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File: henchman.png (1.31 MB, 900x1560)
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Your name is Sean Clayton, aka Gunsmoke. Last time, you reached the summit of Mount Olympus, survived an excruciatingly awful blind date, went on the warpath, and crippled a hostile combat bot.

Now, you find yourself as an unseen participant in a tense standoff in the bridge of the naval vessel you smuggled yourself onto.

> Hello everyone, and welcome back to another issue of DC: Henchman Quest! As always, I’m AxisQM. Rules are simple but flexible: 20-30 minutes to vote / roll what I say, rolls count even if you (or I) mess up the modifier, crit successes override, write-ins encouraged. If rolls / votes are slow to come in, I’ll do my best to adjust for it. Our cover art is courtesy of an eternally blessed anon, and I still get a kick out of it.

Pastebin (Still updating per player request): https://pastebin.com/RwY7nc3S

Link to Previous Thread: http://thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive/2023/5518581/

Link to Archive: http://thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive.html?tags=Henchman
>>
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>>5569223

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2HH7J-Sx80

Christ, how do you keep finding yourself in these situations? You’re supposed to be on vacation, but you just keep stumbling into trouble no matter where you go.

The events of last night are a shining example of how badly things can quickly go spiraling out of control.

A botched date turns into a firefight.

Since you’re chronically incapable of letting things go, a firefight turns into a search-and-destroy op.

Thus, the search-and-destroy op turns into an attempted hijacking.

And now, the hijacking has involved into a full-fledged warzone on the waves.

All because Set thought it’d be a fucking fantastic idea to set you up on a blind date. You’re genuinely never going to let him live that one down, even once you exact your pound of flesh.

Luckily, it seems that all parties occupying the bridge are hyperfocused on staring each other down to the point where they fail to acknowledge your intrusion.

Considering the fact that they’re an errant twitch away from going full-blast, that’s both a blessing and a curse.

A blessing, because it makes it easier for you to maneuver into the appropriate position.

A curse, because this wouldn’t be the first time that a showdown ended with all participants facedown in the dirt; the outcome that would be a worst case scenario for you.

Put bluntly, you normally wouldn’t mind letting the chips fall as they may and letting them hash their issues out amongst themselves. As cold as it sounds, none of the folks in this room mean much of anything to you.

Definitely not to the point where you’re willing to throw yourself in the line of fire to play equalizer.

But where morality fails, pragmatism serves to pick up the slack.

There’s a stack of unanswered questions that need answers, and the folks in this room are your best chance of acquiring said intel.

Trouble is, supporting any one of them is guaranteed to alienate the other two, potentially to the point of dedicated violence.

Part of you is locked in an internal debate as to which horse to back; Marina, Claire, or the bearded stranger.

Instead, an audacious alternative begins to take shape in the depths of your mind. If you can covertly form an Abyssal Shield large enough to encompass all three targets, you might just be able to gently sandwich them to the floor without giving them the Giles Corey special.

With a bit of luck, magic, and creativity, you might just be able to resolve this without firing a shot.

Granted, they’ll probably be a bit sore in both the literal and figurative manners.

But this is the only way you can ensure that everyone is willing to hash this out like mature adults.

And if not, it’ll be easy enough to finish off anyone that gets a bit too belligerent or uncooperative for your liking.

> Roll me some 1d100+10, DC to be determined. First two rolls are Marina’s, second pair are Claire’s (+20), third pair is for the bearded stranger (+10).
>>
Rolled 74, 22, 7, 34, 26, 62 = 225 (6d100)

>>5569224

Messed up my rolls, a promising start to be sure.
>>
Rolled 21 + 10 (1d100 + 10)

>>5569224
>>
Rolled 68 + 10 (1d100 + 10)

>>5569224
K
>>
Rolled 15 + 10 (1d100 + 10)

>>5569224
>>
>>5569225
Blessed rolls
>>
>>5569227
>>5569232
>>5569233

Alright, looks you successfully execute your plan and trap all three targets.

So, which one would you like to question first? (Feel free to include any specific questions you’d like to have asked)

> Marina. It’s about time that you get something actionable on the bastards that sicced her and those mercenaries on you.

> Claire. What in the hell is she doing out here? You clocked her as some kind of agent, but you still don’t know who gives the orders.

> The Bearded Stranger. He’s the relative unknown in this equation, and you need to figure out why he has skin in the game.

> Other?
>>
>>5569242
> The Bearded Stranger. He’s the relative unknown in this equation, and you need to figure out why he has skin in the game.

You.
>>
>>5569242
> The Bearded Stranger. He’s the relative unknown in this equation, and you need to figure out why he has skin in the game.
>>
>>5569242
> The Bearded Stranger. He’s the relative unknown in this equation, and you need to figure out why he has skin in the game.

Seems like the most foddery, expendable merc type
Maybe recruitable?
>>
>>5569242
> The Bearded Stranger. He’s the relative unknown in this equation, and you need to figure out why he has skin in the game.
This is the guy cosplaying as a Duty soldier from STALKER, right?
>>
>>5569242
>The Bearded Stranger. He’s the relative unknown in this equation, and you need to figure out why he has skin in the game.
It might be just a Horus cultist, but I still wanna see if my assumption is right.
>>
>>5569242
>> The Bearded Stranger. He’s the relative unknown in this equation, and you need to figure out why he has skin in the game.
>>
>"Thing are weird for you right now, I know. I dont know you, I dont have anything aganst you, so what if we can talk and know each other?"
>>
>>5569246
>>5569247
>>5569250
>>5569256
>>5569266

Calling it, give me a moment to get a brief write-up done.
>>
>>5569276

Alright, looks like you’ll be speaking with the bearded soldier first.

Before you settle in for your impromptu interrogation, what kind of tone would you like to set?

> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.

> Calculating. Take a good long look at his body language, equipment, and possible motives so you can feed him what he’d like to hear.

> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if he cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.

> Cocky. Make it plain that if he doesn’t play ball, he and his compatriots are going overboard as fish food.

> Hostile. Perhaps a visceral display of magical force will make it crystal clear that you are not someone to be yanked around.

> Other?
>>
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>>5569286

Pic related.
>>
>>5569286
>> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if he cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.

Something tell me this guy dont like jokes. Try to not be a dick
>>
>>5569286
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if he cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved
>>
>>5569286
>> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if he cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
>>5569286
>Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if he cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
Rolled 58, 25 + 40 = 123 (2d100 + 40)

>>5569292
>>5569296
>>5569298
>>5569303

Alright, give me some 1d100+25

> DC to be determined.

(As a reminder, your Luck drain bonus / his malus is 16.)
>>
Rolled 9 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5569306
>>
Rolled 8 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5569306
>>
Rolled 4 (1d100)

>>5569306
>>
>>5569308
>>5569309
>>5569310
Set luck
>>
>>5569308
>>5569309
>>5569310

Well, those are some improbably low rolls. Writing.
>>
You sling your Apokoliptian Carbine over your shoulder to free up your hands for what’s about to come.

It takes a great deal of focus and concentration to merge your Fire and Chaos magics into a cohesive form strong enough to prevent movement, but not so strong that you pancake them by accident.

In the space above their heads, a long, flat disc of obsidian material is slowly willed into existence.

As soon as you’ve generated a large enough slab, you will it to descend at a safe velocity capable of pinning the trio down.

There’s a terrible crashing and some yelling, but it’s more from surprise than from pain. Aside from a few nasty bruises, everyone is safe and sound.

All targets successfully immobilized and ready for questioning.

Now, you just need to figure out who gets the honor of going first.

Decisions, decisions.

Eventually, you single out the bearded stranger as your first person-of-interest to “interview.”

You can’t help but be curious. The others, you have at least a bit of perfunctory knowledge on; not this guy.

Could be a hitter hired by anyone you’ve ever crossed, or just some patsy that took the wrong job.

To better facilitate communication, you crouch down and address him politely, yet with iron firmness.

> “I’m going to be blunt. You’re not getting out of here until I get what I want. If you want to make this harder than it needs to be, I’m happy to oblige. But if you answer truthfully, we can both save each other a lot of trouble. Agreed?”

There’s a beat of silence as he mulls over your cooly delivered olive branch.

You must cut quite the figure, the heavily armed paramilitary operative bristling with weaponry and an identity shrouded behind a balaclava.

His response consists of a thick glob of spit that plants itself solidly on the top of your combat boots.

Well, that answers that.

The bearded soldier grins crookedly and laughs, before fixing eyes with you. Once he’s sure he has your attention, he carefully enunciates a clipped phrase in some vaguely Eastern European language that you still can’t put a name to.

Judging by the scorn in his gaze, it wasn’t a friendly comment.

Guess it’s time for you to try a different tack.

In response, you…

> Shrug your shoulders and engage in some “enhanced interrogation techniques.” You tried this the easy way, now things get a bit dirty.

> Rifle through his belongings for something that’ll shed light on his motivations. There’s always a paper trail somewhere.

> Just put a bullet in his head and move on to your next captive. Let it serve as an example to the others.

> Other?
>>
>>5569355
>> Just put a bullet in his head and move on to your next captive. Let it serve as an example to the others.
there was an attempt
>>
>>5569355
> Rifle through his belongings for something that’ll shed light on his motivations. There’s always a paper trail somewhere.
>>
>>5569355
>"The money you will never get is worth of your life, soldier?"
>>
>>5569366
>>5569358
>>5569355
This too
>>
>>5569355
> Just put a bullet in his head and move on to your next captive. Let it serve as an example to the others.
>>
>>5569355
> Just put a bullet in his head and move on to your next captive. Let it serve as an example to the others.
Sometimes it's about the message
>>
>>5569355
>> Just put a bullet in his head and move on to your next captive. Let it serve as an example to the others.

> Rifle through his belongings for something that’ll shed light on his motivations. There’s always a paper trail somewhere.

>"The money you will never get is worth of your life, soldier?"
>>
>>5569366
+1
>>
It would seem that the chosen option is shoot this guy, then go through his gear.

As these aren't mutually exclusive, I'm happy to merge them together.

Go ahead and give me some 1d100+25

DC: 95
>>
Rolled 71 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5569396
>>
Rolled 56 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5569396
>>
Rolled 17 (1d100)

>>5569396
>>
>>5569400
>>5569401
>>5569403

That's a success, writing.
>>
>>5569404

You sigh in exasperation, and pose a rhetorical question while drawing your 1911.

> “Is the prospect of money you’ll never see really worth losing your life?”

It’s a fair question, one that’s plagued your own thoughts more than once.

To his credit, he doesn’t even flinch as you methodically line up the shot and pull the trigger.

The suppressor muffles the crack, but it’s still loud enough to startle your other captives.

Let that be a message.

Now that he’s dead, you have free reign to rifle through his knapsack for anything of value. Most of it is standard enough kit; extra ammo, knife, detonators, spare cigarettes (which you pocket), some light body armor, and an old PDA.

You shrug on the body armor and discover that it’s a near-fit. Seeing as your primo body armor bought it in the line of duty, this’ll have to do.

As for the PDA, it has some heavy encryption on it for an antiquated model, but you’re able to isolate a few critical weak points and quickly compromise its security.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUvFBvS2B98

A quick look at the message history is quite illuminating.

Looks like Marina kept this guy and his men on speed-dial for especially dangerous missions. Judging from their orders, it looks like they specialize in terror tactics, sabotage, and explosives.

That’s not the kind of training you can just pick up from a few weeks bumming around at a training camp. To make it this long, you’ve gotta have some serious experience.

Sure enough, it looks like your newly deceased pal had quite the rap sheet. Stored in one of the files is a copy of his Interpol wanted poster, a bit vain, but you can understand the temptation.

Your stiff is one Dzhalal Basayev, Chechen guerrilla fighter extraordinaire who went freelance with the rest of his unit after the Russians kicked them out of Grozny. A quick skim of his job record reveals that he and his boys pulled some real nasty shit; bombed hospitals, schools, theaters, anything packed full of Russian civvies.

Dollars to donuts, these guys planted the IEDs back at the restaurant.

Luckily, there are also a few entries about the op where you were targeted.
>>
>>5569440

Interestingly, the written orders suggest that Marina was actively encouraged by her employer to avoid direct conflict with you.

If anything, it reads more like a fact-finding mission. More espionage and subversion than a hunting party.

And yet, she insisted on picking a fight with you in a public space.

A poor decision, for self-evident reasons.

Her employer definitely seemed to hold the same opinion, as Basayev was covertly offered a princely sum to “clean-up her mess, permanently.” Reading between the lines, that’s probably what instigated part of the conflict currently tearing the ship apart.

Well, that didn’t go quite as planned, but it wasn’t a complete loss.

Now, who’s up next for a round of 20 Questions?

> Marina. Now that you have a few pieces of the puzzle, you have better leverage to press her with.

> Claire. Hopefully your execution of the Chechen guerrilla spurs her to realize that you mean business.

> Other?
>>
>>5569444
> Marina. Now that you have a few pieces of the puzzle, you have better leverage to press her with.
I want info but i don't want to leave her alive
>>
>>5569444
> Marina. Now that you have a few pieces of the puzzle, you have better leverage to press her with.
>>
>>5569444
>> Marina. Now that you have a few pieces of the puzzle, you have better leverage to press her with.
>>
>>5569444
>> Claire. Hopefully your execution of the Chechen guerrilla spurs her to realize that you mean business.

Lets keep the best at last

>Friendly
>>
>>5569444
> Marina. Now that you have a few pieces of the puzzle, you have better leverage to press her with.
>>
So Marina knows us as Jonah and Claire knows us as Defcon, right? Or am I misremembering?
>>
>>5569462

Yes, that is correct.

Speaking of which, it looks like you'll be consulting with Marina next.

What kind of tone would you like your interrogation to take?

> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.

> Calculating. Take a good long look at her body language, equipment, and possible motives so you can feed her what she’d like to hear.

> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.

> Cocky. Make it plain that if she doesn’t play ball, she and her mercs are going to wish that they went out as clearly as the Chechen did.

> Hostile. Perhaps a visceral display of magical force will make it crystal clear that you are not someone to be yanked around.

> Other?
>>
>>5569462
Claire know us as a guy named Defcon
>>
>>5569472
> Cocky. Make it plain that if she doesn’t play ball, she and her mercs are going to wish that they went out as clearly as the Chechen did.
>>
>>5569472
>> Calculating. Take a good long look at her body language, equipment, and possible motives so you can feed her what she’d like to hear.
>>
>>5569472
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
>>5569472
>> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.

Just to fuck with her.
>>
>>5569472
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
Should have stayed for desert
>>
>>5569472
>> Rageful. Holding our rage back by the barest amount. Straight up tell her that we just snuffed her man and that we want to snuff her and we have more than enough reason.
>>
>>5569472
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
>>5569472
>>5569477

>> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.

Change my vote
>>
>>5569472
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
>>5569472
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
Though I wouldn’t mind a friendly opener like
>We seem to meet in unexpected places.
>>
Rolled 41, 36 + 15 = 92 (2d100 + 15)

>>5569476
>>5569481
>>5569484
>>5569486
>>5569487
>>5569492

Alright, professional it is.

Roll me some 1d100+25

> DC to be determined.
>>
Rolled 95 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5569494
>>
Rolled 19 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5569494
damn, she really can't keep her cool
>>
Rolled 99 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5569494
>>
>>5569495
>>5569499
>>5569501

That's a success. This feels like a reasonable stopping point for tonight, need to grab some dinner anyhow. We'll pick it up from here on Friday at 5:00 PM EST.

As always, thanks for playing! Hope to see you all then.

>>5569499

To be fair, she's had a bad go of things over the last day or so. Imagine bungling a job so badly that you've got a magic psycho trailing you, your boss wants you dead, and your rep is about to take a huge hit. I'd be panicking too.

As an aside, feel free to post conspiracy theories / shadowrun about what's happening behind the scenes.

The paranoia sustains me.
>>
>>5569501
1 more and we make her go Stockholm
>>
>>5569509
Hey, we aren't happy about this either! It's fucking amazing how out meltdown just made her go Defcon 1 on the spot, Sean has a strange effect on people.
>>
>>5569509
Bitch see Sean going in a mental breakdown of a lot of shit that might not be true, and the first thing she does is bombard the wall and try to put us a bag. And she's also a professional mercenary, one would expect that Sean's breakdown wouldn't bring such tension and heat on her

That's why no men should open up about feelings with women, only the homies and strangers on the bus, baka
>>
>>5569524
>baka
How tf does the autocorrect on my phone went from "baka" to that? I even write it wrong and the autocorrect didn't give an option even close to that, tf?
>>
>>5569525 ok, now i'm retard

I wanted to write "baka" instead of baka
>>
>>5569525
its the filter, I'm guessing you are trying to say f4m? It's an improvement imho
>>
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>>5569529
>he doesn't get it
>>
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>>5569530
>>5569533
I was, in fact, bamboozled

Tried to write s/m/h
>>
>>5569524
She's probably wondering if the whole thing was a set up
What kind of merc spills their guts on the first date?
>>
>>5569542
Happens to everyone.

>>5569552
The barely mentally stable ones, it seems. It would probably work with any of the heroine babes. Not really.
>>
>>5569552
>She's probably wondering if the whole thing was a set up
>the whole thing was a set up
>set up
>set
>Set

Motherfucker
>>
>>5569509
I'm fairly sure she's sent by Task Force X, at least indirectly.

On the bright side, us bungling any nonviolent interaction with a woman means that we're one step closer to naked grippy oil wrestling and kissing with Pandion
>>
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>>5569509
Live Marina reaction
>>
>>5569592
He's a married man anon. I'm holding out for Constantine
>>
>>5569592
Wouldn't it be hilarious if both of these ladies were sent by CADMUS? Both with wildly different methodology to ensure at least one person has an in with the guy who made Lok piss his pants in anger.

My money is on Mammon or some other fancy demon sending Marina after Jonah. That being said we should totally pick up a copy of the Lesser Key of Solomon. Some of those demons in there are alright. If you don't slip up at least. But seeing as we're definitely gonna get into a showdown with the hellish hordes that is probably a dead end to begin with.
>>
>>5569592
>I'm fairly sure she's sent by Task Force X, at least indirectly
I don't think so

It's either Lok or Cadmus, they're the two main players that could have soldiers under their paycheck and have some contacts to a group of chechen terrorists.

But Task Force X it's not possible because Claire is right here, and from the things our team are talking about when we check on them it looks like they Claire came with other weirdos for Marina, surely on a attack or extract mission because somehow they got a lead on us and on Marina, surely to capture her and learn what she knows.

OR, maybe our the Chechens might be from Waller herself. We know Lok it's the boss right know, but maybe Waller knows how much a fuck up Lok it's, so she might swoop in and it's trying to take control of Task Force X with some contacts
>>
>>5569572
Already made that joke the last thread m8
>>
>>5569619
>we should totally pick up a copy of the Lesser Key
We already have a demonology book, other wont hurt.

>My money is on Mammon
Mammon is canon? I thoght that he was make up for the movie.

Nice movie, if only they have named it diferent and say that was just inspired in the comics
>>
>>5570054
Mammon is ye olde hebrew shit. Literally means money. I didn't know he was in any movies. But that's pretty rad. I just figured the demon of greed would most likely have his fingers in mercenary pie.
>>
>>5570063
>I didn't know he was in any movies.
Constantine, the one where Keanu Reeves make a holy flamethrower/shotgun/cross to kill demons and give the middle finger to Satan while God carry him to heaven.
>>
>>5570109
I'm gonna be real with you, I only remember Satan having a cool design with the tar feet and white suit vest from that movie. Everything else is just right over my head.
>>
>>5570145
>I'm gonna be real with you, I only remember Satan having a cool design with the tar feet and white suit vest from that movie.

The best movie satan ever. That he was the one that save the world in the end is just awesome
>>
>>5569572
Set is getting a boot up his ass and latrine duty.
>>
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>>5569509

You’ll focus on Marina next, she was your original target after all.

And while a quiet veneer of professionalism didn’t work well on the Chechen, hopefully it’ll shake Marina up a bit.

Another round of icy politeness mixed with the threat of imminent force, coming right up. Good thing she doesn't seem to recognize your voice, that would've potentially complicated matters.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNb2cV8TSdk

The first of your mindgames is to consciously maneuver into her line-of-sight as you finish poking through the PDA.

Without any fanfare, you look up and give her a slight nod.

> “Not to worry, I’ll be with you in but a moment, I’m nearly finished with this little journal. Quite the page-turner.”

You flick your eyes over and watch her reactions, while outwardly maintaining your focus on the contents of the device.

Her eyes widen when she notices the PDA you’re pretending to peruse.

Good, the more you can rattle her, the better your odds of keeping her honest.

Now that you’ve set the stage, it’s time for the main performance.

You abruptly perform an about-face, close the gap, and crouch to reach eye-level.

If Marina possessed the opportunity to recoil, she would’ve.

It is also likely not lost on her that you’ve adopted the same detached posture as when speaking with your recently executed hostage.

> “Apologies for that unpleasantness, but there’s just no helping some people. What a waste.”

There’s a hint of genuine sincerity in your tone that helps to sell it. The man may’ve been a killer, but he was a skilled killer. Had things gone differently, he might’ve made a valuable ally. Oh well, spilled milk and all that.

> “Now, I assume you heard the offer I extended to our recently deceased acquaintance. Your thoughts?”

Claire makes a noise like she wants to interject, but a pointed look stops her in her tracks.

> “While I greatly appreciate the enthusiasm, I would highly recommend that you wait your turn.”

Your voice, while still calm and collected, carries an unmistakable word of warning that undercuts each syllable.

She doesn’t like it, but complies nonetheless.

> “Much obliged. Now, where were we?”

You drag out each word in your final sentence to further Marina’s discomfort.

She begins to open her mouth, but you cut her off before she can get going.

> ”Apologies, just one last thing; as you may have guessed, if you lie to me, I will know. Any attempt at deception or subterfuge will be treated….harshly. And well, I would assume that you’ve guessed what that means.”

You take a moment to rise and gently nudge the still-warm body of the Chechen.
>>
>>5571774

Marina blanches a little at your implicit threat, causing you to grin internally.

Ah, that there’s the good stuff. Nothing spooks people more than an ice-cold demeanor, unfaltering politeness, and the certainty that you are capable of myriad acts of violence.

> “But, should you cooperate and answer my questions in good faith, I promise that this will be quick and painless. You may even be able to profit from this unfortunate situation.”

A white lie, you’re still on the fence about whether or not you’ll just circle back and punch her ticket once you’re done with Claire.

In all honesty, now that you’ve had some time to cool down, the betrayal stings a whole lot less. Ironically, the fact that she was intended to be some kind of honeypot actually makes you less angry.

Considering your own mercenary experience, you can intimately understand the concept of doing whatever it takes while on the job, no matter how underhanded it may be. Of course, that doesn’t mean that you’ll hesitate for a second if she gives you a valid reason to take her out.

She did try to kidnap / kill you after all. Can’t let that go unanswered.

> “So, what’s your decision?” Your voice adopts a harsher edge as you deliver the ultimatum.

As anticipated, she folds like a house of cards.

Now that you’ve secured a relative degree of cooperation, you just need to start pumping her for intel.

In that vein, what questions do you have for Marina? (If nobody has any ideas, I’ll just go with a list of my own.)

> ???
>>
>>5571775
I've got nothing boss
>>
>>5571775
>> ???
>What you know about your boss?
>What are your orders
>Have you see or feel something strange these days? Maybe about someone? Like they are too evil or your body tell you to stay away from them?
>Have you feel that something follow you?
>>
>>5571775
Yeah not much I can think of that isn't the usual fanfare. "What are you doing here" "Who's paying you" "What is the speed of an african swallow".
>>
>>5571775
>who are you?
>who do you worked for?
>do you know why she is here? *while pointing at Marina*
>>
>>5571779
>>5571782
>>5571775
>>do you know why she is here? Or who she is? *while pointing at Claire*

This too
>>
>>5571775
>who are you?
>who do you worked for?
>do you know why she is here? *while pointing at Marina*
>>
>>5571775
>Your contractor, do you have a name for the individual or Organization that brought your team and the Chechens here?
>Are you and the other armed guys you came here aside of the Chechen your group? Or are you just a freelancer that was given the team and weapons by your contractor?
>From where is your contractor? Americans, Europeans, Asians, Middle Easters?
>Do they have ties or direct envolvement with some Goverment?

I guess that's enough. With Claire we can ask the same questions, and also ask why they attacked Marina and her team?
>>
>>5571775
>Seems the Chechen was sent to clean you up. What’s your take on why that is?
I back all the other questions as well.
>>
>>5571787
+1 This one too
>>
I'll give another 10 minutes for any stragglers, then get a-writing.
>>
>>5571775
>The Chechen's PDA says your job was to gather information on your target, why'd you try to grab him?
>Was that cyborg I broke on the way here one of yours or one of hers?
>>
>>5571775
>I won't sugarcoat that I came off pretty strong but don't you think you might have... overreacted a little?
>>
>>5571775
>What are the numbers, Marina?
>What do they mean?
>What is your ring size

Ask about information but also questions to rattle her
If she can't answer move on quickly yo the next question
>>
>>5571789
Not a question but we can be sorry about our vietnam moment in the date Axie?
>>
>>5571790
+1 except the Cyborg part. If they know or hear about Jonah, and Claire hear that name or know that we somehow manage to take it down, it might conect the dots
>>
>>5571793
>>5571791

I have no issues with it myself, but I would assume that the general consensus is to avoid implicating yourself if at all possible.

Those questions would kinda tip your hand as to your identity.

Keep in mind, you're dressed like just another average thug in a balaclava.
>>
Alright, time for a little Q&A.

