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2 yrs ago
Current I think watching fight scenes can help in general terms with writing combat, since it can give you an idea of flow and choreography.
2 yrs ago
At least if you're writing something you know, with knights.
2 yrs ago
I mean, depends on what you're writing, and the tone and theme of what you're writing. Trained armored knights were legitimately monstrous on the battlefield, so looking up how they fought helps.
2 yrs ago
As much as there's a lot of reasons twitter sucks, I genuinely don't want to see it die for the sake of all the artists who now rely on it. Hoping the shithead stops trying to directly administrate.
1 like
2 yrs ago
roleplayerguild.com/posts/5… If anyone's up for fighting some kaiju, why not try out my new RP, Godzilla: YATAGARUSU?

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In the training room, the statue’s whirling fists suddenly stopped, followed by the simulation dissolving as if it had never been there in the first place.

Across the facility, more then one agent was already being buzzed on their personal communications devices.

But it was likely the voice on the intercom that reached them first.

“Agents Amano, Kawahara, Mae, Murakami, Otsuka, Tachibana, Yakumo, Yamamizu, and Zhao, please report for briefing immediately.”

The voice was feminine, pleasant, and immediately identifiable as not belonging to a human being. No matter how human she sounded any Agent who had been working for Branch-092 for even a brief period would likely be able to recognize the source of the voice as the branch’s AI, AMATERASU.

Arisa, who had been moments from proceeding to Containment and volunteering for support duty, paused for a moment after she heard the request.

“I see,” she said, simply, before changing course to heading for briefing. Out of all of the on-duty agents, she was pleased she’d been selected for duty. Whatever it was, she was certain she’d succeed no matter what.

It wasn’t just a matter of pride, but because of the alternative as well.

The briefing room was large and plain, with a holographic projection screen on the far side, opposite of the seating area and the individual consoles that were available for Agents. In front of the projector were two figures.

One an older, well-groomed man with stern features and neatly-kept hair and wearing a black suit. The other, a beautiful woman whose flowing white coat and white and yellow hair only served as a stark contrast to the figure beside her.

Both were immediately recognizable.

Director of Field Operations Murata Enji and the projected form of AMATERASU.

“Welcome, Agents,” began Director Murata, “I think you all know why you’re here, so I won’t waste any more time. Amaterasu, if you will.”

The holographic screen hummed to life, showing the ruins of an old traditional mansion. At the same time, the same image appeared on each Agent’s personal screen as well.

Arisa quickly looked it over. There weren’t very many details that could be gleaned just from this image, but at the same time she could at least tell that it had to have been abandoned for a while simply due to the sheer overgrowth and state of decay the mansion had gone through.

It was something of a shame, given how stately the property must have been at one time.

“These are the ruins of a mansion once belonging to one Takemura Genjiro, in the Nagano Prefecture. He passed away with no heirs, and the mansion has since been left to decay,” Murata began, “One a week ago, a young woman who will from here be referred to as Victim A was killed while attempting to obtain ghost photos.”

With a click, the holographic image changed, revealing the body of a young woman dressed in light clothing. A puncture wound had pierced her torso, roughly in the location of her heart.

“This was ruled an accident, with the death seemingly explained by Victim A’s fall onto nearby debris,” continued Murata, “However, on Monday, there were two more victims.”

While the first death had been relatively clean, Arisa couldn’t help but grimace slightly when she saw the bodies of Victims B and C. Both were young men, and they had died quite gruesomely.

Most of Victim B’s head was entirely gone, as if a strong impact had simply blown it away. Only his lower jaw remained.

Victim C had been cut in half, quite cleanly, at the waist, his internal organs spilling onto the ground.

“You’ll note that Victim C appears to have been cut with an edged weapon,” commented Murata.

It wasn’t merely the gruesomeness of their deaths that made Arisa tense, but rather the fact they had died in the first place. None of the victims should have been there, it took an idiot to wander into a place like that when they didn’t have any particular abilities. But at the same time, they shouldn’t have had to die in the first place.

