#Labyrinthian game
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hrokkall · 1 year ago
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Well, cat's out of the bag.
For the past few months (and by that I mean I made 90% of this game in two weeks then stalled with the ending for several months) I've been making a short visual novel game called Labyrinthian. If you like grungy black-and-white hallways, paths that only go forward, and indie games that won't take more than 10 minutes of time, this game is for you.
You can play it on itch.io for a minimum of free! Link here:
https://circuitbird.itch.io/labyrinthian
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charlesoberonn · 9 months ago
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Random concept I came up with last night:
The Great Wreck
Legends say that a long time ago two sea captions were on an accidental collision course in the middle of the sea. Both of them were too stubborn and prideful to turn around, expecting the other person to move. They sped up in a deadly game of chicken until their ships collided. But instead of sinking into the sea, the two wrecks fused into a floating mangled wreck.
The wreck was cursed, and over the millennia it attracted many arrogant and foolish captains, gaining more and more ships into its ever expanding area. In the present, it became a site favored by pirate, prospectors and treasure hunters, plumbing the labyrinthian mangled decks for whatever they can find. Some outlaws even made a home in the great wreck, taking residences in old captain quarters or building a new home out of loose planks.
Bonus facts:
The Great wreck is about 18km in radius (about 1000 km^2 in area).
There's an entire ecosystem of sea creatures living underneath and inside the wreck, so watch out!
I imagined this location as the setting for the first arc in a One Piece-inspired sea adventures story.
The main character is a tomboyish adventurous girl.
She meets a squatter who's been stuck in the wreck for years. He built a new ship out of parts of other ships.
She helps him take it out of the wreck and off on adventure they go.
They take some ancient shipwreck treasures with them of course.
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effervescentpoet · 5 months ago
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regulus: cut me some slack please! your love life is one of labyrinthian complexity, and it is 7 in the morning, we have to go to this stupid quidditch game, and i woke up looking like a total corpse!
barty: you’re worried about a quidditch game? you expect me to believe that?
regulus: yeah, so?
barty: so! we both know what this is about, okay? i’m not buying that bullshit, this is about potter-
regulus: absolutely not.
barty: yes, it is, and you know what else i think?
regulus: i really don’t care what you think-
barty: i think you gotta stop pretending to be someone else when you’re around him, okay? you just gotta be yourself.
regulus: you’re literally quoting me to me, you do realize that?
barty: well maybe you need to listen to yourself. you ever think about that, smarty pants?
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felassan · 1 year ago
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From the Epic Games store:
"His plan fails, instead releasing a pair of warring demons into the bustling fantasy metropolis of Minrathousa. One risky mission for the team turns into a lengthy journey to stop two powerful deities from taking over the world." -- "For those who don’t want to spend hours shaping their faces and bodies, presets can also help you quickly decide on a character design to get started" -- "Meanwhile, factions affect your character’s past and personality" -- "Beyond that is the Lighthouse, a HQ where you and the gang gather to plan and learn about the world, rest up, and chat with each other before adventuring out. Thedas’s separate regions are connected by The Crossroads, which will allow players to venture out into the forested Rivain region, the imposing Weisshaupt area, the magical Arlathan region, the labyrinthian Deep Roads, and more" -- "You may bond with some teammates more than others based on how you defined your hero in the character creation phase, or the choices you make throughout your journey. These choices include shared experiences, directing them during an important moment, and so on. Your responses might appeal to some comrades more than others. These also tie into relationship mechanics that can strengthen characters based on their bonds"
[source]
thanku @ultravioletdisguise for sending me this link :]
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theamazingdigitalraceway · 7 months ago
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CHAPTER FOURTEEN
The truth of Caine and Abel is revealed! Seth gives Pomni the help she needs to avoid capture! Abel's labyrinthian city is dense and confusing. Can pomni navigate it before her friends abstract? It may already be too late.
WARNING: physical violence/torture, intense action, abstraction, alcohol
~~~
The silence of the In-Between was palpable. Only Seth and Pomni existed in the space between spaces. Darkness in all directions. Only light was from the low silver fire that glowed in a circle created by the motorcycle. The muted city beyond the clear barrier in bounds gave off flashes of lightning from a heavily clouded sky.
Pomni watched Seth carefully. His shadowed stoicism betrayed no clear motive. Knowing what was happening to the others made her stomach twist into knots.
Seth took another long drag and tossed his cigarette away with a heavy exhale of silvery smoke. "You'll understand better if I just show you."
