RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (Full Version)

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TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/2/2012 16:47:51)

The opening didn't last. Given his aim had been off, he wasn't much surprised; it was harder to guard the face than the chest. Much harder. And the Fighter was quick. Almost the same instant he sent the wall of quicksilver at the coming storm, the Fighter had recovered, and moved to the attack. It was a good strike, aimed for his back, and between heat and edge it would be a mortal blow.

But Wintin's grin had never left his face.

He near folded in half, legs bending to lower him just under the path of the blade, sweat slicking his back as it passed. His body twisted, one foot sliding backwards through the sand, to face the fighter once again, the knives at his right hand falling into the sand.

"Cobra," he whispered, and whipped his right arm around, his fist just missing the Fighter's chest. As planned. The real strike was his chain, the entire length slithering over his body as it extended past his arm, and struck the Fire Fighter’s chest. With a yell, Wintin focused, and the chain refused to yield, his will forcing it to push. For the briefest of moments, the chain was stilled, three links rising from the tinsmith’s arm. And then it ended, and the fighter was thrown, his body launched by the unyielding chain.

Wintin’s grin widened, and promptly vanished, as a searing pain crossed his crossed his cheek. He staggered back, resisting the impulse to clap a hand to his face, his concentration scattering. The metal that surrounded him fell to the sand, knives, hooks, and horseshoes alike, the returning mace head arcing down to roll in the sand. The quicksilver wall wavered, rippled, and then snapped back into place, as he clamped his will back down on that crafting. That one could not fail.




Micosil -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/2/2012 22:38:04)

65 stomped forward as soon as he saw his disruptor connect, even if just barely, with the water fighter - this was, logically, a great opening for him to deal more damage, and he didn't plan on wasting it.

Tactical analysis complete.

Threat level exceeds recommended parameters for a direct confrontation. Suggested course of action: Activate Supernova protocol.


His target wasn't, however, the hydromancer, or at least not only him. He intended to take down every single competitor with one brutal, fell swoop. And he had just the tool to do it.

---SuperNovav2.30.144---
Disabling combat modules - complete.
Disabling stability routines - complete.
Overriding core control - complete.

Half as long.
Twice as bright.


As the Supernova protocol took control over 65's systems, the lightning within started running free, jumping in wide arcs from one plaque of armor to another. A moment afterwards, the golem's armor started splitting again, just as if he were venting while, inside the Core grew unstable, larger, more powerful with each passing moment - until the Golem's body was wrapped in a nimbus of constant lightning, hiding his rocky features under the electricity.

For a second did the golem stand still, his increasing charge drawing his own Pillar's sparks towards him. Thunderclap signalled the instant they touched, the golem's aura suddenly bursting out, barely retaining any humanoid shape as, slowly, the golem's arms spread out giving his body the semblance of a cross. Time stood still for an instant, the proverbial calm before the storm drawing to an end.

At first there was only light, followed a mere moment afterwards by a thundering explosion, aura spreading into a sphere of focused, controlled destructive energy, sand rocketing upwards at its passing, clouds of dust left in its wake.

And, in the center of it all, lay a pile of shattered rocks and molten metal.








The Extinguisher -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/3/2012 0:49:26)

I only blinked for a second. Just a second.
Why is there a wall there now? It was only a second.
Why is the wall getting bigger? Is it moving towards me?

The ice and snow and storm crashed into the wall, and my body turned without me telling it to, in an attempt to get out of the way of the oncoming sheet of metal. I stop moving, and curse. There's not enough water in the arena left to conjure up anything good, at least not until the liquid wall spits up what I used. I guess I need to get closer.

Ugh. I'm at a huge disadvantage here. With no ways to combat the metal that will most surely be thrown at me if I try to run. But there's really no other option. I'll just need to be faster. I glide forward, propelled by the angel's gift, but my one leg touches the ground briefly and pushes off. I'm moving faster, sprinting, gliding between steps to go farther, but each step puts more pain into my legs. But I keep pushing. I need to win. I can't die here.

He's distracted by the other fighter, which lets me get closer and closer to him. The more I run, the harder it hurts, but I'm getting there faster. I drop my sword to pick up speed, I only need the serpents fangs anyway. My body keeps moving, but it's screaming at me to stop. Or maybe it's the voices. Screaming at me to lie down and sleep and never wake up. No no no no no. I need this.

I can't stop now.




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/3/2012 7:49:46)

Time seemed to slow for the armoured avenger as he pounded forward, heavy boots slamming into the scarlet sands. Tiny grains exploded up in response to each forceful step, miniature particles of rock mimicking violent thrusts of wave droplets flying up from some mighty kraken’s wake as it rose, gargantuan into the night sky, overshadowing the brightly war galley upon which a wily hero lurked, black harpoon glinting ominously to the silver light of burning stars shining down from the heavens.

Up above the black titan, onlookers roared and hollered in approval or scorn, raptured in their favoured warriors’ travails across the battlefield tableau. A thick scent of adrenaline soaked sweat and billowed dust coiled up to their viewing platforms from the arena, mingling with pleasant aromas of the ever popular seared flesh that made up a variety of spiced sausages and other foodstuffs clasped in many a fan’s grasp. Teeth tore violently through thick, buttered bread and into minced and reformed meat, tearing and chewing through what was once animals’ muscle and fat. Indeed, an occasional satisfied belch occasionally quietly bubbled beneath the bedlam of the crowd’s cheers of fury and excitement.

Despite the hubbub overhead, Gallaphile vaguely heard the water musician hurrying toward his position, approaching from his right hand side, but forced himself to focus on the immediate danger of the wind warlock, his fingers tightening reflexively around the hilt of his jet back broadsword. The black blade stood pointed vertically up, a sorcery forged mithril serpent poised to strike lightning swift in the veteran’s pre-planned manoeuvre. A familiar prickle upon the back of his spine warned the nobleman that this was to be a pivotal moment in his clash with the bone masked warrior. One of them would stand, and one would fall.

Charging on, he faintly caught sight of the ice maiden confronted with what appeared to be a solid wall of moving metal as she attempted to join the raging battle between the chosen of earth and fire. For a moment he felt a flicker of concern for her but then compelled his concentration to remain upon the assassin, and his own stolen short swords, tauntingly primed to slash and stab. Legs pummelling across the dusty surface, a familiar burst of light suddenly flared from behind the wind warlock’s right shoulder trying to grab at his attention, but he forced aside the distraction, maintaining his sapphire orbs intense study of the red haired warrior, alert to the slightest sign of danger.

Wait- a burst of light? From where that Golem would be? Oh Gods…

Despite his proximity to the agile air mage’s threat, barely a matter of yards away now, Gallaphile’s electric, eldritch eyes flashed briefly to the apocalyptic burst of brilliant initiated by 0-65 supernova protocol… and the horrendous wall of force heading his way.

Unable to check the speed of his rush, the Dreadnight nevertheless took evasive action. Too little time remained for the veteran undead soldier to think through his actions, so he acted on instinct, hurling his sword vaguely in the direction of the assassin’s chest and simultaneously throwing himself headfirst to the floor. As he fell toward the sandy surface, his shoulders tensed, anticipating that his momentum would cause him to skid along the dust and smash into the bone-masked warrior’s shins.

Meanwhile, the colossus’ dark shield twitched, and then shot from its resting place, riding on the crest of the wave of magical infera no as it flew toward its desperate wielder’s summoning fingertips…

So much for thoughts being the fastest weapon of all.




Ryu Viranesh -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/4/2012 12:23:05)

His sword practically flew through the air, the heated edge cutting a perfect path for the back of the distracted Chosen of Earth. At least, Ryu had thought that the man was distracted, but soon found that his “perfect” attack left much to be desired. Quick as a jackrabbit, the devious metal master had ducked the slash, his body almost appearing to bend in on itself; was this warrior a contortionist as well as a smith? For that matter, was his bag of surprises ever empty?

In the end it didn’t matter, since Ryu reacted every bit as quickly as his competitor, his arms grinding to a sudden halt as soon as the weapon they held had cleared the wily man’s form. However, it seemed that he wasn’t content with simply dodging the Fire Chosen’s attack, and instead rose to counter with one of his own, the man’s right fist arcing right toward the swordsman. Acting entirely on reflex, Ryu took a few steps back, attempting to pull his blade back into position with the same motion. It wasn’t until he heard the sudden roar of the crowd that he realized that he’d done something far more momentous: he’d finally managed to draw blood. While the fiery fighter had known that his blade would pass close to the man’s face on its return trip, he hadn’t dared hope that he would actually manage to land a cut. Not after his opponent’s last jaw-dropping dodge. At that moment, Ryu felt a strange satisfaction spread through him, a feeling of confidence that bolstered all of the feelings that had awakened during his confrontation with the Lord of Fire.