“I shouldn’t have to explain why these deaths are far less easily explained,” Murata continued, “Additionally, our drone observation of the site over the past few days observed unusual levels of spiritual activity, though no specific incidents were detected.”

After allowing the Agents to observe the bodies of the victims for a few moments more, the image returned to the ruined mansion.

“As you can see, there’s reason to suspect that there may be an anomalous entity behind these deaths,” Murata level voice added, “And so that’s where you come in. Agents Kawahara and Otsuka, you’ll be on perimeter duty.”

Agent Kawahara, a young woman with fluffy orange hair, looked immediately disappointed at the idea of being assigned to simply guarding the perimeter. Agent Otsuka, a blue-haired man of similar age, didn’t seem to react beyond a nod.

“Agents Murakami, Amano, and Yamamizu shall enter the property from the front, utilizing a combination of natural resistances and anti-spiritual wards in case of curses,” proceeded Murata, “Agents Yakumo, Tachibana, and Zhao will infiltrate the property from the rear, also utilizing anti-spiritual wards. Agent Mae is to remain on standby to provide medical services and additional combat support. Additionally, you’ve been cleared for the use of A-188 as active combat support. You shall also be supplied with a Portable A-5 Containment Unit.”

Arisa didn’t have any particular issue with this approach. Malakim-class Agents and above were typically given a degree of freedom on how to approach most assignments, and it only made sense to utilize her magical resistance to spiritual interference actively. That, and she was confident that she’d be able to counter any initial threat.

However…

“Do you expect that this Anomaly is of a higher grade then Avon?” she asked. There had to be a good reason to send so many Agents, after all.

“Tentatively, we’ve classed it as Avon,” responded AMATERASU, her smooth and pleasant voice only coming as a mild surprise after Murata’s cold tone, “However, the Director doesn’t want to take any chances, given the violent nature of the killings.”

Arisa certainly didn’t want to let this thing have any more chances, either.

“Assemble and prepare for deployment,” Murata’s voice came once again, “Utilize Agent Yakumo’s ability to reach the site. Dismissed.”




Assembly, preparation and gathering A-188 took some time.

By the point the Agents arrived, the sun had already begun to set.

The mansion’s decrepit state was no surprise, given they’d already seen it before. But for the spiritually-sensitive, the sense of general unease was new.

While Arisa wasn’t among those blessed with high aptitude for spiritual channeling and communication, she was still a magician. It felt like a tingling sensation slowly creeping up her spine, crawling over her skin like fingers.

She didn’t like it at all.

“Tch, this place feels terrible already,” she commented with no small amount of dissatisfaction as she undid the clasps on her case, “Well, there’s no reason to delay any more.”

Her fingers wrapped around it.

Ifrit’s hilt.

The blade drawn from the case couldn’t possibly fit, and it was difficult for an observer to understand just how such an enormous weapon could be wielded by Arisa with one hand.

“Aww, look, they’re going to have all the fun…” came a complaint from Kawahara, the orange-haired girl sighing heavily as she rested a large bronze-colored hammer on her shoulder.

Fun?”

Agent Otsuka’s voice carried with it only a small hint of incredulity.

“Wouldn’t you rather be in there, kicking its ass?” asked Kawahara, “It’d be awesome!”

By this point, Arisa was already glaring over her shoulder at the taller Agent. Awesome? While it was certainly a matter of pride for her, she couldn’t comprehend how the other Agent was talking about this like it was some kind of fun game. How did someone like that even make it to Malakim?

“What kind of an idiot are you?!”

It appeared to be a question Kawahara wasn’t unfamiliar with, given she barely reacted.

Otsuka simply sighed, one hand placed on the hilt of the katana sheathed on his left hip.

“We’ll provide backup as needed,” he said, in a level tone.

With one last glare at Kawahara, Arisa simply nodded and stepped forward.

They were on the property’s edge, now.

Whatever happened from here on out, it was all up to them.

@Raineh Daze@PKMNB0Y@Psyker Landshark@Rune_Alchemist@Eisenhorn@Izurich@OwO
Indeed, there was no risk of damage to the blade even striking the stone helm of the samurai statue full-force. It didn't truly exist, after all, and so there was nothing actually there to damage the steel.

