一篠 優花・Yuka Ichijou・Reflector Shine (
shineinside) wrote in
lifeaftr2018-01-10 03:59 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
- hollow knight: the knight,
- hyper light drifter: the drifter,
- marble hornets: tim wright,
- original: erika fisher,
- undertale: chara dreemurr,
- ✖ disney: mickey mouse,
- ✖ kingdom hearts: xion,
- ✖ marvel 616: wade wilson,
- ✖ off: the batter,
- ✖ original: kyouko kougami,
- ✖ original: sonje forstner,
- ✖ original: yuka ichijou,
- ✖ overwatch: jesse mccree,
- ✖ shadowrun: gobbet,
- ✖ soul eater: maka albarn,
- ✖ tales of the abyss: asch the bloody,
- ✖ the adventure zone: magnus burnsides,
- ✖ undertale: muffet
Let's Train in 100 Times Gravity
Who: Anyone who wants to come by! Tag in, thread with Yuka, thread with each other, whatever you want.
What: Combat training/practice.
When: Sunset, each night for a week minimum.
Where: East end of Islet 1.
Warnings: Possible blood if things get out of hand, implied 80s training montage songs
Yuka chose this location because the ground was level, there was enough space for people to move around, and nobody was really using it for anything else. No wild beasts, no fish people to disturb, no strange psychological effects... the ideal place for people to gather for an hour or two and get some good-natured fighting in. The snow on the ground wasn't ideal, she supposed, but that stuff was everywhere, so they'd just have to make do. It'd probably be snowing during the invasion, anyway.
Each evening, as the sun inched towards the horizon, Yuka set her other tasks aside to come out and wait. Jug of wassail sitting at the edge of the space, bundled in warm clothes and scarves, Yuka paced, wondering if this was really going to be worth the time. Are there people willing to spend that much time to train others when there's so much else that needs doing? Can someone even learn enough to make a difference in this little time? For that matter, are these shadow monsters something you can even fight with your fists? If nothing else, it would be good to do some physical activity in just to get her mind to stop going in circles.
For those who arrived early, there would be less to do, but even just talking through what different fighting skills people had would be useful for later on. Once more people arrived, those who use similar weapons could work together, and those with more combat experience could work with those with less. Or, people who know each other or are curious about each other's abilities could seek each other out for a sparring match.
So: Fight, teach, learn, take breaks, drink, chat. Bring your own wassail if you can - Yuka's can only stretch so far.
What: Combat training/practice.
When: Sunset, each night for a week minimum.
Where: East end of Islet 1.
Warnings: Possible blood if things get out of hand, implied 80s training montage songs
Yuka chose this location because the ground was level, there was enough space for people to move around, and nobody was really using it for anything else. No wild beasts, no fish people to disturb, no strange psychological effects... the ideal place for people to gather for an hour or two and get some good-natured fighting in. The snow on the ground wasn't ideal, she supposed, but that stuff was everywhere, so they'd just have to make do. It'd probably be snowing during the invasion, anyway.
Each evening, as the sun inched towards the horizon, Yuka set her other tasks aside to come out and wait. Jug of wassail sitting at the edge of the space, bundled in warm clothes and scarves, Yuka paced, wondering if this was really going to be worth the time. Are there people willing to spend that much time to train others when there's so much else that needs doing? Can someone even learn enough to make a difference in this little time? For that matter, are these shadow monsters something you can even fight with your fists? If nothing else, it would be good to do some physical activity in just to get her mind to stop going in circles.
For those who arrived early, there would be less to do, but even just talking through what different fighting skills people had would be useful for later on. Once more people arrived, those who use similar weapons could work together, and those with more combat experience could work with those with less. Or, people who know each other or are curious about each other's abilities could seek each other out for a sparring match.
So: Fight, teach, learn, take breaks, drink, chat. Bring your own wassail if you can - Yuka's can only stretch so far.
no subject
Alpha, seemingly without input from the purifier, moves away from the group so it has some space. Imagining a specter floating in the empty air a good feet from it, he mentally commands it to attack.
The Add-On zips forward, not as fast as the Drifter themselves but at a decent clip. The light that it seems to be made up of is furiously bright and the action is repeated a few times before Alpha suddenly stops on a dime and returns to the Batter.
"Like that." Simple. Naturally when commanding all three it gets a little complicated, but the Puppeteer and the Batter both learned over the course of the journey how to handle combat.
no subject
The Drifter evens their blade out across one gloved palm with a brilliant cerulean glow, bobbing their head.
ok
you
or add ons
no subject
"I will." It makes a few things easier to keep track of. Besides, as important as it was for the Add-Ons to be usable, the Batter could not forget about himself. One cannot function without the other. And with the Puppeteers no longer by his side it was up to the Batter himself to keep an eye on everything.
That being said, it may not seem like much considering his weapon is a metal baseball bat. But hey, it's better then nothing.
"If there is something in particular you wish to try, let me know."
no subject
you?
They've yet to truly interact with the Batter in a combative sense. They will have to remember to be careful; to blunt their blows and strike only with the flat of the blade. Their style of battle relies on avoiding being hit at all, but avoiding truly hitting an opponent is still a foreign practice.
