As Arun's immortal dynasty carved its dominion over the fractured north, the most formidable challenge rose in the form of the Tripartite Struggle—a fierce contest for northern India's throne involving the Palas from Bengal, the Pratiharas from Gurjaradesa, and the rising Rashtrakutas from the Deccan. This war for supremacy centered on the coveted city of Kannauj, gateway to political and economic control.Arun's forces faced relentless conflict with the Palas, led by their stalwart Dharmapala and his son Devapala, masters of the eastern plains with vast armies and cultural influence. Simultaneously, the Pratiharas under Nagabhata II surged westward, wielding power over key trade routes and fortified towns. Between these titans, Arun maneuvered with unmatched strategy, his centuries of war experience and command block sorcery turning tides.In pitched battles stretching from the Gangetic plains to central India, Arun's troops used rapid fortification tactics—roads and defense works erected overnight, supplies teleported with command block efficiency. While Palas and Pratiharas fought exhausting war of attrition, Arun struck with lightning precision, seizing weak allies, cutting supply lines, and deploying hidden command block traps within the terrain.Kannauj became a chessboard where mortal ambitions clashed against an immortal will. Time and again, Arun's immortal soul, passed down through his descendants, drew from the experiences of thousands of battles to predict enemy moves.Despite fierce resistance, Arun's armies made relentless gains, gradually reuniting northern India's fragmented kingdoms into a cohesive empire under his secret immortal dynasty. Still, the war forged deep scars—the soil soaked with blood, alliances transient, and rivalries eternal.Yet, with every victory, Arun's vision of an unyielding northern bastion grew clearer—a land guarded by the unbreakable bedrock wall and pulsing with the unseen power of command blocks, a realm where his eternal soul could rule through endless generations