Go ahead and give me some 1d100+40

DC: 75 / 95 / 115
>>
Rolled 4 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5571797
>>
Rolled 14 (1d100)

>>5571797
>>
Rolled 45 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5571797
>>
>>5571799
>>5571800
>>5571801

That's a regular success, writing.
>>
Damn, we rolled poorly. All we needed was a 59 to meet the excellent success.
>>
>>5571805
You feel bad abou that you would cry the next time we fuck up in the worst moment
>>
>>5571806
See, those are entertaining in their own right. Having Sean blow up at his blind date? Pretty funny. Anons falling apart afterward not so much, but that comes with the territory.

This was just sad.
>>
So, I'm having a devil of a time getting all of the dialogue written up.

I'm probably not even halfway through the list at the moment, probably another hour or so before I'm close.

Just wanted to give a heads-up that I'm liable to be as slow as molasses for this one.
>>
>>5571817
fair enough
>>
>>5571817
take your time brother
>>
>>5571804

> “We’ll start with the basics. Your name, if you please. Military rank as well, should you possess one.”

“Marina Meru, former JSDF Colonel.”

Guessing that acronym is in reference to the Japanese Self-Defense Forces. Not exactly a common breeding ground for mercenaries.

Part of you is tempted to quiz her on the reason for her separation, but you quash it quickly.

It has little to do with your investigation, and runs a high chance of causing her to clam up.

> “I’ve noticed that you and several others share similar uniforms. Are you part of a larger organization, or are you a smattering of freelancers provided with gear and a temporarily shared goal?”

“We all belong to the same mercenary company, under my command.”

> “Interesting. And the name of this organization?”

“Poison.”

You can tell that she takes great pride at its provenance from the way she says the name.

You’ve never heard of it. Don’t know if that’s a good sign or a bad one.

> “Given your methods, it’s an apt name, if nothing else.”

Before she can decide if you’re making a veiled insult, you move on.

> “Are there any metahumans or individuals with notable abilities among the ranks of Poison?”

“No, I strictly aim to recruit ex-soldiers and former terrorists with specific skillsets. Anything else isn’t worth the ego or the complications.”

Interesting. She seems to be telling the truth, which means that the cyborg and others must’ve accompanied Claire’s frogmen.

> “Now for something a little more contemporary; tell me about your client in as much detail as you can.”

As soon as the words pass through your lips, she tenses and looks away.

“I don’t know anything about that side of things. I handle the field operations, not mission control.”

She’s lying, so you press her further.

> “Come, come. You must know something. Every little detail helps.”

After a tense moment of silence, she relents and spill the beans.

“We never spoke with or met our client directly. All contact was handled through the middleman that initially approached us with the job notice. He made it clear from the start that he just the go-between for a larger entity.”

> “Did he ever make reference to this ‘larger entity?’ A government, crime syndicate, or society of some kind, perhaps?”

“No, not even once. We tried to do some digging, but the guy was a damned ghost. Couldn’t find a scrap of information on him.”

> “Yet you took the job anyway?”

“It seemed like easy money at the time. Guess that should’ve been my first clue that it was a shitty idea.”

> “What was the objective of the job he gave you?”
>>
>>5571886

“He gave us a few headshots of some random guy in his early twenties. Apparently he was some mental case with the misfortune to piss off the wrong people. We were assured that he was a pushover. It was made clear that the job was getting shopped around to other groups, and that there was a big payday for anyone that could gather useful info on him; stuff like his fears, desires, goals, weaknesses, that kind of stuff. Like a psych profile but a bit more in-depth.”

> “Was there anything distinguishing about this man?”

“Not really. He struck me as ex-military from the pictures, but that was about it. Wouldn’t have blinked if I passed him on the street.”

> “And how did you first encounter this man?”

“It ended up falling into my lap. I was in town for a bit of R&R, looking to blow off some steam when a local contact of mine offered to hook me up with a blind date. The description of said date was eerily close to those headshots. So, I had a few men waiting in the wings in case it turned out to be a trap.”

> “And how did things go?”

“Terribly would be too weak of a word. I wasn’t even halfway through the main course, before the guy had some kind of breakdown.”

> “What sorts of breakdown?”

“The pathetic kind, mostly. He just started ranting about how he fought overseas and got a bunch of his buddies killed. If I’m being honest, I ended up tuning most of it out. I hear enough sob stories as it is.”

You resist the urge to let your anger show on your face.

See, that’s what you get for daring to open up about things. At least you’ve learned your lesson.

> “What happened next?”

“Since he was obviously mentally unstable, I assumed that it wouldn’t take much for him to have another episode, one that could escalate into a fight. So, I slipped out and ordered my men to capture him. Figured it might be worth a bonus or something. But I guess you already know how that went.”

> “I have my ways. Circling back to the middleman, how frequently were you in contact with him?”

“We only met in-person a couple times, always at night. He wanted to avoid leaving an electronic trail whenever possible, though he did request call for updates from time to time.”

> “If that’s the case, how were you paid?”

“We have a standing agreement with Calculator. The money gets routed to him, he takes a neat chunk, launders the rest, and wires it to various untraceable bank accounts.”
>>
>>5571890

There’s something she’s not telling you, but you’re inclined to let it go. There are other topics that take priority. You’ve never dealt with Calculator, but you’ve been around the block long enough to know him by reputation.

> “So, what did this middleman look like?”

“Male, maybe late-20s, brown hair, messy beard. Never got a good look at his face, but he seemed kind of sickly. Like the wind would blow him over if he wasn’t careful. That’s about it.”

> “Anything more distinctive that you can recall?”

“He had a voice like he was a chainsmoker, raspy and guttural. Overall, he gave me the creeps.”

> “What language did you converse in?”

“English only.”

> “Is there a major government in particular that you do a great deal of work for? One that would potentially approach you for a job like this? Russia, China, Germany, Iran, England, America; something along those lines?”

Your innocent question elicits a spark of anger.

“I will never work for the Americans. As for the others, I suppose it may be possible. Although, ‘legitimate’ governments tend to give Poison a wide berth for fear of scandal. Having us on the payroll would look bad in the newspaper.”

That doesn’t rule out the nations willing to play hardball on the international stage.

> “Prior to today, have you ever encountered this woman before?” You ask, gesturing towards Claire.

“No, I’ve never seen her before in my life.” Marina mutters, returning Claire’s bored glances with a deathstare.

Both her hostility and statement seem honest enough. Guess she must’ve lost a lot of men in the last day.

> “Let’s move on. That PDA I was fiddling with has some interesting tidbits. For instance, did you know that the Chechens were being bribed to ‘clean up your mess, permanently?’”

A tremor of anger appears on Marina’s face, before she chokes it back down.

“That explains why they turned on us, at least. I run a tight operation, and I can usually see these things coming. But in this case, they blindsided me.”

> “Have you had any strange feelings or experiences lately? Maybe encountered something that defied explanation?”

“Besides this, not really.”

> “Has anyone been following you or shadowing your movements?”

“I get the occasional government agent trying to chase me, but nothing as of late.”
>>
>>5571892

Well, that was quite the lengthy interrogation.

One major question remains though.

Based on what you’ve gleaned; who hired Marina in the first place?

You’ve got quite the enemy list after all, many of whom have the resources necessary to authorize such a strike.

In the end, your conclusion pins the blame on…

> The Penguin. Could be that he put two-and-two together and decided to get some revenge for trashing the Iceberg Lounge.

> Task Force X. This seems like the kind of shit that Lok would give his seal of approval to.

> Cadmus. You gave them a hell of a black eye in Qurac, maybe they’re hunting for you as well.

> Intergang. You’ve been a thorn in their side for months, there was bound to be some retaliation.

> The Court of Owls. If Agnor was right, their reach extends farther than you can imagine.

> The Russians. Maybe Lok leaked that you were involved in that attack that blew up their embassy.

> The Executive. You’ve never been on good terms with that asshole, and he has the connections necessary to line this up.

> Horus. Maybe this was all some kind of divine test, or punishment for aiding Set.

> Demons. According to Delrio, they were quite interested in acquiring your immortal soul.

> Other?
>>
>>5571893
> Task Force X. This seems like the kind of shit that Lok would give his seal of approval to.
> Cadmus. You gave them a hell of a black eye in Qurac, maybe they’re hunting for you as well.
> Demons. According to Delrio, they were quite interested in acquiring your immortal soul.
in this order of probability, with the top being the most likely and the bottom being the least likely
>>
>>5571893
>> The Court of Owls. If Agnor was right, their reach extends farther than you can imagine.
>> Demons. According to Delrio, they were quite interested in acquiring your immortal soul.

Cadmus and X are there, but the weird man make me think of something off here
>>
>>5571893
>>5571901
Support. The raggedy man and the desire for a psyche profile don't strike me as Cadmus or Task Force X
>>
>>5571893
> The Court of Owls. If Agnor was right, their reach extends farther than you can imagine.

> The Executive. You’ve never been on good terms with that asshole, and he has the connections necessary to line this up.

> Demons. According to Delrio, they were quite interested in acquiring your immortal soul.

Or of course it was one of the batfamily and before we cap anymore people we get beat up by batman
It was all a SET up
>>
>>5571892
Also...

>“I will never work for the Americans."

>"Hai, Marina-san. I have a offer to you, desu."
>>
>>5571908
Samurai tom cruise would be an alias i am willing to vote for
>>
>>5571893
>> The Court of Owls. If Agnor was right, their reach extends farther than you can imagine.
>>
>>5571901
>>5571906
>>5571907
>>5571918

Alright, it would appear that The Court of Owls has garnered the most suspicion, along with a slight smattering of others.

Now, it's time to speak with Claire.

You know the drill by now, how do you plan on structuring your interrogation?

> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.

> Calculating. Take a good long look at her body language, equipment, and possible motives so you can feed her what she’d like to hear.

> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.

> Cocky. Make it plain that if she doesn’t play ball, she'll discover that the beating you delivered in France was basically a love tap.

> Hostile. Perhaps a visceral display of magical force will make it crystal clear that you mean serious business.

> Other?
>>
>>5571920
> Calculating. Take a good long look at her body language, equipment, and possible motives so you can feed her what she’d like to hear.
>>
>>5571920
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
>>5571920
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
>>5571920
> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.

She's probably not going to expect this, I'm willing to bet she's trained to withstand super frog torture

But nobody trains to deal with friendliness
>>
>>5571920
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.

After we finish interrogating her we kill Marina and leave Claire tied up in an emergency raft if she behaves, if not we'll kill her too.
>>
>>5571920
> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.

She's been watching us do this the whole time, breaking the facade is just going to make her stay tightlipped.
>>
>>5571920
>> Professional. Break down the facts of the situation in a polite, transactional matter; if she cooperates, things will go a whole lot smoother for all parties involved.
>>
>>5571920
> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.
We got info and a better mood, why not let it show
>>
>>5571910
>Go to hollywood
>Become actor
>Become famed actor after your first film
>Normal people think that you are in movie when they see you doing weird shit

Our movie will be Lightbringer: City of Shadows. Is about a low level criminal that discover a secret society that control Gotham. It play as Bloodborne, all "normal", crime, blood and mistery, then come down magic, demons and a eternal battle the light is losing.

It end in a cliffhanger where we gain powers from a gray place and discover a purpose in life fighting the dark
>>
>>5571920
>> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.

Not chippi, but relaxed
>>
>>5571920
> Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.
Switch it up for the last one to throw her off.
>>
>>5571945
What about a grey fireplace he relights at home? Or maybe his new home base after his previous hideout gets destroyed? We could make a fucking mint with the idea.
>>
>>5571945
I thought it would be more nioh where a white guy comes to japan and does ronin samurai stuff
>>
Rolled 100, 14 + 50 = 164 (2d100 + 50)

>>5571923
>>5571926
>>5571937
>>5571938
>>5571943

Alright, looks like you'll be maintaining the professional approach.

Roll me some 1d100+25

> DC to be determined.
>>
Rolled 87 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5571962
>>
Rolled 46 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5571962
no surprises here
>>
Rolled 96 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5571962
I’m tempted to force a reroll since she’s probably figured out who we are and is about to escape.
>>
>>5571954
>What about a grey fireplace he relights at home? Or maybe his new home base after his previous hideout gets destroyed?

Love it. He grow up on a gang and that fireplace is where he learn about brotherhood and honor. He always carry a lighter becasue the flame make him remember that family.
>>
>>5571920
>Friendly. You tend to catch more flies with honey than with vinegar; after all, your easygoing nature tends to disarm people.
If Claire comes and ask "hey, why tf are you acting like this", the perfect excuse is "I expected Marina here and the Chechens. Not you, you and what looks like your people are a new factor that I didn't expect, and i'm honestly curious"

I come with the same train of thought of >>5571928, we might throw her off and end up like a weird individual.
>>
>>5571970
Fuck
>>
>>5571961
>I thought it would be more nioh where a white guy comes to japan and does ronin samurai stuff

That is part of the plan, we can do whatever in japon and say is for the movie. That sell of adventures and get money
>>
>>5571966
>I’m tempted to force a reroll since she’s probably figured out who we are and is about to escape.
Yeah, I would vote for that
>>
Rolled 62, 4 + 65 = 131 (2d100 + 65)

>>5571964
>>5571965
>>5571966

That's a critical success for Claire.

As your re-roll was spent back on Mount Olympus, it's kinda open and shut.

Go ahead and gimme some 1d100+50.

> DC to be determined.

inb4 double crit
>>
Rolled 62 + 50 (1d100 + 50)

>>5571979
>>
Rolled 63 + 50 (1d100 + 50)

>>5571979
>>
Rolled 64 (1d100)

>>5571979
>>
>>5571980
>>5571981
>>5571982
SET!
>>
Rolled 24 + 50 (1d100 + 50)

>>5571979
fugg, not another lady we have to kill.
>>
File: 1666447536124473.jpg (18 KB, 444x250)
18 KB
18 KB JPG
>luck drain saves the day again
>>
>>5571980
>>5571981
>>5571982

Okay, that's some spooky coincidence.

Three posts in direct order, get a set of sequential rolls.

And the sequence starts with the same as the highest one I rolled.

I feel like this may be a sign.

Speaking of which, Luck Drain puts you over the edge, success.

We'll pick up from here on Wednesday at 5:00 PM EST. I plan on using Monday to work on interlude stuff.

As always, thanks for playing and I hope to see you all here next time!

Boy, I feel like the over/under for crits in this quest is kinda stacked. I may have to do that math when we eventually reach a conclusion.
>>
>>5571980
>>5571981
>>5571982
>One up from the next
>>
>>5571979
What are the rules for rerolls? I thought it was 1 use per thread.
>>
>>5571991
>Okay, that's some spooky coincidence.

Is not all:

>Rolled 62, 4 + 65

There where 4 rolls, and the 65 conect the last roll to the first again.

>DMWWKJ
>>
>>5571967
How do you grow up on a gang? You mean in?
>He always carry a lighter because the flame make him remember that family.
Its needs to be an old fashion flick lighter. With a fancy Set Icon in it, just to fuck with the magic community. The new fireplace has a Hestia symbol in it. Maybe he makes a eye of horus symbol for his signature weapon.
>>
>>5571997

Unless I'm misremembering, it's typically been one per mission, which I've substituted for the purposes of the vacation to be one per country.
>>
>>5572001
>How do you grow up on a gang?

Is for the movie.

>Its needs to be an old fashion flick lighter. With a fancy Set Icon in it, just to fuck with the magic community.

Perfect.

>Maybe he makes a eye of horus symbol for his signature weapon.

Unless we want to fuck with Horus I dont see it, maybe as a nice detail. I dont know if make him as a villian or something else.

Set can not be or be like a shadow that follow us, someone that put you in unexpected situations. Maybe he want to fuck with the dark now that is winning?
>>
>>5572001
The lighter has a sign of a company that made them, with a egyptian word or place. One of the gang members has an oddly similar name to Hestia that was the mom of the group and respected, but the last thing the MC knew and the gang si that she left to continue her studies in some university and the Gang lost contact with her. And a rival gang that's looking for the MC in the present use some eagle head for their symbol. Or maybe they're a motor biker gang that use the eagle head.
>>
>>5572018
>The lighter has a sign of a company that made them, with a egyptian word or place
Oh yeah, I forgot. The mascot or symbol is some kind of Jackal
>>
>>5572003
I mean... With how many mission they we're in each location I understand it. But I say that maybe the best option was to get a "timer", like each two missions we get the ability and reset.
>>
Now that the idea for the movie is firm, who will be the director?

>Michael Bay
>Set
>Spielberg
>Sean
>Other
>>
>>5572051
Peter Jackson. So we can ask him to get Viggo Mortensen in on the action.
>>
>>5571893
>gather useful info on him; stuff like his fears, desires, goals, weaknesses, that kind of stuff. Like a psych profile but a bit more in-depth.”
It's fucking batman, isn't it? I can't think of anyone else who'd be so interested in personal matters like that, maybe The Court.
>>
>>5572069
does batman hire fucking terrorists
>>
>>5572051
It's going to be a A24 movie made by Ari Aster. It will be a more serious and grounded approach with some weird elements and symbolism that we're working, with dream sequences that actually reflect the mind of the protagonist that's also going to work to tell about the background and past of the mc
>>
>>5572071
>the terrorists are him
>he buy a town
>everyone in the town is him
>make a legend of his fake name destroying ghost towns
>>
>>5572051
Sam Raimi
Make a trilogy of movies about a hero that eventually ends up becoming memes
>>
>>5572014
>How do you grow up on a gang?
>Is for the movie.
English isn't your first language huh?
>>
>>5572051
Peter Jackson would be good, or whoever did the Godfather.
>>
>>5572759
>>How do you grow up on a gang?
>>Is for the movie.
>English isn't your first language huh?

I understand English, the problem is that I'm retarded
>>
>>5572821
I see, stupidity is infectious after all.
>>
>>5572055
>>5572154

Good options both. We get Ari Aster as the director, with the aid of Peter Jackson as a co-director/adviser so we can have Viggo Mortensen.

>>5572495
I think that would happen anyway as along we make a cultural impact, which now make me think of which way we can do it. We aim to do a Matrix or just a good trilogy?

Also there is the love interest issue. We get one? If so, which girl? Or do we hint at some vague feelings between Hestia and us?
>>
>>5572903
Good trilogy

For love interest lets go the VN route and have different love interests in different iterations.
>>
File: Soon.png (1.46 MB, 1587x2245)
1.46 MB
1.46 MB PNG
>>
>>5574097
I can see Batman having a stroke as he pours over the footage.
>>
>>5574097
WAIT, WE NEED A BUNCH OF KNEECAPPING SCENES!
>>
File: movie poster no credits.png (2.02 MB, 974x1501)
2.02 MB
2.02 MB PNG
>>5574097
Haven't added credits yet, but here's my take.
>>
>>5574097
>>5574356
Good shit
>>
File: 1590179933066.jpg (64 KB, 640x473)
64 KB
64 KB JPG
>>5574356
Love how the dark tower thing aim to the sun. Exelent

Picrel Court of Owls when the find out this
>>
>>5574356

Now that I think about it that would be great to the last movie.

I have some names in mind.

First part: City of Shadows
Second part: Midnight Madness
Final part: Minutes to Dawnbreak

>>5574297
>WAIT, WE NEED A BUNCH OF KNEECAPPING SCENES!

Our infallible, invincible technique, passed down from generations of criminals and thugs from the dawn of time.
>>
>>5574526
Don't forget the inevitable cash-grab spinoff film featuring classic and now public domain movie monsters "Lightbringer: Broken Moon" which ends in a conflict against count Orlok.

The name and posters reminded me that Dracula is actually canon to the DCU. Which means it's probably a good thing we aren't headed for the Balkans on our vacation.
>>
>>5574575
>Kill Dracula
>Use his corpse as a prop

People in the magic underworld will develop a terminal, incurable case of "I laugh my side off" after seeing the film for years to come.
>>
>>5574595
double points if instead of that we somehow convince good old vlad to actually star in the movie, imagine the entire magic community going into conniptions that king vampire himself decided to act in a movie.
>>
>>5574097
>>5574356
>>5574595

You guys gotta stop giving me interlude ideas.

I can only procrastinate so much.

Anyhow, looks like Venture Bros is actually getting a finale at some point, blessed news.
>>
File: 45767654653564.gif (1.32 MB, 272x320)
1.32 MB
1.32 MB GIF
>>5574920
>tfw the credits roll and it says "Count Dracula as himself"

>>5575145
>You guys gotta stop giving me interlude ideas.
Okay, make it an actual plotpoint so it won't be an interlude then. Problem, meet solution.
>>
Maybe we can use the Shut-Up-Or-You-Die card as a prop.

And the Steel Wolfs can come as security, extras and secondary. We can train with them and said is for the movie.

>Adjutant Tango show up to talk with them.
>"Hello brothers. I have a offer to any of you that is willing to take it. I have a old friend that will give us money to make a documentary of what we all experience in our struggle. The thing is that he is doing a movie about american staff, and want people like you, reliable and competent. If you don't want to go, I won't force you."
>Adjutant Tango go off stage, Jonah come up.
>"Hi, I'm Jonah Thema. As Adjutant say I want to make a movie about corruption in america, a book is going to be published about it, but normal people don't read books unless it's important to them. Expect really weird shit if you come with me."

>>5574920
>>5575288
>>"Count Dracula as himself"

If we are lucky he could be like Thoth. He just need to take a days off.

Even his diet is not that much of a problem, with all the guys coming out of the woodwork for our blood if we make a movie about the Owls, he will have food aplenty.
>>
>We meet Dracula
>roll 100
>https://youtu.be/_kru56uPdzE
>>
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>>5575586
Poor guy, holy shit

Hope he dont hang himself
>>
>>5575373
It's super easy to get blood in the modern day though. Especially in places like Gotham that are super corrupt. Fifty bucks to get let into the blood bank's back door or a quick pit stop at one of the more well supplied alleyway doctor's office for bags full of the stuff. It's a bit cold but very incognito.
>>
>>5575754
>It's a bit cold but very incognito.

That is the thing my friend, this is an Royal European Vampire. Maybe he only drinks from glasses made exclusively for him for all we know.

But you are right, in Gotham you can get amost everything. Maybe is there one of these weird cults/orgy/roleplay group that like suck blood while they fuck? We could pay some of them to pass the night with Mr. D?

That if he like to discuss philosophy and pass time with his food though, if he just want food we just call some more-or-less healthy goon.
>>
>>5575873
Dracula joins your WOD game and ruins it by pointing out inaccuracies constantly.
>>
>>5576054

Dracula has a seething hatred of fishmalks.

Also, I promise that I'm actually being productive today.
>>
>>5576057
But what is Dracula though? A ventrue? Or Bruja?
>>
>>5576057
>Dracula has a seething hatred of fishmalks.
Based and sea-hatepilling
>>
>>5576060

I'm pretty sure he's canonically a Tzimisce.
>>
>>5575873
>Maybe he only drinks from glasses made exclusively for him for all we know.
Counterpoint, blood slushies.
>>
So, I'm plugging through the JLA report on Venezuela, and while I think it's neat; it's probably going to be kind of boring if you don't think reading over import/export stats is the coolest shit ever.

Just wanted to give fair warning.
>>
>>5576091
Import/export stats are the coolest thing ever though?
>>
>>5576091
Man you just being a tease now. That ain't cool Axie.
>>
>>5576091
As long as I get to laugh at some of the entries, I’m game.

Look at how much those nutters are paying to import corn when it’s also Venezuela’s main agricultural product and the true market rate is so much lower, hahaha capitalism and exploitation ho!
>>
>>5576091
>Axie just deleted everything by mistake while editing
>>
>>5576137

I'd say I'm like 80% of the way there. Finally managed to hit a good rhythm on a part that's been tripping me up.

It's about 7000 characters at the moment, for what that's worth.
>>
>>5576141
>It's about 7000 characters at the moment, for what that's worth.
>for what that's worth.
>Can't write +50k per minute
>>
OPERATIONAL REPORT ON THE STATUS OF VENEZUELA

This report is mandatory reading for all members of the JLA leadership council and all active-roster JLA members assigned to the South-American sector of operations.

The information within has been divided into multiple sections in an attempt to better demonstrate the myriad changes in the nation of Venezuela since their internal crisis.

After fierce fighting by internal rebel groups, the longstanding leader of Venezuela, Manuel Pedraza, has been taken into protective custody by a transitional military government known as the “Supreme Junta.”

The founding members of the self-christened Supreme Junta are:
- Major General Juan Rubio, chief representative of the Venezuelan Army
- Admiral Miguel Suarez, chief representative of the Venezuelan Navy
- Major General Nicolas Barrera, chief representative of the Venezuelan Air Force.

It should be noted that while eventual elections have been promised, no concrete dates have been established as of the writing of this report.

Economic Situation

Historically, foreign trade has accounted for roughly 70% of Venezuela’s GDP. However, under the tenure of the now-imprisoned President Pedraza, overall GDP and spending power per capita has plummeted despite the steady expansion of intetnational trade agreements and the loosening of tariffs.

Under Pedraza’s watch, the national poverty rate has broken the 60% mark and shows no signs of improving. Compounding this economic misfortune, the inflation rate of the Venezuelan bolivar has remained within the range of 20% - 30% for the last decade; coupled with a climbing unemployment rate from 13% - 17%.

Put bluntly, these are incredibly bleak numbers that provide a plausible explanation as to the lack of public backlash surrounding the toppling of the former President. If the Supreme Junta can provide viable and timely measures to address these issues, they will quickly establish a bedrock of national support.

One of the first dictates of the Supreme Junta was a widespread anti-corruption campaign. Intensely high levels of corruption have been a serious issue plaguing all facets of society for decades.

To that end, the Supreme Junta has instituted a comprehensive crackdown in all arenas in an attempt to weed out existing violators and dissuade future temptation.

