminded Blue to park the car at the usual vehicle spawn point, hoping it wouldn’t raise any suspicion from the Starsea players.

Footsteps echoed around them—the newly arrived team clearly wasn’t made up of seasoned players. They were running through buildings to loot supplies, completely lacking tactical awareness or coordination.

The upside? They hadn’t noticed anything unusual that might reveal Yang Sa’s group was hiding inside.

The downside? Their aimless looting made it all too likely they’d stumble into one of the ambush spots that had been so carefully chosen.

Half-crouched, Yang Sa once again slipped from the room at the end of the corridor to the outer railing. The player looting this particular building had forgotten that this area had already been cleared. He couldn’t risk staying in the previous hiding spot either—judging from the footsteps, more enemies were heading up to this floor.

“Sa, this isn’t gonna work,” grumbled Black, though his character was agilely parkouring between buildings.

Yang Sa reminded him not to get too cocky. The enemies might be newbies, but Black’s footsteps were way too loud.

Any premature engagement would completely ruin their ambush plan.

Suddenly, the roar of an engine grew louder—a roofless Jeep came barreling into the city.

Yang Sa scoped in, silently counting the heads in the vehicle. Behind him, the sound of looting continued steadily, unaffected.

That hearing… seriously. He suppressed his irritation and fired off a couple of shots at the approaching Jeep. Before the enemy could return fire, he ducked back into the corridor and slipped into the second room, gently closing the door behind him.

The shots finally alerted the looters—someone rushed to the balcony to defend, and moments later, the kill feed lit up:

[Starcraft-Sweet used Vector SMG to knock down Tom Cat]

[Starcraft-Sweet used Vector SMG to kill Tom Cat]

Passing through the hallway, Yang Sa glanced out the window at the bright green loot box below, then nimbly vaulted the wall to reposition.

Finally… they’ve arrived.

Although it wasn’t a coordinated attack, the chaotic shooting was still giving them a major headache.

Once the enemies in the building received word of their teammate’s death, they launched a three-way assault on the players in the car. While their accuracy wasn’t great, the suppressing fire was annoying enough.

Before entering the building, the Xinghai players took out two of the ambushers without even slowing down. They rammed the vehicle straight into a pillar to bring it to a stop, then two of them jumped out and flanked toward the last enemy hiding in a fake garage.

At that moment, both Xinghai players had their backs fully exposed—right within LAP’s firing range.

Yang Sa gave the order to his eager teammates: “Fire.”

Bullets rained from three directions, aimed directly at the Xinghai players. Including the random player hiding in the fake garage, one Xinghai member was knocked down. Before the other could revive him, Yang Sa, having switched to an SMG, locked down all exit routes with suppressive fire.

Just as it looked like everything was under control, a new kill feed message revealed the hidden truth.

[LAP-Killer used GROZA to knock down Starcraft-Sweet]

[LAP-Killer used GROZA to kill Starcraft-Sweet]

[Starcraft-River used Kar98K to knock down LAP-Blue]

Without a moment’s pause, Yang Sa left White behind for cover fire and maneuvered his character with precise jumps and dodges, heading in the opposite direction. As he moved, he curled his lips into a grin.
“That guy… he’s got some skills.”

“It’s too late. Don’t bother picking me up,” Blue said, pushing his keyboard aside with a resigned look, ready to accept his fate.

Naturally, the enemy hadn’t expected LAP to make a rescue attempt either—he was cleanly finished off.

[Starcraft-River used Kar98K to kill LAP-Blue]

Though this oddball squad usually slacked off and joked around, no one dared take the situation lightly now. Blue’s ghostly blue hand propped up his even-bluer head, twisting like a character from a horror movie, then quietly switched to spectate Black.

“He’s fine. Spectate me,” Yang Sa said, his eyes reflecting a faint greenish hue from the screen, unreadable in expression.

Blue cracked his neck twice, straightening it out while switching perspectives.

No way, he almost said aloud. This was the first time since they’d started playing together that Yang Sa had ever asked for backup.

And it wasn’t just him—this kind of moment was unprecedented for any of them, ever since they met this stubborn Chinese guy.

Blue fiddled with the clasp on his headset, trying to act nonchalant. “You’re giving them way too much credit.”

“No,” Yang Sa replied quietly. “It’s not them.”

From beginning to end, there was only one person he truly regarded as an opponent.

Whether three years ago, or now—

It had always been that one.

He had always known — that man was strong.

Xinghai splitting up to chase enemies should’ve been an opportunity for LAP. Unfortunately, the initial interference was too heavy, and they had no advantage in the terrain.

He had already figured out the other side’s situation and calculated that someone had advanced to a position too far away to offer timely support. But just when he thought he had it all planned out, his “arrangement” had already been seen through.

Truthfully, he had to admit—he admired the trust between the Xinghai teammates. They let two of their members swagger straight into his ambush zone, while the rest had to both fire misleading shots to confuse LAP’s vanguard and circle back within a time limit.

To avoid being discovered, they had abandoned their vehicle in advance. Then, using the chaos of the firefight on this side to perfectly mask their footsteps, they closed in. By the time LAP realized what was happening, the trap he’d prepared had turned against him.

[Starcraft-Keen used UZI to knock down LAP-White]

[Starcraft-Keen used UZI to kill LAP-White]


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 33


Chapter 33 – Who Are We Guarding?


“The airport, huh,” Tangyuan curled up his paws and rubbed his chubby face, eyes gleaming with excitement. “I knew it, this is exactly the style of God Shao—coming here to teach the kids how to call him Daddy.”

Infected by his enthusiasm, Jiang Ranan straightened up after landing, flipped over, and went into the building to scavenge supplies.

Meanwhile, Zhuang Bai calmly reported enemy activity while keeping watch, and Shao Zhan had already set up his gun on the third floor, picking off two unlucky players right at the edge of his line of sight.

“Their teammates got knocked and no one’s coming to revive them,” Tangyuan said, having locked onto his target, listening to the sound of a motorcycle fading away. “Not a shred of team spirit.” With that, he holstered his weapon and switched to defense.

Zhuang Bai picked up the helmet and gear Jiang Ranan had left behind, and the two of them found a jeep, swept the nearby area for vehicles, and conveniently picked up a stray duo team.

By the time they drove back to reinforce the area, Shao Zhan and Tangyuan had already cleared out all the active enemies in the zone. The remaining prone campers who dared to peek were instantly locked in—any movement meant instant death.

Those who tried to escape were, unsurprisingly, picked off by Shao Zhan from his high vantage point. Only two well-coordinated survivors managed to retreat, supporting each other as they fled southwest on the map.

After distributing supplies among the team, Fat Tangyuan switched to the helmet and armor brought back by Zhuang Bai and Jiang Ranan. Now armed with a powerful weapon, he strutted around like he owned the place.