I can actually do this.

Unfortunately, it was also at that very same moment that Ryu realized that he was no longer right next to his opponent. He'd not noticed until now, but a chain had struck him square in the chest; a mere moment later he’d been sent flying, his feet forced off of the ground for a few seconds due to the sheer force behind the blow. This must have been the Earth Chosen’s true attack, not the simple jab that he’d dodged. The next moment a thousand reactions flashed through Ryu’s head: he could stab his sword into the sand to bring himself to a halt, make the effort to whip one of his hooks at his attacker, or even take a gamble and throw his sword, hoping that the massive weapon would strike home.

These and many more possibilities controlled his mind for but a second, for as his feet touched the ground and his eyes turned back toward his clever foe, something bright invaded his range of sight. Something that made his face pale as he remembered the searing pain that had come with it, and he very much doubted that his patron would intervene to save him this time.

Oh hells, not the golem again.

It appeared that someone or something had caused the construct to become unstable once more, lightning roaring forth from its elemental core. His gaze straying momentarily to its original target, Ryu saw that the smith’s attention had also been drawn to the malfunctioning giant. Then the man turned and their eyes met, mutual understanding passing between them for those few brief instants, the metalworker swiftly shifting his gaze elsewhere. Following the turn of his head, the Chosen of Fire found himself staring at the Pillar of Earth, a large slab of rock. Something that might be able to act as a shield from the golem’s storm of death.

Somehow Ryu managed to spin on his heel, even as he was stumbling backwards, and use the momentum given him from the toss to kickstart his sprint toward the Earth Pillar. At the same time, he quickly whispered a prayer of forgiveness to his own master. It was unbecoming to hide behind another Elemental Lord’s monument, some might say blasphemous, but the Fire Pillar was simply too far away for him to easily reach. If his god wanted him to have any chance at victory, he needed to survive the golem’s supernova, and for that he needed shelter. Besides, why not pit the attack of one enemy against the defense of another instead of risking the Fire Lord’s own pillar. Sparing only the occasional glance behind him to guard against any unexpected attacks, Ryu primarily focused on reaching his destination, since his life might well depend on it.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/4/2012 12:52:44)

Call that a scratch? That’s no a scratch. When your jaw’s hangin’ off, then that’s a scratch!

Everything was happening all at once. A shiver ran over his spine, as he felt his wall impact storm and ice and snow, but felt no other hit. No fool, then to simply ram the wall herself, and there’d shortly be two foes too close to him. One cold and one hot, like a mountain top and a desert, all at the same time. He could not stop from grinning, though it hurt like hell. A great battle this would be.

No dropping your guard now. He forced his eyes back open, finding the Fighter as he righted himself from the throw, and reached for the metal he’d let go; and then a great bloody flash of light from off to the right nearly shattered his focus once again. Again? Again!? Couldn’t people build a golem that’d bloody well not explode at the drop of a hat?

For a moment, his eyes flicked back to the Fighter, and their gazes crossed. They’d both been in the Cellar. Both been prey to the wash of that wall of energy. And, he knew, both would run. His eyes flicked over to his left, to where Ol’ Father sat, hulking and sturdy, and the decision was made.

“BRAVELY RUN AWAY!”

He turned, and ran. With each step, he pulled at the metal in his shoes, lengthening his stride and carrying him towards the boulder with ever-increasing speed; a technique that gave him a strange, flailing run, as his legs flung themselves forward and whipped themselves back, his arms waving just as wildly. And yet, despite looking as though he would pitch face first into the sand at any moment, he stayed upright, and fairly sailed for the safety of the Pillar of Earth.

In his wake, almost an afterthought, came his metal, a haphazard cloud that centered itself around his cauldron.




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/6/2012 19:47:32)

The Dreadnight's dark shield seared through the air, riding upon the crest of the ruined golem's raging inferno. Like a doom bearing herald to the apocalyptic maelstrom, the black metal disc arced to the aid of its falling master, a screen to the storm behind it. Dynamic force ploughed plumes of scarlet dust in the explosion's wake, creating a crimson cloak to the magical torrent's brilliant white light.

Barely aware of his shield's flight, Gallaphile sensed more than saw his opponent slip aside from him, gliding away from the hastily thrown broadsword and evading the undead warrior's spearing charge. Exquisite pain lanced through his side as stolen jet black short swords found their initial marks, carving through his mithril armour as if it was but shadow soft, before the veteran knight's own momentum caused them to drag jagged wounds along the midnight coloured metal, screeching scars that oozed liquid mana.

Ah… sweet agony. Like nectar to a drowning man. Let death come soon.

But an instant later the blades were ripped away from his sorcerous exoskeleton as he slammed into the ground. Agony burned along his ribs, air whoomphing from under his chest as he hurtled along the dusty floor, vaguely hearing his bone masked foe's footsteps flickering nearby. But then there was no more time to think- of the lancing fire along his side, of whether his opponent was pressing his advantage or beating a desperate retreat- only a fleeting moment to grab his dark shield before the storm was upon him. In that heartbeat’s pause, he was briefly aware of silence, the onlookers above temporarily silent in awe of the advancing wave of destruction.

Verily… this is going to hurt.

And then a wall of force crashed against the black titan's shield, white radiance burning all around him. Temperatures flared shockingly, electric heat blistering against the edges of the black behemoth’s arms and legs, his shield becoming white hot in his grasp. A roar of noise tore at his senses as he was catapulted back, seemingly struck by an invisible giant's ruinous boot. His shield still clenched tight, Gallaphile's prostrate form hurtled back along the arena floor, tearing a track of exposed sand in his skidding wake, until he collided with the circular chamber's wall.

Pressed against the unyielding surface, agonised pain tore through the Dreadnight’s body, sizzling along his very bones, raging around his wounded side, until the light around him flared one final time, and then gently subsided. Yet the sheer impact of the blow against the arena’s wall had left the armoured avenger reeling, his consciousness somehow wavering on the edge of being, the eldritch light in his eyes dimming for a brief moment. For a second the nobleman felt a quiver of hope: that the nightmare was at an end, that he had fought as best he could, fulfilled his responsibilities, and could sink into the bliss of oblivion once more.

But then the torment across his ribs treacherously called the Bremen lord back from the brink of nothingness, unholy sorceries unwilling to release their necromantic grasp on his constructed form. Voices hollered above him once more, fans screaming in dismay or support, even as black steam drifted up from the Dreadnight’s battered shield. Magical energy dripped down Gallaphile’s side as he groggily rose to his feet, instinctively glancing around for his red haired foe, or other combatants who had survived the cataclysm.

Feng’s tooth… can’t this end? Hellfires… where are you then wind warlock?

Sapphire eyes of energy narrowed in suspicion as the dark titan looked hastily around the arena. Not only could he not immediately find the wind warlock haired foe, but it seemed all but three of the elemental lords’ monuments had vanished: the tributes of earth, fire and his own dark master.

If the wind goddess has withdrawn herself… does that mean the assassin is dead?

For a moment, the undead knight felt a thread of sadness, before decades of training compelled himself to steel against the emotion. His gauntleted fist tightened around the clasp of his now battered shield.

He was a warrior, and surely knew the risks of entering this combat. And, verily, it may simply be that only his participation in this tourney is finished.

The undead soldier smiled grimly beneath his black helm, recalling his broadsword to his hand, as he slowly began to march toward the chosen of earth and fire, heading towards the heart of the circular chamber.

Or he may yet have one last spiteful assault in mind for me. Best be on my guard against those whose lords have left the arena, as well as those still present.

Yet for all the black knight’s caution of further attack, mana energy already dripped from his wounded side as he advanced upon his remaining foes. Dark, sorcery-formed metal armour gently began its unnatural healing process as the armoured revenant traversed the dusty terrain, incrementally knitting links into being once more at the edges of the ragged cuts. But the wounds would remain open for some time yet, scarred testimonies to the assassin’s handiwork.




Ryu Viranesh -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/6/2012 20:45:38)

It wasn’t long before the young warrior of Fire abandoned his swift over-the-side glances; if he kept them up any longer he was sure that he’d go blind. Besides, it wasn’t as though he needed to be able to see the explosion to know that it was coming. It certainly made enough thunderous noise to allow his ears to do that job just fine. No, Ryu’s eyes were glued to structure that he was fast approaching, the Pillar of the Earth Lord. Or, as he saw it, a shield from the Energy golem’s wrath.

As much I wish that it wasn’t necessary.