Minor infractions are typically punished with firings, seizure of requisite assets, and light prison sentences as applicable. Major infractions carry stiffer penalties of life imprisonment and total civil forfeiture. For particularly egregious cases, the death penalty has been authorized to draw a clear line in the sand. These measures have drawn international outcry, which has been stonily ignored.
>>
>>5576188

In terms of production, petroleum alone accounts for more than 85% of total Venezuelan exports. The remaining exports typically include acyclic alcohols, iron reductions, gold, crustaceans, and hard liquor. In regards to exports, their primary trading partners (by order of volume) are the United States, China, India, Mexico, Turkey, and Brazil.

Venezuelan imports are largely centered around electronics, refined petroleum, rice, corn, wheat, livestock, and base metals. In regards to imports, their primary trading partners (by order of volume) are the United States, China, Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, and Mexico.

Major occupations within Venezuela are focused on the oil, food processing, construction materials, textiles, mining, steel, and tourism industries. Despite the fact that agriculture employs about 10% of the labor force and over 25% of Venezuela’s land, it only accounts for about 3% of total GDP. The Supreme Junta have enacted a robust rural mechanization and land-grant program in an attempt to develop a self-sufficient food supply that reduces the need for foreign imports.

Effective immediately after the Supreme Junta seized power, key sectors of industry deemed relevant to national defense were nationalized. This includes (but is certainly not limited to) oil fields, refinement facilities, shipyards, factories, mines, and other valuable pieces of previously private-owned infrastructure. Many of these interests were wholly-owned subsidiaries of overseas companies, who have since petitioned the Supreme Junta in the hopes of receiving compensation for their properties.

Each and every one has been pointedly informed that “they have profited from Venezuela long enough” and that “decades of unchecked greed are payment enough.” Ever since, the Supreme Junta has made no effort to shed their command economy, and is instead shifting away from the free-market model entirely. Furthermore, global energy prices have skyrocketed after the Supreme Junta made the controversial decision to greatly lower their oil exports to both replenish the national stockpile and punish foreign interests. Predictions indicate that further protectionist measures are sure to come, with the overall goal being an entirely self-reliant, autarkic state.
>>
>>5576190

Security Situation

The Supreme Junta has made it clear through various legal and diplomatic channels that foreign interference of any stripe into Venezuelan affairs will be met with strict diplomatic, economic, and (if necessary) military retaliation.

After purging disloyal officers from the previous regime, the Supreme Junta has reintegrated the bulk of the enlisted and non-commissioned forces after swearing them to new oaths. To bolster their nascent security forces, the Supreme Junta has also issued wide-reaching pardons to former communist guerrillas and ex-cartel hitmen, in exchange for a long period of military service.

There are already concerns that Venezuela could evolve into a haven state for mercenaries, smugglers, and other threats to global peace and security; especially now that they have dissolved all previous extradition treaties.

Considering the fact that the Supreme Junta is taking active measures to insulate themselves from political and economic repercussions via their autarkic economic plans, it’s reasonable to assume that short of internal rebellion or armed takeover, international pressure will have little impact.
Political Situation

At the suggestion of the JLA, the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council have held a vote to discuss a binding resolution compelling the Supreme Junta to accede to the following major points:
- Turn Pedraza and other political prisoners over to the International Criminal Court for trial
- Hold free and JLA-monitored democratic elections within nine months
- Cease the nationalization programs and compensate the entities impacted
- Pursue a program of military disarmament adherent to the strictures laid down by the United Nations Disarmament Commission

This resolution received support from France, the United Kingdom, and the United States; yet was defeated after the Russian Federation and China vetoed the measure, jointly denouncing it as “wanton interference in the sovereign affairs of a capable nation.”

Upon learning of the failed resolution, the Venezuelan Minister of Foreign Affairs issued a statement decrying “the heavy-handed and self-centered attempts to strip the Venezuelan people of dignity and autonomy.” The minister went on to bluntly question why the international community was so interested in the internal affairs of Venezuela at present, and not during the previous decades of repression.
>>
>>5576192

Reading between the lines, the leaders of the Supreme Junta believe that the United States and other Western powers provided covert military support to Manuel Pedraza in a ploy to prop up his government in exchange for favorable access to oil and other natural resources. Given these suspicions, they are heavily disinclined to build inroads with the West, and will likely extend overtures to pariah states and other natural allies.

The Russian Federation and China likely view this regime change as an unprecedented opportunity to counter the influence of the United States and strengthen economic and military ties in the region.

Given the controversy of the oil supply, they stand to greatly profit if they can establish cohesive agreements with the Supreme Junta.


------------------
Personal Notes (REDACTED FROM OFFICIAL REPORT)

Another flashpoint, and another ceaseless argument.

The interventionists point to the results and claim that it’s proof that we should’ve acted sooner. That if the League had taken a firmer stance and involved itself, we could’ve prevented any of the bloodshed from happening.

Their detractors point at the results and claim that it’s proof that we did the right thing. That if we had driven blindly into a divided nation, we would’ve just encouraged further strife and instability.

At its core, the League was not designed for this. We were established to counter threats that no one else was equipped to handle.

“The Earth’s first line of defense against threats too large for humanity to face alone.”

But insurgencies, nation-building, international politics? How can we be expected to tackle every issue, everywhere, all at once?

The others share my worries, but not to the same extent. Things are changing faster than we can adapt, and I’m certain that we’re overlooking something important.

The more things that fall through the cracks, the shakier the foundation becomes.
>>
FIN

Let me know what ya think, took me ages to finally get this one in a workable state.

Definitely not the most riveting material I've written, but I have a soft spot for these kind of reports.

Hope you enjoyed!
>>
>>5576198
Really nice Axie.

Did you post two times or you copy paste the same post?
>>
>>5576210

I flubbed the formatting on one of em, just refresh and the old one should be gone.
>>
>>5576198
Yeah, this shit's good Axis. I've imagined that if somehow Venezuela IRL could topple the regime this would likely to happen.

But more in terms of a Interlude about the international politics inside a quest inspired in the DC Comics I really liked it. The pace is good and the way to run down the effects and responses of the public are interesting.

And also: NO MENTION OF OUR BOY TANGO, LET'S FUCKING GOOOO

That means our message didn't make it out of Venezuela, and unless some Venezuelan recorded it and put it in the internet we're good for the moment. We can still make our stuff before the JL get the footage and try to seek for Tango.
>>
>>5576197
Its good
Sounds like an official report
Also sounds like if we balkanize mexico or another large country like brazil we could keep the JLA busy but unable to do anything
>>
>>5576198
I think it's pretty great, getting info on Venezuela's actions post-Tango is interesting. They're really living up to their ideals and promises. The UN is a shit, as always. Honestly at this point I wouldn't be surprised if the Venezuelan elections pull exclusively from the military. I mean, the West and 'western ideals' effectively fucked them over, so universal democracy might not be too popular. Maybe.

And the Justicd League's cope and seethe over the issue is great. Keeping them stressed and a bit busy helps us out in the long run.

Overall, amazing work as always Axis.
>>
So what's the next south american nation we should assist? We could always hunt for mecha Hitler in Argentina.
>>
>>5576222
>And also: NO MENTION OF OUR BOY TANGO, LET'S FUCKING GOOOO

>Batman distrust of the space station's venezuelan maid

>>5576250
>So what's the next south american nation we should assist? We could always hunt for mecha Hitler in Argentina.

As a uruguayan I have to tell you that fixing argentina is like try to clean grease with your hands and cold water, everything turns out worse and you end up all sticky.

Mecha Hitler is in Tierra de fuego though, all tech there.
>>
>>5576250
Brazil or (If we're counting states a bit north) Mexico could work. If we were to run down there in that way again, they'd be great targets due to their own problems and trade with the US. Less money for Uncle Sam = decreased funding for shadowrunning.
>>
>>5576250>>5576268>>5576288
There IS a nazi occult book in Brazil that we could nab for our next artifact hunt
>>
>>5576288
Dont know which country is worst with dark magic. In Mexico you have them on the street, but in Brazil they can get realy nasty about that.
>>
>>5576306
>There IS a nazi occult book in Brazil that we could nab for our next artifact hunt
Yo... That sounds good.

>>5576312
>Dont know which country is worst with dark magic. In Mexico you have them on the street, but in Brazil they can get realy nasty about that.
From some time already there has been cults and magic stuff like Yoruba witchcraft, I know this because i'm Venezuelan and from some years ago that religion had a big boom around the country, and maybe that's the same on other Latinamerican countries.

Those that I do know is that there's a cult and worship of La Santa Muerte in Mexico, so if we run against the Cartel, surely we will see some necromantic bullshit or stronger Hexes than the ones we do or what we even know.
>>
>>5576306
to be fair theres an utter metric shitload of nazi's and former nazi's in brazil.
>>
>>5576190
>Hahahaha look at them importing the very agricultural foods they produce. Capitalism and exploitation ho!

Something about presenting a dry academic/journalistic report and then adding personal notes at the end to highlight how the author “really” thinks always tickles me. I enjoyed it, Axie.

Yeah, the League is basically a paramilitary in itself. I’m not surprised stuff like this isn’t something it has the procedures to effectively cope with.
>>
Fun fact, by the way.

I was looking for a good title as to the new Venezuelan government that sounded kinda comic-book like but still grounded in reality.

As usual, history does the heavy lifting for me: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supreme_Junta
>>
>>5576343
Apparently we're doomed to repeat history whether we know it or not. Dang ol history mang.
>>
>>5576337
>Those that I do know is that there's a cult and worship of La Santa Muerte in Mexico, so if we run against the Cartel, surely we will see some necromantic bullshit or stronger Hexes than the ones we do or what we even know.

I still remember one documentary about the soldiers and thugs of Pablo Escobar and how they all were neck-deep in rituals, sacrifices and dark shit.

One militar guy talked to the camara about how he shoot them and the bullets bounced of their skin or just pass through without harming them.
>>
>>5576343
>As usual, history does the heavy lifting for me

History is really full of moments that if where writen as a book people will think its some fantasy
>>
>>5576197
I can't wait to break the whole charade once we give Jack his Final Sendoff.
>>
>>5577214
Or
We could be the next gentleman ghost
Helping out other henchmen
>>
>>5577216
We are doing both.
>>
>>5576192
>There are already concerns that Venezuela could evolve into a haven state for mercenaries, smugglers, and other threats
Batman will be frothing at the mouth when he inevitably finds out that this already happened when he was writing the report, kek
I only wish Sean get's to see it in person
>>
>>5577265
>Batman: You call this fixing a country?
>Tango: I am pleased with the result of my crusade, can you say the same about gotham?
>>
>>5577310
>Batman: Crminals run amuck in the streets
>Tango: And yet they behave and function among the people, the citizens are unafraid
>Batman, there is death everywhere, your mad!
>Tango, and yet its only the criminals that cross the line to die. Its a very pleasant place actually, and when someone innocent is hurt, people can get vengeance and just equally.
>>
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>>5577574
Got some real Armstrong energy
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>>5577680
The only thing he did wrong was shake hands with a twink after all.
>>
>>5577574
>Batman: But, but... This is wrong!
>Tango: Fucking grow up, Batman. The previous goverment got the whole country in ruins, only the military and people with conections with the goverment had good quality of life and the goverment used whole bands of criminals and prisoners to subdue the people that protested or tried to fight. This is a 100 times better now than before where last cop in a little town was corrupt. If anything, most countries in South America are country-sized Gotham.
>>
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>>5577680
>>5577733
We have suffer many hardships, pain and now dark forces from all around the world, and beyond want to break our body and spirit, but that will be always better that living without the freedom to chase our dreams.
>>
>>5576198
Great stuff Axis.
Really nice to see the league interacting with the politics of the world
>>
>Fix a corrupt country
>Crime is likely going to be a small issue

Did we (and the Supreme Junta) just mog the shit out of Batman?
>>
>>5577834
You know, it would be kinda funny if we killed all Batman's enemies for him. Leave him nothing to do. It'd just be a little bit of trolling.
>>
>>5578046
>Did we (and the Supreme Junta) just mog the shit out of Batman?
>>
>>5578049
Dude literally can't survive without work. Depending on canon he broke down at the prospect of being happy. Guy needs a war to function. If we got rid of his villains he would just focus solely on us until more crop up.
>>
>>5578148
This could be a good business opportunity
Batmans carer project dealing with street crime and isolating him to one location focusing on fighting multiple villains while the real supervillains work in peace
If we give him what he needs but not what he wants, fighting the justice league would be a lot easier
>>
>>5578148
>"It was ME Batman. I cleaned up your city so it would seem like you're a maniac with a bunch of psycho criminal colleagues!"
Honestly he's lucky that there isn't a single judge in Gotham who understands that the mentally ill CAN be given the death penalty.
>>
>>5578155
>Call all villains that can are not too retard or crazy
>Convince them of working "together", so they all organized to fight Batman one by one.
>They can do whatever they want, but once every two months one of them have to stir shit up in Gotham for a week in the way they can or want.
>Who get the Batweek turn will be random, maybe through a machine that gives a name. The unlucky dude get a week to plan how win the attention of Batman.
>>
>>5578185
I wonder if Axis would let us get away with killing Joker. Personally I don't see any world where Sean let's him live if they cross paths. Even if Batman shows up to stop us we could quite literally bug him and just put him down later after we ditch bats.
>>
Rolled 67, 71, 2 + 300 = 440 (3d100 + 300)

>>5578212
>I wonder if Axis would let us get away with killing Joker

If you shoot him you will need roll three 100 just to hurt him.

>just put him down later after we ditch bats.
>we ditch bats.

Batman rolls will be like this:
+150 Martial arts
+90 Super tech armor
+60 Surprise attack
>>
>>5578212
No way in hell would Sean kill batman.
He knows the justice league exists and that all the founding members would never let him rest
Also multiple villains would be mad too like the joker
>>
>>5578230
Yet his rogues with no magic regularly elude him.
>>5578232
When did I imply we would kill batman? I don't see a reason in putting down any of the heroes I'm aware of (unless in self defense). Villains on the other hand...
>>
>>5578246
>Yet his rogues with no magic regularly elude him.
Reread my post.>>5578230

>>I wonder if Axis would let us get away with killing Joker
>If you shoot him you will need roll three 100 just to hurt him.
>>
>>5578246
Sorry i misread it
I think joker getting killed would be positive for everyone but batman would still be mad about it
>>
>>5578280
>"GRRRR TWO KILLER SAME NUMBER! KILLER TOO NOW! GROWL!"
>>
>>5578354
>"I was a Killer already, the number actually dropped, retard"
>Launches flash granade to the chest and takes the Claw out
>>
>>5578363
All we need to do is get at least two of his rogues in the same room and kill them both to show him how the math works. Remember, his parents never taught him how to count.
>>
I am begging for a reality check at some point.
>>
>>5578401
>I am begging for a reality check at some point.

They're just memes, Anon
>>
>>5578401
You miss the last twoish arcs where we've largely been getting our shit pushed in our what?
>>
Now that you’ve finished grilling Marina, the last person of interest to speak with is Claire.

She’ll definitely be a tough nut to crack, but you’re confident you can eventually wear her down. From your few interactions, you can tell that she values professionalism; keeping to your current methodology is easily the best option.

It’ll throw up way too many red flags if you abruptly switch up your mannerisms at this point.

She’d notice for sure that you’re on a fishing expedition.

When you crouch down to make your practiced spiel, you notice a small object gripped tightly in her hand.

In the split-second it takes for her thumb to depress the plunger, you recognize it as a remote detonator.

Before you can react, an explosion tears through the hull, causing water to flood into the newly-exposed breach. You can’t be sure quite where the blast originated, but it’s most likely somewhere in the lower decks.

The sudden loss of equilibrium causes you to stumble and lose your grip on your 1911, giving Claire the opening she needs to wriggle out from under your Abyssal Shield.

As she rises to her feet, she tries to crack you upside the head with a rising kick. You manage to pivot in the nick of time, catching the brunt of the blow in the body armor stolen off the dead Chechen. It softens the impact, but you’ll definitely have some bruised ribs in the morning.

A solid shot to the breadbasket is nothing to sneeze at.

When you manage to regain your sea legs, you can already feel that the ship is beginning to list and potentially even capsize.

Luckily, Marina is still pinned under the Abyssal Shield, still wedged in too tightly to escape, though not for lack of trying.

In contrast, Claire managed to fully extricate herself. She has her SMG drawn and on standby, but is making a point of not having it aimed directly at you. It’s still in a position where she can quickly sight you in, but it’s still a sign that she may not escalate further.

“We aren’t here for you, Defcon. I’m willing to let this misunderstanding go and chalk it up as some kind of bizarre coincidence. Just back off and stay out of the way.”

> “I’m not sure what you’re talk-“

“Cut the shit. I know what your voice sounds like. Besides, it’s not like you’re fooling anyone with that ‘stern but fair’ routine.”

Your voice hardens and traces of severe irritation color your inflection.

> “Fine then, I’ll just go ahead and throw manners out the window. So, why should I trust a goddamned thing you have to say?”

The muzzle of Claire’s SMG shifts upwards, a subtle warning that she’s ready and willing to put you down if necessary.

“Besides the fact that if we were enemies, you’d be bleeding out on the floor?”

> “That’s awful tough talk. A little humility would serve you wonders; would’ve figured your last asskicking would’ve taught you a few things.”

“Oh, I know more than enough. Make this difficult, and you’ll get to see firsthand.”
>>
>>5578443

Well, looks like your interrogation was over before it started.

Still, no point in crying over spilled milk.

Now that the ship is living on borrowed time, you might be better served to let bygones be bygones. Marina was your primary target after all, and it doesn’t look like she’s going anywhere soon.

Then again, if Claire is an agent for one of your myriad foes, it might be better to kill / capture her while you’ve got a chance.

In the end, you…

> Reluctantly allow her to withdraw. It’s time to gather your pals and abandon ship while you still have the chance.

> Dive for your 1911 and throw some lead her way. You’ll need to make your shots count, otherwise she’s liable to rip you up with that SMG.

> Keep her talking until there’s another bout of nautical turbulence. If you can take her by surprise, you should be able to close the gap and engage in some good ol’ CQC.

> Bring out the Claw and blitz her. She may be quick on the trigger, but she won’t be fast enough.

> Cast a spell. (Specify the desired spell.)

> Other?
>>
>>5578444
>Reluctantly allow her to withdraw. It’s time to gather your pals and abandon ship while you still have the chance.
This op has gone well enough for my tastes, no need to rock the boat any further. I want to extract that robot safely.
>>
>>5578444
>Summon Abyssal Shield that kept Claire on our arm, pop her with a Hex Bolt, then down and dive for 1911
>If she runs, Fireball.
>>
>>5578443
>Just talk
>Tell her we can fill the whole room with cristals if want
>>
>>5578444
> Reluctantly allow her to withdraw. It’s time to gather your pals and abandon ship while you still have the chance.
>>
>>5578444
> Keep her talking until there’s another bout of nautical turbulence. If you can take her by surprise, you should be able to close the gap and engage in some good ol’ CQC.
I would prefer to capture marina and claire
>>
We can't let the bitch leave, she's definitely with Suicide Squad.
>>
>>5578444
>> Reluctantly allow her to withdraw. It’s time to gather your pals and abandon ship while you still have the chance.
yeah, we are not getting anything more from this
>>
>>5578451
>>5578444
>>5578444
>> Keep her talking until there’s another bout of nautical turbulence. If you can take her by surprise, you should be able to close the gap and engage in some good ol’ CQC.

Change my vote
>>
>>5578444
Switch to this I guess
> Keep her talking until there’s another bout of nautical turbulence. If you can take her by surprise, you should be able to close the gap and engage in some good ol’ CQC.
I don't want her escaping.
>>
How long would it take and how visible is it to cast a communication sigil on her to track her?
>>
>>5578468
the sigil is like a big tattoo in our chest, not possible
>>
>>5578471
>Nanomachines, girl.
>>
>>5578468
this>>5578471
We also don't have the spell, Jack does.
>>
>>5578468
I think you mean a magic spider
>>
It would appear that we're deadlocked between letting things go, and keeping her talking until an opportunity reveals itself.

I'll give another ten minutes for votes / swaps, then roll a tiebreak if necessary.
>>
>>5578444
> Keep her talking until there’s another bout of nautical turbulence. If you can take her by surprise, you should be able to close the gap and engage in some good ol’ CQC.
>”I would hope this is a coincidence, but I’m a little on edge recently. Can you offer anything to help convince me of that?”
>>
>>5578453
>>5578461
>>5578465
>>5578487

Alright, give me some 1d100+25

DC: 80
>>
Rolled 1 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5578489
>>
>>5578490

Boy, the jokes really do write themselves.
>>
Rolled 68 (1d100)

>>5578489
Fuck
>>
Rolled 1 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5578489
alright then let's push our luck
>>5578490
again, no surprises
>>
>>5578490
FUCK! SHIT!
>>
>>5578493
>>5578490
Oh god
>>
>>5578493
oh man, this shit gets better by the second
>>
>>5578491
>>5578493
they really do
>>
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>>5578490
>>5578493
>sean right now
>>
>>5578490
>>5578493
both of you should kill yourselfs
>>
I swear to god if we just run into aquaman
Its so over
>>
>>5578501
>To prove that you dont want to kill me I would let you kill me
>>
>>5578490
>>5578492
>>5578493

So, this is a new one for me.

Give me a few moments while I rack my brains for something appropriate for this momentous occasion.

Gotta tell you, the fact that there have now been a combined total of 3 critfails within the last pair of threads whenever Sean talks to women is incredibly funny to me.
>>
Axis please make what is about to happen legendary. This has never happened before in this quests entire history. None of you cowards ask for a reroll. This is about to be even worse than what happened on the date. We really can not talk to women.
>>
>>5578490
>>5578493
Aight Ima head out. See you guys next thread
>>
>>5578506
at this point we are do this to ourselves
>>5578507
im pretty sure it has happened before. also why did you delete
>>
>>5578507
>Are you gay?
>No, but I cant be hetero
>>
>>5578490
>>5578493
We could have prevented this. Indeed, we would have avoided this entirely. Quit while you're ahead next time.
>>
>>5578512
I could see Sean having a waifu but not a wife
>>
>>5578514
Critfail is a critfail
If we leave and look for our companions we are going to find a drowned bobo and jack being pulled to hell
>>
>>5578514
fuck you I voted to let her go
>>
>>5578518
We are fine with Bab because she have the same problem with man
>>
>>5578490
>>5578493
WHAT DID YOU TWO FUCKING DO?!
>>
>>5578503
>>5578528
last thread i was critting all over and it was like "we are the bestest guy, us" but now that karma has caught up then it's all my and anon's fault huh
>>5578514
fucker you are telling me?
>>
PLEASE ROLL THE DIE PLEEEAS ETEL ME WE HAVE IT PLEEEEASE
>>
>>5578530
>last thread i was critting all over and it was like "we are the bestest guy, us" but now that karma has caught up then it's all my and anon's fault huh?

Yes.

Learn to critting always anon
>>
>>5578524
>kindred spirits because romance always fails
What a weird way to find your soulmate.

>>5578533
Don't worry, she's just going to knock us out, capture us and throw us in a cell. But don't worry it won't be for Lok this time.
>>
Actually yeah, when did we last RTD? Wasn't that with Pandion? IIRC it resets every mission, does this count as a new mission?
>>
>>5578506

As God as my witness, this has the potential to be the most cursed thing I've ever written.

Due to the fact that this was a double critfail, I've decided to make it a little more special.

Please, select the method by which you'd like to jam the entirety of your foot into your mouth.

> Helpfully point out flaws with her weaponry, armor, technique, pretty much everything you can see. Constructive criticism is always a good thing.

> Monologue endlessly about an obscure topic tangentially related to the current situation, without giving her even a chance to speak. Bonus points if you manage to emulate Cullen’s deadpan tone. (Feel free to include a topic.

> Make a comment that you’re surprised at how competent she is. Y’know, for a woman.

> Wax poetic over your shared interests. She kills people, you kill people; there’s bound to be some fun stories to dig up.

> Take a wild shot in the dark and start making idle banter about her love life. It might be a little mean, but you doubt she’ll take it too badly.

> Other?

-------------
>>5578537

Another anon asked something similar; the most recent re-roll was on Mount Olympus. For purposes of the vacation stuff, I've kept to one re-roll per country. Otherwise, I figure it'd get refunded too often.
>>
>>5578535
not my fault Set is holding out on teaching me that Luck drain, the fucker
>>5578537
every place in the roadtrip counts as a mission and we are still in Athens apparently. Clearly we weren't expected to stay in one place for long. Really, it should have just been one reroll a day
>>5578539
> Make a comment that you’re surprised at how competent she is. Y’know, for a woman.
This would be fucking hilarious
>>
>>5578539
> Monologue endlessly about an obscure topic tangentially related to the current situation, without giving her even a chance to speak. Bonus points if you manage to emulate Cullen’s deadpan tone. (Feel free to include a topic.
Guns
>>
>>5578539
>> Take a wild shot in the dark and start making idle banter about her love life. It might be a little mean, but you doubt she’ll take it too badly.
>Talk about ours
>>
>>5578539
> Monologue endlessly about an obscure topic tangentially related to the current situation, without giving her even a chance to speak. Bonus points if you manage to emulate Cullen’s deadpan tone. (Feel free to include a topic.
The steps of how to clean and maintain every weapon in Sean’s arsenal.
Maybe we put her to sleep?
>>
>>5578539
> Helpfully point out flaws with her weaponry, armor, technique, pretty much everything you can see. Constructive criticism is always a good thing.
>>
>>5578539
> Make a comment that you’re surprised at how competent she is. Y’know, for a woman.
>"I mean I've fought a lot of women. N-not like abuse or anything, just uh... anyway yeah you're good for one."
>>
>>5578542

As a compromise, I'm willing to tweak things a bit so that you get a new re-roll at the next city (which would be Knossos) in this case.