With that being said, that didn't mean it would be rendered any more effective then it otherwise would have been.

With a metallic twang, the blade bounced off the stone samurai.

However, the attack was enough to get its attention, and it swiftly lurched forward again, one fist raised to try and strike another blow towards Agent Jinbei.

At least, until it suddenly faltered.

The first of Masaru's arrows had found its place, slipping between the gaps in the stone armor the statue had become and finding something red-orange and fleshy.

With an unpleasant hiss, and a spurt of foul-smelling pale fluid(just how did a simulator get that part right?), the statue suddenly ceased to move, a stony crunch indicating it had suddenly locked all its joints.

The creature infesting it wasn't unaware of its weakness, the other two arrows failing to find their target and instead being sent skittering off of the rock.

The moment the creature sensed it could attack again, suddenly it had outstretched both of its arms, stone grinding as it whirled in place, entire torso twisting backwards to try and catch Agent Tachibana in its spin.

@PKMNB0Y@Psyker Landshark
Good. At least he wasn't an idiot.

"At the moment, I was considering clocking in for the containment wing," Arisa responded. Of course, anyone on containment duty would be assigned ahead of time, but Agents could also volunteer as containment support. It was always important to ensure that every contained Anomaly remained so. A single breach could be devastating, and in certain cases containment units could degrade or weren't sufficient on their own to keep an Anomaly sealed away.

"That, or training," she continued, "I don't particularly need help, but I suppose if you want to follow, I won't stop you."

It wasn't as if Arisa needed any help, even if she went on containment duty. There would already be Agents there anyway, she'd just be there as further reinforcement.

@Eisenhorn
The Branch-092 Training Room was equipped for a variety of different training exercises. Indeed, this included having an area for the purposes of training against recorded data from assignments. It was, indeed, about as close as one could get to live-fire training against actual Anomalies.

While the entire system was managed by one of AMATERASU's subroutines, exactly how it worked was somewhat mysterious to most Agents. It was similar in nature to some altered reality VR games, but didn't require any specific gear on part of the ones utilizing it. The room itself was instead outfitted with whatever technological and magical innovations were required for the purpose of digital reconstruction of a given Anomaly.

By default, it was black white. But as new data loaded in, that changed. A stone path formed beneath their feet. Grass sprouting along the ground, followed by a few trees. As the recreation of the recorded mission data continued, a clear night sky formed above them, finishing with the light of a number of stars and a crescent moon.

Before them stood a statue.

It was large, depicting a rather imposing man in armor identifiable as dating from around the Sengoku era, one hand near the sheathed blade on his hip. While no clear name was depicted, it had to be in honor of one famous figure or another.

A cool, pleasant female voice soon announced just what they were up against.

"Termination Mission Data 2231B: U-101 "Infested Stonework" Instance 82. Commencing training exercise."

There was a sound of grinding stone.

The statue's head turned towards the Agents.

Almost immediately after, it lurched forward with surprising speed, arms now raised and hands balled into fists, bringing them slamming down with enough force to pulverize concrete. Needless to say, a direct blow wouldn't be pleasant even if real injury was unlikely in the Training Room.

@PKMNB0Y@Psyker Landshark
At the audible sound of footsteps behind her, Arisa glanced over her shoulder. The Agent approaching was Amano, an older man who had a past in law enforcement. She wasn't unfamiliar with him, but that was hardly a surprise when they worked in the same branch. Active duty Agents had a duty to at least know the names of their fellow Agents.

"Agent Amano," she responded, bowing her head slightly in greeting.

Another wonderful day in the life? Frankly, as long as she had an opportunity to perform her duties, then that was all she particularly cared for. 'Wonderful' was ensuring that innocent people didn't have to deal with dangerous Anomalies, carrying out her duty to its fullest extent.

If she could take pride in that, then she could consider it 'wonderful'.

"As long as I'm able to fulfill my duty and ensure no-one is hurt, I think that counts as wonderful enough for me," she added, inclining her head slightly as she walked.

After a moment's pause, the redhead glanced over her shoulder again.