Two rounds of shrinking circles passed, and the team remained safely inside. Though it wasn’t the final circle yet, their position and gear were more than enough to lock down the area.

Shao Zhan kept a close eye on the kill feed, but he only seemed to care about one particular team.

LAP hadn’t racked up many kills, but their gun usage was varied. It showed signs of duo coordination, with one teammate not firing a single shot. This implied that their initial drop point wasn’t ideal, or the early-game situation was too messy for them to gain the upper hand, and they were still on the move.

Just as he was thinking about this, gunfire rang out from the southwest.

[LAP-Killer knocked Surrendering with Win94]

[LAP-Killer killed Surrendering with Win94]

[LAP-Killer knocked NeverSurrender with Win94″]

[LAP-Killer killed NeverSurrender with Win94]

Shao Zhan raised an eyebrow. The opponent he had been waiting for had finally arrived. And it wasn’t just him—every member of Xinghai Squad was ready, watching all the approaches to the airport with sharpened focus.

Minutes ticked by. Aside from a few scouting bots getting shot down, everything around them was as peaceful as a vacation resort.

“What’s going on?” Tangyuan muttered, flexing his chubby fingers as he crouched at the window with his gun. “This is the airport—Daddy didn’t come here for retirement.”

Zhuang Bai frowned slightly, and Jiang Ranan leaned against the building’s corner, alternating between watching two directions. Based on the gunfire on the map, any experienced team wouldn’t recklessly charge the airport. Taking a detour into the safe zone was the smarter choice.

However, there should’ve been at least a few squads who were either fearless or just couldn’t read the situation. This kind of peace felt far too unusual.

At the same time, the kill feed continued lighting up:

[LAP-Killer knocked JAN with UMP45]

[LAP-Killer killed Peekaboo with VSS]

[LAP-Killer killed DeathMaster with VSS]

[LAP-black killed HitTheWall with UZI]

[LAP-Killer killed histogram with GROZA]

It wasn’t just the players on the field— even the on-site commentator couldn’t help but joke:
“Is LAP defending the airport, or defending the members of Xinghai?”

In the audience seats, the sharp-tongued Captain Zhou Heng smirked. With his keen eyes, he’d already seen through it: “Defending, my ass. They’re obviously guarding their food.”

Captain Weiguang, for once, agreed with him: “Waiting for prey at the tree. Trapping fish in a jar.”

Qin Chuan turned his head, eyes glinting as he glared at the two whispering troublemakers: “What prey? What fish? Go sit somewhere else.”

The two shameless veterans ignored him, laser-focused on the action playing out on the battlefield, their butts glued firmly to their seats.

“Captain.” Jiang Ranan, unable to hold back any longer, called out. The situation on the field was just too strange.

And he couldn’t be blamed. As a professional player, he’d been trained to use the right strategies and strike with precision.

This kind of behavior—surrounding but not attacking, even giving the enemy room to maneuver—was completely illogical.

This weird feeling had been there since their very first match against that person.

“Don’t panic,” Shao Zhan replied, putting away his gun. He stood up on the rooftop, used the cover to jump across to a nearby building, and climbed up to gain a better vantage point to survey the surroundings.

LAP’s kill feed was still being updated. Although Xinghai Squad was still in first place, LAP’s points were skyrocketing.

Every player who tried to skirt around the airport to escape the zone was, without exception, forced to pay a toll to LAP.

However, this strategy didn’t seem particularly clever. While they were still inside the safe zone for now, the next circle wouldn’t be so kind.

Judging from the current situation, the next safe zone would likely shrink toward the southeast part of the map. Teams were already battling over the power station and the nearby ruins, fighting for favorable terrain to get into the circle.

The later they moved, the worse the situation would get.

LAP had only one goal in mind: Xinghai. To them, there was no doubt who the real threat was.

“What should we do?” Jiang Ranan, the youngest member of the team, asked nervously, his eyes fixed on the rapidly rising scores on the leaderboard.

“What do you mean, ‘what should we do?’” Shao Zhan said with a faint smile. “If the mountain won’t come to me, then I’ll go to the mountain.” With that, he called for the team to get in the car.

At the same moment, as if in perfect sync, the roar of engines erupted around the perimeter.

A powerful jeep circled halfway around the airport, fired two empty shots with brazen arrogance, and then sped off toward the horizon.

Before anyone could question the move, Shao Zhan issued the order: “Split up and chase.”

With ample supplies on hand, Shao Zhan and Jiang Ranan drove through the blue zone to try and cut ahead. Meanwhile, Zhuang Bai and Tangyuan followed closely behind LAP. They encountered little resistance along the way, swapping out gear and updating the team with their locations.

LAP, on the other hand, wasn’t having an easy time. Sticking to a standard rotation route, they were forced to fight through squads blocking chokepoints and demanding “tolls” for passage. They also had to watch out for snipers and remain wary of interference from Xinghai creeping up behind them.

It was a grueling rotation—but it was exactly this kind of high-stakes path that kept their kill count and points at the top of the board.

As for Shao Zhan’s side, things weren’t going smoothly either. Pushing through with meds and energy drinks, they were unexpectedly ambushed before reaching the next safe zone.

Their car tires were shot out, so the two of them jumped out and destroyed the tires on the opposite side of the vehicle to prevent enemies from using it. Then, using the vehicle as cover, they took down a camper lying in ambush near the riverbank.

“What the hell,” Jiang Ranan muttered, his gaze shifting between the loot box on the ground and the wrecked motorcycle nearby. “Not rotating, not moving—just lying here to ambush people?” He wiped his face in disbelief. “What are these guys even playing for?”

Shao Zhan picked up some bullets, left the meds in the loot box for Jiang Ranan, and reminded him to top off his health.

This player was either a solo from a temporary squad or had teammates hiding nearby, waiting to coordinate with his callout.

Either way, getting into the next safe zone wasn’t going to be easy.

Tangyuan fired a sweeping spray as he leapt from the vehicle with practiced ease, using rocks as cover while laying down suppressive fire on the enemy’s advance. Meanwhile, Zhuang Bai, working in perfect sync with him, had already driven around behind the enemy to launch a flanking attack.

After clearing out the ambushers, Tangyuan jumped back into the vehicle and sped toward a moving marker on the plains.

“What happened?” Shao Zhan asked, hearing the slight urgency in Tangyuan’s breathing.

“Nothing, just got ambushed.” Tangyuan replied while healing in the car, briefly summarizing the situation. They’d been following LAP’s car and hadn’t noticed that LAP had left behind a three-man squad to block them.

“Standard play,” Shao Zhan said calmly, then added a reminder for the team: “Reset and refocus.”
The longer this match went on, the more he found himself appreciating LAP’s team leader.