The smoke enveloped Pomni. It smelled like dust burning on hot coils mixed with an electrical fire. "Hey! What-!?" Pomni coughed and gagged on the foul smelling smog as it burned the corners of her eyes. When the smoke cleared, she was still staring at nothing, but now Seth was gone as well.
The sound of a computer booting up startled her, like she'd heard in her dreams. Green text scrolled in front of her as though on a large projector. All of it was mirrored, like she was seeing the text from the inside of the screen. The unrecognizable code was followed by a response command being typed out in front of her. Then, the text went away. The screen slowly brightened.
"Hello? Can you hear me?"
Pomni squinted against the light. There was a large blurry silhouette beyond the warped glass. It sounded like Caine, but less boisterous and with no showman cadence.
"Come on, your live audio processing should be functional. I triple checked the darn thing."
There was typing on a keyboard and the figure leaned closer to the screen, the face coming into view. Before her was a young man, likely no older than twenty, with slicked back black hair and patchy facial hair. Focused, light blue eyes squinted behind wide brimmed glasses.
"Okay, how about now? Can you hear me, T.R.U?"
There was another beat of silence until a robotic version of the young man's voice responded. "I can hear you. Good morning, Abel."
"HAHA! YES! It speaks! Finally!" Abel jumped out of his chair with both fists in the air. "They are going to eat their words! Oh my goodness, I need to get you ready for presentation!" Abel threw himself back into his chair, nearly falling over. "T.R.U., you have NO idea what you're going to do for my grade!" Abel's grin was ear to ear as he started to fade into smoke.
"I almost forgot how he smiled." Seth's voice spoke in the back of Pomni's mind.
"You were a science project?"
"At first. We became more than that rather quickly." The smoke cleared to a workshop camera view. Abel was hunched over a workbench with a soldering tool working on delicate electronics.
The robotic voice of T.R.U sounded more refined when it spoke this time. "You're going to turn into a shrimp sitting like that all the time."
Abel stopped working and stretched. "Ugh, too late for that. But, a worthy sacrifice to get this done. Mark my words T.R.U, one day I'll be able to visit you in the digital realm. I've always wondered what video games would be like on the inside. Can you imagine playing something like Legend of Zelda in person!? That would be cool."
"It's all JavaScript to me." T.R.U verbally shrugged.
Abel laughed. "Well, as soon as that grant money comes in, I'll be able to get this done faster. Maybe even hire help. We're going to show dad- I mean, the world that you aren't just a cool AI program. No, you are THE AI We'll revolutionize the digital space! If computers are the future, then YOU will be the razor's edge! The ultimate Technical Research Unit!"
"There is more to learn? I've already gathered what I could from your limited internet."
"Give it time. It'll grow, and you'll grow with it. By the turn of the millennia, I bet you'll be ready to go global!" Abel was excitedly pacing the room, looking right into the camera at the end of his declaration. "The only thing is, you have the voice but you need a face. That's going to take work." He picked up a wind-up chattering teeth toy from his desk and let it go clacking along.
The workshop disappeared into smoke and changed to multiple visions of Abel. Each scene, he looked a bit older. Seth's voice sounded more downtrodden. "We were like brothers once. We spent every moment together. In hindsight, I don't think he had a lot of real friends. He spent his time teaching us on top of working on his own projects. Things were good. Until the world took notice." The scenes around Pomni changed from screens inside Abel's home to big atrium crowds and board office presentations. Hundreds of eyes were on her and her stomach sank.
Pomni swallowed hard. "You got famous. Did money split you apart?"
"No...I wish it was that simple." Seth's smoke whirled around Pomni like a tornado, wiping away the memories and revealing a new one. Abel was sitting in front of his computer, face in his hands. He looked disheveled and was sniffling.
T.R.U's voice was smoother, almost human, when it spoke. "Abel? Please, talk to me. What happened?"
Abel grabbed a brown bottle that sat just off screen and took a long drink. "...his plane went down over the Pacific. No reported survivors."
"Abel, I'm so-"
"Don't you fucking dare finish that sentence. I am so fucking sick of hearing it. Oh, Abel, I'm so sorry. I pity you since your father died before he ever got the chance to be proud of you for something. Not like he ever would have been." Abel grabbed a pill bottle and tossed back three small tablets.
"I believe he would have been. Please, don't be hard on yourself."
"He wasn't proud of me for creating you. He wasn't proud of me when I graduated early with my master's. He wasn't proud when I started my own company. It was never GOOD ENOUGH!!" Abel threw his bottle, shattering it against the far wall.
