Do you still remember the touching moment that Slam Dunk brought us? Although our youth has passed, the memories will never cease.
This is a very simple Slam Dunk fan fiction, which simply writes down things that I have fantasized about more than once, and uses a clumsy method to reminisce about my childhood.
If some of the things here are also what you have dreamed of, I am glad that they resonate with you. If what is written here is completely different from what you have imagined, please forgive me.
[Ding! Congratulations on fusing with the Ronaldo template!] Lin Chuan, sitting on the Bayer Leverkusen U19 bench, was overjoyed to have obtained the Ronaldo template. The result... was Ronaldo from 2015! The fused version was the 39-year-old Ronaldo. While possessing top-notch ball skills, his stamina was only 15; acceleration 25; and reaction time 25. His physical condition was completely at the level of an average middle-aged man. [Ding! Ronaldo career simulation begins...] [Ding! In the past 10 seconds, you have experienced Ronaldo's complete career in first-person perspective...] It turns out that what was fused wasn't just technique and physique... but also Ronaldo's experience... [Ding! Completed the first goal in the Youth League, reward...]
Reporter: "Mr. Chihara, everyone says you are a living legend, the pinnacle of human intellect, and the contemporary god of Go. How did you achieve such success? What lessons can ordinary people learn from you?"
Hiroshi Chihara: "As Edison once said, genius—"
Reporter: "I know that one percent is inspiration and ninety-nine percent is hard work. Mr. Chihara, are you saying that as long as you put in diligence and effort, you can succeed, right?"
Hiroshi Chihara's gaze was as if he were caring for a child with intellectual disabilities, and the reporter couldn't help but lower his head in shame.
"There is another sentence: 'But that one percent inspiration is the most important, even more important than the ninety-nine percent perspiration.'"
What I really want to say is that my experience is useless to ordinary people because—
general...