Yan Chuan wielded his sword to counter once again.
In this manner, the two exchanged blows, sending one sword after another. In an instant, they had exchanged over fifty moves. The two treasured swords would occasionally clash and separate, at times not even coming into contact, relying solely on exquisite swordsmanship to measure and counter each other's techniques.
Yan Chuan's "Dugu Nine Swords" triumphed in 'no move beats a move', not restrained by techniques.
Meanwhile, Gong Zhao Wen's swordsmanship excelled in its extremely complex transformations, making it difficult for anyone to see clearly.
Before the "Dugu Nine Swords", against the 'Break Sword Style', all swordsmanships had flaws. Gong Zhao Wen's swordsmanship was no exception; his swordsmanship also had flaws.
However, his techniques transformed unpredictably, sometimes fast, sometimes slow, making it hard for Yan Chuan to exploit any flaws.
Yan Chuan's sword moves shifted at will.