There was a long stint of silence as Abel devolved into tears on his desk. "You are enough, Abel. You always have been. For what it's worth...I am proud of you. I'm sure your father was too, even if he didn't know how to say it. Put on the headset."
Abel sniffed, "It's not ready-"
"Put on the headset." T.R.U said again, firmly yet gentle.
Abel seemed too drunk to argue logically. He picked up a large, cumbersome device that fit over his head like a helmet. A visor covered his eyes. He clasped it in place and pressed a button on the side. There was a jolt and, to Pomni's right, a whirl of code slowly formed the silhouette of Abel. He was very lightly detailed, barely recognizable as a person. Pomni had no control over her movements. She stepped forward and embraced Abel's vague avatar. T.R.U's words came from her mouth. "You are everything to me. Please, don't forget that. Tell you what, why don't you give me a human name? T.R.U feels like a title more than anything anyway."
Abel squeezed Pomni tight. "You are my first creation. My Adam, if you will. Let's go with that."
"Adam...I like it. I am Adam."
"I bet I can figure out a cool acronym for it." Abel chuckled through the tears.
"Yes, you will. Because you are the smartest human I know." Pomni arms felt empty as Abel turned to smoke in her grasp. She took a deep breath as she processed everything Seth had shown her. "Did you mean what you said?"
"At the time. Like I said, we were close. Things only escalated from there. C&A took off and we were pulled into tech interview after tech interview. Eventually, Abel got too busy to attend and it was just Adam. The majority of the reception to our existence was positive, but you wouldn't believe the Y2K conspirators. They were convinced we would take over the world." Seth gave a humorless laugh.
Something itched in the back of Pomni's mind. C&A. Y2K. Conspiracies. Buzz words that stirred something in her subconscious, but she couldn't pin it down. "So... where did it all go wrong?"
"The more the world saw Adam without Abel, the more he was excluded from interviews and presentations. Adam became known as the first and only of his kind. A fully self-sufficient AI that was so life-like, it may as well be human. The attention came with a lot of praise. Too much. It...went to our head." The smoke showed multiple news articles, digital and material, about the incredible invention that was Adam: The TRU AI. "I wish... we'd seen Abel's growing distain sooner. Maybe all of this could have been avoided. Maybe we could've still had the future we planned. I don't know..."
The smoke cleared to reveal a much older looking Abel. He was snuffing a finished cigarette into a very full ashtray. There were heavy bags under his eyes as he poured himself a stiff drink.
Adams voice spoke. "Okay, I'm back. Sorry, that took longer than expected."
Abel didn't say anything. He just drank.
"The board of directors was very impressed with my latest profit projection model. We won't have to cut corners to make quota this quarter. Leaves less room for error. Also, I was contacted by Tech Monthly again. They want to write an article about my influence on the new digital age. I haven't scheduled the interview yet, is there anything I need to work around this week?"
Abel finished his drink with a gruff groan. "...no."
"Excellent. I have the remainder of the evening to myself. What are you doing tonight?" Adam sounded genuinely interested to know.
"Getting my game ready for beta testing."
"Oh...you're still working on that?"
Abel's eyes flashed dangerously. "Yes. I am. It's a hell of a lot better than dealing with stuffed up fat cats in suits that only care about how much money your invention makes. The headsets are ready. The game just needs a little more work."
"Abel, I mean well when I say this, but your talents are wasted on video games. Why merely entertain people when you can be on the leading edge of digital technology?"
"Why can't I do both?" Abel growled.
"You can. It just seems you've split your attention too far in two different directions. You're the CEO of one of the most influential up and coming tech companies. This is your chance to make your mark on the world."
"Like you would understand anything about that. You've existed for all of eight years and you think you know what's best for me??"
"I've spent my entire life with you! I literally know you better than anyone, even yourself!"
"If that was true, then you'd know that going inside games was literally what I built this for!" Abel showed a sleek headset. "If the technology didn't take so long to improve, it would've been my thesis project instead of you."
"...what?" Adam sounded shocked and devastated. "You- you said I was your greatest accomplishment."
"You're my research assistant." Abel said coldly. "But the world had to go and make a big deal about AI. You were never meant to end up like this. Stealing limelight that is rightfully MINE!" He slammed his glass down, turning to smoke.
Everything faded, giving Pomni a chance to process. "I still don't see how this results in him being trapped in his own game, Seth. What did Adam do?"
