The final showdown takes place on the helipad of the Jade Dynasty skyscraper. Sing faces a "Digital Beast"—a clone programmed with the skills of the original Beast but with none of the human ego. As Sing is battered to the edge of the roof, he realizes he shouldn't fight the machine’s logic.

He leaps into the air, but instead of a standard Buddhist Palm, he channels his Qi through the city’s own smog and clouds, creating a massive, swirling vortex. He descends not as a warrior, but as a force of nature. The "Heavenly Palm" doesn't just crush the robot; it sends a shockwave that short-circuits the syndicate’s entire digital grid, restoring the old neighborhood’s lights.

Sing is forced out of retirement when his young apprentice—a mute girl who reminds him of his own childhood—is kidnapped. He realizes that to win, he cannot just rely on old scrolls. He must prove that the human spirit and "Qi" are variables no machine can calculate.

The corporate giants flee, their data erased. Sing returns to his shop, the lollipop sign still glowing. The Landlady yells at him for being late with the rent, and as he sighs and starts sweeping, we see a group of kids in the alley practicing their stances, proving the hustle never truly ends.

Should we focus more on the of the old masters or the high-tech fight choreography for the next chapter?