The thought was brief, but spoke volumes about how the Chosen of Fire felt; even though he’d tried to rationalize his decision in his head, it still didn’t feel quite right to him. To seek shelter behind the walls of the enemy was something that would lead to death for most soldiers, and he was one of the Fire Lord’s men, come knocking on the Earth Lord’s front door. In the end, there was naught that he could do about that though. He’d made his choice and would have to stick with it, regardless of what the consequences might be. Mouthing the Lord of Fire’s name once more, something that was quick becoming a litany for him, Ryu put all that he had into running forward and keeping ahead of the deadly tide behind him. He was so focused that he almost didn’t notice the sound of pounding feet coming closer and closer, his eyes rolling to see what else fate had in mind for him.

What greeted him was a sight so overtly unusual that his jaw actually dropped open; it seemed that the metal man’s cauldron of tricks truly was bottomless. Ryu didn’t know whether to call what he was doing “running” or “clowning”, maybe a bit of both, but it had rocketed to the top of his list of strange things that he’d seen since this tournament began. Whatever the case, the Earth Chosen’s strange, jerking stride allowed to run even faster than Ryu was in an all out dash, the short warrior passing him by in just a few seconds. He then concluded his act by actually rolling around the back of the giant boulder, his arms flailing about as he disappeared.

That tears it. He definitely comes from a group of circus-people.

Chuckling to himself the rest of the way, the Fire Fighter made sure to take his turn just a little bit wider so that he could avoid both the spikes and humiliation. Clown or not, he had to admit that he liked this man and his humor, no matter who it was that he served. Amusing was amusing. Interesting was interesting. Once he finally managed to clear the turn, he saw his uncharacteristic opponent trying to assemble what looked to be some further protection against the oncoming blast, or at the least a roof over their heads. His feet quickened by thoughts of the impending doom headed his way, Ryu practically dove beneath the man’s little lean-to. His sword came to rest against his side as he closed his eyes and covered his ears with his hands, waiting for the destruction to come.

It came in force: the bright light clawed at his eyeballs, the wind buffeted against the solid stone of the pillar in front of him, the deafening sound tore through his hands and made his eardrums ache. Yet through it all Ryu remained calm, confident if not in the pillar that stood tall before him, than in his Lord; he wouldn’t have taken him this far if he intended for him to meet his end like this, vaporized by the force of chance. So he couldn’t die, not now. Eventually, the sand’s rough embrace ceased, the light dimmed, and he could hear once more. Ryu timidly opened one eye, then the other and slowly allowed his hands to drop away from his ears, taking a careful look at their state of affairs. Both he and the Chosen of Earth had survived one storm, but there was another looming on the horizon; this one, they couldn’t avoid.

The sound of the man’s exotic voice drew Ryu back to the world at large and out of his depressing thoughts. “Kinda like a sandstorm out in the Skraeling. You alright then?” It was only then that Ryu noticed the state that the rest of the First Arena seemed to be in. Sand hung everywhere, saturating the air and obscuring the vision of the combatants and audience alike, a fact that many in the crowd were loudly bemoaning at this very minute. It was only after taking all of this in that Ryu managed to articulate any kind of response, his throat unable to utter even a succession of sounds while he observed the carnage.

“A-aye, I’m fine. Though it looks like that arena’s not. You?”

“I’ve suffered worse,” the man responded. “Me metal’s worse for the wear, but eh.” So it seemed that he too was still ready and able to fight. While Ryu would have normally would have wished that it wasn’t so, he found that he felt much the opposite. As he watched the man yell at the crowd, Fire’s Chosen chuckled, the noise the only sound other than the metalworker’s voice as he berated the assembled masses. There were times that he wished he could be that outspoken. Before he knew it his foe faced him again, looking thoroughly exasperated with the onlookers. “Bunch of bloodthirsty children, I tell ya. So, Fighter, what say you for the battle? Square off in the center like proper foppy nobles or scrap it out here like streetwise fools?”

Ryu tilted his head for a moment, considering his options before he steeled his face, only for it to break out into a grin seconds later. “Well, I’m no ‘foppy noble,’ but how about this. Let’s go out there and show this crowd that any ‘streetwise fool’ can come this far with enough hard work. What say you?”

The man’s response was a quick assent, telling his opponent to go ahead while he gathered all of his supplies. Ryu quickly nodded, gathering up his sword and strode out of their makeshift shelter so that the smith could disassemble the rest of it. The young man was honestly surprised at how much he trusted the man, since had anyone else told him to go ahead, he would have been instantly suspicious of a sneak attack. Yet in this case none of that suspicion was present, which could only mean one thing: Ryu trusted the warrior. He’d heard that trust was easiest to build on the battlefield, but he didn’t think that the saying meant something quite like this. A content smile settling onto his face, the Chosen of Fire strode toward the Arena’s center and what would likely be the “ruckus” of his life.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/6/2012 20:47:47)

One good thing at least; he hadn’t lost his speed. He tossed a smile at the Fire Fighter as he passed, giving an inner chuckle at the incredulous look on the man’s face. And then he was past, and the boulder was swiftly coming up, and with it the very real danger of slamming into it and impaling himself its metal spikes. He dodged left, stumbling his way around the boulder’s bulk, arms windmilling in an attempt to keep himself from faceplanting.

In the end, he was only semi-successful. His forward momentum ended in a sideways roll, sand flying as he tumbled behind the boulder. The mass of metal continued on, a few bits and pieces caroming off the boulder itself as it passed, until the whole of came to a sudden and complete halt. “Get back ‘ere,” he growled, spitting sand and pulling himself upright.

Thing about explosions was, they tended to go where you didn’t want them too. And much as he was loathe to put his metal in harm’s way, knowing what had happened the last time, he needed more of a shield. Judging by the roar, he had little time; the metal slammed into the rock, knives and shoes and hooks and cauldron clinging to each other and beginning to meld together. The makeshift roof would not be pretty, but it would be something.

Mere moments after he started, the Fighter joined him, diving beneath the dubious shelter of his construct. A final thought struck him, as the roar of the approaching storm drowned out everything else, and just as the light struck the boulder, he ducked his head and pulled his tunic over his face, eyes squeezed shut.

For a long, long minute, there was nothing but the roar, the light through eyelids, and the sting of sand upon his skin. He could feel the force of the golem’s final assault on his wall, tearing at the metal and threatening to blast it apart, and he focused, with all his considerable will, on denying it the right to break. “Ol’ Father grant me strength,” he whispered.

Eventually, the roar subsided, as did the wind and the sand. He popped his shirt back down over his head, grimacing at the twinging of his skin. First his cheek by Fire’s sword, and now his scalp and other places by the sand itself. But he lived. As did Fire. He stood, giving the landscape around them a glance; the sand of the arena had been blasted smooth, and a great deal of it still hung in the air, immersing everything in a reddish haze. “Kinda like a sandstorm out in the Skraeling,” he said, conversationally. “You alright, then?”

The Fighter took his time replying, which Wintin did not begrudge him. Wasn’t every day you survived a mess like this. “A-aye, I’m fine. Though it looks like that arena’s not,” the man said, and Wintin chuckled in response. “You?” He shrugged, rolling first one shoulder, than the other.

“I’ve suffered worse,” he said. “Me metal’s worse for the wear, but eh.” He wiggled a finger in his ear, frowning; it seemed like he could still hear the roar of the storm. It was a mite different, though, a different tone to i- oh. That was the audience. Complaining about not being able to see. He grimaced, and turned towards the wall, breathing in.

“Oh, put a sock in it, ya whiny gits!” he bellowed, the sudden shout shocking the audience into silence. “We ain’t dead yet, so quit your moanin’!” He turned back to Fire, shaking his head, and shrugged. “Bunch of bloodthirsty children, I tell ya. So, Fighter, what say you for the battle? Square off in the center like proper foppy nobles or scrap it out here like streetwise fools?”

The other man grinned. “Well, I’m no ‘foppy noble,’ but how about this. Let’s go out there and show this crowd that any ‘streetwise fool’ can come this far with enough hard work. What say you?” Wintin answered with a laugh, and gave a nod.

“Aye. Get you going, then. I’ve some metal ta reclaim.” He turned away, then, to look at his makeshift roof, and frowned at it. The force of the blast had warped the metal’s nature a touch, fusing much of it together and tarnishing its surface. Still, though, it could serve. His quicksilver would take time to reclaim, scattered as it was across the arena grounds, and this was right at hand. “A’right,” he said, putting a fist into his palm and cracking his neck. “Time to come apart, you.”

That same fist pounded the underside of the roof, and the whole thing shattered, the metal flying apart like roaches before the light, before freezing in its tracks with a wave of his hand. He nodded in satisfaction. Most of the pieces could be recognized as what they had been, even though none of them had come through completely whole. They would serve.