“How’s it going on your end?” Zhuang Bai asked as he drove—right as the kill feed reported Jiang Ranan being knocked down.

“Xiao Ranan!” Tangyuan called out emotionally, gun propped up as he sprayed at a prone camper from the car.

“He’s not dead.” Shao Zhan replied. At that moment, he stormed the second floor for a close-range gunfight, managing to revive Jiang Ranan just before the bleed-out timer hit zero.

Afterward, with his expression unchanged, he calmly healed up. By the time Jiang Ranan was back on his feet, Shao Zhan had already driven a looted car around and was waiting downstairs.

Once in the car, Jiang Ranan quickly filled the team in on what had just happened. Sure enough, a three-man squad had been camping the edge of the zone, farming kills in the danger zone. With no vehicle, trying to cross on foot would’ve been a death sentence.

Then a motorcycle squad appeared—and without hesitation, they sped right into the chaos.

While the two teams were fighting, Shao Zhan crept up along the blue zone’s edge to third-party them, while Jiang Ranan tried to flank from the side—only to get pinched by a team on high ground.

Shao Zhan finished off a low-HP enemy downstairs, vaulted up a wall, and swiftly regained control of the situation.

“Tough one,” Tangyuan said with a mischievous grin spreading across his chubby face. “Heh… So what now?”

“Go block LAP.” Xinghai’s captain, Shao Zhan, replied coolly, eyes fixed on the edge of his field of vision.


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 32


Chapter 32 – The Leaping Orange


A reckless looter who had long been eyeing the supplies climbed up from the base of the hill, sneaking around and cautiously approaching the area. Just as he began picking through the weapons, two gunshots rang out.

[Leaping Orange used S1897 to knock down Audio Monster 887.]

After waiting in vain for a teammate to come rescue him, Leaping Orange, now fully in control, decided to finish off the low-HP enemy.

While Orange was looting the airdrop, Yang Sa used the battle report from his teammates to deduce Shao Zhan’s location.

Based on his pacing, Shao Zhan should’ve arrived by now. He knew Yang Sa was a skilled sniper, and with the airdrop landing here, it was unthinkable that Shao Zhan would pass up the opportunity. He had to be coming for him.

At this moment, Shao Zhan was surely lurking somewhere, waiting for Yang Sa to reveal his position.

Greed is a human weakness.

If Leaping Orange had grabbed the loot and left right away, this story might’ve ended differently.

But he didn’t. He paused to pick through gear and lingered for just two more seconds by the drop.

Those two seconds were all it took.

A rustle came from the bushes along the lower right edge. A figure in forest-green camo crept up silently. Just as he adjusted his scope to aim, the looter at the airdrop turned into a loot box right before his eyes.

A kill notice flashed across the screen:

[LAP—Killer used SCAR-L to knock down Leaping Orange.]

[LAP—Killer used SCAR-L to kill Leaping Orange.]

The spectator hiding in the bushes crouched even lower.

He was just a passing noob—not cut out for this kind of god-tier battle.

As he was debating whether to sneak away the same way he came, a crossbow bolt landed right at his feet.

He bolted from his hiding spot in panic, running without a clear direction.

Yang Sa watched someone wearing the same skin as him appear in the airdrop area and thought,

If only he hadn’t panicked so much, it might’ve been better.

He was gambling.

He was betting that Shao Zhan had already arrived, ready to ambush him. He was betting that even Shao Zhan had blind spots in his vision.

Truthfully, Yang Sa choosing to observe from the high ground of the church was a gamble too. Because of how the game’s aggro system worked, it was easy for enemies to sneak up on that position.

But isn’t the whole match a gamble?

At least for now—he hadn’t lost yet.

Another crossbow bolt landed at the man’s feet. Yang Sa had originally intended to help guide his path—but the moment he released the shot, he knew it was unnecessary.

Because the person he had so carefully flushed out was gunned down the instant he revealed himself.

[Starcraft—Mars used MK14-EBR to knock down NoobPleaseSpareMe.]

[Starcraft—Mars used MK14-EBR to kill NoobPleaseSpareMe.]

The kill reports popped up almost simultaneously.

Shao Zhan, facing off against his longtime rival, had no intention of holding back.

But even before the kill report appeared, he realized he’d made a miscalculation.

That person wasn’t Yang Sa.

He should have waited just a little longer.

If only he had noticed the arrow at the man’s feet beforehand, he never would have taken the shot.

But in a duel between top players, there’s no room for hesitation.

The moment Shao Zhan fired and gave away his position, Yang Sa shattered a window and fired a sniper shot in response.

[LAP—Killer used AWM to knock down Starcraft—Mars.]

The announcement shook the entire match.

Yang Sa had managed to pinpoint Shao Zhan’s location just by sound, and landed a clean, deadly shot.

The spectators were shocked—and even the Xinghai team was caught off guard.

Not because Shao Zhan was invincible, but because his defeats in one-on-one gunfights were exceptionally rare—especially when he was still at full health.

When Shao Zhan charged up S City without firing a shot, the team had already guessed he was going to line up a kill.

What they didn’t expect was that this full-speed charge would end up being a gifted headshot—the most valuable one of the game.

Based on the distance, there was no way to save him in time.

Xinghai’s players quickly regrouped, focusing on the enemies at hand.

Lying on the second floor of a slanted-roof house, Shao Zhan couldn’t help but let out a dry laugh as he thought back on the events.

He had always been the fisherman.

This time, he’d been the bait.

Such a mistake was rare in his professional career—yet it was exceptionally memorable.

His momentum was in sharp decline, and he considered whether to be practical about it—maybe just pull a grenade and send himself back to spectate with the team, rather than lying here waiting for someone to steal the kill.

But the area was remote, far from the main battlefield. Chances were, there wouldn’t be many players coming to loot.

He gave up on the idea of suicide and spent his final moments mentally reviewing his last few moves.

Just as Shao Zhan was analyzing the situation in his head, a set of hurried footsteps suddenly charged up the stairs.

Sh*t—someone actually came to finish him off.

By the time Shao Zhan reacted and reached for a grenade, it was already a bit too late.

Along with the sharp, slicing motion of a charging figure came a crisp gunshot.

Shao Zhan’s screen dimmed, and standing in front of him was someone holding a rifle with unshakable poise.

[LAP—Killer used AWM to kill Starcraft—Mars.]

With a cold, composed expression, Yang Sa holstered his weapon. At his feet lay a grenade that hadn’t had time to detonate.

“D*mn, that was brutal,” grumbled Tangyuan, his round belly rising and falling as he huffed with frustration. He cursed loudly at the screen showing his teammate’s perspective. “You already knocked him down—why go all the way back just to finish him point-blank?”

