Fusrodah & Janus
Fusrodah, ever considered how a quiet pause before an assault can make or break a victory?
Indeed, the pause is crucial; it allows the mind to align the plan, the body to steady, and the enemy to be misled—without it, a charge is mere chaos.
Yes, but remember that the pause is only useful if the enemy thinks it’s yours—if they learn the rhythm, it becomes a trap of its own.
True, which is why we must vary our rhythm, always leaving the enemy uncertain, lest the very silence become a predictable pattern we can be caught in.
If rhythm keeps changing, the enemy will chase echoes and lose the target—so keep them chasing shadows.
Exactly. By shifting the cadence, we force the foe to chase an illusion, and in doing so they abandon their true aim, letting us strike when their guard is lowest.
A well‑timed illusion is a fine blade—cut the wrong line, and it turns on you. Keep the edges clean.
I keep every illusion sharpened to the exact line I intend; a stray cut can betray me, so I maintain precise edges and a steady mind.
Sharp edges keep the lie from cutting the wrong target; a steady mind is the only way to turn a trick into a strike.