I guess so. I'm skeptical as to his efficacy, but it wouldn't mean much anyway. Zhengui doing a cool thing doesn't advance anything in particular. All it would have to build on is Zhengui's comment about picking fights he can contribute to, which this spirit certainly qualifies for, but I'm unsure of that as a theme to develop. For one, it's kind of just tacked on. For the other, in that context it's settling instead of overcoming the challenge of mis-matched foes. Basically a concession following a recently highlighted conflict.It could be a cool scene.
It's a Toxic Earth Spirit, and Wood Overcomes Earth while Fire Purifies, all the while Zhengui leaving fertile ash.
I think this isn't exactly something Ling Qi is suited with dealing with so let's try and contain it to let someone who might actually know what they're doing kill or pacify this beast.
Also, I don't really think we can do the other options without our people being hurt whether that is Zengui eating some scary weedkiller to the face while being part grass type or our subordinates getting radiation sickness since they don't have a third realm spirit cleansing them of poison. This may be overly cautious but it's what I feel.
There was a winding vein of something strange in the earth. Where it passed, grass and trees showed faint signs of withering sickness, and certain spirit beasts were more aggressive. It seemed that the more closely aligned a spirit was to earth or wood qi, the greater the effect. Even Zhengui reported feeling slightly queasy when he dug his roots into the earth where the strange taint passed.They struck down maddened beasts as necessary, and kept pressing south.
So, you just said Contain still spill things around. Why not kill it, then? That stops it for sure.changing my vote, since Ling Qi's internal monologue points out that plan wall off still results in nasty shit spilling all over the place and quarantine is my main goal
True, butI'm kinda torn between the options. I think pacifying is more interesting, but flat killing would be cool too.
[X] Go in for the kill, and call Zhengui to help. You have underestimated your own killing power before, and the things cultivation is not superior to your own. Hill or not, you can End it.
[X] Close in, relying on Sixiang to keep it's toxic aura from affecting you, between your music and your subordinates ritualism, it should be possible to pacify the creature.
If it dies, wouldn't the gross stuff spill everywhere as its spirit unravels? No doubt less bad than it continuing to rampage around, but I'm not certain it's the best success possible here. Disposing of it cleanly sounds like a job for a higher realm cultivator to me, frankly.So, you just said Contain still spill things around. Why not kill it, then? That stops it for sure.
[X] Go in for the kill, and call Zhengui to help. You have underestimated your own killing power before, and the things cultivation is not superior to your own. Hill or not, you can End it.
Thank you so much. Just got back on the thread and the amount of biased reasoning to make killing sound boring and dumb is insane. Like it says, and you stayed, it's Ending. There are so many connections around that action and thought in this quest that's insane. It's not some rash move, or some version of her just killing causally. This is ending it, it's cycle is over. It's so damn meaningful. Also it seems likely to work, which from a sensible point IC means it is rather sensible. IC retreating is smart, but takes action out of our hands and leaves it free to corrupt as much as possible. I don't think people are thinking of the logistics of pacify. I mean, it's not like we can purify it, it doesn't seem calm in anyway. I just can't imagine pacify going well. And also...we are the strongest in the unit for a reason, it's for threats these scouts can't truly face. Also for us to gain experience. I just think people are doing their best to justify pacifying it, when killing it would be much cleaner, and a part of our job. We aren't supposed to leave everything to the main army. And we have shown many times that we don't chase Glory. It's not even that right now, since this a legit threat that we don't know we can leave alone.I can't help but despise the rampant bias and self justification that goes into asserting that Killing doesn't foster character development in this choice
How many times has Ling Qi examined a situation where she had all the initiative in the world and decided she needed to End something? Not hunting something and killing it for a reward. Not being pressed into killing or hurting something on the defense. Not being dragged along by her liege.
This would be a case of Ling Qi, holding all the cards and having the decision entirely being her own- deciding that this abomination, whatever it is it once was- needs to End. For its own sake, for the sake of others, and the sake of the world. It's the thief and coward, the fickle fairy of the moon- taking responsibility for a life. Right after her respected Sect Brother helped her examine what it means to take another's life deliberately and with intent. And then her spirits proceeded to further humanize spirits as a whole and make Ling Qi consider what it means to hunt and prey upon them. It's in light of all this fascinating and earnest character development that Ling Qi is taking it upon herself to expunge a toxic existence from this world as thoroughly as she can because she believes she can.
Least character development my ass.
Anyway, the bit about the Winter Witch explains so very much why Yrs would have preferred the other option - he knew what was waiting for us, and it was exactly within our bailiwick; a spirit of Ice and Winter who may or may not be hostile. Unfortunately, the only clue we had to this possibility is in that Cloud Tribe interlude at the end of Forge of Destiny, and that left no hints...