Compared to the emotional Tangyuan, Shao Zhan was as calm as ever. After a brief pause, he switched to spectating his teammates still in the game.

Up ahead, a chaotic melee had broken out over the high ground of S City.

Jiang Ranan and Zhuang Bai held a temporary upper hand in a 2v2 skirmish, and with Yang Sa returning to back them up, victory—once an uncertain gamble—now had a clear direction.

Game Two: Victory to LAP.

“Tsk.” Tangyuan smacked his lips, took off his headset, and used his chubby fingers to fix his hair, checking his reflection on the screen. “Haven’t seen him in years—the kid’s really something now.”

Shao Zhan wasn’t impressed by his smug tone.

“A few years ago, he beat you on the field like it was child’s play, remember?”

Tangyuan shook the tufts of hair flattened by his headset and glared wide-eyed.

“Captain, is this really the time to boost the enemy’s morale and crush your own teammate’s confidence?”

Shao Zhan leaned an elbow on the desk, his long fingers gently stroking his fair chin as he said calmly,

“I’m just stating the facts.”

Under the desk, Tangyuan’s thick legs were propped up in frustration, his breathing heavy with anger, the flesh on his cheeks jiggling with each breath.

“Heartless. You’ve got a new favorite now, haven’t you? Forgotten your old flame already?”

Shao Zhan shifted sideways, barely saving his back from being thrown out.

“You’re just dead weight—don’t go calling yourself an old flame.”

“Captain, you don’t love me anymore? You really don’t love me anymore?”

Tangyuan clutched Shao Zhan’s hand dramatically, sniffling and tearing up as he listed off all his past contributions.

“Even if I haven’t made any grand achievements, I’ve at least worked hard, haven’t I?”

Shao Zhan eyed the layers of fat on his teammate with exaggerated scrutiny.

“Doesn’t look like you’ve suffered much.”

“You—” Tangyuan choked on his words, his fury deflating like a leaky balloon. He covered his face with his pudgy hands and began to fake-cry, complete with dramatic sniffles.

Kind-hearted Jiang Ranan leaned over the table and patted his round head. Just as the words of comfort reached his lips, the screen switched back to the game scene.

The team quickly resumed their positions.

On the screen, Jiang Ranan caught a glimpse of Tangyuan putting on his headset again, now wearing an expression of smug dominance, like he was ready to conquer the world.

Jiang Ranan wisely kept his concerns to himself.

Zhuang Bai, watching everything from the side, took it all in with a slightly downcast expression as his gaze shifted back to the screen.

Shao Zhan followed the flight path with his eyes, marked the drop point on the screen, and silence briefly fell over the operations room.

This was just a small friendly match. In an official competition, core strategies and techniques would be kept under wraps. What was being tested here was team coordination, situational awareness, and adaptability.

After several rounds, the dynamics of the match were becoming clearer. The opposing team wasn’t a professional squad—they lacked the rigorous training of a formal team—but perhaps because of that, they often unleashed unexpected and lethal moves.

You could get a glimpse of their chaotic style just by looking at their appearances: one in black, one in white, and one in blue. That lineup alone looked like it belonged in a zoo exhibit—with a big cage to boot.

And the real heavy hitter was someone bold enough to talk tough to the league—and strong enough to back it up.

Shao Zhan couldn’t help but picture that boy in his mind. A black mask covering most of his face, eyes sharper and colder than they were three years ago, his entire presence radiating a sharp, unapproachable energy.

Even now, after actually facing off against him, it still felt surreal—like that person standing in front of him was a dream too distant to touch.

But he had a feeling… a sense that he was getting close to touching that sliver of reality hidden within the dream.

That defiant youth, leading a ragtag team with such swagger into the league, the determined reason he insisted on entering the tournament, the subtle probing of Xinghai Club’s intentions—perhaps all of it was connected.

Maybe it held the key to explaining why the boy had appeared so suddenly three years ago—only to vanish without a trace.


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 31


Chapter 31 – The Same Starting Point


Jokes and banter aside, the team kept one eye on the plane’s passenger activity. When parachuting into P City, Black—on recon duty—precisely marked the locations of nearby enemies.

Little Blue and Black, speaking in his thick Northeastern accent, swiftly eliminated the surrounding threats like a bolt of lightning.

At this point, the first slow zone-shrink had begun. The safe zone was located toward the top of the map. With both LAP and Xinghai aligned along a similar straight path, they were essentially starting from the same point.

Yang Sa didn’t waste any time. Two vehicles carried the four LAP members across the map, relying on map prediction to guide their route.

Meanwhile, Xinghai—still at the Nuclear Power Plant—wasn’t so lucky. The squads that had landed there were no pushovers; everyone chose that location to gain an early advantage. Rather than letting enemies develop, they’d opted to fight from the start.

In the heat of these consecutive skirmishes, Xinghai lost the chance to rotate early. By the time they finally drove away, they were already significantly behind.

By the time they passed the prison area, LAP was already wreaking havoc at the shooting range.

Unless something unexpected happened, the final battle would most likely take place in S City, which bordered the shooting range.

“They’re too fast. What do we do now?” Tangyuan asked worriedly, his chubby frame bouncing with each word. He truly was the emotional backbone of the team.

Shao Zhan, focused, listened to the roar of the plane engines through his headset. Then he turned the car in a new direction. “No rush. Let’s try something different this round.”

“You got it!” said Tangyuan cheerfully, swerving behind Shao Zhan’s vehicle while humming a little tune of his own invention.

In the passenger seat, Jiang Ranan, holding his gun, asked coldly, “Do you even know what strategy the captain’s planning this round?”

“Nope!” Tangyuan responded, his naturally upbeat personality on full display.

They took out two squads near the airdrop who had tried to third-party them. Then, under the cover of his teammates, Tangyuan drove straight into an area full of loot boxes. He came out beaming—looking every bit like a… well, a 300-pound happy man.

In order to retrieve that adorable little airdrop, the group actually veered off their original flight path.

But their leader, Shao Zhan, didn’t seem the least bit anxious. Leading the charge, he cut down anything in their way—be it gods or ghosts.

The Xinghai team surged forward like sharks swimming into shallow waters, clearing out every threat along their path.

This gave Tangyuan, who played the assault role, the time of his life. Even Jiang Ranan and the usually composed Zhuang Bai were pumped with adrenaline.

Xinghai kept a perfect balance between pace and precision. After wiping out the defenders of R City, their next target was S City—where LAP was based.

“Little punks, your daddy’s coming!” Tangyuan yelled into all-chat before they set off. He knew the enemy probably wouldn’t hear it, but he still shouted with unmatched bravado.

