Resurrection Empire-Chapter 23 - 17 Reality Compels Me to Lay Down the Pen and Join the Army [A 5000-Word Mega Chapter, Thanks to the Alliance Hierarch, Orange!]

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Chapter 23: Chapter 17 Reality Compels Me to Lay Down the Pen and Join the Army [A 5000-Word Mega Chapter, Thanks to the Alliance Hierarch, Orange!]

The basic information repository didn't have much useful information; it was essentially just the company profile and recruitment advertisements of the Deep Communication Group.

The entire text boasted about how powerful and long-standing the Deep Communication Group is, proclaiming how proud one should be to become an employee of the Deep Communication Group, and how good the benefits are, and so forth.

Although the advertisement was not substantive, Ren Zhong still gleaned quite a bit of information from the "advertisement" by ruminating on it.

This planet indeed is not called Earth, but Source Star.

The current calendar is called the New Origin Calendar, implemented more than six hundred years ago, and now it is the year 682 of the New Origin Calendar.

The source of this c𝐨ntent is freёnovelkiss.com.

A year on the New Origin Calendar is almost the same length of time as a year on Earth, not much different.

Calculating this way, the auxiliary brain wrist watch has been around for 264 years.

The Deep Communication Group, having invented the wrist watch, truly wasn't exaggerating; they really are a three-hundred-year-old establishment with astonishing depth.

After browsing through the basic information repository, Ren Zhong then clicked on the professional teaching system, which recorded the characteristics of the five major personal professions and their foundational basics.

These five professions were perfectly represented in Zheng Tian's team of five: mechanical warrior, armored soldier, gunsmith, blast master, and demolition master.

Ren Zhong wondered if this was a coincidence, or if Zheng Tian had big ambitions. When she formed the team, she specifically considered and emphasized the professional ratio.

Ren Zhong roughly went over the entry requirements for each profession.

A mechanical warrior needs a relatively strong physique, excellent body coordination, good dynamic vision, a well-developed cerebellum, and extremely high psychological qualities. Most importantly, it's the neural network's capacity to carry external biological electric signals, commonly known as the brain-machine synchronization rate, which must be at least 10% by the age of sixteen to possibly meet the basic entry requirements.

The armored soldier has no requirements for body or brain; the strict selection criteria are directly at the genetic level.

The gunsmith requires extremely high vision, excellent dynamic vision, a good sense of direction, and decent physical fitness.

The blast master has high intelligence requirements, needing to memorize a large amount of explosive performance characteristics. Additionally, they need to conduct fluid dynamics-like rapid calculations during explosive processes to know how to make the blasts as cost-effective as possible while achieving the best effect.

The demolition master needs a pair of dexterous and precise hands, also requiring them to be very familiar with the various types and structures of ruined beasts, resembling a combination of a surgeon and a zoologist.

Ren Zhong found these descriptions somewhat strange; the demand for human brain capabilities in each profession was emphasized too heavily.

He didn't believe that there weren't any auxiliary intelligences out there to assist in these calculations; a lot of brain-intensive work could actually be handed over to computers, which could do it better and faster.

Since the fact isn't so, the only inference is that when dealing with high-rank ruined beasts, computers are not reliable enough, which is why these professions start training one's own abilities at the early stages.

Ren Zhong had another new doubt.

These five professions seem to be separate fields with distinct duties, but actually, they are like single soldier classes, similar to professions like electric welders, plasterers, appliance repairers, or chefs, just with different divisions of labor.

But in Ren Zhong's understanding, professions of this level should merely be the tip of the iceberg in the grand social division of labor, not to be treasured so much as to be included in the wrist watch at the level of fundamental knowledge systems.

The only explanation is that if ordinary people can become one of these five professions, they then possess the ability to hunt ruined beasts, no longer being complete useless individuals.

This world's societal structure only requires ordinary people to figure out ways to hunt ruined beasts.

Ren Zhong closed the content of the professional teaching system.

He had little interest in these professions; it was his nature.

He was born in New China, grew up under the red flag, and the first half of his life was about changing his destiny through studying.

He never liked arguing or fighting with peers since childhood; he preferred to score tens of points above the second-place in every exam and then watch those people get angry and frustrated with no way out.

His gift was navigating through the ocean of knowledge; he was born to be a scholar.

The family education his parents instilled in him was also hoping that he would study well, become a knowledgeable, cultured, and aspiring young man.

His longing for knowledge could even surpass his desire for the opposite sex.

His world was not about fights and dealings, but the tenacity in studying, where the pursuit of knowledge was endless.