So with a cloud of metal in orbit around the cauldron, which sat upon his head, and with his chains still wrapped ‘round his body and legs, the Chosen of earth stepped out for the center of the arena, and the next act of the Championship.




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/8/2012 17:44:27)

With scarlet dust still overhanging the arena, Gallaphile had only a vague sense of his remaining opponents’ positions as he steadily marched across the battlefield. His spectral eyes could barely make out shadowy forms amongst the sandy fog, though the mighty monuments to earth and fire gave clues to the pair’s identities.

The enormous stone slab jutting from the sand-made mist recalled the mountain of Fusada, towering over white fluffed carpet clouds. For a moment the veteran soldier was on its barren mountain-slope again, flashing a crooked smile at his dark haired daughter Alliena. In a brief respite from his lordly duties they had climbed the split peak at night, passing through the scrub vegetation which decorated its lower foothills, before progressing into the burnt out upper reaches to arrive at the summit and greet the chilly dawn, sunlit rays dancing down upon the cloudbanks below. Feeling a phantom lump in his throat at the memory, midnight’s revenant moved forward, still cautiously glancing around for threats as he advanced.

Pain lanced through his side with each shuddering step, droplets of liquid mana still seeping through his rent armour to hiss upon the floor, wisps of sorcerous energy fuming from where they landed. But the physical anguish around his ribs was nothing to the mental tortures that constantly battered against the Bremen lord’s iron will. He was a monster, bereft of all hope. He would never see Cate again, taste his wife’s cool lips upon his own, glide his fingers down the small of her back, or feel her silky legs against his thighs.

A man of faith, the soldier had always believed that death was but a short pause- that his beloved was just in another room from him. But now… the original Gallaphile might be with Cate, but there could be no reunion for the shadow armoured avenger.

Verily… this is hard.

Another stride forwards, and another memory burned at the black knight’s core. He remembered crying out in the night, emerging from a horrific dream with a scream in his throat, and Cate immediately wiping away the salty tears that glistened upon his cheeks. She alone had shared his fears and despairs, held him when the strain of bearing the lives of Bremen seemed too great for any man to bear alone. She had known his terror that his enemies would seek to revenge themselves on the ‘Orc Slayer’ by harming her, Alliena, or little Telemach.

She saw beyond my mask of calm as if my eyes were but open doors: saved me from the demons of doubt that wrestled within my mind when to others I needed to be a beacon of calm confidence. Even at that first dance together, she made me laugh at her whispered words.

He wanted to drop to his knees upon the dust swept floor, to scream in anguish. All hope of being with his soulmate once more had gone.

I miss ye Cate.

Another step, another splinter of pain shafted through his ribs. Like a ghostly galleon emerging from ill-omened fog, the black titan moved with surprising quiet into a patch of slightly clearer air at roughly the centre of the arena. Halting there, the dark colossus glanced briefly to the savaged area of his armour, numbly noting that the scarred metal seemed faintly hazy, as if he was seeing it through vapours invisible to the naked eye.

Ye gods… let one of these warriors wake me from this nightmare I’ve become. I must fight to the best of my abilities, lest my children suffer for any hesitation on mine part… but by Feng I hope one of these heroes can overcome me.

Yet the despair that rattled through his psyche did not inflect the undead avenger’s voice as he spoke out to the shadowy forms advancing in his direction, spectral tones carrying icily through the dust storm.

“Greetings chosen of earth and fire. May thy lords grant thee strength.”

As his supernatural speech rang out, the Dreadnight brought his massive broadsword up in salute, eldritch orbs blazing intently from behind the crosspiece as he held the mighty claymore close to his triple pointed helm. For a moment he stood with unearthly stillness, a forsaken statue of jet and unnatural sorcery, before his sorcery-spawned accents cleaved through the air once again.

“I ask thee but one boon: show me no mercy.”

With these words, the grave spawned behemoth swung his sword back to his side, massive shield guarding his front, as the veteran soldier adopted a predominantly side on stance to the advancing gladiators, putting his wounded side to the rear. Absently, he noticed that the haze of dust around him appeared to be steadily clearing.

“Now prepare thyselves: my lord commands and I must obey, for the sake of mine children far away.”




Ryu Viranesh -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/9/2012 14:40:24)

The way forward was slow-going at first; with the sand at his feet and the sand blocking his sight, Ryu was moving at little more than a crawl. This time was not wasted however, because the young warrior’s mind was already going over all that he knew about his opponent: the short-legged but extremely clever Chosen of Earth. There were the obvious things, such as the fact that he had the ability to manipulate metal and that because of his stature, he had a lower center of gravity than Ryu did. Then there were some less certain pieces of information that he’d gleaned, such as the possibility that the man had some type of precognitive power that had allowed him to predict where the Fire Fighter’s sword was coming at him from. That thought was questionable, but in this tournament where defeat could mean death, Ryu couldn’t afford to simply throw it away.

I think that I can deal with him, but the real question is the other combatants. Is there anyone else left?

As the sandy haze started to clear and the Fire Chosen’s pace quickened, his eyes squinted, trying to see what had become of the rest of the battlefield. A quick glance around told him all that he needed to know; of the eight pillars that had once stood proudly along the edges of the battlefield, only three remained. One was Fire, one was Earth, and the other was...

“Darkness,” he muttered as he found his stare settling on the center of the Arena. His destination and where the last remaining competitor other than himself and the metalworker stood awaiting their arrival. Of course it would have to be the undead abomination who had survived to the end of this with them, the one creature in the Elemental Championships that Ryu had truly come to revile. Even though the golem had caused him more trouble, the construct could hardly be blamed for its poor construction. The Chosen of Darkness, however, was an affront to all that was natural.

Ryu gripped the hilt of his sword with all of his might, his knuckles whitening from the strain; this creature just brought the worst out of him. He would have to vanquish this demon himself to finally feel free of its taint. The Fire Chosen brought his weapon into an offensive stance and rushed a few steps forward, intending to test the monster’s boundaries a bit before he really settled into attacking it. Yet at that very moment, he felt a sinking feeling in his gut, almost as though something had fallen into his stomach with a large “plop”. Normally, he’d have suspected the undead titan, but somehow he knew that that was not the case. His eyes were instinctively drawn back to the Fire Pillar, his head twisting about. The monument was no longer there.

He came to a halt, his body just shaking for a few moments as he let it all just sink in. His left hand fell from his sword and after another short second, he raised his head high and sheathed the blade. Rather than disappointment, there was a strange air of content about him; even though he hadn’t won, he was happy with what he’d done, and so was his liege. Besides, he had other work to do. As the smith approached him from the side, Ryu turned to him and spoke, his voice tinged with just the slightest bit of regret, but remaining strong.

“It seems that my time here is done, and before our ruckus has even really begun. If you’re still in town afterwards, I’d like to treat you to some ale and have a nice long talk with you, maybe have that bout. If you’re interested. Nonetheless, good luck against that monster. Win one for us ‘streetwise fools.’”

With this, Ryu turned on his heel and strode toward the Arena’s exit, leaving a very different man from how he’d entered the tournament. He decided that he’d see if he could grab a nice room in a modest inn, if there were any left. A small grin coming to his face, the young man walked straight ahead, not looking back. Not anymore. His fascination with this tournament was done. After a few more days, he decided that he’d make the turn for home, where he really belonged.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/9/2012 16:45:29)

It was a slow walk, but then, he wasn't in much of a hurry. He kept an eye on the Fighter, but for the most part, his mind was elsewhere, spread over the entirety of the arena, searching down amidst the grains of sand to find the scattered quicksilver. For all the golem’s blast had seared his metal and scored his flesh with wind-blown sand, the loss of his quicksilver was perhaps the most costly thing that it had done.

No matter. All part of life and combat. Accept it, and use it. He grinned. Neither Fire nor Darkness, for that was the other pillar still left on the arena grounds, would have a way to see it coming. He frowned, and looked behind him, at where the pillar of Fire had stood, now conspicuous in its absence. Well. Only Darkness, then.

He took a step toward the Fighter, and stopped. Hah. No wails of woe for this one; honest, he’d have been disappointed if there had been. So with a grin on his face, he saluted the Fighter, and nodded. “Aye, Chosen. I’ll be takin’ ya up on that drink.” And then? Well. Just down to him and the Titan.

The haze was beginning to clear; the arena was sandy enough, but it was no true desert. Too much wet in the air for a real lingering haze. Good and good; things were tough enough when you couldn't see your targets. The real surprise was the titan itself. It seemed to have found both a voice and a sense of honor since last he’d paid it any real attention. The first was good; always more fun to fight something that could talk. The latter … eh. Knight’s honor, it sounded like, and that always wound up biting him in some fashion.