"Do you have an assignment, or are you just on-duty?"

If he was wasting time on smalltalk when he was supposed to be on assignment, Arisa wouldn't let him hear the end of it.

@Eisenhorn
When the tall man, Alucard, introduced himself, Youmu's grip on Roukanken's hilt finally loosened. With the appearance of the other woman, who hadn't yet introduced herself, her ready stance grew less tense, and ultimately she let go of her blade's hilt entirely before straightening.

"There's still people alive here?" she asked. It didn't look good where she was, to say the last, and the more she dwelled on the presence of the bodies the sicker it made her feel. However, she could glimpse more intact buildings further along. Was that where they were?

She paused for a moment, and bowed in turn after Alucard bowed. Now that it was clear there wasn't about to be a fight, she couldn't simply forget basic etiquette.

"I apologize as well, I wasn't certain about your intentions," responded the white-haired half-phantom. If there were people dead here, that meant that danmaku rules weren't at play. While Youmu wouldn't have tried to kill anyone, the mere thought of such a thing certainly set her on edge on top of everything else.

@Vlad Tepes@Drifting Pollen
“Are you sure about this, Iwasaki?”

It was hard not to be anxious. Sure, he was a thrill junky. All his favorite VR games were horror-based. Getting scared was his pastime.

But Kawahara Daisuke never wanted to go quite this far with it.

Sure, exploring ghost spots and abandoned places was part of being a horror junkie. He got that, he understood it. He’d done some exploring before, the both of them had.

But this place was on a different level.

“Somebody died here just last week,” he added, nervously, “It was on the news and everything. Aren’t you at least a bit worried?”

Iwasaki had always been something of a delinquent, pushing the envelope whenever he could. The cocky smirk his friend returned to him was a familiar sight, and one that always heralded the formation of terrible ideas.

“What, you think that’s going to happen to us?” he asked, “It was an accident, wasn’t it? An old run-down place like this is full of things that can kill you if you’re careless.”

He waved his hand dismissively.

“Don’t be a baby. You want to catch sight of a real ghost, right?”

He did, but…

Something about this place didn’t feel right. Maybe it really was because somebody had died in an accident recently, but Kawahara wasn’t so sure about that.

It wasn’t anything so special to look at, not really. That was mostly due to how hold it was. A very aged, broken-down mansion that had to date back at least a couple hundred years wasn’t going to be all that impressive anymore, not when it hadn’t been cared for in so long. Kawahara could see places the roof had caved in.

All this property had belonged to the person who built the mansion, he guessed. At this point, he wondered why it hadn’t been torn down yet.

Then again, there really were an awful lot of places like this, weren’t there? Maybe it just wasn’t a priority. It wasn’t as if this land were high value or anything.

Iwasaki had already pushed on ahead. He was already approaching the door.

“H-hey, wait up!” called Kawahara, picking up the pace to catch up to his friend.

Iwasaki’s cocky grin flashed in the night as he turned around.

“See? Nothing bad ha-“

It sounded like a gunshot. At least, that’s what Kawahara thought it was.

Something warm splashed against his face.

“Wha…?”

It was several moments before his mind caught up to what had just happened.

Iwasaki stood there ahead of him. He was still standing.

His lower jaw hung slack, his tongue lolling.

The upper half of Iwasaki’s head was gone. It looked as if it had been blown away, blood and brain matter splattered across the ground behind him as the body slowly fell backwards.

What he’d felt hit his face was---

Kawahara’s scream could be heard even at the nearby town, before being suddenly silenced.




It was just another morning.

There was no real need for urgency, not today. And so, her morning routine proceeded as normal. A shower, getting dressed, and breakfast.

Her profession required formal wear, and thus that was how she dressed herself. Her red hair tied up into pigtails, a red ribbon on her neck.

Ifrit collapsed in its case.

The ride to work was short. Rather than take a train, she was driven there.

From the outside, the building that housed Branch-092 was entirely unassuming, set away from any public spaces with good reason. Not only did it appear as if it was nothing special in and of itself, but it also wasn’t near enough to any residential areas that any random person could go wandering too close.

