Note that they said "full pacification", and then presented a hypothetical end scenario of what that means, questioning if that is the voters intentions or not. I'll say, I don't know what the correct answer is to LQ killing sapient high-level spirits for materials, since she reacted so badly to killing BINO, but we'll probably work it out eventually.....
"like should we stop taking spirit core based medicine, stop hunting for food for Zhengui and Hanyi? Like this is not a world where stuff of that works if we actually want to be someone that matters."
Pretty blatantly implying that pacification can lead to this and tossing in a dose of "this will gimp us in reaching higher cultivation" by the unspoken assumption that us doing something so crazy is an actual possibility
(because leaving Hanyi and Zhengui to starve is totally reasonable consequences to pacifying spirits when possible and treating them as people)
I think it's fine for Ling Qi's decision to be uncertain. I think it's okay for Ling Qi to engage with the question and not know 100% the answer. I think it's appropriate for Ling Qi to experiment with her methods. There is no choice here that can alone definitively shape how Ling Qi feels about killing things. Not a single one. I don't think hyperbolic hypotheticals are very useful here.Note that they said "full pacification", and then presented a hypothetical end scenario of what that means, questioning if that is the voters intentions or not. I'll say, I don't know what the correct answer is to LQ killing sapient high-level spirits for materials, since she reacted so badly to killing BINO, but we'll probably work it out eventually.
Again I say, this isn't hard to figure out, but you just seem to want to yell drama.
-There are endings and Endings, only the very last one is final. Just as winter ends in spring, small endings are new beginnings.
It's... not like if we fail to pacify it the sect won't deal with it? I mean, the 'safe' option is the barricade, and it's the one that has by default the sect deciding what to do. Ending or Pacifying are instead Ling Qi deciding what to do, where if Ling Qi fails the sect comes and decide what to do themselves.I'll point out the attachment to living and badness of death are pretty mortal concepts. Plenty of spirits just reform later if killed (that river fish) or even have ending/renewal as part of their natural lifecycle.
In that context, let's remember Ling Qi's concept of Ending:
Deciding that yes, things like double-corrupted spirits in immense pain deserve an End isn't a bad lesson here, and it's not like it precludes less violent options later when we're much better equipped for it and aren't putting subordinates at risk.
I again don't understand why so many people are taking the pacify option as such a safe bet. Like I agree, it's not going to end the quest no matter what choice we make. But the fact that so many people are saying and thinking things like how this is just an opening phase, or if it doesn't work we will try something else. Like that just seems such a dangerous assumption to make. Especially with this kind of heavily corrupted creature. Why the hell would people think we can succeed at this. Not saying it's impossible, but we have shown, and have no arts or abilities that I can picture easily pacifying this hill. It's attacking us, responding to the slightest provocation with extreme violence, and rejects any Qi getting close to it. And people have to stop bringing up the river spirit, this is a completely different situation to that. The last hill we did something similar to this, we didn't really stop. It spoke a little, but kept moving forward, we had no control over the encounter. Why would we have that here?
Also again, this could exhaust us. Leaving us less options. It seems so stupidly risky compared to the other options, both for ourselves and our minions. And we have almost never truly chosen the "kill" option, and it's not even really about killing at this moment. Otherwise it would directly state that. More than that, we have almost always gone for diplomacy, but even then a show of force almost always was required. This hill is most likely not rational as well. To do any diplomacy we need both minds to be present and attentive.
Hey, Liao Zhu, how about helping us in the inner sect since you're greateful to us for our dogged search? I'm not asking for material things, like talismans or stones, but rather helping us network by introducing us to other top inner sect students. Networking makes dreams work!He was grateful to his junior sister for so doggedly searching the barren upper peaks and ferreting out this interesting little gathering.
He shook his head. She really was quite something, but...
It's always interesting to see how other people treat their spirit companions. This makes it seem like he has a working relationship with Tengjing, but nothing like what Ling Qi and Zhengui have. We have plenty of examples where spirit companions are treated as family, or are explicitly family, with Meizhen and Cui, Han Jian and his tiger, and then Ling Qi and Zhengui. The other people with spirit companions that we regularly interact with don't seem to have their spirits developed to the point of communicating with others, like Xiulan and her fairy or Suyin and Zhenli."We done here?" A gruff voice interrupted his musing, and he glanced to the side, where his spirit Tengjing lay on the rocks, regarding him with great boredom. The spirit ruffled his great feathered wings impatiently. Between those wings, and his powerful, grey furred feline body and scaled draconic head, the Pixiu was certainly a majestic sight.
Or he would be, if Liao Zhu was not aware of what a dull bore the creature often was. No patience at all for extravagance at all. "One would imagine that even you would be interested by what we have spied, my churlish friend." He glanced down at the corpse, ignoring with long practice the faint regret that stirred in his breast at another life taken. "Might you clean this up?"
"Clown," the chimeric beast grunted. Tengjing opened his jaw and breathed out, and streak of silver flames shot out, catching the corpse and beginning to burn voraciously, eating flesh and equipment alike without a single wisp of smoke. "I am not sure why a mere difference of coloration bothers you so."
The circumstances certainly seem to point towards the corrupting influence of the weird stuff expanding. While I'm sure that our firebreak and burning of the blighted vale might have helped the surface issue, since the root cause seems to be far below the surface, it was only ever a stop-gap measure. And apparently, it wasn't even that effective because the effects of the blight seem to have expanded much further than what it initially appeared.Below and behind Ling Qi, her subordinates and Zhengui worked hard, raising barricades of earth and roots to box the beasts flowing emissions in, for the toxic muck seemed to poison and wither everything that it touched. The encirclement was yet incomplete though, because none of them had been expecting this. The day had passed in tense peace, but as they were reaching the end of their survey, the ground beneath their feet had rocked, and the slowly crawling hill that they had been traversing had burst into malignant life.
Ling Qi was all too aware that they were currently near the blighted vale which they had burned the night previous. She had been quick enough to react thankfully, shrouding the hill in cloying mist as her companions made distance, but then the heads had burst out, and she had been forced to activate Deepwood Vitality to protect them all from the massive blast that had followed as the stinking vents in the hillside had opened.
Also, I find this really cool. It seems like his dagger dramatically improves his simulacra art. Without the essence stored in his dagger, he seems to be able to create phantasmal simulacra which he is then able to control. Likely useful in a fight for distracting and disorienting an opponent, but certainly not useful for infiltrating a cloud tribe.Liao Zhu spun the dagger in his hand and returned it to the sheath, and watched the simulacra rise, smoke like from the corpse of the man and beast at his feet. He hummed to himself as horseman and rider alike wavered shimmered, like a reflection in troubled waters. Focusing his qi across the air between himself and the simulacra, he carefully poured essence stored within his sheathed dagger into the construct, smoothing away warping and granting definition to it's wavering edges.
We know Jiao mentioned getting better death... memories(?) from a melee weapon kill than a kill with an arrow. It could be related to that.Also, I find this really cool. It seems like his dagger dramatically improves his simulacra art. Without the essence stored in his dagger, he seems to be able to create phantasmal simulacra which he is then able to control. Likely useful in a fight for distracting and disorienting an opponent, but certainly not useful for infiltrating a cloud tribe.
Makes me wonder what talisman we could get to narratively improve our arts, rather than simply mechanically. A music box where we can store a song and have it play recreating the effect seems interesting but ultimately too clumsy to use in battle or in any other situation.
Anyway, I really like his talisman dagger, and it shows just how diverse the talisman effects can be.