Animus Moderators (
animusmods) wrote in
towerofanimus2014-06-01 11:17 pm
Entry tags:
- *endgame,
- [au1] chidori yoshino,
- [au3] archer (prototype),
- [au4] grainne,
- [ou] asagi,
- [ou] asch the bloody,
- [ou] berserker (lancelot),
- [ou] fon master ion,
- [ou] lancer (zero),
- [ou] nesir aeser,
- [ou] reno,
- [ou] romeo,
- [ou] sephiroth,
- [ou] shion,
- [ou] suzaku kururugi,
- [ou] taiki,
- [ou] veronica (franken fran),
- [ou] xion,
- [ou] zelda (oot)
Endgame: Gathered on This Beach of the Tumid River
Characters: open
Setting: all around the Tower from the 25th of May to the 1st of June
Format: any
Summary: A general mingle for all characters throughout the Tower.
Warnings: Standard Animus warnings; please note anything specific in the subject headers of your threads
[The Tower is stagnant, the only signs of activity confined to the second block. There isn't much time left; it might be a good idea to rest and do whatever strikes your fancy before the timer hits zero.]
Setting: all around the Tower from the 25th of May to the 1st of June
Format: any
Summary: A general mingle for all characters throughout the Tower.
Warnings: Standard Animus warnings; please note anything specific in the subject headers of your threads
[The Tower is stagnant, the only signs of activity confined to the second block. There isn't much time left; it might be a good idea to rest and do whatever strikes your fancy before the timer hits zero.]

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Something that would earn my approval. I was not bored by the people of my time. I was not bored in my interactions with the heroes of my Grail War. Humans are capable of it, but they squander their lives on goals that lack the intrigue and creativity of the past.
Their largest towers are built for the sole purpose being the largest. Their cities grow large only to cultivate more product to be pushed for more money. Their armies only serve to protect that industry of production and consumption.
[It truly was a disappointing era of humanity.]
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[Grainne looks away, off into the cavern. There is something in what he says, though she wished she could find some way to disagree, even for the principle of it.
The truth is, modern human society is sort of disappointing. That and the strangeness of the culture was what made up her mind about not wishing for a new life in it alone. There not even her Great Library to find...
Well... Diarmuid had said the whole world was a Great Library now. He might be right... but what worth did knowledge have if it only served to push humanity toward whatever it is racing toward?
There was no reward in simply knowing for its own sake, and she had no people to take the knowledge back to anymore.
Knowing for its own sake. Consuming for its own sake. Thinking like that, it seemed really rather flat.
And then there were people like Kariya...]
They still care, I think.
[And his fate.]
Maybe I should say love.
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[There is a smirk in his voice, as if what was said should have been obvious.]
They would be that much more boring to watch if they had no inkling of that kind of awareness. Like insects building constantly, mindlessly.
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[From what little she had seen of him in her own world, she never got that impression, but there he also seemed like an entirely different person. Almost.]
You are a strange man.
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[He would not bother being disappointed in humanity if he felt they would amount to more.]
I approve of the potential of caring and love. One does not become a hero without them!
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[Why does Grainne suddenly feel like she is back in Tara, debating this or that with the guest of the day? She turns back to look at him at last, almost recovered from her splash in the pool.]
You are still full of paradoxes, my lord.
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I am not so undiscerning to approve of it every time it shows itself; even things such as those can become boring and predictable. The lengths to which a human will go is interesting and what spawned heroes, but even heroes are ranked in their greatness.
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[Grainne shakes her head slightly with a humorless smile.]
The boy who made the book of heroes thinks that everyone brought here is a hero... except himself.
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If the boy amounted to something that put all the heroes around him to shame, he would be interesting by his own right.
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[Grainne smiles slightly, taking a step closer to him, then another.]
He has written down the name of every soul that was ever trapped here. Think of what this place is like, and what it would take to do that. Some of us, the ones used to war and fear, would balk at that dangerous work, and yet this small boy has accomplished that much. I think he has the courage of a great hero already.
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Courage or foolishness -- a point that would have to be determined when they stand so close together, especially in a place where danger runs rampant.
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[Her own eyes follow his line of sight, wondering what he found so fascinating about the pool.]
It could not hurt to acknowledge the boy's efforts though... does the distinction really matter when the end is so close?
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Not many people would stand up against Servants as she did.]
That is an indulgence I choose not to spend on a child I have no interest in. But he undoubtedly stroked the egos of many with that book of his, and they will respond in kind.
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[For once, Grainne's voice fades quietly into silence, not finishing her thought. What would the point be? Archer is as he is. She doubts one discussion with someone he hardly knows will give him anything to think about. Just like her discussions with Diarmuid will not change what he has decided.
And yet in her mind, there could not be two men who were more polar opposites.]
It is of no importance, I suppose... I will leave you to your thoughts now.
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I will be the judge of whether or not it will be of importance. Continue.
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I was going to say that it seems the measure of how a hero has affected this place is by the length of the writing on their page, and how many people wrote about them. It is ironic of me... I have been feeling very determined lately that I have no use for heroes.
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[He smirks as he makes a leap in logic.]
So is that the true reason you are here? To get away from anyone considered a hero?
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[That may have been a tease, though she tilts her head at his next words seemingly in thought.]
Not precisely... if that were so, when you came by I would have simply shifted to spirit form and left by now. Just one or two in particular.
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[It was easy enough to dismiss the topic with a wave of his hand, finally turning away from the pool.]
Is that so? You seemed too busy falling into the water to shift to spirit form.
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And that is what I get for only trying to move away from the edge. As much fun as it would be, I do not fly, like some of us.
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[He smiles at her annoyance, reaching over with the intention to poke her cheek.]
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[That might have come out more sharply than she intended... still, she does not apologize for it. She makes no move to avoid his hand, just simply ignores it.]
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[If he minds the sharp response, there is no indication on his face or in his voice.]
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[She looks away, frowning, a hand picking at her dress.]
In a way. For whatever reason, I was given the guise of a bean sidhe.
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Why do you look away?
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