Wearing a crown of sand that spun and hovered right above its head like a halo of sand, a crab that was 20 metres tall and 40 metres wide sat in the centre of a humongous, deep hole.
Its body was covered with a bronze-armoured shell that shone under the moonlight, highlighting its glossy appearance despite its smooth surface being ruined by the countless barnacles living on its body.
Similar to that of a king crab, spikes protruded from its three pairs of legs. It also had two pairs of claws—one pair above the other and twice as big.
Its compound eyes, which were respectively attached to its white stalks, blinked open as it looked around its arena sluggishly; its arena was built deep down, at least 60 metres deep.
On the walls that were made with a mix of sandstone and regular stone that had obviously eroded over the ages, the ancient crab gazed at the murals etched into its walls.