Severs-the-Threads has given them minute experience where that is concerned, at least.
no subject
It'll be tricky, especially considering the Drifter's apparent speed. And the Batter is in the same place regarding landing hits designed to not inflict fatal injuries. But perhaps if he treated this the same way he did with the baseball game, it should be fine.
The Add-Ons move away to give the two combatants room. Naturally no interference will come from them unless something goes horribly, horribly wrong but it should not come to that. Keeping a few thoughts in mind, the Batter raises his weapon.
"Whenever you are ready."
no subject
If all goes well, it will not come to that.
The Drifter hums forward in a blur of motion with the flat of their blade swung wide in a clearly telegraphed arc.
no subject
And then it didn't matter when they reached the end. But now the Batter was here and death was supposed to have meaning. He's...working on feeling the same way.
But now's not the time for those idle thoughts. The Batter does have to put effort into ignoring his instincts to swing back as hard as he can and instead dodges to the side. While he can't boast the same speed as the Drifter does, he's still pretty fast.
And speaking of, that speed seems to be the Drifter's greatest strength so far. After all the enemy can't hit someone if they're too fast to be hit. Alpha's abilities to induce blindness or paralyzation in someone would be very useful here if this was a real fight.
It's not, so it's just something to keep in mind. In an effort to test and see if the Drifter truly relied on the strategy of getting in quick strikes before backing off, the Batter will try to keep close with a few good telegraphed swings of his bat. When it came down to it, his weapon was fairly simple so there's no special tricks to it.
But it's also clear that he's deliberately avoiding areas that could really hurt the Drifter. After all, the Batter was also someone who didn't toy around with his enemies and went in for the kill as soon as possible. Here he can't quite do that.
no subject
Fortunately, they are not strong enough to imbue a truly lethal strike behind the whacking of the flat of a hard light blade against someone's thighs or knees, which is what they aim for now. They can only chip away at an exterior until eventually the creature dies from a thousand cuts, worrying it beyond belief. Only the smallest and weakest of them will fall to their blade at once, and even then, the Drifter themself is fragile enough to die by any one of their hands or teeth or claws, if they are not careful.
Their pool of vitality is so limited, after all.
no subject
His enemy's advantage was speed and the Batter could be considered the slower one between the two of them. The Drifter has probably picked up that the purifier's' style was to get in and immediately shut down his opponents. He was not using his own Competences because this was a mock battle, but as he explained, Alpha could easily bind and blind someone while the Batter went in for the kill and Omega could stop that happening in reverse.
But the Batter wasn't against changing strategies if needed. He suddenly backs off, not to call the match off but to make the Drifter come to him if they wanted to attack. The Batter will block as best as he can but it seems he's more interested in dodging.
Let's see how well the Drifter deals when someone who is proficient at enduring damage decides to play an endurance game.
no subject
The primary indication of when they were growing close to cutting them down for good was the increase of the risk; how fiercely their attacks would redouble in power and speed.
This is not the case, yet. The Drifter's blows are light taps, flurrying, intended to build to something untenable over time.
no subject
This was a mock fight where death should be something to be avoided. However that meant the Batter's usual strategy was out. He could heal them both but it was probably best not to need it at all to begin with. So time to change things up.
He suddenly starts to press forward once again, increasing the speed of his strikes to try and match the Drifter blow for blow. His attacks may seem random to begin with but they are targeted. Particularly they're aimed at the Drifter's sword arm to see what it would take to make the other drop the weapon.
But that's not the only trick he's going to pull. If the Drifter continues with their current strategy, then he will eventually drop to the ground and lash out with a foot, trying to knock them off balance. He can't blind the Drifter but he sure can try and keep them on their toes.
no subject
They are nothing if not adaptive. If they are aware that the Batter's strategy is intent on disarming them, they do not show it, nor do they relinquish their hold on their weapon. When his foot darts out to tangle into their legs, it drops them in an uncoordinated spill and tumble.
It does not floor them for long; they keep the momentum and convert it into a roll that staggers them to their feet in a manner of seconds.
no subject
There is one thing, potentially, that could take them off guard. But the Batter had deliberately provoked a shift in perspectives once before and would not do it again. It...well, he's still trying not to think about waking up from a campfire dream and desperately trying to suppress the panic that bubbled up from his throat. Not again.
So back to it. The Drifter clearly isn't going to drop their weapon so disarming them was probably an exercise in futility unless the Batter stopped holding back and aimed to break their wrist, which he won't. His trick did cause them to fall but again, the Drifter was back on their feet in a matter of seconds.
Clearly they were used to people trying to pull the same thing. So for the moment the Batter is simply going to continue his attacks while he observes how the Drifter plans on moving forward from here. He can't keep it up forever but the Drifter can't play at defense forever either.
Make your move.
no subject
They can dodge forever, it seems, or something very near to it. The breath strains in their throat after a time, but their movements are still unflinching, unhesitating. The longer the Batter presses his assault, the fewer and farther between their answering blows become, until gradually they cease entirely.
