Chapter 175

Scott stood up and drew the bedroom curtains tight.

He reached out his hand and took out a piece of silver-white metal from the deformed lizard skin pouch on his waist.

It's a piece of titanium alloy.

Titanium is an important structural metal developed in the 20s.

Titanium alloy has high strength, good corrosion resistance and high heat resistance.

The titanium alloy in Scott's hand was obtained by Michael through some channels after he made a request.

It is said that it was made by the British Space Agency, but it is not known whether it is true or not.

Scott had experimented with the titanium alloy once he got it.

Although using this material as the material of the transformation technique will make his transformation technique products much stronger, it is difficult to be broken by ordinary spells.

But correspondingly, the difficulty of performing the technique will also rise linearly.

Scott has deformed many materials over the years to experiment.

Among the single materials, the one he uses most easily is of course ebony, which is the same material as his wand.

The most difficult technique is the titanium alloy.

Of course, he has not tried diamond, which is known as the hardest natural substance.

Because he dared not touch his parents' wedding rings.

At this time, Scott was holding a one-time magic stone in his hand, which made him a lot more courageous.

He decided to use titanium alloy as the deformation material to endow Rimbaud, who is about to be born, with a solid body.

Putting the silver-white titanium alloy on the table, Scott took a deep breath, chanted a spell, and waved his wand firmly.

The light of the Transfiguration Charm connected the titanium alloy on the table with the wand in Scott's hand.

Under the shroud of that ray of light, the piece of titanium alloy began to slowly deform at an extremely slow speed.

Scott held the wand, gritted his teeth and persisted for nearly a minute before the piece of titanium alloy on the table completely turned into the shape of a raven.

Such a deformation speed is also the reason why Scott basically does not use metal as a deformation material in battle.

This, he thought, was also the reason why no one made wands out of metal.

After all, the magic conductivity of metal is far worse than that of wood.

Looking at the silver titanium alloy raven on the table, Scott didn't directly use Transfiguration to bring it back to life.

Scott, with a Philosopher's Stone in his hand, was not satisfied with this, and he decided to use his achievements in ancient runes during this period of time here because of his lack of greed.

It's just that it is very difficult to inscribe ancient runes on such a hard material.

If Scott uses the previous method, it will not work at all.

But Scott wasn't unprepared.

He walked to his bookcase and took out a notebook and opened it.

This notebook records several rune circuits that he determined through repeated experiments.

The so-called rune circuit is a combination of runes that is different from a single rune, and its effect will be far greater than that of a single rune.

In the magic world, those more powerful magic items are undoubtedly a combination of complex rune circuits and alchemy.

But it is a pity that many ancient and powerful rune circuit combinations have been lost.

According to Professor Babling, only the ancient pure-blood wizard family may still have some.

Before his death, Travers also said that most of the trump cards in the hands of those pure-blood families are a powerful magic item.

Professor Babling told Scott that with such magic items in hand, pure-blood wizards can master the rune circuits inscribed on some magic items to a certain extent.

This is part of the pure-blood family heritage.

Wizarding families with a long history often possess knowledge and secrets that others cannot learn.

This is the source of the pure blood's sense of superiority, and the real reason why they look down on other wizards.

As for lineage?
That's just a slogan and a brainwashing tactic.

Don't you care about bloodlines without watching Medea?

Scott always felt that the first person to put forward the theory of blood was a genius.

He deliberately attributed some reasons to blood, which may actually be disintegrating the fighting spirit of wizards of other origins.

Since everything is born, what is the use of trying?

As for those idiots clamoring about the theory of blood, it is purely the result of telling too many lies and believing them themselves.

Of course, in fact, Scott can only think about these words secretly, and he has no evidence to confirm this guess.

And part of the reason for thinking this way was because he was so sour.

As long as he remembered that those pure-blood families possessed unique inheritance knowledge, he would have the urge to loot their homes.

Scott flipped through the notebook in his hand and withdrew his flying thoughts.

The several rune circuits he has now mastered are nothing more than the simplest high-end goods. It is thanks to Professor Flitwick's face that Professor Babling did not hide his secrets.

Just this.

Scott turned to a page in his notebook.

Raven is a small animal, and Scott didn't want Rimbaud to have a strong frontal combat capability.

He wanted him to act as his eyeliner more, and he also focused on sneak attacks during battles.

Therefore, the main function of speeding up the rune circuit with some hidden effects is very suitable.

The next difficulty he faced was how to engrave runes on the titanium alloy.

Scott didn't have a tool that could leave a mark on titanium, so he had to find another way.

He took out a marker pen, and first carefully drew the rune circuit on the body of the titanium alloy raven.

After this step was completed, the silver-white raven with black patterns on its body already had a sense of mystery.

Of course, this is just an illusion.

The ancient runes painted in this way have no effect.

Scott picked up his wand and waved it again, transfiguring the titanium raven with Polymorph.

This time the transformation technique was delicate work, he carefully controlled the magic power, and used the transformation method to make the strokes of the magic script drawn on the surface of the raven into grooves.

After another minute or so, he withdrew his wand, panting slightly.

He reached out to pick up the raven, and stroked the indented rune on it with his fingers.

Of course, at this point, these magic texts are still just in appearance.

The real rune circuit cannot be formed so easily, and the method of inscription must also be exquisite, and it needs to use magic power to integrate them.

Putting down the raven, Scott directly took out a disposable needle.

Without saying a word, he plunged into his own blood vessel and drew out a tube full of blood.

After withdrawing the needle, he used a Band-Aid to stop the bleeding and rested for a while.

Wizard's blood is of course also a magical material.

Scott held the raven in one hand and the needle in the other, and moved to the side of the magic lamp.

He began to use the needle tube as a pen, and his own blood as ink, filling the grooves of the magic writing strokes on Raven's body stroke by stroke.

His movements are slow and smooth, not unfamiliar, and at the same time, he uses his own magic power to communicate with the magic power contained in the blood, maintaining the vitality of the blood.

When he finished "writing" the last stroke, the rune circuit that was finally integrated by the magic power lit up slightly red, giving the silver-white raven a touch of evil spirit.

(End of this chapter)

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