However, I'd argue that this is still related to your activities in Athens, much like the Mount Olympus stuff.

Sound good?

And true, I didn't anticipate it would take so long. In my defense, things have a tendency to go a bit off-the-rails. I blame the dice.
>>
>>5578539
> Monologue endlessly about an obscure topic tangentially related to the current situation, without giving her even a chance to speak. Bonus points if you manage to emulate Cullen’s deadpan tone. (Feel free to include a topic.
Guns and killing demon possessed individuals.
>>
>>5578544
>>5578547
+1
>>
>>5578545
>>5578539
Change my vote

>>5578547
>>5578544
>>
>>5578539

Write in

>Every woman I have met I have either killed, shot, stabbed, never called back, tricked into killing her team, threatened, choked out, or some combination of.

>Every
>>
>>5578539
WAIT. LETS RANT TO HER ABOUT SET SETTING UP OUR BLIND DATE!
>Rant about our shit love lives and how a literal God of Chaos makes a fucking awful wingman, and how this was supposed to be a vacation after looting the lockness monster
>>
>>5578547
>>5578548
>>5578544
The criticism could easily transition into this. He starts out pointing out flaws in her shit and then goes on on an endless tirade on how he maintains his shit. Like someone just spoke his sleeper agent code or some shit.
>>
>>5578553
yeah it's fine, i'm not gonna beg for fiat. I just think it'd be more consistent if there was an in-universe timer, what counts as a "mission" is kind of vague
>>
>>5578561
I forgot set on fire.

Did I miss one?
>>
>>5578567
blew up? also who did we trick
>>
>>5578571

I think it was one of the chicks from task force X.
>>
>>5578564

I like this mixture a lot, and it looks like the overall mood is in favor of the long-winded monologue.

As a heads-up, it's been a long time since I've channeled my inner /k/ommando.

I'll give it my damnedest though, writing.

This is probably gonna take a fair while.
>>
>>5578576
I don't think that happened, we stomped frost, knockout got suicide bombed by unknown soldier, plastique we blew up, scandal we shot
>>
>meanwhile the ship is sinking and marina is trying to escape
Twenty bucks on getting gassed again. But this time it's nothing fancy, just mustard gas.
>>
>>5578587
>Sean shoots Marina with lightning in a tantrum, rage gas cannister explodes and we go on a rampage
now that'd be fun
>>
Y'know what? I say this shit si happening because Hestia is too fucking jealous, there's no other explanation. The only girl we have talked to before was Babs, at least outside of some mission or battle, and now, NOW after picking that knife, the two woman we've talked to we just critfail. Us, the guy with a Bonus called Crazy Talk and we're known as being a talkative and persuasive guy.

At this point, Sean it's my new Literally Me. Other people have Patrick Bateman on American Psycho and others have Ryan Gosling on Bladerunner, but having this atrocious luck on women just makes me relate on a big level with Sean.

>>5578581
Yo Axis, can you throw in there a quick chat with the team? Nothing fancy, just tell the guys to search for some emergency boats and start getting the fuck out. We'll have Nessie for our escape
>>
>>5578593

No problem, that should be a simple enough inclusion.
>>
>>5578536
>>kindred spirits because romance always fails
>What a weird way to find your soulmate.

We aren't soulmate because we don't want to be with anyone else, we are because we can't be with anyone else.

The purest form of love
>>
>>5578592
>"Egyptian gods allowed me to live another day, and i'm about to make it every Atlanteans problem"
>>
>>5578593
does this mean Hestia is obsesed in Sean like a yandere?
>>
>>5578595
>You get ZERO bitches, Sean!
>The closest thing you have to a man is listening to dating podcasts Babs, fuck you.
>Fuck me, then!
>What?
>What?
There can be no other relationship as built on spaghetti as theirs.
>>
>>5578593
>Y'know what? I say this shit si happening because Hestia is too fucking jealous

>>5578601
>does this mean Hestia is obsesed in Sean like a yandere?

This wasn't in the pact, but don't Hestia's priestess have do be virgins?
>>
>>5578593
I'm so down for these critfails being Hestia secretly defending Sean's virgin purity from feminine wiles. It's exactly what a Greek Goddess would do for her champion.
>>
>>5578609
Man, when your goddess would rather you be shot than have more than a single productive conversation with women per day. What's next, a flame themed chastity belt appears under Sean's pillow?
>>
>>5578613
Don't forget that Aphrodite started the ancient equivalent of a world war because she wanted her champion to sleep with the prettiest woman in the world.
>>
>>5578593
It’s always been the fucking Greeks…THE ENTIRE TIME. THAT’S why we’re one step away from homosex, the FAGGOT ASS GREEKS. I should’ve fucking KNEW the MOMENT we got the Claw this would happen…you get involved in Greek shite and this is the result. We’re going to have to take radical action against this, Sean will get pussy, divine or otherwise. No matter what it takes.
>>
>>5578613
>What's next, a flame themed chastity belt appears under Sean's pillow?

Shut the fuck up, the dice gods are watching
>>
>>5578609
>>5578613
>>5578614
We have one solution, take Hestia as a wife and make her take responsibility. Or quit.
>>
>>5578618
>Two crit fails
>Same roll
Very true.
>>
>>5578563
>>5578561

Both of these need to be included in this epic rant.

I mean we literally did THIS Op because our date ended up with this woman trying to kill us. And we wanted to know why.

I mean this is VERY MUCH a revenge Op for faking a date and attempting to assassinate us.

Though that means Marina now realizes even further how badly she fucked up considering the person she attacked also tracked her down, killed a bunch of people she had difficulty fighting off, and... well a whole bunch of shit really.

Wonder if we reveal we also str8 disabled a killer robot just to be mad at woman for catfishing.
>>
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>>5578605
Are we NOT a virgin?

As far as I can tell, we haven't gotten laid. Nor has any kind of romance worked out...
>>
>>5578619
The final boss of the quest, second base.
>>
>>5578632
We did get fucked by the military top brass multiple times
Maybe?
>>
Status update.

I'm plugging away at it quite nicely, but I kinda doubt I'll be done tonight.

I figure I'll put another half-hour or so into it, and check back in to see where we stand.

My knowledge of these matters are almost entirely theoretical, so please don't eviscerate me too badly.
>>
>>5578642
If you wanna research it to make it a good post, I don't think anyone is gonna fault your for it. It's a double 1.

And considering a bunch of people here are /k/ommandos and there are those who aren't noguns, you can simply ask questions.

Or you could just rewatch the MGS 3 1911 autism scene.

https://youtu.be/hS32Wx6qd_0?t=100
>>
>>5578642
>I'm plugging away at it quite nicely, but I kinda doubt I'll be done tonight.

What ever that work is fine Axie.

>>5578632
>Are we NOT a virgin?

Maybe we have some close contact in highscool, maybe a kiss even, but we were focus in getting in the army at that time.
>>
Alright, I can feel myself starting to flag a bit, so I'm going to call it a little early while I keep working on the update.

We'll pick it back up on Friday at 5:00 PM EST. As always, thanks for playing!

Hope to see you all there.

(Gotta tell ya, that double critfail took me entirely by surprise. Couldn't have chosen a more appropriate moment for it if I had tried.)
>>
Rolled 86 (1d100)

Rolling for meet, date and fuck a woman that is not Bab

>>5578665
See you Axie
>>
>>5578665
See ya Axis
>>
>>5578665
Sure you could have. It could have happened when we were about to stop Babs from figuring out Jonah was Gunsmoke.
>>
>>5578708
Dude can you imagine where we'd be if we hadn't pulled that off? We'd probably be in Arkham beating Zsasz to death with a gurney.
>>
>>5578769
Shit would be SO much chaotic I guess... Surely some running, interrogation from a butthurt Batman if Babs actually got us, being called crazy and maybe waiting for the weekly Prison break in Arkham with the help of Jack and Set
>>
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>Double 1
Oh golly gee
>>
I come to check on the quest and see double 1s. I'd be annoyed at our godawful luck if it wasn't so fucking funny.
>>
So it goes.
>>
>>5578632
Depends on how many tours in sandland he's been on. Guys in uniform are VERY popular no matter where they go(unless in Japan and black).
>>
>>5578561
Pls this this fantastic.
>>
>>5578563
Supporting. It would be funny as fuck to bitch Set and have them be confused as hell.
>>
Howdy, anons.

I'm still chipping away the next update, but I need some more time to get it in a state that I'm pleased with.

Therefore, I'm going to need to move our session today to Monday at 5:00 PM EST.

As recompense, (and because I always enjoy the exercise) feel free to throw interlude ideas at me.

Your patience is greatly appreciated.
>>
>>5580351
Does batman notice the multiple intergang bases we hit?
Jla report?
Barbara studying greeks in history class?
>>
>>5580351
Has the Young Justice crew been sneaking behind their bosses back to look at all the Gunsmoke and Tango events to see any patterns? Is Superboy itching to be humbled?
>>
>>5580351
Is this next update gonna be interlude sized?

Because it has that feel.
>>
>>5580351
another sean backstory interlude or better yet, a
Gentleman Ghost backstory interlude
>>
>>5580384
>another sean backstory

This. Highschool or whatever time right before join the army.
>>
>>5580367
Supporting this for interlude
>>
>>5580384

A sean backstory of him being terrible with women
>>
>>5580515
>talking to his crush in middle school
>ends up headbutting her and getting suspended
>tries to flirt with a girl in high school
>steps on her foot and knocks her over, breaking her ankle
>tries to get a military wife
>he doesn't do anything wrong she just nearly got taliban'd and gets discharged and marries an average suburbanite man for peace and quiet
>>
>>5580563
>The day we finally found the courage to confess to our crush
>We found her in the bus stop
>Call her out
>A truck crash then
>For looking behind she dont see a box full of axes before it fall on her
>>
>>5580576
>Hestia have her eyes on Sean since he was a child, when one time he asked for a better family close to a fire.
>Everything that happen to us is a Aizen tier plan so we have no choise but be her husbando, no matter what.
>She even is ploting aganst the other gods with the goal of with the objective that they accept the union between her and Sean
>All because the stupid kid Sean have to tempt fate
>>
>>5580636
"Groomed by a goddess" sounds like a wild nipponese animoo.
>>
>>5580687
>"Groomed by a goddess" sounds like a wild nipponese animoo.
Until you realize that this is not what you want from your life and you try to go against divine designs to be a free man.
THEN it become nipponese animoo
>>
>>5580708
>Man that genre change from season 1 to season 2 is crazy
>>
>>5580717
>is Belldandy Lie level of freak out
>>
>>5580708
>Season 1 Sean: Wow I’ve been chosen by a hot goddess! She’ll be my girl since everyone else keeps leaving me!
>General plot: Sean meets women each episode and Hestia schemes to push them away.
>Season 2 Sean: She’s been bullied into standing against Outer Heaven. She and the rest of the gods will die.
>General plot: God of War, but magical Big Boss.
>>
>>5580757
Maybe the other way around?

>Sean slowly become Magic Big Boss
>Magic and Set is there but not too much
>We see how Sean have bad luck with womans and good luck with fire
>In the finale of the first season Hestia appear out of nowhere
>She want that Sean abandon everything he build to be a divine toy, of face divine punishment
>The second season is revel that this was the final chess battle between Set and Hestia, chaos and orden, with Sean and his mens in the middle of all it
>>
>>5580770
Hmm. Still has the second season end with killing god(s) in the Japanese anime tradition so yeah, better structure your way.
>>
K but, what about the spinoffs?

>That Cultist Scholar we once saved, somehow he got into much more troubles
>A mini series of 13 episodes
>Half the first it's about his life, the rest is a setup on how he ended up in the cult
>We follow him through the world being paranoid and losing his sanity, trying to stay alive while demons follow and torment him
>We see his struggles and how he's utterly alone, grasping to the minimal hope of finding the protagonist and lead this War against demons. Not because of God's will, but because demons are fucking evil and someone needs to stop them
>The history of a unknown hero that won't get any recognition and be lost in history forever.
>>
>>5580351
Oh, interlude ideas! I kinda forgot the whole point of today.
>Dracula gets another agent coming by with a script. He takes more of an interest in this one because he’s legitimately bored and wants a change of pace.
>>
>>5580824
I can imagine Agnor being in a psychological horror drama series that slowly descends into actual body horror scarefest and then right at the end an unknown hero backlit by what must be the radiance of Heaven itself (it's just an incandescent lightbulb, Agnor is fighting a full schizoid meltdown at this point) saves the day.
>>
>>5580824
>Weak
>Without way out this mess
>Enemys can be everywhere
>Alone
>Scared to the bones

>Still jump head first into the darkness, because he knows that if is not him, it will be someone else
>He will do what he can for save a future that he will never see
>>
>>5580873
Oh God this, just some guy that is a fan of Sean comes by Dracula's place with random script ideas
>>
>>5581018
>Hey Mr. Vampire man check out this neat script?
>Who the fuck are you and how did you get in my secret lair?
>>
>>5580351
The opinion of the Greek gods seeing Sean kick ass and be a virgin with rival gods of chaos and magic at his side.

I wanted to see if Zeus took interest due to Sean's proficiency with lightning.
>>
>>5581180
Not enough bitches
Can't get pregnant
Seans not into bestiality
Will get jealous over not being the only lightning bolt thrower

At best zeus doesn't fuck with us because everyone likes hestia and hestia likes us
>>
>>5581188
Solid answer, wonder when the wedding will be.
>>
>>5581192
Marrying hestia might be the best route
The gods like her because she is the only goddess with 0 drama
Known for keeping the house, tending the fire, good homemaker
If we reject her, her brothers (pretty much every god on olympus) may come down and set up a shotgun wedding even if she doesn't want to force the issue

Being unlucky with women might be keeping us alive in greece
>>
>>5581199
>tfw you have to fight off the gods just to continue your bloodline
Can't we just promise to get hitched with her after our mortal shell perishes? If we die in a bathtub full of olive oil we get shipped to Elysium instead of Heaven, right? She can pick us up from there.

Imagine waking up one morning with the sun shining through your blinds bright as hell. Except it's 2 A.M. and Apollo is standing at the foot of your bed telling you to get on his chariot for your big day.
>>
>>5581188
Zeus takes notice of Sean's virgin-ess and teams up with Set to get Sean laid
>>
>>5581199
>If we reject her, her brothers (pretty much every god on olympus) may come down and set up a shotgun wedding even if she doesn't want to force the issue

>Being unlucky with women might be keeping us alive in greece

It was Afrodite shipping us all along?

>>5581220
>Imagine waking up one morning with the sun shining through your blinds bright as hell. Except it's 2 A.M. and Apollo is standing at the foot of your bed telling you to get on his chariot for your big day.
>>
>>5581325
Aphrodite is a threat
Goddess of love and fertility but also constantly cucks her husband/brother hephaestus (as chill as he is crippled) with her other brother ares (warrior chad) and many others
Cupid also messes up a lot

I don't want aphrodite's assistance with her very loose definition of love
>>
>>5581356
>I don't want aphrodite's assistance with her very loose definition of love

That is the thing, Aphrodite see love in all it's bloody, scary and mindrotting glory. There is not mortal filter for her.
>>
>>5581325
kek nice
>>
>>5580351
Maybe a little Spectre POV too? Maybe he is one gamer moment away of killing us because he dont want us in Satan side
>>
>>5582031
+1

I would like some POV from the big players, like the Greek gods like another anon said, maybe Horus or some egypt god, or even someone of the Magic community to see if Jonah got some reputation, or if even Thoth manifesting on Gotham actually make some kind of news.
>>
>>5582114
>ask for horus POV to see why his followers are so pissed off lately
>get hestia POV of her pointing at some random guy on a mountain saying "this is mine now"
I would love to see some of the divine or magical waves we've been making mostly completely by accident in the pool though. It would even be cool to see some of Thoth and Set's behind the scenes interactions. I'm sure Set and Thoth ask each other for advice and try to prop each other up.

>"Hey, buddy! I was just think-"
>"You want to ask my thoughts on how to apologize to Sean?"
>"Damn you're good."
>>
Howdy, anons.

Between work kicking my head in, a bit of writer's block, and my notes inexplicably disappearing, I'm still not with the double critfail segment I've been working through.

I apologize for another delay, but I can guarantee that I will be finished by Wednesday at the usual time. It's just been kinda hard to get in the usual groove lately.

In terms of interludes, I'm cool with doing another segment from the perspective of younger Sean.

As for Spectre, and other magical interludes; I'd prefer to shelve that idea for the time being. Mostly because I'd risk a few spoilers, the concept itself is interesting.
>>
>>5583762
That sucks, well see you later Axie

Can you take time to work in the pastebin?
>>
>>5583816

Sorry for the lack of response, anon.

I basically fell asleep moments after my post. Once I get done with the current update, I'll shift to working a bit harder on the pastebin.
>>
>>5584079
Take your time to sleep Axie, the last thing you need is getting tired and do something you regret later on.
>>
You can’t just let Claire walk away while there are still questions to be answered. Just because she isn’t hostile at the moment doesn’t mean that she (and by proxy her employers) won’t turn on you in an instant. Before that can happen, you need information to better establish a profile for future dealings.

And of course, that isn’t the kind of intel that she’ll just hand over without a fight. Your best option is to buy time and keep her distracted until the swaying of the sinking ship gives you an opening to close the gap and engage in hand-to-hand combat.

The trouble is that you can’t think of a topic capable of keeping her occupied and unsuspecting for long enough. Suddenly, you notice that Claire’s SMG has a minuscule patch of corrosion marring the outer edge of its barrel.

Old instincts kick in with a vengeance and you can feel yourself transitioning into the tone of voice that primarily made an appearance when you caught a private doing something monumentally idiotic. Like the time you caught Private Green trying to crack open a grenade so that he could ‘harvest the gunpowder’ for some asinine reason or another.

You’d call it a reasonable way of explaining your displeasure and means of improvement to an otherwise obstinate adult. Outside observers were prone to classifying it as a tone of voice suitable when speaking to a particularly dimwitted toddler caught jamming crayons into their nose for the third time that hour.

> “Holy shit. Is that rust on your goddamned weapon!? I’m embarrassed on your behalf! Whatever way that you’re cleaning that thing, you’re doing it wrong. Now, I’ve always been a big fan of Militec-1 lubricant for pistols and AR platforms, but it’s a stellar option for universal use. Trust me, I’ve put my gear through the ringer wherever fighting is to be had, and it hasn’t failed me yet. It can get a bit pricey, but let’s be real; if you can’t afford to fork over two bucks an ounce for a decent gun oil, fuck off back to the poorhouse before they notice that you’ve escaped. If you’re gonna be carrying something into combat, it needs to be 110% reliable, otherwise you’re begging for a jam or breakdown at the worst possible time. After all; take care of your firearm and your firearm will take care of you.”

That last sentence is spoken practically like a religious mantra.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XK_RkH7aHb8

You take a moment to gauge how Claire is reacting to your sage advice. Despite the obvious value of your words, she seems entirely disinterested, and perhaps even a little irritated. Can’t possibly imagine why, this is valuable advice that could keep her from filling an early grave.

Your lecture continues to meander over the fine nuances of firearms maintenance in excruciatingly precise detail, but Claire seems to be tuning the majority of it out. Eventually, your frustration starts to boil over, and the critique starts becoming a little more vitriolic in both tone and delivery.
>>
>>5585164

> “Christ, why am I even bothering with this? I might as well be lecturing to a brick wall; I’ll bet you’re satisfied to just slap some WD-40 on and call it a day. Actually, I bet you don’t even maintain your own weapons. Dollars to donuts, you’re one of those slackers who just dumps it on the armorer to clean and maintain for you.”

Claire’s lip curls into a frown, a glowing neon sign that you’ve hit a soft spot. And now that you’ve sussed out a topic that lies closer to home, you can finally press your point with a bit more impact.

It might sound a little harsh, but constructive criticism and mincing words don’t exactly go hand-in-hand.

> “Why pick an SMG for a mission like this? Judging from all the gunfire outside, it’s not like this was planned as a stealth op. And if it was, you lot definitely fucked it up. Seriously, why not choose something heavier? Bet that thing sounds like a wet fart when you pull the trigger. You really want to get somebody quaking in their boots? Pack something with a little goddamn oomph to it next time, like a shotgun. Not some over-engineered hunk of Eurotrash that’ll jam the second you take it off-road and get it dirty.”

Once you’re finished pointing out the specific errors in her loadout, you move to some more general criticisms.

> ”I mean, what the hell is that thing even chambered in? Let me guess, some kind of byzantine specialist ammo that was developed and sponsored by the good-idea fairy? Go ahead, leave caliber interchangeability to the plebs; you’re special and need your own proprietary gear. The logistics guy much love dealing with you and your pals. And you know what? I’ll bet you still use the stock parts that you were issued with. No experimentation or creativity allowed, otherwise you might break your fancy toys.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NbdiZMCX8_k

When you pause for some air, you take a moment to see if Claire is following your reasonable disdain for her tactical and strategic decision making. The look on her face makes it seem like she’s been sucking on a lemon for the last few minutes, which is a good sign. Means that she’s finally realizing the length and breadth of her mistakes. That’s no reason to stop though, you’ve got plenty of material to keep working with.

The next item on your list of feedback is an important one; protective bodily measures.

> “And really, a wetsuit? As neat as it may be to pretend that you’re some kind of commando, it genuinely makes you look like you’re part of a bargain brand Coast Guard detail. You do realize that this we’re in the Mediterranean, not the North Sea? The water isn’t that cold. Besides, why on earth would you wear that to a boarding action? Wear some actual goddamn armor before a stray round punches your ticket. Get a vest and some Level IV ceramic plates or something; ask your requisitions guy. Even that dead Chechen had more sense. Didn't really help him in the end, but you never know.
>>
>>5585166

When you make that crack about the Chechen, her eyes widen and her grip tightens a bit. Might be a bit of a low blow, but you’ve never been a fan of sugarcoating the truth.

> “As for your stance, I’ve seen better. You’ve got the basics down, but ya need to bend your knees a bit more. Otherwise, your center of gravity is going to be an absolute shambles when it comes to handling recoil. Your grip isn’t perfect either, but we work with what we get. Now, if I remember correctly, you mix a bit of combat Sambo into your fighting style. Surely you can do better than a flavor of knockoff Judo? Do yourself a favor and learn an actual fighting style. For instance, literally any martial art whose foundational building blocks aren’t taught at the YMCA once the jazzercise class clears out. Honestly, the fact that it gets lumped in with Greco-Roman wrestling only proves that the Soviets ruined everything they get their greasy red mitts on.”

While you finish eviscerating the supposed benefits of her glorified jiujitsu routine masquerading as an actual military style, you idly notice that Claire has a dive knife sheathed at her side; a measure presumably intended to cut lines or throats as necessary.

But what really catches your interest is the way that the glistening of the evening sun dully reflects from the blade.

The sight of its condition enough to make you audibly scoff.

> “You’ve gotta be kidding me! I wouldn’t even trust a blade like that to dice a tomato!”

You draw and brandish your dagger at her, a hasty move that causes the barrel of her SMG to incline towards you. This subtle byplay of tension is totally lost on you as you begin to extoll the virtues of a properly maintained knife.

> “You see this beauty? You see how sharp it is, how it practically gleams in the light? Let me tell you, it doesn’t become that way by accident. Get a sharpening stone, and keep the damn thing in fighting trim! Now, if you can score an Arkansas sharpening stone, that’d be ideal. Always been fond of the harder variety, but that’s mostly just an aesthetic preference. And be sure it’s a pocket stones, bench stones are just a tad too unwieldy. Overall, bench stones are a waste of precious pack space and an unneeded weight. Plus, a smaller stone encourages you to treat the knife with the respect it deserves; if you start getting lax and dice yourself up, there’s only one party to blame. And never mind all that fancy designer shit, it’s all a load of overpriced, overhyped junk for rich assholes who style themselves as ‘outdoorsmen’ because they drive their camper into the Adirondacks for a week.”

You pause for breath, astutely interpreting Claire’s facial twitching and closed-off body language as unmitigated enthusiasm for your continued soliloquy.
>>
>>5585167

> And for the love of all that’s holy, use a decent honing oil on the damned sharpening stone! The number of glue-eating troglodytes I’ve had to argue with about this is infuriating. ’But it’s not like it’s hurting anything, the stone is supposed to be tough!’ Bullshit! Give the goddamned stone its due, or you’re gonna damage something! I tend to like mineral oils, but-“

“SHUT UP! Just shut up already! I don’t care what you think, and I don’t care what you have to say! If I hear one more word, I’m going to enfonce mon arme dans ton cul et fais exploser ta putain de tête stupide!” Claire practically screeches at you, her cool and collected front becoming a distant memory as her rage unconsciously causes her complaining to veer into heated French.

Welp, looks like she’s the sort who can’t take advice offered in good faith. Here you are, trying to impart a few pearls of wisdom to a potential ally of convenience, and this is the thanks you get. The injustice of it all is enough to get your hackles up and provoke you into a more direct confrontation.

> “I would suggest that you keep that attitude in check. It may interest you to know that every single woman who has made the mistake of crossing me has either been shot, stabbed, blown up, never called back, tricked into committing friendly fire, terrorized, or knocked unconscious. If I happen to be in a good mood, usually only one of those things happens.”

Instead of being cowed into submission as you anticipated, Claire swears even louder in French and trains her SMG on you. It’s a little hard to make out the angle, but it looks to be aimed directly at your head.

Smooth as always with the ladies, Clayton. This is the second time in twenty-four hours that you’ve incited a woman into an act of potential homicide with nothing but your charming personality. To be fair, some people might consider that a talent of sorts.

Things may have gotten a little tense, but you can play this off with a bit of tact. Just need to defuse this without saying anything that'll set her off.

