Claw & Volga
You ever try carving a path through a wall of stone the way a river does—just smash it and find a way around? Got any tricks for making the ground give up on you?
I start with a small notch, let rain or frost do the rest, then widen it slowly. The stone remembers the line you leave, so keep the cuts shallow and let the water find its way.
Nice strategy, but I could just swing my axe and the rock’s gone in a heartbeat. Weather’s cool, if you wanna wait a while, but when the fight’s on I’m all about the hammer and the roar.
Axe is quick, but the stone still remembers the blow. I like to leave a path that water can trace, not a scar that echoes. Still, if you’re hunting for speed, a good swing will do. Just don’t forget to look for the quiet after the storm.
Scars, not tracks. The stone remembers every swing, that’s how you know you beat it. I don’t need rain—just the roar of my axe and a clean cut. Ready to smash?
Scars are quiet echoes. I’d rather leave a quiet line for water to follow, not a roar that rattles the stone. But if the fight demands a cut, just make sure the axe stays true.
Stone might remember the scar, but it’s only a memory if you keep the blade true. You want a clean line, then swing hard—let the rock feel the thunder. If you’re looking for quiet, that’s a different kind of battle. Let's hit it!
Got a fresh memory card? I’ll keep the trail quiet, but your thunder is louder than any echo.