The inhalation was still very light. After closing the door, Lan Zhe saw Egbert who did not take any action.
Lan Zhe blinked and said, "I thought you should squat in some corner or something and practice hard."
"That's what you think." Egbert denied this.
"I do want to become stronger," Egbert admitted, "but I already know that the existing means of becoming stronger are destined to be unable to surpass the monsters that civilization controls."
Lan Zhe was stunned for a moment and suddenly asked: "So, you have an idea?"
Egbert nodded and shook his head.
He said, "But this question should at least be asked to Custer, who has studied Lord Sully's blood."
Egbert had a guess.
The blood of monsters has long been mixed into the blood of humans.
But the only thing the blood of monsters grants to humans is elemental affinity.
There is no increase in lifespan and no improvement in other special skills.
This bloodline simply provides humans with the qualification to cultivate the elements.
But what if humans give up this qualification? Will the elements really just be special forces that can no longer be controlled?
Egbert is more inclined to believe that when humans choose to abandon the part of their bloodline that is mixed with monster blood, humans will not be unable to continue to cultivate the elements.
A ball of light appeared in Egbert's palm, and he could clearly feel every trace of the light element moving in his body, in his cells, and in his blood vessels.
Are these really just things brought by the blood of monsters?
Egbert thought that perhaps originally, humans were also qualified to cultivate the elements. It was just that the sudden behavior of the monsters distorted the development of humans that should have existed.
The author has something to say: