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View allLet's grow any plant you want, anywhere!
A vast prairie where lush grass and flowers blanket the earth in green, with nothing to obstruct the view.
At the horizon of the endlessly stretching plains, the sun and moon rise without rest,
and the blue sky serves as a roof for the many who live on the grasslands.
Serun, a student in the Element department at Magiya, is a black-haired girl from the prairies.
She adored the grasses, flowers, shrubs, and fruits that grew on the prairie, and she wanted to give her livestock beautiful and delicious plants regardless of the season.
After much deliberation on how to provide lovely grass and flowers, the girl resolved to study 'magic that could grow any plant she wanted, anywhere' and submitted her application to the magic academy 'Magiya.'
Magiya had only one admission requirement: the ability to sense 'Akasha,' the source of power that makes magic possible. As long as you could sense Akasha, Magiya's gates stood wide open for anyone to come and pursue their own magical research.
Fortunately, while not exceptionally talented, Serun could sense and use Akasha, so she was admitted to Magiya. The moment she completed the foundational magic course in Nechinet, she joined the Element department.
The magic to grow desired plants was related to the life of plants, but since growing plants requires borrowing the power of earth and water, Serun had deliberated over whether to join Vogue or Element. After consulting with her Nechinet professor, she chose Element.
Three years of research in Element later, Serun finally found the key to the magic she sought.
By recording the biological data of the seed she wished to grow onto a magic circle, storing that circle in some medium, and then summoning water and soil to provide sufficient nutrients, she could grow any desired plant anywhere — even without the original seed.
On top of that, if she grafted a 'partial time acceleration spell' obtained from a close friend in Istonique onto this magic circle, she could produce the desired fruit in an instant.
Of course, she hasn't yet found a suitable medium to store the seed's biological data, so she may need several more years of research. But simply having discovered a method to record seed data onto a magic circle in just three years made Serun overjoyed.
Vowing to someday complete this magic and gift an armful of delicious hometown fruits to the friend who helped with the time acceleration spell, Serun sits in her chair once again today, staring intently at parchment.