As the audience watched the crazy red currents of fire and heard the dreadful booms, they didn't have the time to post many comments.
It was because they all knew that it was a rarely-seen livestream of a nuclear explosion that they couldn't miss.
The rumbling went on for about a minute, before the picture finally became clear.
Everything was still burning. Bubbly red fluids were running to the lowlands on the ground.
Those fluids all used to be sand, which had been burnt into magma by the high temperature. After they cooled down, they would turn into variegated glass.
It was almost impossible to see the boundary of the red fluid.
The reefs, which were hit as a target, had turned into an enormous pit, and a lot of red magma was filling back in.
The air was being twisted intensely. Due to the air flow boosted by the high temperature, a strong, soaring current was caused.