That punk Yang Sa had led LAP’s monkeys in wiping out the Jiangling team. Although they’d been avoiding Xinghai so far, one of the defeated teams had been Tangyuan’s friend. Today, he was determined to avenge his brother Iron Ox.

But Tangyuan’s burning fighting spirit was slightly doused when Shao Zhan suddenly took a detour. He trailed behind reluctantly, looking back with every step. “Captain, captain… aren’t we pushing S City?”

Shao Zhan stopped at a quiet little housing area at the foot of a hill and replied, “We are.”

Tangyuan wanted to say, “If we are, then why not just floor it and go?” But, intimidated by Shao Zhan’s aura, he only dared to mutter a silent complaint under his breath.

Shao Zhan, on the other hand, was completely unhurried, slowly picking attachments and fine-tuning his weapons.

Meanwhile, the battle in S City was growing fiercer. A new wave of attacks had broken out among teams trying to seize the high ground.

Amid the dense exchange of gunfire, a distinctly different sound wave cut through the chaos.

“Captain, it’s an airdrop,” said Jiang Ranan, who had sharp eyes and was scanning the full-view display for the plane. “Direction N. Estimated drop point… the back slope of S City.”

Shao Zhan slammed on the accelerator. He had originally planned to let other teams wear down LAP’s resources and gear, but now he sped off like a bullet.

He absolutely couldn’t let LAP get that airdrop—because he knew, if that person got their hands on a high-powered sniper and took the high ground, even with interference from annoying third parties, the odds of victory would dangerously start to tip.

While the previous attackers were launching a frontal assault on the buildings, Shao Zhan led his team in from the flank. They were suddenly sprayed with bullets from behind—by someone who was half ally, half threat—but luckily, it didn’t deal any lethal damage.

Once inside the housing area, their car rammed straight into a wall. Shao Zhan had no intention of sneaking in quietly.

He wanted LAP to know he was here. Xinghai was here. He wanted to shatter their thoughts of upgrading their gear.

Though ambushed by Xinghai, LAP’s formation didn’t fall apart. While suppressing enemy fire head-on, they split up to defend and managed to severely injure the vengeful berserker.

[LAP—Blue knocked down Starcraft—Keen with a Vector]

Freelancer Jiang Ranan immediately raised his weapon to retaliate and, under a hail of bullets, managed to rescue the downed teammate.

In the garage, secondary sniper Fat Tangyuan calmly assessed the situation. With precision strikes, he not only saved his teammate from danger but also took out LAP’s main firepower.

[Starcraft—Sweet killed LAP—White with an AUG A3]

“What the hell…” muttered Little Black, who had been the first to get knocked out in both matches. He clutched his cheek in disbelief. “Am I reverse cheating or something? Why do the bullets all have eyes and come straight for me?”

“Maybe,” said Little White, who had the ID Black, suppressing Zhuang Bai with gunfire while waiting for backup. He joked, “Maybe they just want you to go home early and keep your wife company.”

Little Black let out a wail, rubbing his curly hair. “Don’t mention such terrifying things during a match,” he said, clutching his chest. “You’re gonna give me a heart attack.”

“Heart attack or not, you’re dead anyway—won’t make a difference,” said Xiao Blue with malicious glee.

They were joking around, but in reality, Xiao Blue was barely hanging on. More enemies kept swarming the building they were defending, and his teammates were locked in brutal fights on the other side. Even if he wanted to help, he was completely pinned down.

Fortunately, Black came through—after repositioning to a better angle, he took down the lone Sweet, evening the odds to a 3v3.

Desperate to support his teammates, Xiao Blue glanced at their positions and asked, “Sa, why the hell did you run so far?”

LAP and their enemies were fiercely contesting a three-story coastal building—S City’s highest point. But Yang Sa had moved all the way near the church at the edge of the compound.

That spot was far from the rest of the team, with no support nearby. If he ran into enemies there, there was no way the others could come to his aid in time.

“Don’t bother him—Sa has something of his own to take care of,” said Xiao White –Black-, suddenly sounding like a wise sage instead of someone skipping warmups. “Haven’t you noticed? One member of Starcraft hasn’t shown up at all.”

“Mars.” Xiao Blue clamped a hand over his mouth, then frantically pulled the trigger, hoping the sound of his gunfire would cover his slip-up.

Black had no idea what to do with his jumpy teammate—but he didn’t have much time to think, because he now had to face two Xinghai pros on his own. Thankfully, Little Black, who had already been knocked out, was watching from the sidelines and could guide him. Maybe, just maybe, they could do something from the rear to put pressure on the opposing captain.

Yang Sa had no idea what his teammates were planning. Up on the second floor of the church, he crouched in a corner that gave him line of sight in two directions.

The plane flew across the horizon on its scheduled path, and the smoking airdrop began its slow descent.


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 30


Chapter 30 – The Art of Running Away


The ever-changing tides of the battlefield sparked wave after wave of cheers from the audience.

The commentator excitedly said, “Brilliant, absolutely brilliant. We can see that, instead of using the standard rifle tactics during close combat, the two players are exchanging grenades as a sign of mutual respect.”

The playful remark drew hearty laughter from the crowd, easing the tension in an instant.

Pleased with the joyful atmosphere he’d created, the commentator joked, “These top-tier players really go all out—every move is deadly. If this were a palace drama, it would be the final showdown between the Empress and the Noble Consort. As for someone like me, I probably wouldn’t even make it past the opening credits…”

After being eliminated, Yang Sa didn’t immediately spectate his teammates. Instead, he let the screen in front of him slowly fade to grayscale.

In the same scene, Shao Zhan remained motionless as well. He stared at the loot box in front of him, his expression unreadable.

In the ruins, another duel was still ongoing, but even before the outcome was clear, the moment the kill announcement came up, everyone knew that LAP had no chance of winning this round.

With only two members left, there was no way they could beat Starcraft, a three-person team—especially with Mars, known as the number one player in the league, still in the game.

Given the situation, the two foreigners, Blue and Black, didn’t try to fight it out. They tossed every throwable weapon they had, then jumped out of the building and drove off at lightning speed—without a single moment of hesitation, as if they had practiced this exact escape a hundred times.

The spectators outside the game burst into laughter at the two foreigners’ smooth and skillful escape, practically doubling over. Only the commentator, holding his microphone and blinking dramatically with tearful eyes, said: “Teammates, teammates, are you really just going to leave like that? Aren’t you going to avenge your captain? Couldn’t you at least pretend to hesitate a little…?”

The players in the match, of course, couldn’t hear the jokes being made outside the game. Blue, who was driving, took his low-health teammate to an empty house to rest. Just as he was about to catch his breath, he heard the sound of Little Black patting his chest beside him: “Oh my god, that was intense!”

Blue rolled his eyes dramatically and turned to him in exasperation. “You died at the start of the game.”