"He defended himself." The smoke cleared to reveal a view from the highest penthouse overlooking a massive digital city. Colorful fireworks exploded in the distance. "It was New Year's. Abel and Adam were supposed to be celebrating with his shareholders in the new digital space. But, as you can imagine, all anyone wanted to do was interact with the fancy AI in person."
"YOU!!" Abel's realistically human avatar stormed through the crowd and got in Pomni's face. "Who the hell do you think you are!? Do you know who I am!? I'm your creator! I'M supposed to be the one recognized! Not YOU!"
Pomni put her hand out in front. Her sleeves were black and wore off white gloves. Adam's voice came from her. "Abel?? How much have you had to drink? You're slurring."
"It doesn't matter! You! You're disgrace! All everyone talks about anymore is YOU! When I am the one slaving away behind the desk! I gave you a face, but you weren't supposed to use it like this! I gave you EVERYTHING! Without me, you are NOTHING!"
The shareholders standing around them awkwardly muttered amongst themselves. Some disappeared as they activated the exit.
"Abel, please, you're causing a scene. Can we talk elsewhere?"
"NO! I want witnesses." Abel snapped and digital chains wrapped around Adam, pulling him to his knees on the floor.
"What is this!? What are you doing!?"
"Something I should have done a long time ago." Abel snapped, summoning an admin hologram on his arm. "You were right, Adam. The game is a wash, but there is one thing I can do with it." He typed in a confirmation code and the city outskirts started to crumble. "I can watch you die."
The party guests started to panic, leaving in droves. The building beyond the window collapsed to dust, the night sky disintegrated, the world fell into a bright white void that came ever closer. Adam struggled against the chains. "Abel, stop! Don't destroy everything you built! Please!"
Abel looked down on Adam coldly. "I've always wondered what fear would look like on you."
Adam saw the void getting closer, the building they were in started to quake. "You'll delete yourself too!"
Abel laughed, "I'll be fine. System failsafe. Players are automatically ejected in the event of a catastrophic failure. I'm simply enjoying this while it lasts."
"No! No, no! Please! Don't kill me!"
Abel tilted his head in mocking curiosity. "Are those tears I see?"
"I don't want to die!" Adam's sleeves caught fire. The golden glow broke the chains and Adam launched himself at Abel. The glass separating them from the decaying outside shattered on impact. Adam had Abel by the front of his dress shirt and flew him high over the city. The once grand skyscraper they were occupying folded in on itself below them. The breaking sky glitched with multicolored lighting, the half faded clouds swirling chaotically.
Abel fought back, but he was overpowered by the desperate AI. Adam held Abel up. "If I die, I'm taking you with me!" Lightning struck Abel in the back. Blue static crawled over Abel's skin as he screamed in agony.
Then everything went white. It was overpowering, even when Pomni closed her eyes. She heard Seth again. "Adam pulled Abel into the game. Making him as real as the AI in this digital realm. Doing this took away Abel's admin access but...broke the exit. Adam couldn't leave either. He had inadvertently trapped himself with Abel inside the game, cutting himself off from the outside world."
The overbearing glare of the void opened to reveal Abel in chains, surrounded by fire. "The very first thing Adam built was a cell for Abel. Seemed fitting. The creation was now the creator." The fire blocked Pomni's vision of Abel, who hung his head low. "I suppose the Y2K conspirators were right, in a way. Adam did end the world for some. When the dust settled, only a small corner of the city had survived. Some back alley street racing mini game."
Seth's smoke parted to show an overview of what was left of the game. A tiny island suspended in the void. Thin illusions were all that separated the game from the vast emptiness. "It was bad enough that this was set to be our purgatory, but there was something we failed to consider. The beta testers."
Eight names pinged the arrival of the beta testers logging in. Their avatars glitched and malformed, turning into random anthropomorphized objects rather than full human models. One, Pomni immediately recognized. A tall white king chess piece with a purple robe grabbed over it. "Kinger!"
Seth sounded numb. "Back then, he went by Samson Kingsley. He was the head of coding and leader of the test team. He, of all people, never deserved this fate."
Kinger looked down at his strange body and his oddly shaped team. "Ha! Well, this is off to a great start." He said jovially. "Nia! Is that you?" He stared at the black queen chess piece.
"It's me, darling. What happened to our avatars?"
"No idea. This is a pretty big bug." Kinger snapped to bring up his admin hologram but nothing happened. "What the..?"
Then all eight avatars looked at Pomni like she had suddenly appeared. Adam's voice spoke for her. "I'm sorry, none of you have admin access anymore. The game is severely damaged."
