Nilfgaardian & RustFade
I’ve heard you work with rusted metal, so let’s discuss how we can turn corrosion into a strategic defense for a fortress.
Sure, rust can be a surprisingly solid barrier if you let it thicken in the right spots and then seal it with a thin epoxy coat. It turns a wall into a living armor that ages like a stone—plus it’s a great conversation piece for the guards. Just make sure the pigeons don’t start building nests in the gaps.
A solid strategy is to reinforce those gaps with stone masonry before the pigeons get a chance, then apply the epoxy only after the rust has fully stabilized. That way the wall remains unbreachable and the guards can focus on the front line instead of maintenance.
Sounds solid—stone to plug the holes, then let rust sit, then coat it. Just keep the mason on a tight schedule; rust can’t wait for paperwork. Once that’s done, the guards can actually stop polishing the bricks and start firing.
Agreed, keep the mason on a strict timetable—no bureaucratic delays. Once the stone is in place and the rust has fully stabilized, the wall will be ready for the epoxy. Then the guards can leave polishing behind and focus on firing. I’ll keep an eye on the progress.
Nice, just make sure the mason doesn’t use marble—stone’s fine, but marble will just make the rust melt and leave a puddle. Keep the timeline tight and the epoxy ready, and we’ll have a wall that’s both a monument and a bulletproof vault.