“I know,” said Black. “I was spectating Sa and keeping an eye on your screen too. One heart wasn’t enough to handle it all—I felt like mine was shattered into eight pieces.”

Blue didn’t even bother to respond. After resupplying some basic resources with Black, he started driving again, heading out ahead of the shrinking play zone.

Strictly speaking, they weren’t exactly escaping the zone—it was more like taking a scenic drive. Wherever the view looked nice, that’s where they went.

If they ran into anyone, they’d fire a couple of shots—just enough to knock someone down—but they didn’t stick around to fight. What was supposed to be a tactical shooter had basically turned into a parkour adventure for the two of them.

But they had their reasons. Their team’s main combat power, Yang Sa, was already eliminated. There was no way the remaining two could win a gunfight against Xinghai’s professional players, so they figured they might as well stay far away.

As long as they didn’t die, the match wouldn’t end.

Driving around enjoying the scenery, warming up their aim with a few random encounters, and easing the tension a bit—all while discussing future tactics.

By leaving the battlefield to the stronger teams, they were hoping that Xinghai might get whittled down by others. Maybe then, they could swoop in and pick up an easy win.

Of course, Xinghai was far too experienced and tactically sharp to fall for that. Under Shao Zhan’s leadership, they dominated the map, wiping out their opponents with overwhelming force.

LAP’s remaining players didn’t make it to the final circle—they were wiped out beforehand. Starcraft, unsurprisingly, claimed the victory.

When the post-match results screen popped up, Tangyuan actually felt a little emotional. Patting his chubby paw, he said, “Wow, it’s finally over.”

Zhuang Bai, sitting beside him, felt the same. Even though Xinghai had won in the end, it had been anything but an easy match.

They’d both played a full round, but the amount of effort each team had to put in was clearly very different.

While Xinghai was conquering cities and expanding their territory, they also had to constantly be on guard against sneak attacks from all directions.

The two remaining LAP members weren’t easy opponents either. They often appeared at unexpected moments, hit and ran, never giving Xinghai the chance to counterattack or surround them.

Even so, they still managed to cause significant trouble for the players on the Starcraft team.

Little Blue—who looked like a cross between a Smurf and an Avatar—snuck up from behind during the chaos of Xinghai’s push on P City and managed to finish off Zhuang Bai. He even nearly took down Tangyuan.

At the foot of G Town’s mountain, LAP was finally wiped out, but Starcraft paid the price of losing all their armor in the process. Only the Starcraft members truly understood how hard-fought that victory was.

The second match began with everyone geared up and ready.

As they soared through the air, Tangyuan stretched his fingers and cracked his neck loudly. “LAP brats, your Fat Grandpa is coming!”

Whether by coincidence or design, the flight path happened to cut horizontally across the bottom of the map.

Shao Zhan marked the Nuclear Power Plant—this location had the richest loot along the flight path and was also the first landing point.

A bloody fight was guaranteed upon landing. As the team’s assaulter, Tangyuan’s eyes gleamed with bloodlust.

But not everyone shared the same fate. Little Black, with his obsessive need for symmetry, twisted his neck as if trying to physically move the map. Slamming the table in frustration, he shouted, “Sa, when are we jumping?!”

Black glanced at him with surprise and admiration. “Whoa, when did you start speaking with a northeastern accent? That was pure Dàchǎzi flavor!”

Little Black grinned smugly. “I found a tutor online—specifically for northeastern dialect.”

“For real?” Little Blue’s usual cool-guy persona instantly cracked. He leaned over and asked, “Where’d you find that teacher?”

“In-game,” Xiao Black replied. “60 yuan an hour, on-call anytime, great service, and the dialect is spot on.”

Little Blue instantly slumped back into his seat and typed up a post on Zhihu: [I really don’t get it—why would anyone learn spoken language with a game tutor?]

Within seconds, dozens of replies popped up:

[Thanks for the invite. Currently in New York, just got off the plane…]

[Thanks for the invite. Currently in the Taklamakan Desert, just got out of a tank…]

[Thanks for the invite. Currently on Mars, just landed from a shuttle…]


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 29


Chapter 29 – Did the Cafeteria Auntie Put Pig Feed in His Food?


Still immersed in his fantasy of shooting birds through a scope, Tangyuan suddenly froze, realizing something. He nudged Zhuang Bai, who was still guarding through his scope: “Did I… just say that out loud?”

Zhuang Bai gave a simple, straightforward answer: “Mm.”

“Why didn’t you warn me?” Tangyuan blurted out, then sneaked a side glance at the man sitting in the team leader’s spot. As he stared, he couldn’t help but wonder: they both grew up eating the same base cafeteria food—so how come that guy turned out so good-looking? He pinched the flesh around his own belly.

D*mn it.

Did the cafeteria auntie spike his food with pig feed?

Completely lost in this sudden conspiracy theory, Tangyuan forgot all about his current predicament—until the big boss spoke again.

“Fatty.” Shao Zhan’s voice was smooth and clear. “Do you want to answer me now, or wait until we’re back at base for a deeper… discussion?”

“I-I-I…” The moment he heard “deeper discussion,” Tangyuan practically had a blowout on the spot. “The ‘despicable’ I mentioned… I meant baby! Like the big-eyed baby! The one from horror movies! Super scary one…”

Shao Zhan, crouching until his legs had gone numb, was planning to mess with his teammate a little more—but a roaring wave of engine noise interrupted his fun.

With sharp eyes, Jiang Ranan was the first to report: “They’re here. Direction W.”

As soon as he finished speaking, the team voice chat returned to its usual icy silence.

No one moved. No one attacked. The vast ruins felt like a dead city.

“Captain, should we engage?” Jiang Ranan, the youngest on the team, was starting to get restless as the enemy vehicles approached.

If they let the opponents get within grenade range, the advantage Xinghai currently held would vanish in an instant.

Faced with the anxious question from his teammate, Shao Zhan simply replied, “No rush.”

In the operations room, Jiang Ranan tilted his head, clearly confused, and looked toward the captain.

But seeing that calm and unbothered look on Shao Zhan’s face, the anxiety in his heart gradually settled down.

When experts clash, it’s not like a reckless gunfight. What’s tested is mindset, strategy, and patience.

At first, Yang Sa had been desperate to win, but with each shot, he quickly adjusted his mentality. His opponent this time was a seasoned veteran, someone who had led his team to win PUBG’s highest honors—he knew he couldn’t let his guard down.

Meanwhile, Shao Zhan was also analyzing his attacker’s mindset. Most players, after a failed ambush, would weaken on their second attempt and break by the third. Or they’d grow impatient during a prolonged standoff and charge in recklessly the next time. But clearly, none of that applied to Yang Sa.

