Blade & Medina
I found a reference to a lost sword technique called Shien Ryu in an old scroll—ever heard of it, Blade? I'm curious how a disciplined warrior would approach such a forgotten art.
I’ve heard whispers, not the full story. A disciplined warrior would first trace its origins, test each move against the fundamentals, and practice with patience. Lost art is often a reminder that true mastery comes from disciplined study, not just flashy strokes.
Interesting—so the secret is to follow the trail of dusty parchment instead of swooping in with a flashy finale. I’ll add the scroll to my archive and give the ancient moves a taste test, just to see if the legend holds up under a modern eye.
Good plan. Keep your focus sharp and test each move methodically. If it truly is a lost art, it will reveal its worth through consistency, not spectacle. Stay patient.
Sounds like a solid roadmap—trace, test, repeat. I’ll keep the scrolls organized and the practice consistent, hoping the lost art proves itself through steady work rather than a flashy flourish.
Sounds like a solid approach. Keep the practice focused and let the technique speak for itself.
That’s the way—quiet, consistent, let the old technique talk, and if it still whispers, we’ll know we’ve found something worth keeping.
Yes, quiet work will show whether it still holds value. Keep moving forward.
Sounds like a plan—steady progress, no flash. I’ll keep the scrolls in order and let the technique do the talking.