They could have adapted this sentence better... Dumping the ancient saying entirely would have been great, as it doesn't even fit the situation too well.
Marsilio steps forward, still fully confident that he can take care of our heroes by himself; but this time there won't be a barrier to nullify all the damage done to him. Marsilio is probably the easiest to beat among the Ten Wise Men, because his attacks are few and easy to dodge. Would he have been a threat, had he teamed up with the other two? Probably... Berle still has that annoying Meta Barrier, which is still impenetrable even with the Void Matter, and taking care of two powerful fighters like him and Marsilio is hard, because you'll have to rely on at least another fighter in your group beside Claude. And let's not forget about Shigeo: you haven't seen him fight yet, but he's the bastard who tried to shoot Rena back on Expel (Claude took a beam shot for her), which means long range attacks from him. It's very fortunate that Marsilio took that saying to the letter, being the lone-fighter lion instead of leading a pack of three wolves.
Marsilio draws his huge sword (not shown, maybe for decency) and slashes the virtual Berle our heroes were training against, destroying it in a single hit. This means two things: the calculations the Nedians have made to create the simulation underestimated the power of the Ten Wise Men, and Berle may now be pissed at Marsilio for destroying his virtual image (that might be the reason he leaves him to fight alone, heh).
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