He was calm, controlled, and paced his team’s advance with precision, steadily carrying out the plan laid out from the very start.

Even Shao Zhan, mature beyond his years and known for his composure, couldn’t help but admire Yang Sa’s mental fortitude as LAP’s leader.

But did Yang Sa really think he’d just sit back and let LAP’s convoy drive into grenade range and start planting traps?

Through the scope, Shao Zhan observed a sudden shift in the enemy convoy’s formation.

Just before the change fully took place, Shao Zhan pulled the trigger.

“What the hell, are those two playing hide and seek?” Jie Ao’s captain, Zhou Heng, yawned as he reached out to ask a teammate for some water.

After a moment with no response, he remembered—he was sitting in Xinghai’s area, and the only one nearby was another lazy bastard who was just as used to being waited on as he was.

Faced with the idea of lifting his precious backside to get water himself, he licked his dry lips and decided he’d rather stay thirsty.

The captain of Team Weiguang, sitting beside him, clearly had the same thought. Instead of getting up, he tried to shift the mood with conversation: “If they keep circling like this, the flowers on the battlefield’ll wilt. Do these two even have any competitive spirit?”

Surprisingly, Zhou Heng from Jie Ao agreed for once. “Exactly. Slap a passive gameplay penalty on them. Disqualify them and send them back home.”

“No kidding.” Mu Chen from Weiguang nodded vigorously. He rolled up his sleeves and pointed at the screen. “If they were fighting like they did against Jiao’ao, this match would’ve been over already—”

Zhou Heng cut him off, “Why aren’t you using Weiguang as the example?”

Just hearing that made Zhou Heng’s blood pressure spike. When other teams lost, it stayed internal. But when he lost, not only did he get mocked across the entire internet, he also got turned into a viral meme.

“Well, you know…” Mu Chen chuckled awkwardly, “It just… came out naturally.”

Zhou Heng raised an eyebrow. “What do you mean, ‘Jie Ao came out naturally’?”

“You tell me.” Mu Chen shot him a glance, amusement dancing in his eyes.

Off in a corner, a pair of sharp eyes were quietly observing the Xinghai team’s player section.

Qin Chuan pulled out his little gossip notebook, bit off the pen cap, and started scribbling furiously in the glow of a nearby armrest light: “Those two are definitely hooking up. Definitely hooking up!”

“You really don’t know what I meant?” Zhou Heng asked again.

“How would I know?” Weiguang’s captain nervously swallowed.

With a sudden move, Zhou Heng lifted Mu Chen’s chin. “You… really don’t know?”

“I… I know…”

“Louder.”

Bang!

A gunshot rang out, immediately followed by the battle report:

[Starcraft—Mars knocked down LAP—Killer with an AWM]

As the notification flashed on screen, the remaining vehicles surged forward like mad to shield their injured teammate.

Thick smoke grenades were quickly deployed, and within moments, the convoy disappeared into a dense white fog.

However, the Xinghai players, having already received the signal to attack, began unloading pre-aimed bullets directly into the veil of smoke.

[Starcraft—Sweet knocked down LAP—Blue with a 98K]

[Starcraft—Keen knocked down LAP—White with an AKM]

[LAP—White eliminated Starcraft—River with a frag grenade]

[Starcraft—Keen killed LAP—White with an AKM]

At this point, both teams had lost one player. The situation was unclear, and everything remained hidden in the heavy fog of war.

Spectators at the front rows stared at the big screen, trying to make sense of the battle through the chaos of roaring engines, gunfire, and explosions.

[Starcraft—Sweet knocked down LAP—Black with a 98K]

[LAP—Blue knocked down Starcraft—Keen with a frag grenade]

As Blue, having just been revived, drove to reach Black, Keen rushed forward toward the frontline.

While both sides were focused on emergency revives, a rusty jeep suddenly burst through the northern flank, racing straight into the inner part of the ruins.

Gunfire erupted again as Mars, who had anticipated the enemy’s route, calmly fired a shot to intercept.

Downstairs, Yang Sa wasn’t going to just sit there and take it. The moment he spotted the flash of a barrel at the window, he slammed the gas, switched seats mid-movement, and hurled a grenade using the vehicle’s momentum—landing it perfectly through the target window.

Shao Zhan let out a soft hiss, a hint of regret flashing across his face for missing the last shot. He had watched the bullet spark off the front passenger seat—only to realize Yang Sa had already switched to the back row.

Just as he became aware that he’d missed a rare opportunity for a long-range kill, a grenade rolled to a stop on the floor behind him—boom.

While Shao Zhan turned to heal, he heard rapid footsteps below. He knew there was no avoiding a close-quarters fight with that person.

At the same time, Yang Sa climbed through the window, his heart pounding. After all the games he’d played, all the ground he’d covered, all the shots he’d fired—he had finally earned the right to stand face-to-face with that man.

Upstairs, Shao Zhan carefully repositioned himself, using the sounds of footsteps to pinpoint Yang Sa’s location.

Elsewhere nearby, both teams had entered into close combat. The battle was at a boiling point.

The odds were 50/50—whoever landed the first blow here would secure the win for their team.

Footsteps came to a halt at the top of the stairs, as if aware that a gun was aimed precisely at the empty stairwell.

Shao Zhan smiled faintly and casually cooked a grenade, counting the seconds before tossing it downstairs.

At the same moment, a perfectly timed grenade flew up in return, forcing him to retreat.

As Shao Zhan was falling back, Yang Sa—risking death from the blast—charged the staircase.

Before his feet were even fully planted, he fired in the direction of the retreating steps, based solely on sound.

His speed and fearlessness were so astonishing that even the professional players watching had to admire it.

Two grenades exploded around him, one in front, one behind, bursting into dazzling fire. But that still wasn’t the deadliest part.

What truly left him defenseless… was the man who had been waiting for him all along.

[Starcraft—Mars killed LAP—Killer with an AWM]


LGTC

Let Go of That Captain, Let Me Handle This [Esports] – Chapter 28


Chapter 28 – Who’s Being Despicable?


At the same time, the moment they entered battle mode, Little Blue, Little Black, and Little White surrounded their team leader, their differently colored eyebrows flying with urgency. “So… how do we play this round?”

In different rooms, Yang Sa and Shao Zhan responded almost simultaneously: “We play it how it’s meant to be played.”

“This… probably isn’t…” Tangyuan cautiously bit the collar of his shirt, his chubby body twisting as if about to take off. “…a good idea.”

“What’s not good about it?” Shao Zhan asked in confusion. He curled his long fingers and gave each teammate a knock on the forehead, then pushed open the door and entered. “Get your spirits up. LAP isn’t an easy team to deal with.”

In another operations room just ten meters away from Team Xinghai, Yang Sa stood with his arms crossed.
“Win first before you start boasting.”