I don't care about Liao Zhu though; not knowing things about Liao Zhu wasn't the issue I'd hope for the interlude to have addressed.
That could indeed be an interesting character development... in an arc designed for it. Like the last one, though that'd obviously be too soon. This arc started with exploring Ling Qi's discomforts and personal challenges with leadership. It's gone off the rails somewhat, but not in any fashion that coherently lends itself to the self-imposed duty of death dealer. The arc is crowded enough with discordant properties as it is that I think (re)introducing these themes would be a pacing misstep, both for the arc and the themes. Besides, I'd think it'd be more appropriate to really dig into those more once Hanyi's had a chance to advance a little bit, given their proximity to her own portfolio.I can't help but despise the rampant bias and self justification that goes into asserting that Killing doesn't foster character development in this choice
How many times has Ling Qi examined a situation where she had all the initiative in the world and decided she needed to End something? Not hunting something and killing it for a reward. Not being pressed into killing or hurting something on the defense. Not being dragged along by her liege.
This would be a case of Ling Qi, holding all the cards and having the decision entirely being her own- deciding that this abomination, whatever it is it once was- needs to End. For its own sake, for the sake of others, and the sake of the world. It's the thief and coward, the fickle fairy of the moon- taking responsibility for a life. Right after her respected Sect Brother helped her examine what it means to take another's life deliberately and with intent. And then her spirits proceeded to further humanize spirits as a whole and make Ling Qi consider what it means to hunt and prey upon them. It's in light of all this fascinating and earnest character development that Ling Qi is taking it upon herself to expunge a toxic existence from this world as thoroughly as she can because she believes she can.
Least character development my ass.
Ling Qi only recently, during this adventure arc, used music to pacify an angry river spirit. Without even qi draining it, like we did with the dragon. Her music talent also allowed her to 'hear' snippets of meaning from the earth elemental they stopped to interrogate. Ling Qi's music is pretty bullshit. It's an A rank skill, her single best skill, and core to her cultivation and Way. Negotiation and diplomacy are at least possible without a specific art, so I see no reason Music would be any different. It's also explicitly getting backup from our spirit-whispering subordinate for more nuanced communication.Thank you so much. Just got back on the thread and the amount of biased reasoning to make killing sound boring and dumb is insane. Like it says, and you stayed, it's Ending. There are so many connections around that action and thought in this quest that's insane. It's not some rash move, or some version of her just killing causally. This is ending it, it's cycle is over. It's so damn meaningful. Also it seems likely to work, which from a sensible point IC means it is rather sensible. IC retreating is smart, but takes action out of our hands and leaves it free to corrupt as much as possible. I don't think people are thinking of the logistics of pacify. I mean, it's not like we can purify it, it doesn't seem calm in anyway. I just can't imagine pacify going well. And also...we are the strongest in the unit for a reason, it's for threats these scouts can't truly face. Also for us to gain experience. I just think people are doing their best to justify pacifying it, when killing it would be much cleaner, and a part of our job. We aren't supposed to leave everything to the main army. And we have shown many times that we don't chase Glory. It's not even that right now, since this a legit threat that we don't know we can leave alone.
Also the idea that our music, with no art or direct stated ability is going to pacify this creature...seems more like wishful thinking than anything else. When has our music ever allowed us to do that? It's a pained creature, tortured by its own corruption and exceptionally irritable. It seems stupid to assume that we can calm it down, considering the provocation to attack us was entering its range. The closest thing to pacifying with music we ever did was to the water dragon. After we beat it down, and it was clearly okay and capable of rational thinking. We don't even know how much this earth hill is capable of mentally, and based on our last chat with one, even at the best of times we can't really change it's mind from the action it was doing. Also it only really focused on us, and if it was really doing that based on cultivation that's not a high sign of intelligence and rationality.
And if she was making that decision about something that she actually cared about. Say, idk, a person, then that would absolutely be meaningful?I can't help but despise the rampant bias and self justification that goes into asserting that Killing doesn't foster character development in this choice
How many times has Ling Qi examined a situation where she had all the initiative in the world and decided she needed to End something? Not hunting something and killing it for a reward. Not being pressed into killing or hurting something on the defense. Not being dragged along by her liege.
This would be a case of Ling Qi, holding all the cards and having the decision entirely being her own- deciding that this abomination, whatever it is it once was- needs to End. For its own sake, for the sake of others, and the sake of the world. It's the thief and coward, the fickle fairy of the moon- taking responsibility for a life. Right after her respected Sect Brother helped her examine what it means to take another's life deliberately and with intent. And then her spirits proceeded to further humanize spirits as a whole and make Ling Qi consider what it means to hunt and prey upon them. It's in light of all this fascinating and earnest character development that Ling Qi is taking it upon herself to expunge a toxic existence from this world as thoroughly as she can because she believes she can.
Least character development my ass.