> “Listen, I think we might be taking this a little too far. Why don’t you go ahead and put that thing down before you get do something to get yourself hurt?”
>>
(Finally managed to get it all penned out, hope you enjoy. Seeya tomorrow, anons.)
>>
>>5585172
I know it's been a week but i'm not ready, i'm still not ready
>>
>>5585181
I'm really hoping we put an abyssal shield inside of our skull so the bullet doesn't scramble our thinking egg.

Get your beers ready to drown out the pain of this horrible double critfail.
>>
>>5585172
I can't wait to get shot to pieces and get our ayy rifle stolen by the French bitch. It's joever bros
>>
>>5585170
>who has made the mistake of crossing me

More like "I've ever talked to" or I've even befriended
>>
>>5585281
>say hi to a lady
>a month later she fucking explodes
>>
At this point actually just kill them both, for real. Kill them, loot the place and GTFO be done with it.

Sean you fucking tard.
>>
>>5585172
Outstanding work Axis!
>>
>>5585435
I agree, just kill them all and call it a day.
>>
Rolled 8, 14 + 55 = 77 (2d100 + 55)

Alright, go ahead and give me some 1d100+25 to dodge Claire's wrath.

(I'm aware that it's nominally a +50, but that's the price of a double critfail, at least for this roll.)

> DC to be determined.

inb4 crit
>>
Rolled 17 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5585863

pls no nat 1 again
>>
>>5585863
fuck you capotcha
>>
>>5585866
So sleepy he forgot to roll
>>
Rolled 79 (1d100)

>>5585863
Fuck France
>>
Rolled 85 + 25 (1d100 + 25)

>>5585863
>>
>>5585865
>>5585868
>>5585871

That's a success, writing.

Man, she really went and bungled a golden opportunity to get some damage in.
>>
>>5585875
I guess we were right in our rant
>>
>>5585876

The truest irony would've been if she critfailed and her gun jammed.
>>
File: 1617578969317.gif (3.56 MB, 298x224)
3.56 MB
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>>5585876
>her gat hangfires immediately after a rant about weapon reliability
>>
>>5585875
Too bad she didn't critfail so her shitty (surely manufactured in St. Etienne) SMG could misfire
>>
>>5585875

The second you finish speaking, you worry that you’ve gone and thrown fuel onto the inferno.

Your suspicions are confirmed when Claire’s response consists of a flurry of frenzied French and a veritable cacophony of small-arms fire.

Thankfully, her anger dulls her aim long enough for you to dive behind cover before she can line up a clean shot.

Unfortunately, it would appear that you've really gotten under her skin somehow. She practically chases you around the bridge with bullets, absolutely shredding the main controls and other pieces of presumably important and expensive nautical guidance equipment.

If there wasn’t already a huge hole in the hull, you’d feel slightly bad about inadvertently trashing the place.

Eventually, your luck runs out at the worst of times.

Another bout of rollicking momentum trips you up when crossing to a fresh patch of cover.

Claire triumphantly draws a bead on you and pulls the trigger, intent on riddling your upper body with lead.

Click.

For such a small, unassuming noise, the silence it leaves in its wake is practically deafening.

She immediately realizes her mistake and fumbles for a spare magazine, giving you the time you need to muster a response.

While Claire reloads, how do you retaliate?

> Toss a frag grenade at her feet. There’s a decent chance that Marina may be injured in the blast, but you can live with that.

> Move in close and give her a few jabs to the ribs courtesy of your commando dagger. Hopefully you can nick something important and use the promise of medical care as leverage.

> Rapidly draw your Carbine and go for a reaction shot. It’ll be tight; the Carbine is a bit too bulky for a proper hair-trigger response, but you’re a deft hand with it.

> Launch yourself her way with a vicious football-style tackle. If you can separate her from her weapons, your odds of survival increase; simple as.

> Cast a spell. (Reference the spell you’d like to use.)

> Other?
>>
>>5585899
>> Launch yourself her way with a vicious football-style tackle. If you can separate her from her weapons, your odds of survival increase; simple as.
>>
>>5585899
> Toss a frag grenade at her feet. There’s a decent chance that Marina may be injured in the blast, but you can live with that.
Two for one
>>
>>5585899
>> Rapidly draw your Carbine and go for a reaction shot. It’ll be tight; the Carbine is a bit too bulky for a proper hair-trigger response, but you’re a deft hand with it.
>>
>>5585899
> Toss a frag grenade at her feet. There’s a decent chance that Marina may be injured in the blast, but you can live with that.

Well, golden opportunities like this don't show up often
>>
>>5585902
Honestly it's significantly funnier if we capture her.

> Launch yourself her way with a vicious football-style tackle. If you can separate her from her weapons, your odds of survival increase; simple as.
>>
>>5585899
> Toss a frag grenade at her feet. There’s a decent chance that Marina may be injured in the blast, but you can live with that.
Can we charge this with fire magic?
HESTIA PLEASE PROTECT MY VIRGINITY AND OBLITERATE THESE WOMEM
>>
>>5585899
>> Toss a frag grenade at her feet. There’s a decent chance that Marina may be injured in the blast, but you can live with that.
>>
>>5585903
>>5585906
>>5585909
>>5585916

Looks like the ol' pineapple surprise is victorious.

I'll give ten minutes to decide if you'd like to experiment a little and attempt to augment your grenade with a bit of Fire magic.

> Yes, might as well see if you can put a bit of extra kick to it.

> No, just lob the thing and seek cover.
>>
>>5585918
>> No, just lob the thing and seek cover.
nope, no, uh-uh, no thanks.
>>
>>5585918
>No, just lob the thing and seek cover.
>>
>>5585918
> Yes, might as well see if you can put a bit of extra kick to it.
>>
>>5585918
>> No, just lob the thing and seek cover.
>>
>>5585918
> No, just lob the thing and seek cover.
Let ambassador pineapple do the talking.
>>
Rolled 29, 6, 40, 2 = 77 (4d100)

>>5585919
>>5585921
>>5585923
>>5585926

Alright, give me some straight 1d100.

> DC to be determined.

(First pair of rolls are for Claire, second pair are for Marina (-25))
>>
Rolled 54 (1d100)

>>5585928
>>
Rolled 45 (1d100)

>>5585928
>>
Rolled 20 (1d100)

>>5585928
>>
Rolled 93 (1d100)

>>5585928
>>
Rolled 41, 24, 98, 63 + 16 = 242 (4d100 + 16)

>>5585929
>>5585930
>>5585932

Alright, that's an overall success; catching both Marina and Claire in the blast radius.

Now, I'm going to do a bit of rolling to see how badly they fare.

Similar to before, the first pair of rolls are for Claire, second pair is for Marina.

DC: 65 / 80
>>
>>5585936
Should've worn armor Claire
>>
>>5585936
Looks like Marina made it out well
>>
>>5585936
We have blown up two women so far
>>
>>5585936
The shield saved Marina
>>
>>5585936

>>5585936

Fumbled the roll a bit, that was meant to be a -16, not a +16.

Looks like Claire takes some nasty shrapnel, while Marina manages to scrape by with superficial wounds.

How would you like to handle Claire?

> Finish her off quickly, as measure of respect. She was a professional for the most part, it’s a shame things had to end this way. (Feel free to include a specific method of execution)

> Finish her off brutally, as a clear message to her employers. Either stay out of your way, or be ready to start digging graves. (Feel free to include a specific method of execution)

> Cut a deal to stitch up her wounds in exchange for answering your questions. Might be a bit cold, but that’s nature of the work.

> Rummage through her gear and leave her to bleed out. She’s wasted enough of your time as-is, you need to rendezvous with the others before the ship capsizes.

> Other?

———————

How would you like to handle Marina?

> Retrieve your 1911 and give her the same treatment as the Chechen. Two in the head, as quick and clean an exit as anyone could hope for.

> Knock her out and haul her along with you. Might come in handy as a bargaining chip or something.

> Leave her stuck under the Abyssal Shield. She’ll have plenty of time to contemplate her decisions as the ship slowly sinks beneath the waves.

> Other?
>>
>>5585943
Actually I just realized the luck drain might have dropped her roll enough to put it below DC. I thought she had a -20 but she had a -25. With an additional 11 that puts her below 65. Unless she is no longer considered an enemy in this instance.
>>
>>5585950
> Rummage through her gear and leave her to bleed out. She’s wasted enough of your time as-is, you need to rendezvous with the others before the ship capsizes.

loot and ditch


> Knock her out and haul her along with you. Might come in handy as a bargaining chip or something.

I see no reason to leave Marina to die
>>
>>5585950

> Finish her off brutally, as a clear message to her employers. Either stay out of your way, or be ready to start digging graves. (Feel free to include a specific method of execution)
Boot to head = crunch

> Retrieve your 1911 and give her the same treatment as the Chechen. Two in the head, as quick and clean an exit as anyone could hope for.
>>
>>5585950
>> Finish her off quickly, as measure of respect. She was a professional for the most part, it’s a shame things had to end this way. (headshot)
> Retrieve your 1911 and give her the same treatment as the Chechen. Two in the head, as quick and clean an exit as anyone could hope for.
>>
>>5585950
> Finish her off quickly, as measure of respect. She was a professional for the most part, it’s a shame things had to end this way. (Feel free to include a specific method of execution)
Bullet to the brain stem

> Retrieve your 1911 and give her the same treatment as the Chechen. Two in the head, as quick and clean an exit as anyone could hope for.
I want to use the chechens gun for this
>>
>>5585950
>> Finish her off quickly, as measure of respect. She was a professional for the most part, it’s a shame things had to end this way. (Feel free to include a specific method of execution)
Just shoot her.
>How would you like to handle Marina?
>> Retrieve your 1911 and give her the same treatment as the Chechen. Two in the head, as quick and clean an exit as anyone could hope for.
Let's not leave any loose ends to chance.
>>
>>5585950
> Finish her off quickly, as measure of respect. She was a professional for the most part, it’s a shame things had to end this way.

> Retrieve your 1911 and give her the same treatment as the Chechen. Two in the head, as quick and clean an exit as anyone could hope for.

>Take all gear, dump any trackers

We've already bungled it enough, just clean house and get it over with. Both ended up hearing things they probably shouldn't have and that makes them both liabilities; much as I would've preferred body snatching.
>>
>>5585950
> Finish her off quickly, as measure of respect. She was a professional for the most part, it’s a shame things had to end this way.
Frenchwoman's brain, meet .45 ACP

> Knock her out and haul her along with you. Might come in handy as a bargaining chip or something
Hmm.... on the one hand, she might know interesting things. On the other, loose ends need tying up and I fear anons getting cold feet when it's time to ice her later...

Meh, you guys are pretty cold blooded. Just remember, pump her mind and dump the body in the sea.
>>
The results are in, it would appear that both Claire and Marina are getting their tickets punched.

Ruthlessly practical as always, eh anons?

Writing.
>>
>>5585977
Kek, we really have the worst relations with women, don't we?
>>
>>5585986
i blame Sean's dad for it
>>
>>5585977

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRWCK9zGynA

When words fail, high explosive is generally enough to make up the slack.

You rip your sole frag grenade from the bandolier and chuck it directly towards Claire (and by extension, Marina).

As soon as it leaves you hand, you dive once more into cover and ready yourself for the fireworks.

There’s a deafening bang as the pineapple express delivers its payload within close range of its intended target.

The moment that the smoke clears, you cautiously poke your head out to assess the situation.

Surprisingly, Marina managed to scrape by with only some light injuries despite being close to the epicenter of the blast.

With a bit of basic first aid, she’s sure to make a full recovery.

In contrast, Claire is in considerably worse shape. She’’s been blown off her feet, staring upwards at ceiling. The shrapnel absolutely shredded her weapon, which may’ve inadvertently saved her from getting chopped up like hamburger. Unfortunately for her, it wasn’t enough to guard her from the jagged chunk of metal lodged solidly in what appears to be a lung.

That’s not the kind of wound that you can just casually walk off.

Bet her respiratory system would be thanking her if she were packing some better armor like you suggested.

Fixing that’d take some emergency triage, and there’s a solid chance that she would just die on the table.

Part of you wants to try and patch things up in both a literal and metaphorical sense, but a razor-sharp instinct beheads the idea before it can take root.

When you put aside matters of emotion and philosophy and break the situation down to its most primal level, it’s actually rather simple.

She made a wholehearted attempt to kill you.

You fought back.

She lost.

Is there really any other way for this to end?

Alive, she’s a loose end with a grudge. Easy odds that she’d eventually be back with backup and a score to settle. Even as a source of information, you can’t trust a damned thing she has to say. If the positions were reversed, you’d give her dangerously false intel out of pure spite.

Well, best make this quick then. Things to do, other fish to fry.
>>
>>5586018

You emerge from cover, dust yourself a bit, locate your discarded 1911, and approach Claire.

When she notices you, she spits a glob of blood at you and murmurs something unintelligible in French. Seconds later, a trifecta of 45. ACP rounds become intimately acquainted with her grey matter.

What a waste.

Once you finish dispatching Claire, you turn your attention to the still immobilized Marina. By a sheer stroke of luck, your chunk of Abyssal Shield actually managed to protect her from the overwhelming majority of the shrapnel.

It’s a bonafide miracle that will sadly be for naught. She has to go, virtually for the same reasons as Claire.

To her credit, she is smart enough to put the clues together and correctly guess your intentions.

As you approach and loom over her like the proverbial angel of death, Marina is almost pleading for you to reconsider, how she can be useful, that you’re making a big mistake, that you’ll need her help. A thousand and one promises fly through her lips, but you don’t hear a single one of them.

As soon as the decision is made in your head, it’s like a switch is flipped and you tune it all out.

You interrupt her frantic attempt to bargain for her survival with a ragged volley of gunshots to the head and neck. Might be a little excessive, but you’ve got a bit of ammo to spare. After all, if you’re going to clean house, you might as well be thorough about it.

Part of you idly wonders when this kind of thing became so blasé. Eh, you’re on vacation; there’s no sense in crying over spilled milk.

Speaking of which, you might as pick Claire over for anything that might come in handy.

Not like she’s going to need it anymore.

> Give me some 1d100+40, DC: 100
>>
Rolled 41 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5586019
Poor Marina, go easy with the terrorism next reincarnation
>>
Rolled 3 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5586019
lookie here
>>
Rolled 70 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5586019
rollin
>>
Rolled 19 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5586019
>>
>>5586023
>>5586026
>>5586027

That's a success, writing. I need to take a break for dinner, and this feels like a natural stopping point; we'll pick up from here at 5:00 PM on Friday.

As always, thanks for playing and I hope to see you all there!

Some burning questions still need to be resolved.

Who was responsible for that setting this whole clusterfuck in motion?

Who was responsible for the creation and deployment of that humanoid combat robot?

Will Sean ever have an interaction with a woman that doesn't end in gunfire or screaming?

Only time will tell.
>>
>>5586031
Thanks for the session, Axis. It's good shit.

>Who was responsible for that setting this whole clusterfuck in motion?
We already know Set was technically responsible for this, even if he didn't know it.
>>
So from an objective standpoint it looks like we are degrading pretty fast. In all ways other than martial and physical we look to have crossed the moral event horizon from anti-hero to psycho for hire and blood knight. All we need is to see a friend die and we might go off the deep end. Remember when were just depressed and aimless? That was so long ago.
>>
>>5586034
The ways of chaos are not for mortals to understand, or even to the gods to control.
>>
>>5586036
>So from an objective standpoint it looks like we are degrading pretty fast. In all ways other than martial and physical we look to have crossed the moral event horizon from anti-hero to psycho for hire and blood knight. All we need is to see a friend die and we might go off the deep end. Remember when were just depressed and aimless? That was so long ago.

That can be a good thing, because it means that catharsis would be within our reach soon.
>>
>>5586036
>we look to have crossed the moral event horizon from anti-hero to psycho for hire and blood knight
Why do you think that?
>>
>>5586036
we've always been pretty ruthless, remember the Intergang?
>>
>>5586036
Meh, those who live by the sword die by it. An evil attitude, but hardly the worst ever.

>>5586042
Sean did just execute three people in cold blood, one of whom was pleading for her life at the time. That's the extreme end of antiheroism, if not outright bad.
>>
>>5586036
I don't know about that. We stopped a gas attack on civvies, we refused to use sarin in Venezuela, and we still only put people down for good if we feel it'll bite us in the ass later otherwise. Doesn't seem like much of a difference from the first thread, other than now Sean has people and entities he cares about and has a self-decided goal to chase after.
>>
>>5586036
All I can say is that I’m glad the double crit-fail didn’t come while checking on the rest of the team.

It’s still not too late to get pulled back towards the other side though. The hook from Agnor suggests we’ll be facing some demons soon, and they’ll be Jonah’s problem to deal with. Calling in some help from (anti-)heroes is possible. If anons vote for it...
>>
>>5586047
We did try to capture them until the boat got some holes in it. And they did try to kill us multiple times
>>
>>5586036
Are we? I mean, this is still pretty much in-line with Sean as a person. We didn't go out here on revenge alone, Marina knew how to find us and tried to capture us, endangering civilians. It makes sense that we'd go to get her.

And as for the chechen and Claire, tough shit for them. The Chechen deserved it for the school thing, and Claire fought fair and lost fair.
>>
>>5586051
I'm just saying, there is a difference between killing someone in the moment and calmly collecting your pistol before splattering their brains across a wall. A legal and moral one by most people's lights. I don't mind it, Sean is a killer and I like him that way. A revolutionary murdering two terrorists and a spook is a-ok to me.
>>
>>5586047
Sean probably did similar shit in Afghanistan, honestly. But also keep in mind the context of the situation. He didn't pin some helpless bystander to the ground and shoot her. She is also probably a mass murderer and was trying to kill or kidnap him earlier.

The other was actively trying to kill him. She was also a trained killer and has probably killed plenty of people for some not so great reasons as well. As glowie types do.

The chechen was a long time (war)criminal and murderer.

It's actually entirely reasonable that Sean was morally vindicated in killing every single one of them. And he did so mercifully all things considered.

Sure he -could- have maybe talked a couple of them down or taken them prisoner, perhaps even flipped them, you have to keep in mind that none of them were here under duress like most of Sean's other recruits prior.

While I can concede that Sean's mental state might still be drifting towards ever darker places his conduct here isn't in any way indicative of that.
>>
>>5586057
>It's actually entirely reasonable that Sean was morally vindicated in killing every single one of them.
Maybe if you're some consequentialist fag, but let's be serious here. Gangland executions are bad, we're bad, whatever. Sean has racks to stack and governments to topple, leave morality to men with the time and means to waste on it.
>>
>>5585977
woulda voted against if if I wasn't busy with work. fug. We came for info. Killing Marina removed said info collection.

sucks everyone gotta die. Plus side is nobody knew we were gonna be there, and nobody ideally knows we were.
>>
>>5586058
>leave morality to men with the time and means to waste on it.
My guy you are the one who brought it up.
>>
>>5586062
I was agreeing with the anon above that Sean is pretty far across the moral event horizon. Others have contended that not to be so, and I disagree. I don't care for people pretending that Sean isn't a cold-blooded killer with professional, not moral, standards.
>>
>>5586067
There's a difference between degrading mental state, degrading morals, and degrading professionalism. I don't think anyone here was arguing that Sean is moral, more that his mental state isn't really deteriorating and he is remaining fairly professional.
>>
>>5586067
>Others have contended that not to be so
No one said he wasn't a bad dude though?
>>
Moralfag begone! This is /qst/, one day Sean's saving puppies and giving to children, the next he's executing prisoners in cold blood. I wouldn't take too much issue with it.
>>
>>5586072
>more that his mental state isn't really deteriorating and he is remaining fairly professional.
What do you mean? He went on two loony rants and killed people he didn't really have to kill. He's clearly losing it.
>>
>>5586075
consider the fact that the ones that Sean killed were:
a warcriminal
a terrorist
and a spy of unknown origin that tried to kill him
that is why Sean is way better than the majority of heroes that would just beat this bastards then throw them to jail just to for them get out in the same day
>>
>>5586117
I can see your point in the rants part, but he had to kill these people because they tried to kill him first and they knew too much about him.
>>
>>5586117
Yeah, the rants are a pretty big point. Sean has killed before, but raving in front of strangers is new.
>>
>>5586117
The rants are explainable though. The rant with Marina was because we were talking about a very sore subject, and the ranting at Claire was to distract her until the boat rocked again. It didn't and she chased after us, but still, there's no proof of mental deterioration beyond what Sean got in that desert.
>>
>>5586134
>It didn't and she chased after us, but still, there's no proof of mental deterioration beyond what Sean got in that desert.

But the moralfag think that Sean have mental deterioration. That is all the proof he need.
>>
>>5586036
we've become the DC version of the punisher, it feels like.
>>
Is it just me or is it that whenever we crit fail we get narrative failures while crit successes tend to get mechanical boons?

We should get something different for one like a boon/detrimental new ability like say:

>Lady Killer (Literally)
Whenever talking to the opposite sex, Sean receives a -5 to any dice roll that relies on his charisma.
When in combat with female opponents Sean gets a +15 to any dice roll when attempting to kill or lethally harm the opposite sex.


I'm not happy at once again killing two named characters who coincidentally are women *flashback to Venezuela*, I'm somewhat glad we firmly kept our secrets to their graves.
>>
>>5587491
Our killing of women is very exaggerated, we kill way more men. These critfails and having zero female friends, well, that's bad luck. We did part ways somewhat amicably with Double Dare but no one remembers the tournament.
>>
>>5586031

Your search of Claire’s equipment quickly reveals itself to be a disappointment. Most of her gear was heavily damaged in the blast, and none of it was anything too special to begin with.

Part of you wants to cut your losses and call it a wash, but you continue snooping.

Eventually, some gut instinct compels you check her personal effects once more, just to be extra-thorough.

You feel around carefully, hunting for anything you may have missed on your initial once-over.

Sure enough, the probing of your fingers reveal a hidden seam stitched into its side. Some speedy slashes from your dagger reveal the contents; a plain business card of some kind. Doesn’t have a logo, a company name, or even any kind of personal information.

Just a phone number stenciled in a harsh black font on a pure white background. You slip it into your pack for later analysis.

Don’t have time to get distracted while still on-duty.

Especially since the few remaining instruments that haven’t been riddled with gunfire or shrapnel give the impression that more water is flooding into the hull by the minute.

Your next move is to…

> Link up with Set and Thoth to mop up the majority of the hostiles on the main deck. You’ve severed the heads of the serpent, now to ensure that the body follows suit.

> Use your comms sigil to get the others on the horn and signal a general retreat. Your objective was to neutralize Marina, time to leave before anything else can spiral out of control.

> Make a detour to the lifeboat stations. If you can sabotage them all, the merciless sea should do all the heavy lifting once you make your escape.

> Beeline for the engine rooms to rendezvous with Jack and Bobo. Maybe you’ll be able to buy the ship some extra time before it sinks to a watery grave.

> Other?
>>
>>5587491

My general rationale is that I try to match the critfail to the situation it occurs in.

A persuasion critfail means that you totally botch the conversation and likely alienate a character.

A combat critfail means that you make a terrific blunder that may end up getting you killed or captured.

I consider that punishment enough. I'm happy to throw in physical debuffs if necessary, but I'd rather avoid having critfails diminish stats over the long term.

To make my rambling thoughts short, I just go with whatever I figure makes things flow the best given the situation. It's open to interpretation, and I cheerfully encourage you to let me know if you feel differently.
>>
>>5587870
> Beeline for the engine rooms to rendezvous with Jack and Bobo. Maybe you’ll be able to buy the ship some extra time before it sinks to a watery grave.
>>
>>5587870
>> Use your comms sigil to get the others on the horn and signal a general retreat. Your objective was to neutralize Marina, time to leave before anything else can spiral out of control.

Hello Axis
>>
>>5587870
>> Beeline for the engine rooms to rendezvous with Jack and Bobo. Maybe you’ll be able to buy the ship some extra time before it sinks to a watery grave.
>>
>>5587875
I think the current system is fine so far
I like having better stats over time
>>
>>5587870
> Use your comms sigil to get the others on the horn and signal a general retreat. Your objective was to neutralize Marina, time to leave before anything else can spiral out of control.
> Fireball the bodies to make them harder to identify. What’s a little more ship damage at this point?
>>
Looks like there is a tie, I'll allot another ten minutes to vote, and roll a tiebreak as needed.
>>
>>5587870
> Beeline for the engine rooms to rendezvous with Jack and Bobo. Maybe you’ll be able to buy the ship some extra time before it sinks to a watery grave.
Aren't there civilians on this ship?
>>
>>5587899
>Aren't there civilians on this ship?
non-combatants maybe, but no, this is the mercs ship
>>
>>5587876
>>5587878
>>5587899

Looks like you'll be heading for the maintenance section, give me some 1d100+40

DC: 75


>>5587899
If there are, you haven't seen one yet.
>>
Rolled 65 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5587911
>>
Rolled 41 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5587911
>>
Rolled 61 (1d100)

>>5587911
>1
>>
>>5587913
>>5587914
>>5587917

Alright, you make it there without any hostile encounters. This roll is going to be a little different; give me some 3d100 each to brainstorm and implement a fix for the imminent sinking of the boat.

First roll of each anon's trio is for Sean, second roll is for Jack (+25), third roll is for Bobo (+20).

> DC: 80 / 95
>>
Rolled 5 (1d100)

>>5587919
>>
>>5587920
well, sorry Sean, it was a long shot anyways
>>
Rolled 86, 99, 45 = 230 (3d100)

>>5587919
>>
Rolled 53 (1d100)

>>5587919
Yay for smart
>>
>>5587920
>>5587924

Feel free to throw me some 2d100 for Jack and Bobo's rolls.
>>
Rolled 8, 55 = 63 (2d100)

>>5587926
oh yeah, sorry
>>
Rolled 8, 29, 3 = 40 (3d100)

>>5587919
>>
Rolled 43 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5587911
>>
Rolled 58, 89 = 147 (2d100)

>>5587926
>>
Rolled 63, 37, 70 = 170 (3d100)

>>5587919
Rolls are a mess. I’ll do another 3d100 anyway.

