The climax is not a brawl. It is a courtroom battle under a banyan tree, with swords drawn. Rudra Pratap has rigged the jury. Viraj doesn't fight him; he hacks the system . He reveals that Rudra's own father broke the code 40 years ago using a forgotten stanza. He projects the evidence on a giant leaf using his laptop and a projector (a classic Trivikram "reveal" scene).

The rule: "An eye for an eye, but only after the full moon. Blood for blood, but only with a written grievance."

When Rudra refuses to accept the digital proof, calling it "soulless," Viraj delivers the film's soul: "Parampara is not the wood of the tree, sir. It is the seed. The seed does not grow by becoming the old tree. It grows by becoming a new one. Your tradition died the day you stopped asking 'why.' My tradition starts today with 'what if.'" A single-take, raw, unarmed combat scene against 100 men, but with a rule – for every man he knocks down, he recites one forgotten right of the common people from the ancient book. It's brutal, balletic, and intellectual.