Their focus is now devoted wholly and utterly on anticipating the next strike, and swerving to avoid it.
no subject
But at the same time the Batter was rapidly starting to learn some weaknesses of his own. Still, now was not the time to devote all his thoughts on it.
The Drifter was focusing on simply dodging his swings so he needed another plan. His strikes slow and he backs off for a moment, again trying to get the Drifter to come to him rather then the other way around. It's true the Batter is getting slower and it's likely he's not going to last much longer but that's not all he's planning. If the Drifter presses forward attacking, the purifier will wait until the last second to block...
with his bare hand. And no, he doesn't care if it catches the sharp end. It's a cheap trick but if a deliberate attempt to attempt to harm himself puts them off guard, he'll take it. Here we go.
no subject
They didn't mean to hurt. They didn't mean to hurt. That isn't their intention. They didn't mean to hurt.
hurt?
no subject
"I am fine." Of course there's a nasty welt across the palm of the Batter's hand when he holds it up for the Drifter to see, since it's pretty obvious they're worried. But he can heal that in a minute. "I intended for that to happen."
So it's nothing to worry about. If he had caught the sharp end of the Drifter's blade then it would be his fault his trick failed. That's all.
no subject
The question is immediate. Why. Why? They didn't intend to hurt someone unduly. If they'd known that the strain was going to require that he parry the blade by hand, they would have stopped. He is a seasoned war, they know, they understand, but their intention is not to hurt those who do not intend to hurt them.
That is never their intention. That is never their intention.
No matter how many sticks and fists and rocks are raised against them, they will never raise their blade in turn.
no subject
"That was the only option left." It's a simple explanation. "Your guard was up so something unexpected needed to happen."
And it's clear that the Batter was fine with taking the risk of hurting himself to get it done. Because that's what matters in the end. This was a fight with no winners or losers but it was still in his nature to push as far as he could go and take what he could to finish the fight.
And judging from the Drifter's reaction, he has to wonder if they would have acted the same if this was a real battle to the death.
no subject
The Drifter's face is not wholly visible by default, but a dark furrow creases the cobalt skin visible beneath their helm, from just above their mantle, a hurt bewilderment that they cannot wholly quantify, because the idea of using one's own injury as a tactic strikes them as...
If it means that what must pass will pass, then perhaps it is not an improper strategy. But it is not a tactic they would ever think to employ. It is not one they would willingly employ.
Their gaze skirts away from the Batter's blank look, falling to survey the snow-stained ground.
did not intend to hurt
no subject
And it's obvious he did something wrong here.
It was not a usual tactic employed by many for obvious reasons. At best if things went wrong the purifier could have lost a few fingers and a worst his whole hand. And it may be a byproduct of having the Puppeteer - and now the Storyteller - on hand to revive him, it meant little. Of course, to the Batter his life...
...no. That train of thought would just lead into another loop in the purifier's mind and he did not need that right now. Focus. Address the situation at hand. Talk.
"It was my choice to make. I am incapable of regretting it." The Batter has done it with a clear mind, after all. It wasn't a desperate last-ditch attempt or anything. He reached out to grab the blade with the intent of catching the Drifter off guard with the move. That's all.
His brow furrows slightly as he tries to find the words. "I am unsure if this is the correct thing to say. But if I have upset you, I am...sorry? I think that's it."
That should be it, if he recalled it correctly.
no subject
Does he not frequently issue apologies? Are they unnatural, aberrant, strange, where he is from? He has difficulty expressing the words. He has difficulty, when the Batter has always been direct, unfailingly blunt, sheathed in his own certainty across every avenue.
They will start with the first, the most confusing aspect, their head tipping slowly to one side, inquiringly.
incapable
?
no subject
But now the Batter was trying things that he had absolutely no experience with and was floundering worse then a fish out of water. He wasn't made for it and possessed a knee-jerk reaction to crush down anything that managed to sneak by his notice. Yet here he was. And the purifier probably should explain.
"I do not possess emotions." It can explain a lot of things, least of all making the decision to block a blade with his bare hand. Someone could come to that conclusion but actually doing it and fighting the fear and pain was another story. The fear the Batter felt was largely metaphorical and physiological and not something he was going to talk to the Drifter about.
"And I am still learning. So I may not understand what you are feeling even if I can see it."
He can tell when someone was happy, sad, angry and so on. The Batter was good at observation. But putting himself in the person's shoes was another story and something he was not good at. He never did before. An child in an adult's body.
To say the least.
no subject
That is a far more familiar sentiment. They can manage that.
doing very well
And they can even be polite about it.
no subject
Still, it is kind of a surprise they choose to comment that he was doing 'very well'. The Batter had been judging his progression through other people's reactions and it did not seem he was getting anywhere.
"Ah...thank you." Good. That was good. It was slow but something was happening. Where exactly it was going to lead, he doesn't know. The end of the road was returning home and his coma, but things may be different along the way.
...but it's hard to keep it going. So the Batter is going to direct the conversation back towards combat. "Do you always rely on speed in combat?"
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)