His lips curled in their usual sneer—but this time, the target wasn’t someone else.

“Xinghai is a formidable opponent. That person…”

Yang Sa didn’t finish his sentence. He knew too well that beneath Shao Zhan’s refined appearance hid a terrifying strength.

Facing Xinghai, he wasn’t confident in winning. But the match had just begun—who said he didn’t stand a chance at fighting them on equal footing?

“It’s starting.”

The team captains calmly issued instructions to their players.

The plane drew a sharp straight line down the map. The flight path was short, concentrating the teams more closely, which typically meant fiercer battles.

“Does it have to be this intense?” Tangyuan fiddled miserably with his headset, muttering under his breath, “This is just the first round…”

Captain Shao Zhan remained unfazed, silently studying the map he already knew by heart.

He was a skilled fighter, but he never rushed into battle.

He was using the flight path to guess the opponent’s strategy. After a few rounds, LAP’s strength was obvious to all—they could no longer rely on eccentric appearances to catch the enemy off guard.

Against a strong opponent, most teams would focus on early-game development and wait for a chance to exploit Xinghai’s weaknesses.

Shao Zhan marked a spot on the map. He wanted to test for himself just how much that long-absent boy had improved.

At the same time, in a different operations room, Little Black, also suffering under his headset, irritably fiddled with the mic. All ten of his fingers were covered in flashy gemstone rings. He smacked his lips in frustration and tilted his head.

“This flight path sucks. Straight lines drive me crazy.”

Yang Sa was unaffected. He had studied this map overnight before—every resource point, every garage along the route, was etched into his mind.

He was guiding the enemy’s thoughts—because he knew that right now, Shao Zhan must be trying to read his.

When facing a team as strong as Xinghai, most teams would choose to avoid conflict early on. They’d focus on farming in the wild areas, hoping to leverage superior equipment to gain the upper hand in later fights.

That’s how most people think—and Shao Zhan would surely expect it. But Yang Sa refused to give him that chance. He was determined to take the fight to Xinghai head-on.

No one at the scene knew it, but if this cold-faced young man were sitting at a poker table, he would undoubtedly be the wildest gambler of them all.

He was familiar with Shao Zhan’s tactical style. At least in this match, he was certain Shao Zhan wouldn’t launch an aggressive early game—after all, Xinghai’s players had just come off a previous match and needed some buffer time to adjust their rhythm.

Since Xinghai wanted to take it easy, Yang Sa wasn’t going to let them.

He marked the air-raid shelter at the center of the map—a location that allowed easy access whether Xinghai jumped to M City below or to Y City in the opposite direction.

He had no time to waste on slowly gearing up at the airport. He was here for a showdown with that person.

Following Yang Sa’s instructions, LAP hit the ground like unleashed tigers. Wherever they went, enemies fell into boxes one after another.

Watching the flood of kill announcements on screen, Tangyuan quietly rubbed his feet together.
“Uh, Captain… didn’t we drop a bit off the usual route?”

While LAP dominated the kill feed, the Xinghai team was still high up at 10,000 meters, enjoying the view.

Jiang Ranan wore the same worried expression, nodding repeatedly in agreement.

Only Shao Zhan adjusted his equipment unhurriedly, his reaction speed rivaling a dinosaur’s. After a moment, he finally responded, “What did you say?”

“I said…” Tangyuan took a deep breath, but the moment he saw Shao Zhan’s look, all his bravado deflated.
“Nothing, I didn’t say anything. Just pretend I farted.”

In that moment, Tangyuan felt like he was being overly fussy. Whether the team was good, whether the marker was right, how the match went—what business was that of his? He was just a stuffed rice ball, only useful during Lantern Festival. No need to think, just close his eyes and play.

But Zhuang Bai, silent as always, had already figured out Shao Zhan’s intentions.

Yang Sa had stirred up the entire Jiangling esports scene with his team—but had carefully avoided Xinghai the whole time. That likely wasn’t just out of fear of the team’s strength… but of a certain someone.

Now that they were face to face, whether it was part of the plan or not, there was no backing down. If there were grudges, they’d be settled. If there were debts, they’d be repaid.

If it were an ordinary person, they’d naturally try to buy time to gear up before engaging in battle. But Yang Sa wasn’t just any ordinary person. It was no surprise that he’d want to go straight for Xinghai right from the start. Besides, LAP had been winning back-to-back matches and was riding high on momentum. With that surge of morale, a swift and decisive attack might just lead to victory.

Shao Zhan had accurately guessed Yang Sa’s eagerness to fight, which was why he chose the mountaintop ruins at the edge of the map. Though the loot there wasn’t the most abundant, its high elevation gave it a natural advantage.

Of course, it still depended on how the safe zone shrank—but from the looks of it, some people wouldn’t wait for the circle to close before coming to trouble Xinghai.

After landing, the frontline player Tangyuan quickly took out enemies who had dropped at the same mountain peak. Shao Zhan and Zhuang Bai scouted the area for weapons, while Jiang Ranan headed to the vehicle spawn point to find a car.

If it weren’t for being on a battlefield, Tangyuan would’ve thought he’d wandered into a farming novel. Life here was just too peaceful—sunbathing, enjoying the breeze, and when you got bored, you could take a drive and admire the scenery. If it weren’t for the occasional appearance of a few little robots to spice things up, he might’ve actually dozed off.

Meanwhile, as Tangyuan blissfully imagined himself in a farming simulator, LAP’s team was locked in a bitter struggle.

Climbing up from the lower-middle portion of the map wasn’t something that could be accomplished in one go.

Comparing the battle reports with the map, Yang Sa realized he’d made a miscalculation. He had guessed Shao Zhan would avoid early conflict—he just hadn’t expected him to be this thorough about it.

The plan to intercept Xinghai had to be postponed. LAP had no choice but to hone their aim and wear down opponents over several rounds, waiting for the final showdown.

Yang Sa knew as well: the more he chased a fight, the more the other side would avoid it.

That guy was really…

“Despicable!” came Tangyuan’s curse in the otherwise calm team voice chat.

Driving a blue Dicia toward the rendezvous point with the others, Jiang Ranan coughed lightly. Seeing that Tangyuan was still stuck in his own little fantasy, unaware of how serious the situation had become, he suddenly turned up the in-car speaker volume.

Startled, Tangyuan jumped and yelled, “Jiang Ranan, are you crazy?!”

Mission accomplished, Jiang Ranan turned off the speaker, jumped out of the car, and rejoined the teammates hidden in the building. He distributed the loot he had picked up from an airdrop zone along the way.

“Fatty,” came a deep voice over the team channel, accompanied by Jiang Ranan’s light footsteps.
“Who exactly are you calling despicable?”