Of course, that didn’t mean its perimeter was unguarded, nor did it mean it was the only entrance. Just that sometimes subtlety was better then doing anything that would arouse too much suspicion, and this was the closest entrance for her.

Besides, she considered anyone who would go sticking their nose in here a little bit of an idiot. There wasn’t any reason for the average person to involve themselves with the Branch’s business.

They would just end up getting hurt.

Or worse.

“Welcome, Agent Murakami.”

The entrance was nothing special, either. A simple lobby with a desk run by a few receptionists, where all she had to do was show her identification and have it scanned before being let in. There was more to it then that, as she understood, but it was pretty obvious she was who she claimed to be.

Murakami Arisa proceeded down the smooth, clean, clinical hallway. She knew it was lined with all sorts of security measures that kicked in the moment someone set foot in it. You’d have to be a moron to think that it was just checking and confirming your identity.

There was no way that would be enough.

Naturally, Arisa had nothing to worry about.

At the end was the entrance to the real Branch-092. From outside, it just looked like a simple, albeit particularly large elevator.

The doors opened.

Arisa stepped inside.

“Geh, it’s her,” complained an orange-haired agent, clutching a clipboard to her chest, leaning towards her black-haired friend.

“Geh? Did you really expect me not to hear that?”

Arisa glanced over her shoulder towards them as the elevator began to move.

Neither of them spoke after that.

Rather then directly down, the spacious elevator was instead moving at an angle, steadily, soon enveloped in dark steel.

It was some time before it exited again, coming to a smooth halt.

This was the location of the True Branch-092, and where she performed her duty.

Without glancing back at the other Agents in the elevator, Arisa exited herself, gripping the handle of Ifrit’s case somewhat more tightly as she walked. She heard the other Agents exiting behind her moments later.

The hallway was vaguely cylindrical, opening into another lobby with a final identity confirmation. But if someone got this far, it was likely that all of the other security measures had failed against them already.

She always felt a little bit impatient about it.

Beyond the lobby the hallway widened into a much larger, rectangular room with access to different wings of the facility up or downstairs, plus further doors lining the halls and suspended walkways linking the offices above.

At the center of the room, surrounded by a ring of greenery, was the Monument of Humanity’s Future. As Arisa understood it, this was a fixture of every Branch, in one place or another. A tiered sculpture, tall and smooth, bearing Sefirot’s motto:

‘Fight for Humanity. Reach the Future.’

Of course, the containment wing was also accessible this way, though going there without being cleared ahead of time required an additional layer of security checks. The grey floor and the pale, near-white blue walls were marked only by the colored lines that indicated which wing was being approached.

Green for Research, Blue for the Offices, Yellow for Training, and Red for Containment.

Today, Arisa was expected to be on-duty, but hadn’t yet been briefed on any missions.

She supposed she could take advantage of the training room if she felt so inclined, or perhaps help oversee the Agents on containment duty. With her Malakim-level clearance, she was permitted to do so with most of the Anomalies contained in Branch-092.

Needless to say, she wasn’t aware that her plans would soon be changing.

@Raineh Daze@OwO@Psyker Landshark@Izurich@Eisenhorn@PKMNB0Y@Rune_Alchemist
There was another voice. A man's. Somehow, while the words sounded unfamiliar to her, she could understand their meaning.

It didn't make any sense to Youmu, but that was beside the point.

What mattered was the fact that he'd made a threat.

Her grip on Roukanken's hilt tightened. Her feet slid slowly apart, squaring themselves into a combat stance as she inhaled, leaning forward. While her phantom half had been injured, yes, and she could sense moving too quickly for too long would only worsen it, that didn't mean she thought her speed would be insufficient for this.

Draw, move, and slash, all in a single motion.

Each action had already outlined itself in her mind, even as her lips parted to speak.

"I am Konpaku Youmu," she introduced herself, "In service of the Lady of Hakugyokurou and Princess of the Netherworld, Saigyouji Yuyuko-sama. I wouldn't suggest drawing your sword, but I won't hesitate if you try to attack."

@Vlad Tepes
@OwO: Accepted.


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