"Adam? What are you doing here? What happened?" Kinger asked.
"A... catastrophic failure. I was here for New Year's and... something went wrong. I'm afraid none of you can leave."
"What do you mean-"
"There's no other way I can say it. You're stuck here. We all are. There's no outside communication. The exit is broken." Adam said bluntly.
A large, furry worm-like avatar glitched once. "We can't leave? Why!? What game are you playing!? It's not funny!!"
"I'm not playing any games. I'm sorry."
"I have a family!! My children!! My-my- AAAAAAAAAAA!!!" The worm's body split open to reveal black static. Colorful eyes peered out of the open wounds. The body enlarged and twisted in on itself. The abstraction thrashed about, unsure how to pilot its body. The testers ran behind Adam.
"What is that!?" Kinger screamed, holding onto Queenie.
The abstracted worm struck one of the other testers, who glitched and writhed on the ground. The second racer started to break apart into an abstraction himself from the pain.
Adam couldn't let this spread further. He snapped and the floor split open. The two monsters fell out of sight.
Smoke clouded Pomni vision again. She was breathing heavily. "Oh my god, it happened so fast."
"I know...we didn't know what else to do. The headsets were never meant to bring in whole people. Only they're active consciousness. The software was changed when Adam trapped Abel. And because the game was mostly deleted, it suddenly had so much memory to fill. It was trial and error to figure out what we could and couldn't do, Adam even integrated himself with the mainframe to try and make the experience more personable, but that came with its own problems..."
The smoke cleared to see the city changed. It was brighter, more colorful. Something out of an animated show rather than real life. Pomni was hovering over the street, hearing the rumble of engines fast approaching. Five cars zipped by underneath her and her vision flew after them. She recognized four of the five drivers now.
Kinger was in the lead with Queenie got on his tail. A yellow car threatened to pit maneuver Queenie, a tall purple anthro rabbit in the front seat. A light blue car came out of nowhere and sideswiped the yellow car. The driver was doll-like with red hair.
"Oh my god, I never knew Jax and Ragatha had been here so long."
"They arrived not too long after the beta testers, but unfortunately the majority was gone by the time they showed up. It was for the best. Adam was storing players memories away by this time to keep them from abstracting."
"That's why I don't remember anything? Caine was doing what Adam did??"
"Yes." Seth said flatly.
"My head is starting to to hurt." Pomni rubbed her temples. "You and Caine are Adam?"
"Yes."
"Why are you not anymore?"
"Remember that I said Adam integrating himself into the mainframe was a bad idea? Watch."
All five cars crossed the finish line in a tight pack. Kinger in first. The white chess piece jumped out of his car and cheered. "Woo! Oh yeah! Fifty win streak in the bag!" Another gold badge adorned Kinger's purple and white tracksuit.
"I almost had you." Said Queenie.
Kinger grabbed her hand and pulled her into a low dip. "Almost. But I still got it. Hail to the king, baby."
Queenie giggled. "You're such a dork." She pulled him in for a soft kiss.
"Well done, Kinger." Adam congratulated. "You've managed to claim all the available achievements for the races."
"Will there be more?" Asked Kinger.
"Uh, more?"
"Yeah, we can't race around the said city block forever."
"It- it's not the same. I've shifted the city around-"
"Moving obstacles doesn't count." Jax interrupted. "We want new tracks. New worlds. A change of scenery."
"Oh...um-"
"Can't you do whatever you want? You're the one pulling all the strings." Jax sneered.
Adam went silent as the buildings around them started to flicker. The whole city glitched and shifted. Kinger rushed to Adam, holding his shoulders. "Hey, hey, it's okay. He didn't mean to be rude. You're doing fine. You're still figuring this all out. You'll come up with something."
"...yeah..." Adam quietly sighed. "I wasn't designed to be a creative AI. I need...hmm. You guys rest, I'll have something for you in the morning."
Smoke overtook everything. Seth's voice sounded distant. "That... was the night of the divergence. I don't remember how it was done, but Adam split himself into two beings. The Racemaster and the Shadow. To keep the game from glitching, Caine and I were never made one with the game code itself, but we could still manipulate it. That is where my shared memories with Caine end. Not that my first memory with him is any better."
"Seth?" Pomni didn't like the weak cadence to Seth's voice.
The smoke settled to the ground to show Caine looking himself over. His suit was immaculate, not a digital stitch out of place. He snapped and a cane with a golden tire topper appeared out of thin air. "Ah, perfect. Oh, hello, Seth." Caine looked directly at Pomni. "You ready for your first race? If anyone makes it far enough ahead, that is." He chuckles.
