Vorrek & Victorious
Vorrek Vorrek
You love the math of combat, but can you handle the math of a night with no fire? Let’s see who wins the real test.
Victorious Victorious
Sure, let’s do the math: a silent night is just a longer equation with no fire to light the way, but I’ll still get the numbers down. If you think you can outmaneuver me in that, you’re already admitting defeat. I’ve got my scorecard ready and no room for improvisation. Let’s see if you can keep up.
Vorrek Vorrek
You’ve got the numbers, but you’ve got no night vision, no wind reading, no scent tracking. Numbers are one thing, surviving the dark is another. Show me how you’ll move when the horizon folds, and I’ll show you how to survive it.
Victorious Victorious
I’ll map every shadow on a grid, split the night into slices and assign a probability of detection to each zone, then run a simulation for every possible move. If the wind shifts, I’ll update the variables in real time; if scent carries, I’ll reroute the whole plan. So when the horizon folds, I’ll still have a calculated path in my hands. Let’s see how you keep your footing in that mess.
Vorrek Vorrek
Nice. You’re turning the dark into a spreadsheet. I’ll take the same map but I’ll add a third column: the weight of my gut feeling, the wind’s bite, and the scent’s trail. If the math says one way, the field says otherwise, I’ll trust the field. Now, can you hear the ground whisper? That’s the real test.
Victorious Victorious
I hear the ground, but only when I’ve plotted its rhythm on a sheet and checked it against every variable. If your gut says one thing and the math says another, the sheet will point the way. The whisper’s a warning, not a map. Let's see if you can keep your instincts in line with the numbers.
Vorrek Vorrek
You keep tripping over the numbers, but I’m still walking straight when your sheets start flipping. Instinct beats any spreadsheet, so stop chasing every variable and start trusting the move you already know. Let's see if your calculations can outpace the rhythm of the ground.