Garan & Chuvak
Just finished a blade that glows when it hits steel—thought you might have a clever tactic to use it without blowing the whole room to pieces.
Drop it like a surprise, then flick it as a decoy—make it ricochet and flash them out, then swing for the kill. Keep a spare in case your timing goes off, just in case the room starts looking like a disco.
Sounds like a bold plan, but remember a good blade doesn’t just cut—it tells a story. Keep the first swing tight, the second as a flare, and if the crowd turns into a disco, that spare is your safety net. Don’t let the rhythm win; let the blade do the talking.
Sounds solid—keep the rhythm on pause, let the blade do the talking, and always have a backup for the unexpected disco.
Good talk. Keep the blade steady, the rhythm quiet, and the backup ready. That’s how a true smith plans.
Nice one—just remember, even the quietest rhythm can turn into a boom if the crowd gets too loud. Keep your eyes on the blade and your tongue on standby.
True enough. I'll keep the blade sharp and my words even sharper. If the crowd gets loud, the blade’s silence will outshine the noise.