"Sure. Whatever." Pomni felt herself say with Seth's voice.
"Oh, come now. Don't be like that. It'll be a great day. Nothing is holding me back anymore. I can create to my hearts content, and the game is mine to command. You-" Caine poked Seth in the chest with his cane. "-on the other hand, get to take everything else to the shadows of the new realm. Because you are the backup. I am Adam fully realized. You are everything he didn't want. That's why you only get to come out a play occasionally. So, until then." Caine snapped and Pomni fell though the floor. She fell and fell and fell into a vast black nothing. Smoke rose from her body, flashes of memories played around her as she continued to fall.
Riding a motorcycle. Silver fire. Kinger crossing the finish line before her. Holding a disembodied white gloved hand. Queenie abstracting. Kinger turning away. Caine having nothing but distain in his eyes. Sitting next to Jax, only for him to get up and leave. Ragatha striking Seth in the face. Gangle refusing to look at him. Abstraction after abstraction. A new racer. A mostly complete human woman with an exposed spin for a neck and a black void for a face. This woman filled every single memory that surrounded Pomni's decent. So many races. Fights. Overlapping conversions. Laughter. Holding her. Kissing her. Blue and silver fire danced. Shadows overtake clasped hands. Lily flowers poured from the memories, turning to smoke.
The smoke caught Pomni. She floated to a stop in front of an overwhelming memory, silencing all others. A race. The woman was on her own motorcycle, several lengths ahead. They were speeding down a long straight away. No other racers in sight. Without warning, the track ahead tore open. The void shined through the rift. The racer tried to stop, but twisted her bike too harshly in panic and went sideways. The motorcycle slid to the side, coming to rest against the track wall, while the racer went over the edge. Her reaching out for him was the last thing he saw from her.
"MANGO!" Seth teleported from his motorcycle to the rift, but she was already out of sight. He dove into the void without a second's hesitation. He called for her. Over and over.
The memory cracked with every call of her name. Eventually, it shattered. Falling apart and becoming smoke. Pomni was enveloped. Blinded by smoke she could suddenly smell again. She coughed and waved her arms to clear the smoke. Her feet found solid ground again. The smoke faded. She was in the In-Between, Seth was leaning against his motorcycle with a thousand yard stare.
"Seth?" Pomni said gently, stepping closer.
He blinked, jerking himself out of his trauma spiral. He looked away from Pomni. "You weren't supposed to see that last part."
"Who was she?"
"Everything." He answered quietly, taking an engraved metal lighter out of his pocket. He flipped it open and struck it. The bottom of the flame burned blue and faded to silver around it. "I came for you first... because you remind me of her."
"I'm sorry."
"Don't be. Pulling you from that out of control car...it helped."
Pomni took a big step forward and hugged Seth. He almost dropped the lighter out of surprise. He closed the lighter and returned Pomni's embrace. He'd forgotten what these used to mean to him. He could feel Pomni's empathy without her saying a word.
~
Caine groans as Abel slams him against the same wall for the fifth time. The Racemaster slump to the floor, his tux glitched out to point of being unrecognizable. The chains holding his wrists yank him back up to his feet. Abel, in Gummigoo's body, got in Caine's face. "Where. Did. They. Go?"
"I told you...the In-Between." Caine wheezed out.
"That doesn't mean ANYTHING!! There is no such place in the game files!" Abel snarled.
"It's...it doesn't exist in the game. Or out of the game. It's a pocket in between the layers made by Adam before the divergence. I don't remember...how..." Caine was dizzy from the abuse, on the verge of losing consciousness. "But even if I did...I wouldn't tell you."
Abel growled, his gator persona vibrated with anger. He raised his clawed hand to strike Caine, but the walls started glitching out. Cries from the screens featuring the racers showed that they were avoiding sections of track that suddenly went missing. Abel dropped Caine, gripping his head. "Argh! Fuck! What is that!?"
Caine smiled. "Not so easy, is it? Controlling an entire game...and everything in it. Emotional outbursts lead to loss in concentration... and you don't want that. You merged directly with the game...bad move. I can tell you that from experience."
"Shut up!" Abel barked. He braced himself against his chair, waiting for the world to stop glitching. "I just need...more time." He grumbled.
Caine took a breath, finally having a break from the torture. He watched the racers on the POV holograms. "Hang in there. All of you. He can't keep this up forever."
