VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA

Chapter 709 - 709: From Cramped Walls to Open Markets



For a moment, Ryoma doesn’t respond. His expression shifts slowly. The childish lightness from earlier fades without resistance, replaced by something contained.

His eyes settle into focus, his posture straightens slightly, and what remains is a quiet, firm stillness, like he has moved out of personal feeling and into calculation.

When he speaks, his tone is steady. “…When are we getting the money?”

The question lands in the room without emotion, that he shows not concern with Kenta’s situation.

Nakahara’s brows twitch slightly, a subtle sign of displeasure that he doesn’t voice. Hiroshi glances at Ryoma with a faint confusion, as if the shift in tone doesn’t quite match the conversation they were just having.

Kurogane, however, answers without hesitation, though his expression tightens as he does. “Not immediately,” he says. “They still need to collect all the payments first before transferring our share. There are still a few pending settlements from other parties. Nothing unusual. It’s normal at this stage since the fight only happened four days ago.”

The explanation is factual, but the room doesn’t fully relax with it. Ryoma simply nods once, as if confirming something for himself rather than acknowledging the delay.

“We should adjust the capital,” Ryoma says, looking toward Nakahara. “Increase the reserve fund to one million dollars.”

He pauses briefly, then continues in the same calm tone. “If we’re going to operate at this level from now on, keeping the capital at its current size doesn’t make sense anymore. We’ll be dealing with bigger fights, bigger promoters. This needs to scale properly.”

His gaze shifts slightly as he adds, “And we should give bonuses to Aramaki and Kenta. The success of the Alvarez event still has something to do with them.”

Nakahara’s eyes narrow slightly. “So you think… giving Kenta more money will fix what’s happening with him?”

Ryoma meets his gaze without hesitation. “I’m not trying to fix anything. I just think they deserve it. Whether Kenta quits or not is his decision. He’s older than me. It’s not my place to manage his life. If anyone can talk to him properly, it’s you.”

Nakahara exhales slowly through his nose, the tension easing just a fraction as he looks away.

“…That’s fair,” he says finally.

Ryoma pushes himself away from the sofa, as if the discussion is naturally coming to an end. But before he fully leaves, Kurogane speaks again.

“What about us?” he asks, trying to keep his tone light. “And the assistants? Hiroshi, Sera, the sparring guys… are they included in any bonus from this?”

Ryoma stops mid-step. When he turns, his expression is flat, grounded. “This is investment profit. Not event revenue. Alvarez’s event wasn’t run by us. Nobody here produced it, promoted it, or controlled it. This return exists only because Nakahara and I put our personal capital into it.”

Nakahara lets out a small breath through his nose, somewhere between agreement and resignation.

“That’s how it is,” he says quietly. “Even if the return is absurd compared to what we did at Yoyogi.”

His eyes shift toward Kurogane. “But don’t misunderstand. Your involvement in preparing Ryoma for the Manila fight, that will still be rewarded. Just not from this pool.”

He leans back slightly. “That will come from the gym’s operational budget, not the investment profit.”

Then Nakahara turns back to Ryoma. “What do you think, kid? Should we give them something a bit above the usual bonus?”

Ryoma shrugs lightly. “I don’t mind. You decide how much.”

That settles it without further debate. He turns toward the door again, ending the conversation as if it has naturally reached its limit.

But at the doorway, he stops, lingering for a moment in silence. Then he turns back, and his expression shifts again, lighter now, almost careless, the same naive ease returning briefly.

“I think we should find a new place,” he says. “The number of members lately is making this gym feel too cramped.”

Nakahara doesn’t answer immediately. Instead, he glances toward Hiroshi and Sera. Hiroshi gives a small shrug, as if the idea is obvious rather than surprising. Sera follows a second later, also shrugging, then nodding once in agreement.

Nakahara exhales quietly through his nose. “That part I can’t argue with,” he says.

Kurogane leans forward slightly from the desk, already thinking in structure rather than sentiment.

“I agree with Ryoma,” he adds. “If we’re expanding anyway, it doesn’t make sense to stay in a space like this.”

He gestures faintly, as if outlining the idea in the air. “We should move into a two-story building. Ground floor for the gym and training space. Second floor for management, promotion operations, and office work. It separates functions properly. We’re already operating at a level where we need that distinction.”

Nakahara listens without interrupting, then gives a slow, approving nod. “That’s reasonable. We’re already past the point where everything should be running out of a single room.”

Ryoma shifts his weight slightly at the doorframe, still half inside the room, half outside of it.

“We don’t need to rent,” he says casually. “We can just buy something. With the money we just made, there’s no point treating this like a temporary step anymore. We already have the capital for it.”

For a brief moment, Nakahara looks at him, measuring the simplicity of the statement against what it actually implies.

***

The number of 1.7 million dollars, the revenue from Japan broadcasting alone, would normally sound excessive for a regional unification bout. But in this case, it doesn’t feel inflated so much as carried by momentum that never properly stopped.

Even days after the fight, Japan is still moving inside the same current Ryoma created. The unification of the OPBF and WBO Asia Pacific titles is no longer the center of attention. It is only the structure around something larger, something harder to categorize.

Because what people are still watching is not just a boxer winning belts. It is Ryoma Takeda as a figure who survived something he was not supposed to survive.

A fighter tied to a training camp incident that escalated into violence. A man who entered a fight already marked by attempted injury, already surrounded by speculation, already discussed in the same tone usually reserved for scandals rather than sport.

The narrative around him is no longer technical. It is emotional, fragmented, and constantly replayed through different angles depending on who is talking. That is what broadcasters are still feeding off.

On one late-night sports program, the footage reappears again, the clip of the incident, slowed down, zoomed in, analyzed frame by frame. The commentators present it as something the audience has already accepted, something they are simply revisiting because it refuses to lose relevance.

“This moment changed everything,” one of them says, voice steady but careful, as the screen freezes on the split second before the escalation. “You don’t come out of something like this and return as just another contender.”

Another program takes a different approach; a talk segment framed around conspiracy rather than sport. They discuss the pattern of resistance around Ryoma’s career path, the way doors seemed to close around him.

“If you look at the timing,” one guest says, “it doesn’t look like coincidence anymore. It looks like structure. Like someone is trying to slow him down.”

Even news broadcasts, usually more restrained, cannot avoid the shift in tone. A segment is built around a podcast clip that has been circulating online, one that argues Ryoma has already crossed the threshold from rising contender to unavoidable title trajectory.

The voice from the podcast plays over supporting visuals of his fights, training clips, and the post-incident media chaos.

“He’s not optional anymore,” the host in the clip says. “At this point, whether people want him in that title picture or not, it’s just a matter of time. The WBO title fight isn’t a question of if. It’s a question of when.”

On screen, the broadcast cuts back to the studio anchors, who do not challenge the statement directly. Instead, they frame it as “a growing sentiment within boxing circles.”

That is exactly why the 1.7 million dollars from Japan holds its weight. It is no longer simply payment for a fight, but payment for attention that keeps regenerating on its own, refusing to fade even after the event ends.

Because Ryoma is no longer being watched as a champion-in-progress. He is being watched as a disruption moving toward inevitability.


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