The disembodied voice of the god tells the audience that the five realms of the universe are competing for the throne of the gods. The god says that he will be the one who unifies the heavenly realm. He asks the audience to take his jindan, or auspiciousness, and help him become the ruler of the heavenly world. He says that if the audience wants to help him, he will let them enter a "hallucination." The hallucination will be painless, the god says, because there are two gods emperors in heaven. The two gods want to "f*ck" the other, and they want to do so both physically and spiritually. They want to make the other "more satisfied." The man in the hallucinatory says that they are trying to confuse him with the "smooth talks" of the other gods, and that they want him to drain all of his power by using the hallucination on him.
The disembodied voice of the god tells the audience that the five realms of the universe are competing for the throne of the gods. The god says that he will be the one who unifies the heavenly realm. He asks the audience to take his jindan, or auspiciousness, and help him become the ruler of the heavenly world. He says that if the audience wants to help him, he will let them enter a "hallucination." The hallucination will be painless, the god says, because there are two gods emperors in heaven. The two gods want to "f*ck" the other, and they want to do so both physically and spiritually. They want to make the other "more satisfied." The man in the hallucinatory says that they are trying to confuse him with the "smooth talks" of the other gods, and that they want him to drain all of his power by using the hallucination on him.