“I’m afraid it’s only me, Titan. I’m no quite sure how the Lords make their decisions as to who’s in and who’s out, but it seems it’s just you and I left,” he said, grinning at the Chosen of Darkness from across the distance that separated them; a good ten feet, he’d left. The Titan could close that right quick, he knew, but it was always more fun up close. “But if you wanted a fight wi’ no mercy, then I’m your man.”

The haze cleared yet further, and revealed his handiwork. The cauldron remained upon his head, but the cloud of metal was a cloud no longer. To his left, there floated a spike, like those he had crafted in the Cellar and never had the chance to use; to his right, there floated a hook, its inner edge toothed, to rip and tear; and atop the cauldron, there rested a rod, thick as an arm and long as his torso, looking heavy and solid.

It was amazing what you could do with a little time.

“Funny thing about Ol’ Father,” he said, rolling the rod forward. “He’s never once given me an order. Should I be jealous,” he mused, and threw the spike at the Dreadnight’s head, “or grateful?”




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/11/2012 4:22:58)

The dark avenger hastily raised his shield high to intercept the incoming bolt, angling the sorcery formed screen with the intention of deflecting the metal missile. And not a moment too soon, for the hurtling spike was flying with considerable force, well capable of piercing through the black titan’s thick metal plate.

With a clash that rung through the arena, shining steel struck against midnight coloured mithril… and then proceeded to eerily scrape up the black side of Gallaphile’s shield. Far more obedient to its master’s will than to any laws of physics, the barb didn’t bounce away, but instead quickly screeched alongside the face of the undead warrior’s screen, and launched itself from the razored edge. Flying over the triple pointed helm of the veteran soldier, the vicious skewer darted away from the combatants, a faithful barb to be recalled at the blacksmith’s command.

At least this one does not lack spirit.

Moments before, Gallaphile had felt both surprise and sadness as the fiery eyed sword wielder turned away from their duel. Hurrying forward from the fading dust clouds to test the titan’s defences, the violet haired warrior of fire had seemed determined to honour the black colossus in his request for no mercy. For a brief moment, the Bremen lordling had felt hope, that here at last was a hero to vanquish his skills, and end this waking nightmare: that the younger man’s flame would be the light at the end of his darkness.

But then the pillar of flame winked out of existence.

Once again, despair had gripped at the nobleman’s heart, even as disappointment briefly rippled across the long-fingered gladiator. Seven competitors had entered the arena, six chosen warriors to best the servant of darkness. And now only one was left.

Why gods, why do you torment me so?

Like the remaining warrior left upon the scarlet sands, Gallaphile had no idea why the fiery eyed swordsman had been eliminated. Fortunately, it seemed the sandal-clad smith confronting him was not without confidence… or- the veteran soldier drily noted- a cauldron balanced on his head. Or a variety of odd weapons, including a hovering hook, rod and spike. Indeed, were it not been for the utter misery that cloaked the black knight’s heart he might have smiled to see such a menagerie of wargear.

He does not lack in spirit… nor floating ironmongery.

Finding humour in the exotic collection of weaponry would have been ill judged, however, as illustrated by the deadly intent with which Gallaphile’s silver tattooed opponent sent his cruel spike racing for the shadow formed revenant, and responded to the nobleman’s warning with an ironic quip of his own.

Nevertheless, having avoided the vicious shaft, the dusk coloured destroyer afforded himself a grim smile. “Verily, that depends on thy master, mine orange clothed friend.”

Clenching his sword tight, the Dreadnight launched himself into sudden motion, legs pounding against the sandy surface as he accelerated toward Wintin, eager to cross the distance between himself and the smith quickly.

“Have at thee!”

The spectral tone of the grim knight’s cry was barely heard above the arena, where spectators screamed out in support for their favoured competitor. Championship aficionados and opportunistic sausage merchants alike recognised that one of this pair would soon be crowned champion... if they didn’t kill each other first.




Starstruck -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/11/2012 7:01:16)

A FEW MINUTES AGO

Tiure was running away from the golem, running towards the Dreadknight. His feet were having a bit of trouble where some wind had knocked up drifts...he was slowing down...he looked behind him, something you should never do. But it was important that he did so because that was how he saw the wall of light heading towards him.

There was nowhere to dodge.

There was nowhere to run.

Closing his eyes, Tiure concentrated hard and placed the effects of the weakened spell right before him and hoped for the best. A small wall of water, barely seven feet tall and four feet wide, sprang into being before him, the energy burning through it with wild abandon but slowing and stopping its deadly charges through the insulation provided by the water. Humming and crackling, the watery wall lost the magical bonds between the water droplets and dissolved into a puddle on the sands. Almost a successful defense...but a stray spark hit him on the wrist and, after a brief flash of blinding pain, he knew no more.

PRESENT

Tiure groaned, stirring gently and pulling his arms out of the thick sand. He was unharmed, but his clouds had disappeared, presumably caught in the golem's fierce energy blast. Tiure himself had caught the very tiniest portion of the explosion, and look where that left him. The Elemental Championships was neither a safe nor a prudent place for him. He had to go now.

Standing up, he picked up his violin and his bow and began to play, walking towards the exit as he did so.

It seemed like ages to him, though it could not have been more than a minute to play each of his songs. And with each song, more and more water appeared, and with the added water, Tiure spun it with his mind around himself in an intricate dance of mist and splashing haze. It was beautiful to behold and, though the Water pillar was long disappeared, he hoped the Lady was watching in approval, though he was not the Champion she hoped for. Tiure waved at the Dreadknight, still working to prove the supremacy of his element. He surely did not know of Kalen's existence if he was undead, so Tiure decided to give him a little soothing hope to relieve the harsh, inescapable light of despair. Cheating a little by bending the sound so it would reach the Dreadknight's ears only, he said quietly, "Kalen is still alive. I, the bard, have met him."

And with that, he was gone.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/11/2012 22:38:55)

That was tough stuff, that the Titan was made up of. Harder than steel, likely about as resilient as mithril, light but not too light. It could tear, though. That rent in the thing’s side was proof enough of that. Get the spike in a head-on strike and it’d go right through. Nothin’ on Kerzzek.

He wiggled a finger in his ear as the spike finally ceased its screeching trek across the Titan’s shield, and brought it to a sudden, silent halt, behind the other Chosen and out of his sight, lending it the spin he hadn’t before. It’d just take a bit of maneuvering to strike the finishing blow. Dangerous maneuvering, but hell, the whole thing was danger. And he’d already died once today. What was once more?

He nodded in reply as the Titan spoke, balancing his rod on the palm of his hand, one foot already shifting back. When the Titan charged, he dropped it, and kicked, his foot meeting the end of the rod and sending it flying across the sand, well under the reach of the Titan’s shield; right up until he threw an uppercut at the air, and brought the rod flying up to pummel the Dreadnight’s torso, meeting his charge with enough force to toss a horse.

Then came the hook. With a flick of his other hand, it arced out, and with a twist of his fist, came arcing back in, aiming to catch the sharp, serrated edge in the gaping hole that marred the Titan’s armor. You did that much at least, Mr. Bone-de-bone.




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/12/2012 9:26:05)

Rods and hooks? Verily, I would fain not be gutted as a fish.

To the observing crowds, the dark knight would have seemed undeterred by Wintin’s incoming aerial assault, not breaking the pummelling strides of his charge. The ground did not quite shake as the behemoth thundered forward, though an observer could have been forgiven for mistaking such.

In truth though, the black colossus was cautious of his foe’s armoury, having already felt the force of his earlier flying spike. As the pole shot forward Gallaphile angled his run slightly to the smith’s left hand side, and swept his massive broadsword down, intending to strike the bar aside.

But the sapphire orbed titan had yet to fully appreciate the subtlety of the smith’s skilful sorceries. As Wintin threw an uppercut in the air, the metal shaft switched direction too fast for the armoured avenger to counter, and blasted into the side of his torso with awesome force. Spun about by the bald man’s blow, an animal-like snarl of pain and fury resonated from the undead warrior, his spectral cry echoed a split second later by hundreds of voices in the gallery above, a few mangled segments of blood soaked burgers being spat into the air in the process.

Dark liquid droplets bubbled from a massive dent newly formed in the Dreadnight’s armour, matching those still seeping from the other side of his midnight coloured mithril. A faint odour of brimstone drifted up from the spilt fluid, had anyone time to inspect it closely.

Yet even in the midst of being sent whirling about, the veteran soldier had the presence of mind to beware the serrated hook seeking to rip and tear at his armour’s scars. In a display of remarkable fighting skill, tempered with no little luck, the black knight sent his razored shield smashing into the metalworker’s cruel hook as it arced toward him, crunching against its serrated edge in a crude but effective parry. But a moment later the unnatural giant crashed to the floor, unable to maintain his balance: a raging bull grounded by a pack of sharp toothed jackals, savage teeth glinting in the starlight that twinkled upon the barren plains. Scarlet dust flew up in response to the colossal weight striking its sandy surface, exploding into the arena air once more.