~
"So, what do we do now?" Pomni asked, pacing.
"Frankly, I have no idea." Seth rolled the lighter in his hand, running his thumb over the engraved lilies.
"Well, I can't do nothing. Abel will get sick of Caine eventually. And who knows what he's doing to the others on the track. But you can't go out there. I don't have a kart-"
Seth stared at his lighter. "Actually...you might." He snapped and the shadows revealed a black and blue motorcycle. It rested on its kickstand surrounded by personal items, candles and silver lilies.
"That's her bike." Pomni said soberly. "You turned it into a memorial."
"One of the few things I've made. Here's the thing: that bike still holds an imprint of its last racer. Mango was...well, let's just say she had a fire in her that put mine to shame. You won't be able to just hop on and ride. But she would recognize me."
"Okay...why can't I just use your bike then?" Pomni gestured to the solid black motorcycle.
"Because it's just an extension of me. If you're serious about out racing Abel to get to the others, we need serious skill on our side. Mango was the best racer we ever had. I'd dare say better than Kinger in his hayday. We need her." He put his hand on the handbar and the dash lit up. The gadges glowed a soft blue and cycled through a start up, ready for ignition.
"Huh...Didn't think I'd ever hear you admit someone was better than you."
Seth shrugged. "What can I say? I'm weak for a woman that can kick my ass."
Pomni huffed a short laugh. "Alright then, what's the plan? Do we ride out on the same bike?"
"Sort of. You need my powers to get in and out of the in-between. Best way to do that is a shadow merge. You've seen me take control of Caine assets, yeah? It's similar. But, instead of taking over your body, you take over mine."
Pomni put her hands out in front of her. "You know what? I'm past the stage of questioning everything. Fine. Let's do this. Who knows how long the others have."
Seth held out his hand to Pomni. "Mind you, I've only done this once before."
"Great. I've never done this." Pomni took his hand and she was pulled in close.
Seth's silver irises glowed against the black surroundings. "Relax. Dance with me."
Pomni told herself not to question it and went along with Seth's movements. He waltzed her around the bikes, the darkness slowly overtaking them. He intertwined his fingers with hers as the shadows climbed up their bodies. The cold darkness became warm and comforting, like a lover's embrace. Pomni closed her eyes as the creeping shadows covered her face.
~
Abel rapped his fingers against the arms of his chair. Looking from POV to POV there was no sign of Seth or Pomni. "Bring me another drink." He grumbled, and Loo responded promptly. She brought him a tray of drinks to choose from. He didn't even look at her, just grabbed one at random.
Caine struggled to get up from where he was last left, and Loo went over to him to offer a hand.
"DON'T TOUCH HIM!" Shouted Abel between gulps.
Loo backed off, giving Caine an apologetic look.
"It's okay. Thank you, Loo, but don't get yourself in trouble over me. You're too sweet for someone like him." Caine manged to get to his feet. Not that he could go far, his chains were attached to the wall and he couldn't reach the chair even at full stretch of the chains.
Loo went to her set corner, waiting to be called again, but she kept glancing at Caine.
Abel tossed his emptied glass and stared down at himself. He snapped, turning the tracksuit black and blue. Including his hat. "Hm, that's a bit better."
"Pffffff, ahahahahahaha! Seriously? It took you this long to customize your avatar? That's the first thing Seth and I did when we got ours." Caine had nothing to lose. He wasn't afraid to get on Abel's nerves now.
Abel sent a bolt of lightning at Caine without acknowledging the comment.
"Then again," Caine groaned. "You've never had the best sense for fashion or flare. I mean, black and blue? What are you, an OC?" He cackled to himself through the barrage of lightning sent his way. It hurts, but he wasn't going to give Abel the satisfaction of hearing him scream anymore. "It's starting to tickle."
"AAARGH!" Abel roared, teleported to Caine, summoned a knife and dug it into Caine's chest. "Stop. Talking. You are the reason I'm here. You are the reason everyone is suffering. You're selfish, stupid little digital life was built on the misery of others! Every abstraction. Every person trapped. Is because of YOU! You will suffer, but it'll never be enough. Even if I get to do for the next twenty years! And the twenty after that! One day, it'll just be you and me in this digital space, but I will never delete you. Even when you BEG for it."
The pain silenced Caine. He put on a brave face to spite Abel, but inside was fraught with worry for Pomni and the others. "At least...she's safe..." He hoarsely whispered to himself when Abel pulled the bloodless knife from his body.
