Chapter 553: Showdown, I Have Superpowers

Chapter 553: Laying My Cards on the Table, I Have Superpowers

Meng Fan's enhanced five senses stemmed from all three precision stats exceeding twenty, but beyond that, it was also a synthesis of other abilities.

Now possessing extraordinarily keen senses, could he truly reverse-engineer them into training?

Yes!

Meng Fan had indeed consulted a vast array of training methods for sensory enhancement and, combining them with his own experience, devised a set of Meng-style Five Senses Enhancement Training. After systematic, effective, and long-term practice, the five senses would be greatly improved, far surpassing any existing methods on the market.

Could one reach Meng Fan's level?

That was hard to say—it truly depended on talent and effort.

In fact, after Meng Fan had summarized this training method, he used it himself and indeed improved through practice.

Once he confirmed its effectiveness, he took it to the shooting and archery teams for the coaches to reference. Since those teams already trained in focus and other areas, parts of this method were incorporated into their daily routines.

It was still undergoing repeated trials and experiments; if proven effective, it would be promoted across multiple fields.

"Regarding the training for sensory enhancement, we've actually already promoted it on a small scale," Meng Fan said, seeing the top athletes' expressions grow more eager and excited, so he spoke frankly. "Whether this method works for others besides me is still in the data collection phase. If it proves clearly effective, the scope of promotion will expand. If you want to learn it, of course you can."

As they walked toward the next hole, Meng Fan briefly introduced the current promotion status of the five senses enhancement training. After playing two more holes—this time with a longer distance between them—Meng Fan, seeing everyone's overwhelming curiosity about sensory enhancement, decided to demonstrate from another angle.

"The five senses, five simplest demonstrations."

"First, sight." Meng Fan asked one of the athletes for his phone, then had the caddie walk far away, about a hundred meters, and stand still. He then asked for that athlete's phone number and had another athlete on site call it.

The call connected quickly.

Meng Fan said to the caddie a hundred meters away, "Turn the phone screen this way."

When the screen turned around, everyone looked. The phone a hundred meters away already seemed tiny, let alone its screen. In broad daylight, they couldn't even see the screen light up.

At that moment, Meng Fan read out the phone number being dialed!

Everyone was stunned.

He could see that?!

Unbelievable!

Was it a setup?

They switched to a more prestigious athlete to make the call, and Meng Fan still read it out—completely correct!

They tried another, and it was the same.

"My god, is that eagle eyes?"

"No, it's clairvoyance!"

A hundred meters might not sound far, but those present knew exactly how terrifying that distance was for reading a string of numbers.

Generally, a person can only see things clearly at about three meters; six meters is basically the limit. For a normal-sized character in a book, seeing it clearly at three meters is considered excellent vision. Meng Fan was now over a hundred meters away.

"Second, hearing."

"Each of you record a single word on your phone, then play them all together. I can distinguish every word and also tell which word came from which person."

……

"Third, smell. Everyone must have heard of 'Scent of a Woman'…"

…….

Each of Meng Fan's subsequent demonstrations resembled the highest difficulty challenges on "The Brain," except that he needed some preparation and not many props. The key was that as soon as he roughly stated the "challenge rules," he immediately executed and quickly succeeded, with no pauses in between—very smooth.

With the five senses demonstration concluded, the game also ended. As for Meng Fan's final score, aside from the camera equipment still recording, everyone else had selectively chosen not to know—it was too demoralizing!

The world record had been slashed in half, believe it or not!

This charity event was broadcast live—CCTV5 covered parts, and online platforms streamed the entire event.

Domestic netizens and golf fans watched the whole thing dumbfounded, completely unable to find words to describe their feelings. Unlike most professional players, after watching, no one thought, "The gap is too big, I'll quit." Instead, their golf spirit blazed, and they immediately went to find a course to practice.

Abroad, after watching the live stream, replays, or highlight reels, most people were skeptical. Sure, Meng Fan was awesome—five Olympic golds, unbeatable in combat sports—but this was too exaggerated. Even if Meng Fan held world records in precision throwing like shooting, that didn't mean he could do the same in precision striking like golf. Even if he were really good, he couldn't be that boastful!

This was no longer just sensory enhancement; he might as well say he had superpowers.

And those top golf athletes—had they no shame, cooperating in such a fraud? Did Meng Fan threaten them, saying he'd beat them up if they didn't cooperate?

You are world-class athletes; you should have integrity. How could you be threatened?

Yes, how could they be threatened?

Then was it all real?

Damn, it was real!

Some doubts never even reached Meng Fan before they self-destructed!

After this globally shocking charity event, domestic precision sports training programs more or less incorporated the Meng-style Five Senses Enhancement Training. Later, multiple foreign training teams or coaches came to learn advanced techniques and experience. From then on, various precision events successively initiated new technical and rule reforms from the outside in.

In domestic and international sports textbooks, various versions of the "Meng-style Training Method" appeared, organized, simplified, or localized, covering fields including but not limited to strength, combat, and precision. But in terms of significance and influence, the "Meng-style Training Method" had far surpassed Meng Fan's championship and record achievements in various fields.

Some meddlesome print media, when reporting this, proposed that the General Administration of Sport should award Meng Fan the title "Sports Saint"—equivalent to the Go Association awarding the title "Go Saint."

Basically, no one paid attention to this; it was probably felt that the title "Sports Saint" didn't sound as good as "Iron God."

Additionally, some netizens edited together footage of Meng Fan's golf game, sensory enhancement demonstrations, and previous competition clips into a ten-minute highlight reel of Meng Fan's high-energy moments, titled—"Laying My Cards on the Table, I Have Superpowers!"

Once uploaded, the video was shared domestically, then went abroad, where it was reposted wildly. Domestic netizens, seeing various reports and astonishment from foreign websites, felt a sense of accustomed complacency while also thinking that foreign netizens were a bit inexperienced.

(End of chapter)

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