As he lay upon the ground, time seemed to slow for the titan, splinters of agony tearing at his sides. The world around him seemed to be growing faint and foggy, as the very mana that powered the undead construct’s unnatural existence bled from his wounds. It seemed so very tempting to the aged knight to just remain still where he lay sprawled, to let the sandal clad smith press his advantage and end the mournful giant’s travails.

But at that instant Tiure’s departing message reached the wounded warrior.

Kalen… Kalen Kalthain? The Drak stripling from Narlich? Within his dark helm, Gallaphile’s jaw clenched in a grim smile. He must be a man now. So, he survived his encounter with the dark wizard and the years that followed. And if he has gone on without his home, his people… how can I not keep fighting on for Alliena and little Telemach?

Decision made, the veteran soldier began wrenching himself quickly up from the floor and onto his hands and knees, still conscious that he was still in a desperately vulnerable position. At least he’d been fortunate enough to hang onto his own wargear... for he had a feeling he'd need them to block whatever new assaults the smith had in mind.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/13/2012 23:16:34)

Titan was faster than he looked, and no slouch, either, managing to slap away the hook before it could get into his wound and start to tearing; or maybe just yanking him about. And still he went down, a massive dent in his armor, his body, from where the rod had rammed him. A little sad, really. A waste of magic, a waste of souls, to build a thing that, frankly, just didn’t measure up.

He sighed, as he raised the spinning spike, and angled it at the Titan’s back. One good hit, and it’d be all over but the cryin’, pinned to the sands by a basic move. Not really all that fun at all. He paused, watching as the Titan just lay there, magic seeping from the wound in its side. Who had made the thing? Who had sent it here? And were they watching?

His eyes flicked to the Pillar of Darkness, as a grasping hand emerged from the cloud, and he frowned. “Children far away?” he muttered. “So some rat stole a father’s soul, and threw it down a deep dark hole, and now the Lord of Dark holds sway and bids the father to obey?” His grin returned, as the Titan began to move, scrambling to get its legs back under it, and took the cauldron from atop his head, balancing it upon the tip of his finger. “A father holds his children dear, and if they live with danger near, then father must needs guard them well, e’en should he fall to hell.”

His palm flattened against the base of the cauldron, and swiveled it so that the mouth faced the Titan. Yes, even with the helmet, it would fit. “Ol’ Father likes his children hale,” he said, punching the cauldron into the air, “and hates to ever hear them wail.” He raised one arm into the air, and with a twist of his other, set the chains to moving, their links sliding along his body and snaking towards the Titan. “So those who threaten children need, in both his mind and mine, to bleed.” He grinned, as the Titan gained its feet again, and winked in his direction.

And then he dropped his arm, and the cauldron came back down, its yawning mouth aiming to swallow the Titan’s head.




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/14/2012 16:10:16)

Verily, to my mind too. But wilt thy elemental god wage open war with the lord of darkness for the sake of two lone souls?

The crowd’s cries and roars thundering around him, Gallaphile lurched to his feet once more, red dust trickling away from his gauntleted hands, and the slowly healing rents in his armour. Barely visible to the naked eye, miniscule black bonds of liquid mithril leaped across the ravines in his metal plating, tightening and knitting the ruptured exoskeleton together once more. Sorceries weaved and coagulated, solidifying what was once empty space. The scar to the Dreadnight’s right side had now halved in size from the damage originally inflicted by the bone masked wind wielder, though the dent to his left was barely beginning to push its way out once more.

Not that the armoured avenger had time to review the restorative process taking place around his protective shell, or respond to his opponent’s rhyming words. Particularly when more of the sandal-clad warrior’s weaponry was hurtling toward him, a dark cauldron plunging toward his face being the most prominent concern.

First he tries to gut me as a fish, and now he tries to put me in a pot?

Instinctively, the black behemoth rapidly side-stepped to his right hand side, titanic strength surging through his legs to send him scrambling out of harm’s way.

Yet this foe can change the way harm travels.

Having seen the smith alter the direction of his rod’s flight moments ago, the dark knight was not so foolish as to believe he had escaped the cauldron’s threat. But with the spike and rod also nearby, he doubted he could parry aside every weapon at the bald man’s command.

Instead, as the dark knight hurried along, he decided to put some trust in the ancient adage of attack sometimes being the best form of defence. Mailed feet moving along with awesome strength to enable such swiftness, the behemoth brought his jet black broadsword around in a surging arc, ignoring the song of pain that ruptured through his right hand side in the process. As the sapphire orbed revenant released his grip on the four foot long weapon, it spun away, horizontally arcing end about end toward Wintin.

Fly true my blade.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/14/2012 17:45:18)

The Titan sidestepped, and Wintin halted the descent of the cauldron with a clenching of his fist, turning it in midair so that the mouth faced the Titan once again. Can’t escape that easily. Of course, distractions such as that huge sword windmilling through the air might help a bit; not that it was the best of ploys, either. A flick of his fingers, and the chains shot forward, rattling merrily on their way to intercept the tumbling claymore, coiling about the blade with bone-shattering force. Then, with a grin, he grabbed the chains themselves, took a step back, and heaved.

The chains went taut, and swung out, hauling the claymore off its course and bringing it around in a wide, and deadly, arc. Brow furrowed in concentration, he spun backward, his feet digging arcs through the blood-soaked sands, his chains sliding up the claymore’s blade to meet at the crossguard, and so control the sword’s flight. “Damned foolish thing ta do,” he muttered, as the sword passed behind him and began to return, “throwin’ away a weapon like that. Never know just how it’ll come back to ya.”

And the sword did return, its dark blade cleaving the air as it sailed towards the charging Dreadnight’s right side.




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/14/2012 19:43:36)

His blade flew true, but was caught with deft ease by the metal wielder’s chains, rearing up to snare the jet black claymore. The manacles’ iron links quietly clinked beneath the hubbub of the watching crowd, their metallic tails still swathed about his silver tattooed foe as he brought the massive broadsword swinging back toward the dark armoured knight. And, as the enormous weapon whirled back toward the charging Dreadnight, his silver tattooed foe quietly admonished him for tossing aside his wargear.

Another combatant might have felt shame or chagrin at the soft rebuke, but inside his helm, Gallaphile’s jaw only tightened in a sad smile. Throwing the blade at the metal wielding smith might turn out to be a mistake, but he’d learnt long ago that a knight’s only true weapon was himself.

And in mine case, that’s verily a large weapon.

For a split-second the black behemoth was tempted to try to grab hold of the metal whips as they hurtled towards him, to dodge the blade itself, and attempt to seize a writhing serpent in its flight. If he timed his actions correctly, he might catch hold of the fetters, and use his own gargantuan power to wrench them- and the man whom they were still wrapped about- catapulting up into air, send him careering around the battlefield like a rag doll. The idea of turning his orange clothed opponent’s own words against him had a certain pleasant irony.

But grabbing the metal cord in mid-flight would be a dangerous game, particular when the whip was liable to mutate its shape with a moment’s notice from the iron-shaping smith. Indeed, the veteran soldier had seen hands broken and lashed to bloody ribbons trying to catch hold of a leather whip. Durable as his sorcery sustaining gauntlet of copper and blackened steel might be, the armoured avenger was wary of risking it against the sorcerous bonds hurtling toward his side.

Consequently, Gallaphile took a different path.

With his own sword swinging ominously toward him, the sapphire orbed titan slid feet first under the arcing chain. Being of sizeable mass, the knight barely threw himself forward in time, razored black mithril passed a hair’s breadth over the revenant’s scarred armour, cleaving through the dusty air. Faintly, the veteran knight heard the air hum, as metal links wove across his head.

Skidding along the dusty ground, the Dreadnight hurtled with surprising speed toward his sandal-clad foe, grains of scarlet sand building up in his now unencumbered right gauntlet as he flew along the floor.

Rising rapidly to his feet, the Dreadnight closed in on his foe, snapping out his right arm in an attempt to grab hold of his opponent’s orange clothing. Inadvertently, sand blasted from his palm toward the smith’s face, even as the gauntlet surged in behind the cascading crimson grains.

I may not wish to risk taking hold of your chains, my friend, but let’s see if I can’t catch hold of you.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/16/2012 1:33:35)

He loosed the chains as the Titan hit sand, a flick of will severing the links at the tips of his fingers. Immediately, he pulled his arms in and his legs together, and put his will to his shoes; within moments he was a whirling top, spinning away across the sands, his body slipping just out of reach of the Titan’s reaching grasp.