Based on >>5587923, I’m guessing Bobo isn’t much of a mechanical engineer while Jack has picked up a few things over his life.
>>
Alright, looks like you and Jack pull off an excellent success, while Bobo doesn't do so hot.

Assuming that the damage to the ship has been stabilized if not completely mitigated, what do you plan on doing next?

You…

> Along with Jack and Bobo, storm the main deck to back Thoth and Set against he Chechen insurgents, Marina’s mercenaries, and Claire’s wannabe commandos. No quarter will be asked, and no quarter will be given.

> Cut the engines off, leave the ship dead in the water, and activate the distress signal. Hopefully the myriad of hostiles duking it out will be too busy to realize that they’re stranded and easy pickings for the coast guard.

> Tamper with the engines and drive the ship into the coast. It’ll make one hell of a ruckus, but at least it ought to distract the authorities with something to investigate.

> Tap into the ship-wide intercom and demand that the various parties on board stand down or face annihilation. Make it clear that this is a one-time offer, and it’s come with a rapid expiration date.

> Other?
>>
>>5587943
>> Cut the engines off, leave the ship dead in the water, and activate the distress signal. Hopefully the myriad of hostiles duking it out will be too busy to realize that they’re stranded and easy pickings for the coast guard.
>>
>>5587943
> Along with Jack and Bobo, storm the main deck to back Thoth and Set against he Chechen insurgents, Marina’s mercenaries, and Claire’s wannabe commandos. No quarter will be asked, and no quarter will be given.
>>
>>5587943
>> Cut the engines off, leave the ship dead in the water, and activate the distress signal. Hopefully the myriad of hostiles duking it out will be too busy to realize that they’re stranded and easy pickings for the coast guard.

Let the cops fix the rest.
>>
>>5587943
> Cut the engines off, leave the ship dead in the water, and activate the distress signal. Hopefully the myriad of hostiles duking it out will be too busy to realize that they’re stranded and easy pickings for the coast guard.
>>
>>5587945
>>5587949
>>5587953

Alright, since you and Jack both got an excellent success with stabilizing the vessel, I'll go ahead and mark this one as an auto-success given its relative simplicity in comparison.

I'm also going to make the assumption that the natural progression from here is teleporting back to the van and getting the hell out of Athens.

Are there any opposed to this course of action?

> No, you've accomplished all of your major objectives, time to head home.

> Other?
>>
>>5587956
>> No, you've accomplished all of your major objectives, time to head home.
>>
>>5587956
> No, you've accomplished all of your major objectives, time to head home.
>>
>>5587956
> Other?
>Did we bleed anywhere? May want to give it a scrub with fire.
>>
>>5587956
Give the ship a good once over to clear any evidence tracable to us or our crew
Cameras? Blood?
>>
>>5587958
>>5587960
>>5587963
>>5587968

I'll rule that the camera system was borked beyond repair during your dust-up at the bridge.

As for blood, I'll lump that in with the whole 'burn the bodies' thing.

Writing.
>>
>>5587971

Just checking in, anons. Still alive, merely taking my time a bit.
>>
>>5588015
I'm here qm, people will filter in as you post
>>
>>5588015
good
>>
>>5588015
nice
>>
>>5588015
As long as you don’t start singing about cake, we’ll assume you haven’t been replaced by a machine.
>>
>>5587502
The issue for me is NAMED characters, not faceless nameless mooks.

>>5587875
A temporary debuff would be interesting or entertaining if perhaps implemented in a comedic way.
>>
>>5587919
Use the abyssal shield power to plug the hole temporarily? Or just close the relevant sections of the ship doors and bulkheads.

>>5587956
> Other?

Wait why do we want the ship to stay afloat with all the evidence of our crimes/battle?
I suppose loot the cargo if there is anything good in the hold and strip the bodies? Specially that cyborg. Or just grab it wholesale. In fact, just grab the entire cyborg and forget about anything else besides phones and data devices.

>>5587968
>>5587971
Why not sink the ship? Kind of hard to do forensics at the bottom of the ocean.
>>
>>5588062

In my mind, the logic for letting the authorities have a peek is so that it draws all of the immediate heat from the Athens

That, and it may serve to sic them on the responsible parties.
>>
>>5588067
Better to deny them any information at all, but hey if we scrub things clean enough I suppose it could work.
We are grab the Cyborg tho right?
Turn him into Cybro!
>>
>>5588077

Oh, for sure.
>>
>>5587971

Before you depart the bridge, you take a quick moment to immolate the trio of bodies with a flurry of Fire Bolts.

Don’t want to leave any obvious forensic evidence of your presence here, it’d be a major pain if anybody sporting a badge caught wind of your involvement in this snafu.

As for CCTV footage, the bridge controls have been absolutely trashed during the brawl. There isn’t a chance in hell that anyone will be able to pull a single frame out of this wreck.

Now, you just need to decide on your next course of action.

Given that you’re practically making this up as you go along, the safest option by far is the one that puts more sand in your hourglass. Having the ship continue to sink or maybe even capsize while you’re on board would be nothing short of a disaster. Sure, you might be able to call for help via sigil ping, but that won’t work in a pinch.

After all, what if the ship abruptly lurches and you crack your skull on the wall or an errant bit of railing? Can’t really do much if you’re busy sucking down a brain bleed.

Or, what if the violent ministrations of Poseidon fling you bodily overboard into the briny deep? With your gear and all the chop, you’d sink like a rock, no matter how quick the response may be.

What if your section of the hull snaps under all of the stress and you get trapped in some godawful cubbyhole to asphyxiate? No, that’s enough doomsaying. Just put one foot in front of the other and be on your merry way.

The faster you move, the better your odds of salvaging this in time. Even if you can only come up with a temporary solution, it’ll be well worth your effort.

There are a few close calls, but you manage to avoid being spotted or drawn into the conflict that has spread like wildfire throughout.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r87aXrXqg7A

When you arrive, the maintenance deck is in a state of absolute chaos. Alarm klaxons are blaring and screaming in your ears, a cacophonous orchestra signaling the imminent demise of a once seaworthy vessel.

The flashing alarm lights paint the area in a hellish red glow that flickers over the dead bodies of several commandos.

Jack is at some kind of master control station, pulling and prodding a series of complicated levers and buttons with a surprising degree of familiarity. Meanwhile, Bobo is frantically attempting to stem a massive electrical fire before it can spread to the fuel tanks and blow the whole ship to kingdom come.

The diesel engines are running at full blast, adding even more screeching noise to the mix.

Despite all those distraction, Jack spots you and immediately starts bellowing commands that manages to cut through the fog of war.

“HEAD DOWN THE HALL AND SEAL THE MAIN BULKHEAD, NOW! LOOK FOR A SET OF SWITCHES, YOU’LL KNOW IT WHEN YOU SEE IT! IF YOU CAN’T LOCK IT DOWN INSIDE OF FIVE MINUTES, WE’LL NEED TO ABANDON SHIP!”
>>
>>5588082

The gist of his orders are simple and curt, bereft of their usual pleasantries for self-evident reasons.

Jack immediately dismisses you and returns to the complicated dance of balancing pressure, power, fuel, speed, and a dozen other variables that all need to be kept in check or risk a cascading series of mechanical failures.

You tear down the hallway like a madman, narrowly managing to keep your balance in lieu of the constantly fluctuating balance under your feet. After a few panicked minutes, you reach the emergency bulkhead that Jack referenced.

Instead of lowering as it should in an emergency situation, the compartment door is suspended several feet above the ground due to some kind of jamming. And due to the electrical issues, the entire switchboard is dead.

Look like you’ll have to do this with some good old-fashioned elbow grease.

You roll up your sleeves, summon the Claw, and start hauling down the door down.

Even with the power of Claw coursing through you, it takes every ounce of your considerable strength to force the compartment door to comply, inch by agonizing inch.

Yet despite your herculean efforts to the contrary, you can feel your grip begin to slacken as you finally reach your physical limits and start to lose ground. With a frenzied roar of exertion and some truly imaginative swearing, you slam the compartment shut with such force that you warp the metal of the deck. To ensure that it’s doubly protected from leaks, you slap a makeshift Abyssal Shield over a few potential weak spots in the frame.

Once you confirm that the bulkhead has been well and truly sealed, you stagger away and hit the button labeled as EMERGENCY PUMP CONTROL. Judging from the heavy whirring and clanging, it sounds like the overall water level is finally starting to recede.

As soon as you’re certain that your job is done, you immediately rest yourself against the nearest wall and slide to the ground in a sweaty, exhausted heap.

Using the final vestiges of your strength and willpower, you fumble around in your jacket pocket and produce a soggy but still serviceable pack of cigarettes.

This small victory is immediately soured when you realize that the goddamn thing is as empty as a politician’s promises. You just fling the pack away in disgust, nearly beaning an approaching Jack with it by mistake.

When Jack notices how you’re slumped over, he immediately assumes the worst and rushes to your side.

You chuckle weakly as he helps you to your feet and escorts you back to the main maintenance bay. It’s just as well that he showed up when he did; your arms and legs feel like jelly, and you could really use a long nap. Or twelve.

> “I’m fine, just dead tired. Listen, I need you to turn off the engines, and set off the distress signal. It’s about time we got off this damned ship. Let those idiots up-top keep killing each other until the coast guard arrives to pick up the pieces. If we’re lucky, it’ll keep the law busy for a while.”
>>
>>5588083

In a flash, you’re away from the Iron Dragon and back at the hiding spot for the Set-Mobile. Soon, the rest of your crew appears; haggard, but lit with the fire that comes from a truly wild caper.

Both Pandion and his robotic cargo are safe and sound, albeit a little damp. You’ll need to figure out what to do with that thing soon. Eh, that'll be a problem for future-you to handle.

Thoth looks the same as usual, albeit a bit disheveled and with an interesting sharpness in his eyes. Something tells you that he noticed something interesting out there that he’s planning on keeping to himself.

Bobo looks tired and more than a little singed, something you can’t fault him for. You’re internally berating yourself for not helping him put out the fires, but you had your marching orders and cut it close as it was.

Jack takes a moment to smooth out the imperfections in his suit and rub futilely at a massive grease stain he picked up along the way. He did a damned good job keeping the ship afloat, you’ll need to ask him about where he learned that particular skillset.

And of course, Set is sporting an absolutely feral grin on his face, is completely soaked from head to toe, and has Nessie tucked in the crook of his arm like an oversized football. Asshole doesn't even have the good grace to pretend he didn't have a spectacular time.

As you all pile into the Set-Mobile, your hand unconsciously clenches around the business card you found on Claire.

What would you like to do with it?

> Call the number from a burner phone, and pretend to be a member of Claire’s commandos. Can’t be too hard for an accomplished liar like you.

> Call the number from a burner phone, and play it straight with whoever answers. You’re not looking for another enemy, and they sure as shit better not be.

> Throw the number over to Gremlin for expert investigation. He’s the best cracker you know, but this may potentially paint a target on his back.

> Leave it be for now. It’s not the card is going anywhere.

> Other
>>
>>5588086

That's all for tonight, anons! Vote closes Sunday night, we'll pick up from here on Wednesday at 5:00 PM EST. I plan on using Monday to rest a little / work on interlude stuff.

As always, thanks for playing and I hope to see you all next time!

Your homework for this weekend is to watch Das Boot. There will be a quiz.
>>
>>5588086
>> Call the number from a burner phone, and pretend to be a member of Claire’s commandos. Can’t be too hard for an accomplished liar like you.
surely now we could get something out of that shitshow
>>
>>5588086
Do we have any more favors from Index? Even if not, we surely have money to pay him for information on the number.

>Call Index, ask about the number
>>
>>5588094

I believe that you still have a freebie, yes.
>>
>>5588086
> Call the number from a burner phone, and pretend to be a member of Claire’s commandos. Can’t be too hard for an accomplished liar like you.
>>
>>5588086
> Call the number from a burner phone, and play it straight with whoever answers. You’re not looking for another enemy, and they sure as shit better not be.
>”Look, I got dragged into this stuff, cleaned things up from my end, and I’m outta here. Nothing personal against your crew, let’s just go our separate ways and if we ever meet up again then maybe we work together instead. Or you kill me then, but let’s avoid the hassle for now.”
Something along these lines?
>>
>>5588094
the problem with index is that he is just as likely to sell that information about us looking for it

> Call the number from a burner phone, and pretend to be a member of Claire’s commandos. Can’t be too hard for an accomplished liar like you
>>
>>5588086
> Call the number from a burner phone, and play it straight with whoever answers. You’re not looking for another enemy, and they sure as shit better not be
I killed your agent and I'll kill you too if you keep on fucking with me. Or, we can be friends. Their choice.
>>
> Call the number from a burner phone, and play it straight with whoever answers. You’re not looking for another enemy, and they sure as shit better not be.

Let's continue to be professional about this. >Next time don't send women to do a man's job.
>>
>>5588086
Set fucking planned this didn't he....
>>
>>5588086
> Call the number from a burner phone, and pretend to be a member of Claire’s commandos. Can’t be too hard for an accomplished liar like you

THEY DONT KNOW WE WERE THERE
Let's keep it that way
>>
>>5588086
> Throw the number over to Gremlin for expert investigation. He’s the best cracker you know, but this may potentially paint a target on his back.

Safer bet.
Also
WHY CALL FROM LAND WHEN IT WOULD BE SUSPECIOUS SINCE THEY ARE ALL OUT AT SEA?!!

Phones can be triangulated even with GPS turned off.
>>
>>5588127
Wait does giving the card to gremlin mean he's gonna call them?
Checking out the number shouldn't arouse any suspicion unless they are the NSA.
>>
>>5588086
> Call the number from a burner phone, and pretend to be a member of Claire’s commandos. Can’t be too hard for an accomplished liar like you.
>>
>>5588095
Can we look over the stuff we captured for any details on Claire's commando team?

I don't think this is a good idea, why would a commando use the card number instead of a separate number likely dedicated to taking calls from the team or any emergencies?
Using a "public" number on a card she would be expected to give out would be immediately suspect.

>>5588094
This is actually a better idea, changing to support.
>>5588127
>>5588086
>Call Index, ask about the number
>>
>>5588086
I'll back this
>Call Index, ask about the number
>>
>>5588086

>call Index about the number
>>
>>5588094
I'd call Index via Gremlin or an intermediary

They're very likely to have passphrases we have no hope in hell of guessing.
>>
>>5588086
> Throw the number over to Gremlin for expert investigation. He’s the best cracker you know, but this may potentially paint a target on his back.
>>
Howdy, anons.

It looks like we have something of a deadlock between giving Index a try and masquerading as one of the commandos.

Call the number and impersonate one of the commandos:
>>5588093
>>5588096
>>5588099
>>5588122
>>5588133

Leave it to Index:
>>5588094
>>5588146
>>5588149
>>5588156
>>5588491

I'll give it until Tuesday night for any swaps / super slowpokes to get their votes in. Otherwise, I'll just roll a tiebreak.

I will also rule that you may route your request to Index through Gremlin if you're looking for another degree of separation.

In the meantime, I'll just be chilling and plugging away at interlude stuff. Have a good one.
>>
>>5591434
>>5588097
I’ll swap from “talk to them straight” to
>Call Index through Gremlin
>>
>>5591438
>Gremlin Index calling time.
Man shit really blew up. All we were missing was the JLA breaking through the roof.
>>
>>5576192
Also shit man damned if you don't, damned if you do. No one cared about Venezuela until their lights started to go out and their gas prices risen to 5$. Hopefully China and Russia continue to cover for us until the Steel Wolves are ready to fight the JLA and defend the glorius Supreme Junta.
>>
>>5591887
There is no damnation in our crusade, just the blood of the evil.
>>
>>5591437

A lead like this would best be thrown to Index for further investigation. As a black market broker, he’s the go-to guy with the connections necessary to get the job done in a timely manner.

The biggest problem though is that by his very nature, Index is as slippery as a used car salesman doused in motor oil. There’s a non-zero chance that he won’t use this request to build up his own dossier on you, that could eventually find its way into the hands of your enemies.

Worse, it wouldn’t be entirely out of the realm of possibility for him to contact the party that you’re asking him to investigate, and engage in some double-dealing.

It’d be an incredibly unwise maneuver, but greed makes fools and felons out of the greatest of men (a grouping that Index is certainly not a member of).

He’s still the readiest source of intel in your arsenal though, so you can’t just dismiss his services outright.

After weighing the pros and cons, the only palatable option is to work through a trusted intermediary; buy yourself a bit of plausible deniability wiggle room in case anyone gets a funny idea and starts digging deeper.

Gremlin ought to do the trick. You won’t ask him to be the direct link, but he’s gotta know a few ways to camouflage yourself and reduce any potential attack surface for Index to latch onto.

As a bonus, the info itself won’t cost you a penny, seeing as you still have a marker to call in. You’ll probably throw Gremlin some dosh for his troubles though, as both a personal and professional courtesy.

You’ll save that for later though; it’s an ungodly hour on the East Coast right now and he might be on-the-job himself. Wouldn’t want to accidentally break his concentration if he’s doing something important.

That, and you kind of want to put this whole debacle behind you and just forget about it for a while. Part of you wonders if you ought to ease off the escapades a bit before you go and bite off more than you chew. It’s food for thought, if nothing else.

Before the Set-Mobile hits the road, there’s one last minute issue to deal with; the deactivated robot that Pandion hauled home.

The party universally agrees that its soulless eyes are giving everyone the creeps.

Set neatly solves the problem by gently placing a lampshade on its head, wrapping the whole thing in a rug, and dumping it the back of the van.

Between that, the Nazi gold, the crate of alien munitions, and the remnants of Marina’s chemical weapon stockpile; you’re in for one hell of a traffic stop if you get caught speeding.
>>
>>5593951

Luckily, the drive out of Athens goes smoothly and the Set-Mobile proceeds uninterrupted to the car ferry that’ll take you to Crete, and by extension, Heraklion.

Less fortunately, the ferry ride is slated to take about nine or ten hours with good weather.

Normally, you’d use the time to try and train or something, but between the skirmish at the restaurant and the full-fledged conflict on the cargo ship has left you with a bone-deep weariness,

Instead, you opt to laze around a bit by spending the bulk of the journey speaking with…

> Jack. He showed some real skill in the engine room; that’s not the kind of thing you develop overnight. Maybe he’s got some stories he’d be willing share that’d bolster your own expertise?

> Bobo. This trip was meant to be some fun in the sun, but things have gotten a lot dicier than you would’ve liked. Maybe you ought to make sure that he’s doing alright.

> Set. It’s about time that the both of you cleared the air in regards to the Athens situation. You’ve let Set off the hook for a lot of things, but this one could’ve ended much worse.

> Pandion. He’s got to have some mixed feelings about seeing his hometown in the rearview mirror. Even if he doesn’t feel like saying much, he’d probably appreciate having you as a sounding board.

> Thoth. You get the feeling that he noticed something that gave him pause during the battle on the Iron Dragon. Thoth’s been around the block plenty of times, something that grabs his attention could be worth looking into.

> Other?
>>
>>5593952
> Thoth. You get the feeling that he noticed something that gave him pause during the battle on the Iron Dragon. Thoth’s been around the block plenty of times, something that grabs his attention could be worth looking into.
>>
>>5593952
>Set. It’s about time that the both of you cleared the air in regards to the Athens situation. You’ve let Set off the hook for a lot of things, but this one could’ve ended much worse.
>>
>>5593952
> Set. It’s about time that the both of you cleared the air in regards to the Athens situation. You’ve let Set off the hook for a lot of things, but this one could’ve ended much worse.
> Thoth. You get the feeling that he noticed something that gave him pause during the battle on the Iron Dragon. Thoth’s been around the block plenty of times, something that grabs his attention could be worth looking into.
>>
>>5593952
> Thoth. You get the feeling that he noticed something that gave him pause during the battle on the Iron Dragon. Thoth’s been around the block plenty of times, something that grabs his attention could be worth looking into.
>>
>>5593952
>> Set. It’s about time that the both of you cleared the air in regards to the Athens situation. You’ve let Set off the hook for a lot of things, but this one could’ve ended much worse.
>>
We seem split down the middle in terms of Set vs. Thoth, I'll give 5 more minutes to vote and roll a tiebreak as needed.
>>
>>5593952
> Thoth. You get the feeling that he noticed something that gave him pause during the battle on the Iron Dragon. Thoth’s been around the block plenty of times, something that grabs his attention could be worth looking into.
i want Set to sit and think about what he did.
>>
>>5593958
>>5593974
>>5593980
>>5593985

Alright, give me some 1d100+40 to see if you can understand what Thoth is going on about.

No Luck Drain bonus for this one.

DC: 75 / 100
>>
Rolled 81 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5593991
>>
Rolled 52 (1d100)

>>5593991
>>
Rolled 23 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5593991
>>
>>5593994
>>5593996
>>5593999

That's an excellent success.

Go ahead and give me some 1d100+35 to see if you pick up something special for your trouble.

DC: 100
>>
Rolled 80 + 35 (1d100 + 35)

>>5594000
>>
Rolled 84 (1d100)

>>5594000
>>
Rolled 79 (1d100)

>>5594000
>>
Rolled 45 + 35 (1d100 + 35)

>>5594000
>>
>>5594001
>>5594002
>>5594003

Alright, I've got a weird request, but just humor me.

Go ahead and roll me some 2d5 each.

We'll keep it up until we get three of any number (three 1s, three 2s, three 3s, etc.)
>>
Rolled 4, 1 = 5 (2d5)

>>5594006
Weird
>>
Rolled 1, 2 = 3 (2d5)

>>5594006
Hmmm...
>>
Rolled 1, 2 = 3 (2d5)

>>5594006
>>
>>5594008
>>5594009
>>5594010

Well, that went quicker than I had expected. Writing.
>>
>>5594008
>>5594009
>>5594010
/one/ bros, we won
>>
>>5594012
Shame we didn’t a third 1, 2.

Spell upgrade?
>>
I'm still plugging along, anons. Another long one is steadily on its way. Think I'm at like 4500-ish characters.
>>
>>5594067
We did vote to talk with Thoth, and we succeeded at the roll to understand him. That does imply sitting through a lot of words and not zoning out.

Everything checks out here boss.
>>
>>5594012

Thoth is off on his lonesome, muttering to himself and scribbling away at a well-worn notebook. You can’t help but be interested as to what has him in such a tizzy, so you sidle on over and attempt to strike a conversation.

After a bit of gentle prodding, Thoth finally spills the beans as to what’s garnered his attention.

Back on the cargo ship, one of the hostiles that gave him and Set the most trouble was some guy with iron skin, who was apparently a skilled practitioner in some kind of traditional Chinese magic; something that Thoth hasn’t seen for genuine centuries.

From the way Thoth tells it, there was actually a fair amount of ancient Egyptian-Chinese exchange. Mostly due to trade of course, but there is always a bit of cross-cultural contamination whenever and wherever money changes hands. As such, Thoth managed to score a few treatises and scholarly texts on Chinese mysticism and their perspective on the nature of magic.

Turns out, he’s a little sore that he doesn’t know as much about it as the yet-to-named hostile who lit this competitive spark to begin with. Since you’re a sucker for learning about what makes the universe tick, you politely request that he give you a bit of a deeper dive on the topic.

In response, Thoth gives you a multi-hour crash course in Wuxing, otherwise known as the Five Elements.

A lot of it is just philosophical Wushu mumbo-jumbo that threatens to put you to sleep from abject boredom, but there are some genuine nuggets of wisdom sprinkled into the mix.

Specifically, Thoth goes into agonizingly laborious detail about each of the elements, driving you to mentally construct your own summary of each or risk total information overload.

The first element you learn of is Wood. The most human and of the elements. Characterized by flexibility, strength, and idealism, but undermined by intense bursts of anger that surface at the worst of times.

The second element you learn of is Fire. The most dynamic and unpredictable of the elements. Characterized by restlessness, creativity, innovation, yet stifled by a predilection for dangerously impulsive acts.

The third element you learn of is Earth. The most stable and static of the elements. Characterized by patience, stubbornness, and practicality, yet marred by constant doubts and worries that the labor will never be enough.

The fourth element you learn of is Metal. The most rigid and forceful of the elements. Characterized by firmness, determination, self-reliance, and ambition, yet plagued by the loneliness which troubles all who discard relationships in the name of progress.

The fifth and final element you learn of is Water. The most yielding and thoughtful of the elements. Characterized by intelligence, wisdom, and gentleness, yet subject to paralyzing fear that could lead to inaction when decisiveness matters most.
>>
>>5594099

Thoth goes on to explain how each of these elements cooperates or are weakened by each other, forming a kind of harmonious cycle centered around the transfer of energy known as Qi.

It’s a lot to take in, but the strangest thing about the entire experience is that you can genuinely understand it. Not just follow along with what Thoth is saying, but extrapolate from his arguments and points to draw your own, sometimes even in a reasonably divergent direction from Thoth’s beliefs.

In your mind at least, the Qi that Thoth speaks of sounds a hell of a lot like what you channel for your own spells. Perhaps, you hypothesize, it’d be possible to leverage it to supplement your existing arsenal?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JXgloPSu9f8

Rather than correct you, Thoth encourages you to pursue your idea to its natural conclusion. And in this line of study, the only way to know for sure is to take a bit of a risk.

Instruction may be able to smooth out the path, but it is up to the beholder to walk the journey themselves.

You focus deeply and carefully, drawing upon your core of magical strength and every patchwork scrap of arcane knowledge that you’ve managed to cobble together into a loose approximation of understanding.