The chains that wrapped him kept him from pitching to the sand and a bloody, gritty end. Child’s play, really; a game from his youth. Less so the rod, which flew to his call, whipping around his own whirling body in a flashing, deadly arc. And less so his leap, as chains and shoes lifted him into the air and slowed his spin, to land upon his summoned cauldron and balance there.

Wintin opened his eyes as he came to a halt, and clamped his will down on his chains to keep upright despite the spinning of the world. He had a small opening, but not nearly large enough; so to widen it he tossed the rod at the Titan, not caring about angle or target, but simply that it got in its way; and then for good measure he pulled the spike from where it hung, sending it at the Titan’s back. No real power there, but it would buy more time. Time to reach for the loosed chains and halt their flight; time to reach for the quicksilver, in its tiny pools, and bring it to the surface of the sands; and time, above all, for the spinning to stop.

“I’m goin’ to break you, slave.”




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/16/2012 17:19:18)

By Feng thou art swift metal mage. And I thought the wind wielder was hard to hit.

The Dreadnight’s grasping gauntlet had snatched only empty air, as the sandal-clad smith danced away from his ominous reach in a whirl of skipping feet and writhing chains. Initially, the behemoth pursued his foe, vainly trying to grab hold of the dextrous man, and brutally drive him into the scarlet sands below their feet, but the orange clothed man was too fast and agile for even his long legged strides.

Gallaphile’s armour was not idle while his silver tattooed opponent beat his retreat however. The air assassin’s savage strike had all but healed by the time Wintin had vaulted upon his cauldron, black plating stretching and straining to restore itself. Sorcerous fluids that burned up to the surface of the black leviathan as molten magma coagulated upon its surface, crusting and hardening into a near-solid shell once more.

The more recent wound to the titan’s left hand side was still reforming, the dent pushing itself back up into shape, the crack at its centre still healing. Yet the process was underway: where once a forest had been decimated by a violent hurricane tearing through its woodland heart, now healing winds gently rippled through quivering fronds. Saplings grew from the relics of their forefathers, virgin roots sinking into rich soil and drinking in life sustaining nutrients.

But as effective as the restoration process taking place across his sorcerous exoskeleton was, the Bremen lord knew that so far in their duel the orange garbed smith had had the upper hand.
Verily mage, with thy command of magics alone, thou wouldst be mayhap more deadly than I, but by encasing yourself in thy metal thou art swifter too. Slowing his pursuit, the veteran soldier glanced briefly around the arena, looking for some means of slowing down his foe, or at least combatting his abilities. But all that seemed to greet his gaze was iron weaponry scattered around its crimson carpet, every scrap of metal a potential servant to his bald foe’s will. For a brief instance he was vaguely tempted to hurry across to the remnants of the stone surfaced golem, desperate enough to consider throwing the rough shaped rocks that were all but remained of the giant monster at his opponent, before dismissing the notion as dishonorable.

Besides, I doubt I’d make it half way across to the boulders before I was attacked from behind.

Failing to find aid or inspiration, the armoured avenger was in the process of summoning his giant broadsword back to his side when, from the corner of his sapphire orbed vision, he caught sight of the smith’s spike turning to face his way, and then bursting forward like a doomful crossbow bolt. Simultaneously, he heard his bald headed foe cry out a threat, that he was going to break the slave of darkness.

Thou may’st not like what thy find if thou break’st me open. Gallaphile could not help but smile at the grim thought, even as the metal spear arrowed toward him. Crouching low to minimise the risk of the smith’s device changing direction and striking him unexpectedly, he once again angled his shield to deflect the oncoming barb. Force trembled through his screen and along his arm as the dart collided a second time with the black metal, and then scraped harmlessly across its edge and past the armoured titan.

The force thy thorns impart is impressive mage. The black knight turned back to face his foe just in time to see his rod flying into the fray once more, barely two yards distance from his helm. Battle-honed instincts snapping into play, the Dreadnight jerked to the side with remarkable speed for a creature of his size, shifting his weight onto his back foot in the process, and brought his mithril shield whirling around to hammer the iron bar away from his side once more. A ringing clash of metal jarred through the arena, before disappearing below the roar of spectators bellowing for their chosen favourite.

As is the subtlety of thy skill. Truly thou has’t have a juggler’s art. The black leviathan’s electric orbs narrowed slightly, inspiration suddenly striking the veteran warrior. But what if I help thee throw those balls a touch higher? Verily, ‘tis a risk to lend my strength to the mage’s sorceries, but a sword may be double edged.

The titan briefly considered the idea. If he released the magics of his gauntlet, their raw sorceries could boost his foe's abilities so that he became impossible to defeat. Or alternatively, the smith himself might find himself unable to control shoes that suddenly danced beyond the stretch of mortal flesh, or chains that coiled about his waist too tightly for him to bear.

Trusting his instincts, Gallaphile levelled his sorcery generating gauntlet at the spinning smith, allowing power to build up in the mailed fist. Raw mana energy constantly flowed from the garment, enabling the maintenance of the undead soldier’s own existence, but now its master willed it to remain locked in the magical device. Somewhere, perhaps half a world away, a young monk by the name of Kalen Kalthain might have noticed the wizardry draining properties of his own gauntlet grow slightly greater as sorcery fled through a wormhole into its partner’s grasp. Perhaps some denizen of the pit, in combat with the green eyed Drak, and his feline tailed companion, might have found itself suddenly grown weaker.

A black nimbus of power crackled momentarily within Gallaphile’s fist, eldritch energy sparking like a scream of nightmares turned into midnight’s lightning. And then the dark knight opened his palm.

Suddenly, the song of healing in the Bremen lord’s armour ceased, gentle leaves frozen in the wind. Suddenly, the giant claymore which moments ago had been flying to its master’s side trembled and crashed down into the dusty floor once again. Suddenly, the world around the Dreadnight seemed to go dark, the undead fighter visibly sagging, feeling faint and weak from his expenditure of magic.

And suddenly a roaring torrent of black veined catalytic magical force exploded from the gauntlet. Like a raging river pouring from a burst damn it blazed toward Wintin, bubbling and fuming, an amethyst aura surrounding the bar of pure power as it shot forward for the spinning smith.




TormentedDragon -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/20/2012 21:01:57)

Titan was fast. Shield to spike, shield to rod. Still, the opening was wide now, and the sword had stopped fighting his chains. The spinning was dying, and his silver was ready. He could end this. With a tug of his will, the chains wrapped the sword and began to whirl it about, building momentum for the next move. His spike, he caught, and whipped it around as it passed his body, slinging it right back at the Titan.

As for his silver, that would be h-

Reflex pulled him to the side, his eyes widening in surprise; but the magic moved faster than reflex.



He blinked. From across the table, his mirror image did the same, and then scratched its nose. “Your move,” it said, and he looked down. Ah. Flipsy. He frowned. He was in a bad position. Almost the entire board was copper, and none of the options open to him were especially promising. With a growl of frustration, he floated his piece over the board and let it fall into his chosen square, flipping the appropriate pieces over to iron with a wave of his hand. The other him frowned for a moment, brow furrowed, and then, predictably, undid his temporary advantage with his next move. Wintin sighed, and waved a hand. “You win, already,” he growled.

The other chuckled, shaking his head. “Giving up already? There’s at least ten more moves ta be made.”

He snorted. “And let you make the gap wider’n it already is? Me poor ego couldn’t take it.” At that, his doppelganger threw back its head and laughed, roaring. And for his part, he just shook his head, as his twin had before.



His mouth twisted open

“So that’s it, then?”
but he could not scream.




A face the mirror of his own stared down at him, half-covered in blood and grinning like an idiot. He grunted, trying to move, but no dice. Arm and legs alike were pinned to the ground by horseshoes, and held there by a will that matched his own. His captor laughed, and placed a knee on his chest. “Yield?” He grimaced, but nodded. It rankled, but he had no choice; he was caught. Above him, his mirror sighed. “Really? You sure?”

“I’m sure,” he growled. “Now let me up.”



The dark slipped over his eyes

“You done?”
and he could see nothing.




“What’s that you’re making?”
He looked up, and grinned at his twin. “It’s a gift!” he said, moving his hand to show off the copper rose. The other cocked his head, and gave a low whistle.
“That’s nice. That for Rinna?”
“Aye. It’s her trials on the morrow, you know?”
His twin nodded, a sly grin on his face. “Lookin’ ta get your foot in that door, then?”
“Well, ya know, ain’t hurt ta try.”
Winbin barked a laugh, and slapped his back. “Aye, an’ mind you keep at it, now. Y’see what ya can do when ya try.”



His hands grasped his head

“Can’t keep up, can ya?”
and clenched.




“What happened?”
He shrugged. “Yolin beat me to it,” he said, rolling the rose between his finger and thumb. “She favored him, as it was. No real surprise.” He didn’t have to look to know what his brother was doin’. Eyebrow up, frown on his face.
“So, what, didn’t even try?”
“Well, ‘is was gold. An’ she kissed him.”
“Mouth?”
“Nah, cheek.”
Winbin snorted. “Not much meanin’ there, then. Could still have given it her, anyways. No girl’ll turn away a nice present, given honest.”
“Eh.” He shrugged again. Winbin just shook his head.



He bowed

“Why’d you even try?”
and slipped toward sand.




He swung the blade once more, but the beast just shrugged it off and kept on coming, its expression angry. His eyes flicked to the sides; he could just run. Wouldn’t be hard. Sure, it’d tear through the forge, but th-

“Sod this.”

The shock of his own palm slapping his cheek forced his eyes open, and he looked out on a world gone dark. There were the walls and the sands, but shadowed, blackened, dark as night. Where the Titan stood, there was simply a void, a vaguely man-shaped hole in the world; behind it, its pillar, a greater void, blank and yet menacing.

He growled, and reached for his metal. That was bright in the darkness, sharp in his mind; chains and cauldron, spike and rod, hook and quicksilver, and in the distance, in the sand, his nail. A tug on the chains and the cauldron, and he righted; a pull on the silver, and it burst from the sands to fly at the Titan’s head.

The spike had almost torn itself apart; he forced it back together, and thrust it at the Titan’s leg. The colossus tried to side-step his attack, but this time it was not fast enough. Instead the metal spear sliced through the dark revenant’s limb, its armoured plating tearing and buckling before its motion. A hiss of sudden pain bellowed across the scarlet sands, as the undead creature felt his bolt’s bite.

The rod was twisted, more a crook than a rod; he rolled it up, flattened it, and heaved the disc at the Titan’s side. The wounded leviathan somehow managed to get its shield in place to meet his assault, its heavy feet bracing for the collision. But as the circular weapon struck, it spun in place, grinding relentlessly against the shield; moments later, the monster’s razored screen burst apart, jagged fragments exploding into the dusty air. Titan itself flew back, awkwardly crashing to the ground. The monster seemed smaller now, its dark substance flickering, somehow appearing less solid.

“You can’t,” he growled, reaching for the chains that bound the Titan’s sword, “beat a man with the things he’s fought and won.” The chains fused at his bidding, encasing both hilt and crossguard, and swung the mithril blade at the Titan’s shoulder. The monster lurched backwards on the ground, sending its gauntleted palms slamming together against either side of its giant claymore in a desperate attempt to halt its flight. A savage clash of metal rang through the arena, dust billowing from the collision.

“I’ve already faced that demon, necromancer. And won.”

The Dreadnight’s eldritch sapphire orbs suddenly blazed in the sand soaked dusk, shining with an intensity that matched Wintin’s own. Defiant to the end, the brute’s massive hands were clasped around its own black blade, even with the massive broadsword impaled through its plated shoulder.

“Some demons don’t die mine friend, however oft we face them.”

Channelling the surge of mana now leaching from its devastated body, the behemoth sent a deluge of its dark veined energy in a devastating rush, focussed along the chain that bound it to Wintin. Like a monstrous flood, the tidal wave of power rushed forward for the silver-sandaled smith, churning and seething in its awesome force.

“I hope thou hast a chance to learn that.”

The disc slipped between tinsmith and torrent, its spin redoubled; but the power met iron and passed through unharmed, barreling into the tinsmith’s chest. Once again, the darkness rolled across him, changing his skin from tan to grey, and blackening his silver tattoos. Before his eyes, Yolin sneered at him, the lovely Rinna at his side, bedecked in bridal dress. In his ears, his brother jeered at him, and with him all the village.

Wintin grinned.

“You finally speak!” he rasped, wincing at the pain that speaking brought, and with a grunt, threw his arms wide open and shattered the disc. “And here I was beginnin’ to think that your first speech was but a trick. So, Chosen! Who are your wee ones?” The pieces twisted into discs themselves, and floated up to join the gathering mass of silver, where it hung above the Titan’s head.

Apparently exhausted, the Dreadnight did not try to scramble away, or launch an attack. Instead, it simply sat upon the sandy arena floor, massive broadsword still impaled through its shoulder, the bellows of the crowd echoing around the combatants as Wintin’s weaponry closed in on his undead foe. Yet even in the midst of the hubbub, the veteran soldier’s unnatural voice carried clearly through the battlefield.

"In life, mine own terror was being unable to defend mine children. I cans't not tell thee in the midst of this savagery. Too many enemies did I make, too many who would have vengeance.” The monster paused, eldritch eyes looking around itself. In a whisper, too quiet for any to hear within the roar of noise around it, the creature seemed to whisper “Gods, this is familiar.” For a split second the reaver’s helm became semi-transparent, revealing an ebony jaw clenched in a grisly half smile.

“But if I am destroyed this day, a favour would I beg. Search out the last Drak, and ask him who gave him the gauntlet he bears. Then thee shalt know mine name, and through it my child and child's child. Protect them if thou would, make those who would harm them bleed."

Wintin’s grin widened, and he nodded, raising one fist into the air. “Aye. An’ Ol’ Father grant you rest, Titan.” His arm dropped, fist opening, and quicksilver enveloped Dark’s Chosen, discs grinding against mithril, to slice it apart. The darkness surged, then, and Wintin grunted, as his eyes turned black and his breath grew weak. “And keep me from it."




superjars -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/21/2012 21:23:36)

From deep within the sands, a rumbling is heard, as if some large stones were grinding past one another. The two remaining pillars disappear in a flash, with the Earthen pillar returning to stand high atop the arena. The sand below it began to part as something began to rise from the center of the arena.

First, a head appears, followed quickly by heavy jowls, a pug nose and the rest of an overweight body, well-primped and looking good. It was the same announcer from the beginning of the tournament, preparing to make the final announcements.

The crowd howled with applause, each one chanting the name of their favored contestant. The Elemental Championships were coming to a close and people were excited for the post-tournament partying to begin. A loud, booming voice echoed over the arena.

"Ladies and Gentlemen, the decision has been made and the winner chosen. Welcome your new Elemental Champion, the mad monk, metal-user extraordinaire, Wintin!"




Mirai -> RE: =EC= 2012 Finals Arena (8/24/2012 19:43:19)

Dying becomes a habit.

Gallaphile lay on the arena’s sandy surface, his dark armour ripped and torn from where Wintin’s discs had sliced it into jagged ribbons. Initially the agony was horrendous, a thousand razor claws shredding the Dreadnight’s external exoskeleton as raw mana exploded from his ruptured mithril shell. Linked to his erstwhile foe through the mana infused bar of black energy, the Bremen nobleman simultaneously sensed something of the demons assailing the smith, of a village’s taunts and love lost.

But then the pillars of earth and darkness had disappeared. In their absence external sorceries from the edges of the arena exploded into place, auras of amber and green instantly severing his connection to his orange clothed opponent. Simultaneously, the quicksilver discs ceased their torture.

Such were the splinters of agony wracking Gallaphile’s body, the dark knight barely heard the blood thirsty mob’s applause, or the pug nosed announcer’s booming voice declare Wintin as the tournament’s champion. Fortunately, as the sorceries that gave him life drained away from the titan’s body, so too did his sense of pain, evidently originally prioritised by his necromantic creator below sustaining existence itself. The searing hurts subsided, replaced by a cold numbness that seeped around his body.

The armoured avenger clenched his jaw, sensing the coming end. The gauntlet upon his right hand was straining against the tide of draining energy, pushing new magic into his system, but it was only delaying the inevitable. Too much damage had been wreaked across his savaged body, too much existence sustaining sorcery had been lost. He could barely feel the massive broadsword still lodged in his side.

“… thou see what mine old bones can do?”

Barely conscious of the familiar voice flickering and whispering at the very edge of his subconscious, Gallaphile felt a flush of fear. Not for himself, but for his family. The undead warrior had fought to the best of his ability, but ultimately had not won the tournament. And the dark lord was not renowned for his mercy.

Hellfires… Alliena, Telemach… I’m so sorry.

The Dreadnight closed his sapphire orbs, reflecting on his failure. Yet he could find little cause for self-recrimination: only a worthy adversary to be acknowledged. Determining not to spend his last moments in undue despair, the dying warrior’s spectral voice rang out once more, quietly cutting through the applause and cheers above. “Congratulations Champion. I’d get up to applaud thee, but thy Old Father hastens me to rest soon.” The veteran soldier’s jaw tightened in a half smile. “Verily thou fought well.”




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