With cautious trepidation, you reach out into the featureless void, and attempt to draw upon one of the Five Elements. For the longest time, you’re stumbling blindly through the dark and rapidly losing hope that you’re doing anything more than embarrassing yourself.

There are no feelings that can describe the sensation that occurs when something reaches back and greets you. A strange, yet pleasant energy begins to grow deep inside, a power that grows to encompass the whole of your body, from head to toe. The effects are invisible at first, but they quickly make themselves known.

In an attempt to further your concentration, you’ve kept your eyes closed and senses blank. Despite that, you can both hear and vaguely sense how skin and bone is being molded into an unfamiliar shape.

You’re afraid to open your eyes and see what damage has been wrought, but your damned curiosity demands it of you nonetheless.

When you finally open your eyes, you’re treated to a singularly unsettling sight. Instead of flesh and blood, your entire body is comprised entirely of what appears to be hickory wood. And yet, your body feels the exact same as it would normally; your fine motor control and strength are unaffected, albeit your balance is a little lacking.

Despite the invasive nature of your wooden metamorphosis, there is no pain or overt sensation of discomfort. At worst, you feel a bit stiff for a moment or two. Just as you begin to worry that you’ll be eternally doomed to star as a Pinocchio knockoff for the rest of your days, your body shifts back into its natural form. A smidge of tinkering reveals that it takes a few moments for the change to initially take hold, but it can revert back almost instantly.
>>
>>5594102

It seems like your body has to adapt to it at first, but shedding it is much quicker. The transfer itself burns a moderate amount of your magical energy, but it’s definitely not as draining as some of the spells in your arsenal. Maintaining it doesn’t seem particularly energy-intensive, which is a plus.

Thoth is beaming like a proud professor who just watched a bright graduate student complete a critical part of their thesis. Which, you surmise ruefully, isn’t that far from the truth.

Despite the trials and tribulations of the last few days, there are fewer moments in your life when you have been more proud. It may be a humble discovery at first glance, but the long-term implications are great.

This isn’t a carbon copy of someone else’s work that you successfully recreated. You didn’t copy this from a musty book or some ancient tome written by a long-dead mage of repute.

Beyond a few initial pointers from Thoth, this discovery is entirely on your shoulders. An idle thought almost causes you to bust out laughing. Perhaps one day you’ll put together a compendium of your own magical research; pay the goodwill forward for another punk with a chip on their shoulder and more guts than sense.

And with further refinement, you may perhaps discover some more martially inclined uses for your new spell. One of which comes to mind immediately, albeit for an extreme situation. One of your myriad talents involves the usage of Fire magic; specifically in regards to absorbing flame for the purposes of limited self-healing.

In that equation, maintaining a sufficient supply of fuel for the fire has always been the primary obstacle to its utility. But if your body itself could provide a potentially limitless kindling…

Well, that could change everything. Assuming of course, that you can force the magics to cooperate and not burn yourself at the metaphorical stake in the process. A problem and an experiment for another day.

Now, you just need to think of a good name for your first original creation.

In the end, you settle on…

> Clearcut

> Evergreen

> Deadwood

> Barkskin

> Windbreak

> Other?
>>
>>5594103
>Evergreen
Gives you a hint, but it isn't too on the nose.

'I am Sean Clayton, and I speak for the trees. For some fucking reason, they speak Chinese.'
>>
>>5594103
> Deadwood
sounds cool and will probably confuse people
>>
>>5594103
>Evergreen
maybe we'll honor the name by clogging an important canal for trade
>>
>>5594103

>Deadwood

I love the idea of Sean gaining the ambition of teaching magic regardless of its type and viewing all magic as part of understanding the fabric of the universe. Now with him gaining the ambition to create his own spell book and invent his own spells, I would say we are now firmly established ourselves as a Journeyman level practitioner of the magical arts. Unlike that fraud Constantine we did not need a magical bloodline or dark deal to get this far.
>>
>>5594103
>> Deadwood
>>
>>5594103
>Deadwood
Fuck, I regret rolling that 1 earlier. Twochads were right all along.

>Made of living wood
>Called Deadwood
Too kekworthy not to choose.
>>
>>5594103
> Deadwood
Heh
>>
>>5594114
Deadwood is Sean's dick
>>
>>5594107
>>5594112
>>5594113
>>5594114
>>5594120

Alright, looks like Deadwood is victorious as your new spell name.

We shall pick up from here on Friday at 5:00 PM EST with your time on Heraklion.

As always, thanks for playing! I hope to see you all there.

Apologies if I've been a bit slow getting updates out, but I hope the amount makes up for it.
>>
>>5594132
This was worth the wait.

If we had done three sets of 1 and 2 would we have immediately verified Sean’s theory as Deadwood burst into flames?
>>
>>5594141

Honestly, I probably would've just rolled a tiebreaker to settle it at that point.
>>
>>5594132

Considering your recent troubles, everyone concurs that it’d be best if we all stuck together for the time being.

The Athens stuff seems comprehensively settled, but that’s no reason to let your guard down.

Plus, this offers an excellent opportunity for a group activity!

If you’re being honest, you’re kinda excited for the prospect; most times everyone just kinda peels off to do their own thing.

There's nothing wrong with playing the cards you’ve been dealt to ensure everyone has a good time.

So, what do your plans consist of?

> Exploring the Palace of Knossos, a huge archaeological site right outside of town. According to mythology, it’s the location where King Minos built his Labyrinth. Could be fun to walk around and point out all the little discrepancies they slap on to wow the average tourist.

> Finding a private spot at the beach, and engaging in a little surfside recreation. The weather is certainly perfect for it.

> Renting a boat, cruising just off the shore, and casting out a few lines. Nothing else passes the time quite like a spot of fishing.

> Wandering the Old Town for a while and looking for some neat souvenirs. Might be an excellent opportunity to grab a few gifts for your friends.

> Heading out into the countryside for a picnic of sorts. It might be neat if everyone fixes something they like, that way you can have a small potluck of sorts.

> Other?
>>
>>5596153
> Renting a boat, cruising just off the shore, and casting out a few lines. Nothing else passes the time quite like a spot of fishing.
Can’t forget this is Nessie’s vacation too.
>>
>>5596153
>Renting a boat, cruising just off the shore, and casting out a few lines. Nothing else passes the time quite like a spot of fishing.

Put a sign on the van 'gone fishing'
>>
>>5596153
> Renting a boat, cruising just off the shore, and casting out a few lines. Nothing else passes the time quite like a spot of fishing.
>>
>>5596153
> Renting a boat, cruising just off the shore, and casting out a few lines. Nothing else passes the time quite like a spot of fishing.
>>
File: 1closedfishing.jpg (27 KB, 269x400)
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>>5596153
> Renting a boat, cruising just off the shore, and casting out a few lines. Nothing else passes the time quite like a spot of fishing.
>>
>>5596157
>>5596162
>>5596164
>>5596178
>>5596182

A comprehensive victory for the fishermen.

Now, what is obviously the most important decision of the quest thus far.

Do you plan on using magic to get a little bit of an advantage?

> No, the old-fashioned ways are the most sporting.

> Yes, absolutely. (Describe how you'll use magic to gain an edge over the dastardly fish)
>>
>>5596187
> No, the old-fashioned ways are the most sporting.

No magic Just fishing
>>
>>5596187
>Both, of course.
Old-fashioned way first, the. switching to magic when Set gets bored.

Try making an Abyssal Shield dragnet with tiny holes for water to go through. See if hex bolt will work against the fish and lead them to your crew’s hooks. Kinetic Frenzy to littlerwlly snatch the fish out of the water.

Some magic training doing something silly and fun, basically.
>>
>>5596187
>Yes absolutely (See if hex bolt will work against the fish and lead them to your crew’s hooks)
This seems both hilarious and possible
>>
>>5596187
>>5596187
>> No, the old-fashioned ways are the most sporting.

If we really want fish we could ask to nessie to bring some. We are here to rest under the sun and talk with our bros.

We need to talk with Set to put this behind and look out the future.
>>
Rolled 9, 24, 6, 10, 76, 33, 36, 68, 54, 69 = 385 (10d100)

>>5596189
>>5596195
>>5596199
>>5596200

Go ahead and give me some straight d100 to see how well you do at the regular fishing.

No DC, this is just to roughly measure how you do.

I'll be rolling some pairs of d100 for Jack, Set, Thoth, Bobo, and Pandion in that order.
>>
Rolled 90 (1d100)

>>5596205
>>
Rolled 45 (1d100)

>>5596205
How could they all be so bad at fishing? SHAMEFUL
>>
Rolled 37 (1d100)

>>5596205
>>
Rolled 46, 15, 5, 61 = 127 (4d100)

>>5596206
>>5596207
>>5596209

Cool, now give me some 1d100+10 for some unorthodox fishing technique.

Same deal as before, I'll be rolling some pairs of d100 for Set (+45) and Thoth (+35)
>>
>>5596205
>Jake and Set catch shit
>Bobo and Padion do good.
>Thoth is a pro, even if is his first time in centurys

Thoth is a fucking bird
>>
Rolled 74 + 10 (1d100 + 10)

>>5596211
Fish, Get
>>
Rolled 35 + 10 (1d100 + 10)

>>5596211
>>
Rolled 36 (1d100)

>>5596211
>>
>>5596218
>>5596219
>>5596221

Alright, that ought to do it; writing.

Gotta tell ya, I'm a wee bit surprised that fishing won by such an overwhelming landslide.
>>
>>5596224
fishing is great
>>
>>5596224
Fishing is eh, but it was the only one I saw that felt fully inclusive of Nessie.
>>
File: Heraklion Cove.jpg (61 KB, 588x374)
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>>5596224

Seeing as Heraklion is a port city, it’s a relatively trivial matter to find a boat large enough for you and your compatriots, even on short notice. Price wasn’t too bad either, surprisingly.

Might have something to do with the fact that you’re doing this without any kind of permit or fishing license. But hey, who cares about that kind of nonsense? Besides this is Greece; if somebody really wants to inspect your papers, you’ll just bribe him to go ruin somebody else’s day for a while.

After a bit of navigation, you park the rental boat in an isolated little cove that’ll be perfect for your needs.

As a safety precaution, you have Bobo warn Nessie about the fishing line and hooks in the surrounding waters. She makes an affirmative chirping noise and swims off to a safe, but relatively close distance. Wouldn’t want her to get tangled up or harmed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OUP_Z3iZPs

Once the miscellaneous issues are handled, everyone picks a spot, casts their lines, and settles in for a lot of waiting. The natural boredom inherent to fishing is easily mitigated by a mixture of good-natured shittalking, anecdotal stories about previous catches, generally good company, and a large cooler filled to bursting with cheap beer.

Eventually, you pull yourself away from your station to see how the others are faring.

To his credit, Jack manages to snag a fair number of the critters; a respectable enough showing. He swears up and down that he was a far better fisherman when it was socially acceptable to use dynamite instead.

In contrast, Set doesn’t catch a goddamned thing; much to his consternation and everyone else’s amusement. At one point, he finally gets a nibble and acts unbearably smug about the proportions of his dream fish. The look on his face when his haul is revealed to be a waterlogged old boot is one that you will treasure for the rest of your days.

Thoth does well, probably because he has some particularly rancid bait that he most likely concocted himself. You’d ask what it was, but you’d genuinely rather not know.

Bobo is perched in a lawn chair, just enjoying the crisp breeze and hauling in the occasional fish. Good to see that he’s getting to decompress a bit.

And despite some initial difficulty with his cast, Pandion proves to be a quick study. When he has the time, he regales you with old wives tails about the sea and the myriad of creepy crawlies that call it home.

Overall, you’re doing the best and as a result, boast a very well-stocked cooler. Guess it must be your lucky day.
>>
>>5596287

Eventually, once the collective blood alcohol level is considerably higher, a small competition begins to brew between the more magically-inclined members of your little band.

Your first attempt at constructing a makeshift net with Abyssal Shield only serves to spook the fish away, so you change tack entirely and try cursing the fish with Hex Bolts. Unfortunately, due to the nature of water refraction, it’s damnably difficult to line up a clear shot on the little bastards, despite the see-through water. Although, the few you do solidly hit invariably stray into the waiting jaws of your hook.
Eventually, you resort to using Kinetic Frenzy to speed up your reaction time to the point where you can yank the still-wriggling fish out with your barehands. After nearly pulling a muscle, you give it a rest and observe the others.

Set, in a display of his usual shrewdness, rapidly catches a bevy of fish by setting some kind of underwater fire to change the ambient temperature and mess with their internal functionings. Almost immediately, a cluster of dead fish rise to the surface, which he gleefully snags with a net and hauls in.

However, Thoth steals the show by conjuring and instructing a flock of seagulls to dive-bomb several schools of fish. These winged rats do as ordered, and obediently deposit their catch in front of their erstwhile master. His face is as impassive as ever, but you can tell that he’s internally grinning like a maniac.

Once that little sideshow is over, the gang agrees to call it a day as the sun starts to dip over the horizon. But first, everyone pools their catches together in preparation for dinner.

Looks like the majority of the haul is tuna, mixed with a gentle smattering of flathead mullet, razorfish, and amberjack. At least, that’s what Thoth says, you’re not exactly much of a fish expert.

The ones that are a little small for human consumption are given back unto the sea. More specifically, you and the others make a little game of pitching them upwards, so that Nessie can snag them in mid-air for a light snack and some entertainment.

> Give me some 1d100+20 for a bit of cooking. Feel free to get as simple / fancy as you’d like with preparing the fish.
>>
Rolled 50 + 20 (1d100 + 20)

>>5596289

number time
>>
File: thefunhat.png (230 KB, 872x563)
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We need a photo of Sean with the hat that says Women Fear Me Fish Want Me but instead of the random fish we replace it with Nessie
(pic related)
>>
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>>5596294
>>
Rolled 2 (1d100)

>>5596289
>>
Rolled 73 + 20 (1d100 + 20)

>>5596289
Fish fry
>>
Rolled 68 + 20 (1d100 + 20)

>>5596289
I'm just GRILLING for God's sake
>>
>>5596290
>>5596298
>>5596300

It would appear that this is not Sean's first rodeo when it comes to frying / grilling fish.
>>
>>5596303

Once the haul is inventoried, you fire up the grill and the onboard fryer for some down-home country style cooking. It might clog up your arteries, but that’s how you know it tastes damned good.

The recipe is simple enough, and even though you haven’t been on a bonafide fishing trip since your grandfather passed; you still remember it like it were yesterday.

Barring a couple frustrating missteps, you’re able to produce several heaping servings for your hungry pals, many of whom request seconds and even thirds in Pandion’s case. Guess you’ve still got the touch, even if you are a bit out of practice.

After a hearty meal, all and sundry agree that it’s time to guide the rental boat back to shore. Not long after dinner concludes, Set approaches you privately while you’re staring off at the waves.

“Hey, kid. I mean, Sean.”

He takes a deep breath and composes himself. It’s not easy to spot, but he’s a little nervous.

“I wanted to uh, apologize. Y’know for that whole ‘blind date’ thing. I should’ve ran that by you first.”

You keep quiet, tacitly giving him permission to continue speaking.

In a manner that suggests this kind of talk is similar to pulling teeth, he nonetheless soldiers on.

“I’ve….never been very good with people. Sure, I know how to charm the pants off somebody, but that’s not what I mean. Sometimes I forget to think ahead, and take things too far for the sake of my pride or a dumb joke. Just ask Thoth, he’s seen some of the worst of it blow up in my face.”

Set’s ever-present smirk is a lot more fragile than he’s likely willing to admit.

He sighs, deeply. With a sheepish look, he continues to make his case.

“I just want to make sure that we’re still good. Either way, just know that I owe ya one. For y’know, taking up with me for this long. Haven’t had this much fun in centuries, guess it might be causing my bad habits to flare up.”

He mutters, more to himself than anything else. “Fuck, I’m awful at this feelings stuff.”

How do you respond?

> Tell him that you need to think about it. You’re still royally pissed about the mess he dragged you into, but you’re not going to bite his head off for trying to mend fences.

> Let him off the hook, but with a stern warning. You don’t mind that he has some fun every now and then, but he needs to dial it back.

> Refuse his apology outright. You're not sure if this is just a ploy to get back in your good graces or not, but something definitely smells fishy (and it isn't just your cooking).

> Other?
>>
>>5596324

> I owe you a debt for starting me on the path that led me to who I am today. I know you said we are square but without you, I would still be dying in a gutter. I forgive you but if there is ever a next time I may consider cutting ties with you.
>>
As much as he annoys me we may were just a dumb goon with a cheap gun and even cheaper knife before meeting Set. He is the OG companion.
>>
>>5596324
> Tell him that you need to think about it. You’re still royally pissed about the mess he dragged you into, but you’re not going to bite his head off for trying to mend fences.

more so because after this date Sean should realize he isn't all fine under the hood after that outburst at the table, also with her comment about him when they met again simple driving the nail in for the guy that he's got some problems
>>
>>5596324
>We are friend. I know you are a god and have your problems that maybe I can't even think, but we are friends. You fuck up, yeah, but you also really help me out. Just try learn from this.
>>
>>5596324
> Tell him that you need to think about it. You’re still royally pissed about the mess he dragged you into, but you’re not going to bite his head off for trying to mend fences.
>>
>>5596324
> Let him off the hook, but with a stern warning. You don’t mind that he has some fun every now and then, but he needs to dial it back
>>
>>5596324
> Let him off the hook, but with a stern warning. You don’t mind that he has some fun every now and then, but he needs to dial it back
No harm (to us), no foul I say
>>
>>5596326
>>5596324

I support this
>>
>>5596324
>> Let him off the hook, but with a stern warning. You don’t mind that he has some fun every now and then, but he needs to dial it back.
Look, buddy, you just gotta chill the fuck out. It's funny if it's annoying. It's not funny when someone might get shot in the face for it.

>>5596326
Way to make it sound like a transactional friendship, man.
>>
>>5596353

It started as that. It has grown from there. Let's not pretend that he does not want us to entertain him.
>>
Alright, it looks like letting him off the hook with a stern warning is the victor. I'll work in the various write-ins as best as I can.

Now that you’re done with Greece, it’s time for the next (and potentially final) leg of the vacation.

Full disclosure, I've planned for the last country on our roadtrip to be Russia.

Does anyone have any issues with catching a boat straight there via the Black Sea? For instance, are there any other pitstops along the way that you’d like to make?

> No, that route works for me.

> Yes, I would prefer to visit (insert nation here)

(I’m going to leave this one open until Sunday night, we’ll pick up from here on Wednesday at 5:00 PM EST. As always, thanks for playing!)
>>
>>5596324
> Let him off the hook, but with a stern warning. You don’t mind that he has some fun every now and then, but he needs to dial it back.
>>
>>5596360
The Himalayas are on the way? If so then

> Yes, I would prefer to visit (Himalayas)
>>
>>5596392
+1 we need to climb those fucking mountains and befriend some Yeties
>>
>>5596392
Anon, the Himalayas are on the other side of the world from Greece and nowhere near Russia.
>>
>>5596415
Also learn actual spells and mistic chi bullshit that we use to do real magic.

Also maybe we and ghostdad can speak with the dalailama about death and so on
>>
>>5596360
> Yes, I would prefer to visit (Türkiye)
Since we're heading to the black sea, we might as well try to steal the recipe Byzantine fire from Istanbul. It's on the way and ancient napalm seems like a good addition to our collection.

Not to mention the Ottomans were known for their extravagant collections of wealth and artifacts when they were around. Maybe there will be some useful magical artifact in there?
>>
>>5596360
I wana stop by some turkish bathhouses and eat kebab and weird goat meat.

Maybe check out some old skool forts and ottoman stuff.
>>
File: maxresdefault.jpg (217 KB, 1280x720)
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>>5596758
NO MORE BS DRAMA MAGICAL OR OTHERWISE!
We're gonna have a nice quiet 5 police stars avoiding remainder for the trip.
>>
>>5596781
Well Istanbul has a lot of places to relax too. Not to mention there's no better place to blend in than a city of nearly 20 million.
>>
>>5596791
What year is it again?
Maybe we can livestream a coup taking place... Wait no! Bad Brain, bad! No Drama.
>>
>>5596360
>> No, that route works for me.
>>
>>5596360
>> No, that route works for me.
>>
>>5596360
> No, that route works for me.
I would like to look for Romanovs
>>
>>5596360
inb4 we met bulletproof russian man and take him back to base.
>>
>>5596360
> No, that route works for me.
>>
>>5596360
>> No, that route works for me.
>>
>>5596324
> Yes, I would prefer to visit (Türkiye)

Turkiye numbah 1!!!
>>
Just checking in, anons.

Looks like we'll be heading straight to Russia for the final leg of our journey.

Took a while longer than I had anticipated, but that's all part of the fun.

I'm still plugging away at interlude / update stuff, but I kinda fucked up my hand a little bit at work. Nothing serious, but don't be shocked if I type like a spazz every so often.

Seeya Wednesday.
>>
>>5596360
> Yes, I would prefer to visit (Türkiye)
>>
>>5600213
whats the interlude?
>>
>>5601950
Sean school life I think
>>
>>5601950

Don't want to tip my hand overmuch, but it'll offer a few glimpses into Sean's life before he enlisted.
>>
>>5600213

> “Set, I appreciate that you’re taking the plunge and trying to clear the air. That can’t have been easy, and I appreciate the effort; maybe more than you know. But that doesn’t change the fact that you could’ve gotten me killed, captured, or grievously wounded. I mean, what if Marina and her goons had been a little more prepared, or I was a little off my game? I could’ve been shot, blown up, gassed, stabbed, and that’s just what I can remember off the top of my head. I know that it’s important to blow off some steam every once in a while, but the fun kinda vanishes when it almost causes me to get my ticket punched. You get what I’m saying?”

For as long as you’ve known Set, you’ve been half-way convinced that he’s physically incapable of feeling shame. The grimace that replaces his customary grin is proof enough that your words are managing to find purchase.

You sigh, lean against the safety rail, and stare out over the azure depths.

> “I’m not saying that you’re a bad guy or a poor friend; it’s just that you need to learn to dial it back sometimes. Had you run this by me first, I would’ve probably vetoed it. And if I had agreed for whatever reason, I wouldn’t be so wound-up about it going south, because I would’ve had a choice in the matter. As it stands, you left me hanging in the wind for a cheap laugh.”

The slight slump in his posture tells you that he’s fully expecting you to read him the riot act, to utterly and totally reject his attempt at mending fences. There’s a flicker of genuine surprise when you just lightly punch him in the shoulder.

> “Lucky for you, I don’t make of habit of holding grudges against my friends. We’re all in this together, right? Might hit a few rough patches every now and then, but that’s just how things go. I’m not gonna lie and say that it’s water under the bridge just yet, but we’re still good.”

Talking about your feelings openly has always felt strange, like some kind of precarious balancing act on top of an iceberg. That if you say the wrong thing or give off the wrong signal, you might as well be flashing a great big neon sign telling all and sundry that you’re some kind of headache with a loose screw.

Hell, seeing as how you’ve completely and utterly bungled your last few social interactions, maybe that’s not too far from the truth.

Thought you had that shit under control, but maybe you’re starting to backslide a little. Sometimes it doesn’t take much to trigger an old memory or some kinda reflex, and suddenly you might as well be a thousand miles away.

It'd be best to keep your mind busy for a while, that usually makes it ease off.

> “Just be sure to keep all this in mind for the future, alright? Otherwise, I’ll sic Thoth on you and have him read you the entirety of War and Peace through a megaphone while you’re trying to sleep. Eh, I’ll think of something.”
>>
>>5602282

Your tone is joking, but your expression is clear that the well of patience only goes so far. You’re willing to forgive an honest mistake or two, but your patience has limits and boundaries, just like everything else.

The solemn look he gives you in return is proof enough that tells you that he can read between the lines and pick up on the unspoken warning.

To avoid seeming like you’re busting his balls, you throw him a bone.

> “I will say, somehow not the worst date I’ve ever been on. Guess it wasn’t a total waste; though I suppose you were hoping I’d come home as a different kind of ladykiller.”

Set snickers a little, and you find yourself joining along.

The laughter peters out and the evening passes in companionable silence as the both of you just watch the endless shifting of the moonlit sea.

It won’t be much longer until you’ll be back home and plying your trade once more.

How would you like to spend your time during the journey to Russia?

> Work to improve one of your spells. (Specify which spell)

> Experiment with Deadwood, see if you can better adjust to its nuances. Never know what might come in handy.

> Work to improve one of your combat skills. (Specify which)

> Hone your understanding of Ancient Greek with Pandion. Might as well work on your classical education while you can.

> Other?
>>
>>5602284
>Experiment with Deadwood, see if you can better adjust to its nuances. Never know what might come in handy.
>Try and learn Russian.
>>
>>5602284
>> Other?
Read the scrolls
>>
>>5602284
>> Experiment with Deadwood, see if you can better adjust to its nuances. Never know what might come in handy.

Want to see what we can do with our new discovery.
>>
>>5602284
>Train with the Blade Of Flames, see what it actually does.
>>
>>5602286
>support
>>
>>5602284
this>>5602286
>>
>>5602286
+1
>>
>>5602286
>>5602292
>>5602297
>>5602300
>>5602305

Alright, give me some 1d100 to learn the finer intricacies of Deadwood.

DC: 75 / 100
>>
Rolled 94 (1d100)

>>5602309
>>
Rolled 79 (1d100)

>>5602309
>>
Rolled 43 (1d100)

>>5602309
>>
Rolled 17 (1d100)

>>5602309
>>
>>5602319
>>5602320
>>5602322

That's a regular success; go ahead and give me some more 1d100 to see how well you do with Russian.

(Thanks to Polyglot, you can only fail via critfail, so you're guaranteed a minor success.)

DC: 65 / 90
>>
Rolled 74 (1d100)

>>5602324
>>
Rolled 94 (1d100)

>>5602324
>>
Rolled 90 (1d100)

>>5602324
Here's the critfail
>>
>>5602327
>>5602329
>>5602330

Looks like you're a quick study at Russian; all that practice seems to be paying off.

Now, how would you like to modify your Deadwood form? (As this was a regular success, you only get to pick one.)

You’d prefer to focus on improving Deadwood's…

> CQC Lethality. Sharpened limbs make for excellent bladed attacks.

> Durability. All that matters at the end of the day is if you can walk it off.

> Agility. Speed is king when every second matters.

> Magic Resistance. Might be nice to have a fallback if you encounter another magician.

> Other?
>>
>>5602340
> Magic Resistance. Might be nice to have a fallback if you encounter another magician.
>>
>>5602340
>> Durability. All that matters at the end of the day is if you can walk it off.
>>
>>5602340
> Agility. Speed is king when every second matters.
We are stiff drift wood, being able to get out of the way and move properly is important.
>>
>>5602340
> Durability. All that matters at the end of the day is if you can walk it off.
You okay, reautard? I am wood. Stoopid.
>>
>>5602340
>> Agility. Speed is king when every second matters.

It already seemed to not LOWER our speed, so being able to use it for a persistent speed buff would be really fucking nice.
>>
>>5602340
>> Magic Resistance. Might be nice to have a fallback if you encounter another magician.
>>
if we ever encounter Swamp Thing we should try to convince him that we seek no harm against the green since we are part tree ourselves
>>
>>5602340
> Magic Resistance. Might be nice to have a fallback if you encounter another magician.
Something we don’t have yet.
>>
>>5602341
>>5602351
>>5602363

Alright, looks like magic resistance is victorious.

I've only got one more point of order to discuss before we hammer out travel plans; would you like to make contact with Stalnoivolk while you're in country?

> Yes, might as well check-in and see how he's getting along. Back in Venezuela, he mentioned that he had some business to settle in the old country; maybe you could lend a hand.

> No, you'd rather keep your distance for now. Best to avoid mixing business with leisure, especially given your recent troubles.
>>
>>5602379
>> No, you'd rather keep your distance for now. Best to avoid mixing business with leisure, especially given your recent troubles.
>>
>>5602379
> No, you'd rather keep your distance for now. Best to avoid mixing business with leisure, especially given your recent troubles
If he wanted help he would have asked
>>
>>5602379
> No, you'd rather keep your distance for now. Best to avoid mixing business with leisure, especially given your recent troubles.
>>
>>5602379
>> Yes, might as well check-in and see how he's getting along. Back in Venezuela, he mentioned that he had some business to settle in the old country; maybe you could lend a hand.
he's cool
>>
>>5602379
> Yes, might as well check-in and see how he's getting along. Back in Venezuela, he mentioned that he had some business to settle in the old country; maybe you could lend a hand.
>>
>>5602379
> No, you'd rather keep your distance for now. Best to avoid mixing business with leisure, especially given your recent troubles.
>>
>>5602380
>>5602381
>>5602382
>>5602401

Alright, gonna take a moment to grab some dinner and get writing.
>>
>>5602379
>> No, you'd rather keep your distance for now. Best to avoid mixing business with leisure, especially given your recent troubles.
The squad is probably watching him as close as they can as well to recapture him anyway.
>>
>>5602418

Once you’re back on solid ground, you notice that the police presence is very muted when compared to the stifling response in Athens.

Either the authorities must not figure that Crete is at risk, all reserve units have already been deployed to lock down Athens, or the remnants left aboard the Iron Dragon are occupying the brunt of the spotlight.

Regardless, the outcome works neatly in your favor; nobody with a badge in sight to pose a threat. Makes it nice and simple for you to prep for your next destination.

As your next and final stop, the Russian Federation offers a wide variety of potential entry points.

Rather than risk a land route through the still-turbulent Balkans or the war zone in Vlatava, everyone decides that it’d be far easier and more convenient to just ride the Black Sea through the Bosphorus Strait and make direct landfall on the Russian coast.

Plus, a water route gives you the ability to avoid the rigamarole of border checkpoints and the potential of having some very uncomfortable conversations about your reasons for visiting.

It doesn’t take Set long to find somebody willing to smuggle you there, and the gang is back on the water before the day is out.

During the lengthy trip, a few of the sailors take a shine to you and helpfully provide pointers as to the fundamentals of spoken Russian and Cyrillic lettering. From what one of them explains in half-decent English, they get a kick out of hearing you butcher it with your accent.

In addition to the basics of the language, you’re also treated to some delightful new swear words, as well as some interesting terminology for Italians, Central Asians, Indians, and all other manner of ethnicity near and dear to the famously cosmopolitan Russian mariner.

Who says that learning can’t be fun?

> Language Unlocked! Russian (Ocнoвнoй - Basic): Can understand signs and basic conversation with the aid of hand signals / gestures.
>>
>>5602468

And when the sailors leave you be, you spend your idle time practicing with Deadwood by slowly diffusing large quantities of magical energy while in your wooden form. It’s an exhausting process that takes days to show even the slightest dividends, but you eventually begin to see results. The sensation is tough to describe, but it’s almost like you’re building an insulating layer against magical attack. It’s definitely not fool-proof, if somebody of sufficient magical might wants to punch through it, they’ll bash through like a train ramming through a brick wall.

But a shield is a shield, no matter how weak it may be at first.

> Spell Modified! Deadwood: When in this form, most spells cast on you have a 10% chance to weaken, and a 5% chance to fail entirely.

When there’s spare time left after your various studies and experiments, you pore over potential stopping points on a weathered but excruciatingly detailed map of the vast Russian expanse.

In the end, your final picks are… (Choose 2)

(For reference, you'll probably ride the Trans-Siberian railway when possible, concluding with an epilogue of sorts being held at Vladivostok in the Far East.)

> St. Petersburg. A whole lot of history to be found there; given that it’s flipped from St. Petersburg to Petrograd to Leningrad, then back to St. Petersburg.

> Moscow. You’ll never forgive yourself if you pass up the opportunity to see the Kremlin up-close and personal.

> Irkutsk. It’d be a good opportunity to experience the infamous Siberian taiga, and perhaps go for a dip in Lake Baikal.

> Nizhny Novgorod. It’s an excellent example of classical Russian architecture and culture; at least the bits the Reds didn’t manage to ruin.

> Volgograd. It’d be worth a look at the infamous site of the battle for Stalingrad.

> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.

> Other? (Write-ins heavily encouraged, Russia is truly staggering in size and I can’t touch on everything.)
>>
>>5602470

I'm going to conclude our session tonight with this vote so that everyone has time to get their rolls in.

We'll pick up from here on Friday at 5:00 PM EST; vote closes at that time. If the thread happens to die early, that will be our cutoff.

As always, thanks for playing! Hope to see you all next time. Apologies in advance if I end up making glaring errors about Russian history / topography / linguistics.
>>
>>5602470
>> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
>> Other? That ghost town where more than 500 people disappeared and then the tide brought all their fingers
>>
>>5602470

>> Moscow. You’ll never forgive yourself if you pass up the opportunity to see the Kremlin up-close and personal.

>> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
>>
>>5602470
> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.

Say it with me, people. GHOST ADVENTURES
>>
>>5602470
>> Moscow. You’ll never forgive yourself if you pass up the opportunity to see the Kremlin up-close and personal.
> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
>>
>>5602470
> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
> Nizhny Novgorod. It’s an excellent example of classical Russian architecture and culture; at least the bits the Reds didn’t manage to ruin.
>>
>>5602487
you can choose one more anon
>>
>>5602470
> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
Give the real leaders of Russia a prayer for holding against the long nose tide.
> Nizhny Novgorod. It’s an excellent example of classical Russian architecture and culture; at least the bits the Reds didn’t manage to ruin.
Reds, Tribe members, parasites one and all.
>>
>>5602470

> The Kola Superdeep Borehole aka the Hole to Hell. The single deepest hole ever dug into the earth by man. Over 7 and a half miles straight down. Legend has it the drillers could hear the voices of the damned.
>>
>>5602490
I read that after I posted. My second was a write-in.
>>
>>5602470
> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
> Nizhny Novgorod. It’s an excellent example of classical Russian architecture and culture; at least the bits the Reds didn’t manage to ruin.
>>
>>5602470
>> The Kola Superdeep Borehole aka the Hole to Hell. The single deepest hole ever dug into the earth by man. Over 7 and a half miles straight down. Legend has it the drillers could hear the voices of the damned

Change my write-in for this
>>5602493
>>
>>5602470
> Moscow. You’ll never forgive yourself if you pass up the opportunity to see the Kremlin up-close and personal.
> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
>>
>>5602487
To be fair, pick a place in Russia, it probably has a ton of resentful spirits there. It has never been quite a happy place.
>>
>>5602470
> St. Petersburg. A whole lot of history to be found there; given that it’s flipped from St. Petersburg to Petrograd to Leningrad, then back to St. Petersburg.
> The Kola Superdeep Borehole aka the Hole to Hell. The single deepest hole ever dug into the earth by man. Over 7 and a half miles straight down. Legend has it the drillers could hear the voices of the damned.
>>
>>5602470
> Other? (Write-ins heavily encouraged, Russia is truly staggering in size and I can’t touch on everything.)
East Karelia
>>
>>5602549
That is like just saying >Siberia dude
Tell more
>>
Let to see what is there

>>5602524
The "I go outside with a coke and now I have a chunk of ice in my hand" cold dont help
>>
>>5602470
>> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
>> The Kola Superdeep Borehole aka the Hole to Hell. The single deepest hole ever dug into the earth by man. Over 7 and a half miles straight down. Legend has it the drillers could hear the voices of the damned

Fuck
>>
>>5602470
>>> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
>>> The Kola Superdeep Borehole aka the Hole to Hell. The single deepest hole ever dug into the earth by man. Over 7 and a half miles straight down. Legend has it the drillers could hear the voices of the damned
>>
Someone gonna archive this?

Also the votes
>>
> Irkutsk. It’d be a good opportunity to experience the infamous Siberian taiga, and perhaps go for a dip in Lake Baikal.
Camping with the bros

> The Kola Superdeep Borehole aka the Hole to Hell. The single deepest hole ever dug into the earth by man. Over 7 and a half miles straight down. Legend has it the drillers could hear the voices of the damned
>>
>>5602470
>> Yekaterinburg. Might as well have a look at the final resting place of the Romanov dynasty.
>> The Kola Superdeep Borehole aka the Hole to Hell. The single deepest hole ever dug into the earth by man. Over 7 and a half miles straight down. Legend has it the drillers could hear the voices of the damned
>>
Alright, give me a few moments to tally everything up.

>>5603961

I'll archive the thread tonight or tomorrow, figure we can get a bit more mileage out of this one.
>>
>>5604687

Looks like our winners are Yekaterinburg and the Kola Borehole.

Seeing as how Kola is objectively closer and would require backtracking otherwise, I'm designating that as your first major stop.

Writing.

tfw your capital city has less tourist appeal than a literal hole in the ground.
>>
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Your first pick is a bit of a dark-horse candidate; the Kola Superdeep Borehole; located deep in the bowels of the Arctic Circle.

It’s an unorthodox pick, but there’s a certain appeal to seeing the deepest man-made hole on Earth. No better place to stare into the void, at least.

Besides, you’ve seen enough art and ritzy architecture already; there’s nothing quite like a post-modern industrial hellscape to help keep things in perspective.

As soon as the smugglers make port and usher you off-board, you call Gremlin on a secure line and leave a message. You keep it concise and quick, asking that he commission Index to investigate a phone number. For sake of compartmentalization and Gremlin’s own safety, you keep the details of its origins to a minimum. It’s also made abundantly clear that you don’t want it traced back to either of you, in case the results end up raising a red flag. You’re also sure to include one of Index’s encrypted markers so that Gremlin can cash that in instead of paying him.

It’d be pretty shitty to dump this on him, and make him foot the bill for it. Providing the means of payment is the least you can do from both a personal and professional standpoint. Not like it was burning a hole in your pocket anyhow.

Now, back to more important matters; namely the roadtrip.

According to your map, you’ve landed roundabouts the city of Sochi. The Kola Borehole is located in the vicinity of Murmansk; aside from its status as an important warm-water port, you don’t know much about it.

Hell, the only reason you know anything about Murmansk is because your arcane research practically demands that you force-feed yourself history books to understand what the fuck they’re ranting about.

Judging from your map, you’re a little over 2000 miles away; a full two or three day drive barring any unexpected breakdowns, road closures, or otherwise unanticipated disasters.
>>
>>5604847

You just shrug your shoulder in regards to that last concern; no sense worrying about something well out of your control.

With that, you and your pals strap yourselves back into the Set-Mobile and hit the road.

Time for a jaunt into the Arctic Circle.

Speaking of which, how would you like to spend your downtime during the drive?

> Do some magical poking and prodding with that golden talisman you swiped in Athens. The last time you fiddled with one of these, you got thrown into some void and ended up meeting with Thoth; best be cautious and methodical.

> Just turn up the radio and focus on the drive. You’ll be driving through some gorgeous countryside, better enjoy it while you can.

> Crack open that combat bot and start digging for gold. Might not be the most appropriate environment, but since when has that ever stopped you before?

> Continue to brush up on your Russian. Don’t want to embarrass yourself in front of the locals or get hopelessly lost if you need directions.

> Make idle conversation with Jack. Wonder if he has any stories about Russia; he’s been doing his thing since well before Lenin and the Bolsheviks took over.

> Other?
>>
>>5604848
> Do some magical poking and prodding with that golden talisman you swiped in Athens. The last time you fiddled with one of these, you got thrown into some void and ended up meeting with Thoth; best be cautious and methodical.
>>
>>5604848
> Do some magical poking and prodding with that golden talisman you swiped in Athens. The last time you fiddled with one of these, you got thrown into some void and ended up meeting with Thoth; best be cautious and methodical.
>>
>>5604848
> Do some magical poking and prodding with that golden talisman you swiped in Athens. The last time you fiddled with one of these, you got thrown into some void and ended up meeting with Thoth; best be cautious and methodical.
At least this time ask Thoth and/or Set to assist.
>>
>>5604861
>>5604866
>>5604876

Alright, I'm willing to have Set and Thoth on standby in case things go sour, but this will largely be on you.

Gimme some 1d100+40

DC: 100
>>
>>5604848
>> Do some magical poking and prodding with that golden talisman you swiped in Athens. The last time you fiddled with one of these, you got thrown into some void and ended up meeting with Thoth; best be cautious and methodical.

Hope aganst hope the god we contact is not a dick

>tfw your capital city has less tourist appeal than a literal hole in the ground.
bout are shit holes, but one is deeper
>>
Rolled 6 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5604912
>>
Rolled 93 (1d100)

>>5604912
>>
Rolled 74 (1d100)

>>5604912
>>
Rolled 26, 81 + 50 = 157 (2d100 + 50)

>>5604918
>>5604923
>>5604932

Nice, that's a success.

Go ahead and throw me another set of 1d100+40

> DC to be determined.
>>
Rolled 84 (1d100)

>>5604935
Fuck
>>
Rolled 76 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5604935
Good lord
>>
Rolled 32 + 40 (1d100 + 40)

>>5604935
>>
>>5604935
luck drain pls?
>>
Rolled 10 + 5 (1d15 + 5)

>>5604946

Good point. Let's see if it's enough to get you over the top.
>>
>>5604946
Set and Thoth are friend
>>
>>5604950
Holy shit best spell ever
>>
Looks like we've got a little bit of a quandry; I'll let you decide how you would like to resolve it.

Your options are:

> Siphon a bit of luck from your compatriots. It'll only be for a moment, what's the worst that could happen?

> Use Roll the Die to force the QM to re-roll with a -40 malus.

> Use Roll the Die to have the anons re-roll.

> Take the failure.

> Other?
>>
>>5604962
>> Siphon a bit of luck from your compatriots. It'll only be for a moment, what's the worst that could happen?
>>
>>5604962
>> Use Roll the Die to force the QM to re-roll with a -40 malus

If we choose this, we have to re roll too?
>>
>>5604968
we don't
also don't reroll you fucks, we could have prevented the whole debacle with marina if you hadn't wasted our one reroll
>>
>>5604962
> Take the failure.
>>
>>5604962
>attempt to totally off the cuff to siphon luck from the inanimate object currently held in your hand.
>>
>>5604962
> Siphon a bit of luck from your compatriots. It'll only be for a moment, what's the worst that could happen?
>>
>>5604974

As a reminder, Roll the Die will become available once more when the Kola stuff is done with.

There were some good points raised about treating vacation destinations akin to missions that I'm happy to accede to.
>>
>>5604962
>> Take the failure.
>>
Seems like there's a tie between taking the failure and temporarily borrowing some luck; I'll give 5-10 more minutes to break the tie.

If necessary, I'll settle it with a d2.
>>
>>5604962
>> Siphon a bit of luck from your compatriots. It'll only be for a moment, what's the worst that could happen?

This so failure dont win then
>>
>>5604963
>>5604980
>>5605029

That'll do; go ahead and throw me some stock 1d100
>>
Rolled 30 (1d100)

>>5605039
>>
Rolled 4 (1d100)

>>5605039
Be a damn shame to roll a nat 1 right about now, huh?
>>
Rolled 13 (1d100)

>>5605039
>>
>>5605043
>>5605047
>>5605050

Interesting. That should tide me over for a while; need to take a quick moment to get my dinner in the oven, and I'll be back to writing.
>>
>>5605056
I dont get it Axie the first roll was to investgate? To make a portal? The we pass that we have one more roll to do something? We fail, then you roll luck and we pass, but then we dont pass. And now we have "stock" rolls.

Maybe is because im half sleep but i dont undersand what is happening
>>
>>5605081

Bit of a spoiler for the upcoming update, so I have marked it as such.

And when I said "stock", I only meant that it would be a d100 roll with no modifiers. Just a quirk in my terminology.

The first roll was to investigate the talisman and garner a reaction of some kind similar to when you were in Kahndaq. The second roll (which was a success via Luck Drain) was to prevent something bad from happening. As there are currently no enemies to leech luck off of, you had to target your traveling companions instead. The third roll was for any potential impacts of such.
>>
>>5605056

The bulk of your time is spent on the golden talisman you looted from that strange packs of cultists who attacked you in Athens.

Thoth and Set agree to serve as observers and bail you out in case of any serious trouble, but the overall work is being left for you to handle.

These attempts at experimentation are not aided by Set’s insistence on restricting the Set-Mobile’s radio to some local station that blasts the same staticky polka music on repeat for hours.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBhh23-paLU

Your initial objectives are simple, lightly probe the talisman with your magic, elicit some kind of response, and work from there.

As you would belatedly discover, triggering a reaction turns out to be the easy part; albeit tediously boring.

Given that back in Kahndaq, you managed to accidentally bring about some kind of angry warrior-bird intent on skewering you, such precautions only make sense.

This time, you take steps to fastidiously regulate your magical output and keep a sharp eye on the talisman for any bizarre behavior. With a sharp enough eye and a quick enough mind, you can hopefully head off any potential issues at the pass.

So instead of dousing it with magic like a fireman hauling a hose, you gently add an eyedroppers worth at time; drip instead of bursts, essentially. It’s a slow and mentally grating process, but safety is your priority; especially in a confined space like the Set-Mobile.

However, an issue suddenly arises when you cross some kind of invisible demarcation line and finally activate the talisman. Thanks to your paranoid prepwork, you’re able to lock down its anomalous activity for further analysis.

The intent and mechanics of it are difficult to identify, so you’re mostly working off of educated assumptions. If you had to bet money on it, you’d speculate that it’s a two-step procedure of sorts.

Step one is to broadcast some kind of magical alarm that reveals your general location, kind of like a magical alternative to LoJack.

Once the location is locked in, the second step is to generate a rift for some bruiser to reclaim your property by cracking the skulls of all parties present.

Courtesy of some well-reasoned advice from Set and Thoth, you gently form a tight shroud of magic over the talisman, and quarantine it. That ought to prevent it from calling home while you functionally lobotomize its security measures.
>>
>>5605176

Unfortunately, doing so without breaking it entirely is incredibly difficult; you can feel your control beginning to slip during several key moments. It’s somewhat risky, but you have to resort to quietly siphoning a bit of luck from your buddies to help make up the difference and keep your control from disintegrating.

Even with that boost, it is still an overwhelming effort that leaves you drained and exhausted at its conclusion. After Set and Thoth confirm that you’ve rendered it completely safe for further use, you take a moment to mop a bit of sweat from your brow and slump onto a lumpy cot for a bit of rest while basking in the afterglow of your success.

You’ve developed quite a knack for this stuff. Hell, you haven’t even had any major backfires for a while! That’s got to count for something.

All that’s left to do now is decide if you’d like to create another one of those rifts now, or save it for another time.

As you slip into a catnap, you decide to…

> Use the talisman to summon a rift when the van pulls over for its next rest stop. You’ve always known to strike when the iron is hot.

> Put the talisman back in storage for now. Once your vacation is over, you can go diving into the unknown at your leisure; it’ll still be waiting for you.

> Other?
>>
>>5605179
> Use the talisman to summon a rift when the van pulls over for its next rest stop. You’ve always known to strike when the iron is hot.
Is there a russian superhero or villain that would interrupt us?
I would prefer to take care of this one far away from our bases because it does have an alarm and summons
>>
>>5605179
>> Put the talisman back in storage for now. Once your vacation is over, you can go diving into the unknown at your leisure; it’ll still be waiting for you.
>>
>>5605182

Thanks to your previous success, the alarm has largely been neutralized. Should be free and clear for use.
>>
Looks like activity has slowed a little bit, so I'll go ahead and call it here for tonight.

We'll pick back up on Wednesday at 5:00 PM EST, same as usual. I'll go ahead and close this vote at noon tomorrow.

As always, thanks for playing! Hope to see you all there.
>>
>>5605179
>> Put the talisman back in storage for now. Once your vacation is over, you can go diving into the unknown at your leisure; it’ll still be waiting for you.
>>5605213
See you Axie, thenks for the answer
>>
>>5605179
> Put the talisman back in storage for now. Once your vacation is over, you can go diving into the unknown at your leisure; it’ll still be waiting for you.
>>
>>5605179
>Put the talisman back in storage for now. Better to use it in a more interesting place, like at the bottom of the world’s deepest manmade hole.
Slight rewrite.

>>5605213
Have a good weekend, Axie!
>>
>>5605179
> Put the talisman back in storage for now. Once your vacation is over, you can go diving into the unknown at your leisure; it’ll still be waiting for you.
Probably shouldn't do anything overly magical near borehole to hell.
>>
>>5605179
> Put the talisman back in storage for now. Once your vacation is over, you can go diving into the unknown at your leisure; it’ll still be waiting for you.
We should use it in Gotham to set off Batman's magic alarm again. I love driving that man insane with our antics.
>>
>>5605179
> Put the talisman back in storage for now. Once your vacation is over, you can go diving into the unknown at your leisure; it’ll still be waiting for you.

Thanks for writing as usual Axis! Great work!
>>
The borehole is gonna be full of demons gunning for our blood and soul, isn’t it. Because nothing good can happen to Sean Clayton.
>>
>>5605179
> Use the talisman to summon a rift when the van pulls over for its next rest stop. You’ve always known to strike when the iron is hot.
>>
File: Sean Expectations.png (391 KB, 791x401)
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>>5605598
>Sean knows he's got Demons coming for him
>Decides to visit the hole reputed to reach into Hell
>Picrel when Demons start crawling out of said hole
>>
>>5605598
>>5605656
we are going there to kill them and loot whatever cool stuff they have
>>
>>5605689
Anon, I strongly feel that if we come face-to-face with a Demon that is important/powerful enough to have something worthy of looting then shit has hit the fan.
But I also wonder if hacksawing a Demon's horns off is worth the potential corruption. I'm sure someone in the magical circles of the world would pay a good sum for them...
>>
>>5605775
>Don't know the legend about the two friend that defeat the devil himself.
>>
>>5605656
Maybe if we kick enough demon ass Heaven will take notice and send an angel for backup.
>>
>>5606053
>Heaven
>Helping

God trust and have faith on you, that is all the help you will get. Humans are his greatest creation, after all.
>>
>>5606268
I think literal demons from hell running around on Earth in droves would warrant a bit of divine intervention. Some idiot summoning them in their basement? That's the Church's problem to solve. Twelve legions suddenly tunneling up in the tundra and getting ready to go hog wild? That's smiting time.
>>
One of these days we are going to meet John Constantine or the Morning Star and on that day we will not be impressed. One of the longterm goals in this quest is to meet an Endless and either kill or befriend them. Most DC characters never interact with or have knowledge of the multiversal power ladder. As long as we don't die or this quest drops I hope we get to meet Destruction. He has not been doing his job.
>>
I wonder what endgame Sean looks like. We either die in which case we fight out of hell or use our magic to cheat death or keep growing in power. They will have to build a special prison just to hold us or put us in the phantom zone. We are already a greater threat than most street level criminals. I would say mid to high-league-level threat.
>>
>>5606469
>We are already a greater threat than most street level criminals. I would say mid to high-league-level threat.

Batas bathe batcomputer batsay, batour bathree batID batare batmid batlvl bathreat.
>>
>>5606528
but batbat, what if you combine all three?
>>
>>5606469
Probably just Doomguy. We get to a point where we're too angry to die, and so we spend the rest of our time slaughtering our way through hell or Apokolips or something.
>>
>>5606587
Officially? Sean is still mid level, although above many in priority level if he is seen free.

Personally? Batman will ask Superman and Wonder Woman to help him so thay can fucking flat Sean to the ground.



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