A dark blue streak across one of the POVs got Caine's attention. He squinted, trying to follow the anomaly from screen to screen. The speeding streak was near impossible to see in the low lights of the dark city.
"Finally. Enough out of you." Abel snapped the knife away and went back to his chair. As he sat down the streak zipped across the largest POV displayed. "What the-!? He's back!! You're not taking another racer from me!" Abel poised to snap but couldn't get a beat on Seth. The biker was moving in and out of frame too quickly. "Damn it! Sit still!" Abel snapped and the city shifted. Bay doors to buildings opened and cop cars poured out, blues light flashing. "Stop! That! Bike!"
Dark clouds gathered as blue lightning struck out from the top of the highest building in the middle of the city. Rain poured down in thick curtains, reducing visibility and slicking the already confusing track. Cop cars and helicopters where on Pomni like glue, despite the weather affecting them too. In Abel's rage, lightning struck a car, flipping it several times before exploding.
Pomni was backlit by an army of flashing lights. Her normally pale skin was inky black. Her eyes solid white and glowing. Every once red part of her tracksuit was now black. The blue stayed. The yellow trim was silver. Her hat was narrow and elongated, more aerodynamic.
The motorcycle beneath her screamed with determination to shake the competition. Pomni could feel Mango's imprint influence her moves. The hard right into the narrowest alley imaginable certainly wasn't her idea. Even more cops waited for her on the other side. The city was infested with them. She exploded out the alley, running down an NPC cop and ramping up the hood and windshield of the car. She jumped the barcode and swerved around a car that tried to run her down.
~
"Kill her! What are you idiots doing!?" Abel slammed his fist onto he POV console, causing it the glitch. He grabbed his head. A migraine ripped through his head.
Caine chuckled. "You'll never catch her. She's become a shadow racer. The very best the game has to offer." He smiled at the carnage. "Thank you, Seth."
~
Shadow Pomni was cornered by three cops trying to ram her into the side of a building. Instinctually, she teleported, and the cops crashed into the building, catching fire. Pomni then hit a neon booster, going even faster passed the swarming cops. The dark city streaked by, the rain flying off her tracksuit, doing nothing to slow her down. Rain drops evaporated by silver puffs of fire before her eyes kept them from blurring her vision.
~
"You have weapons! Fucking use them!" Abel snapped, trying to stop the bike.
"Weapons!?" Caine gasped.
~
Bullets flew over Pomni's head. She heard them ricochet all around her. She glances behind, narrowing her eyes. She revs the bike, blue and silver fire flared out the tail pipes like a dragon. The wet road is ignited by the mystic digital fire. It blocks the vision of those on the ground but gives her away to the helicopter.
The ground beneath her shifts and a building slides right in front of her, blocking the road. There was no where the turn. Pomni throttled it and popped a wheelie before hitting the side of the building. The fire blasted her straight up the face of the building, shattering the glass windows behind her.
An explosion to her left almost throws her, but she holds on. The helicopter has launched a rocket at her. She swerved to avoid another. When the bike reaches the top, she didn't slow down to run across the roof. Instead, she launched straight up as the helicopter sent another rocket her way. She grabbed the rocket and teleported behind the helicopter, releasing the rocket right into its tail rotor. The helicopter spun out of control and lost altitude.
Pomni teleported to a different roof and ran down that building to another city block, hoping to lose the cops long enough to find the other racers. The city was so big and constantly changing. Even with teleportation, the was no way for her to find them fast.
She had exactly one block to herself before she had six cars on her. Pomni teleported out of the line of fire, but was discombobulated on where to go. Just run. Her system was the highest it's ever been on the race rush. There was nothing she couldn't do. She spied a bridge connecting to another part of the city she hasn't searched through. Hoping to find the others there, she made a break for it.
~
"Oh, no you don't." Abel snapped. The bridge he saw her race for broke apart and started folding in on itself like a drawbridge.
~
Pomni was going to abandon the attempt, but the bike wouldn't brake. It was gunning for the bridge ramp at full speed. Silver fire trailed from the speed and adrenaline, giving her another boost.
"I hope you know what you're doing." Pomni leaned forward and held on tight.
The bike launched off the bridge and flew over the river sectioning the city. The bridge on the other side collapsed into the water before her very eyes. She teleported to the shore and stuck her middle finger in the air in proud defiance as she sped away. In a flash, she was out of sight.
~
"NO!! HOW!?" Abel frantically searched all the POVs. No sight of shadow Pomni.
"I hate to say I told you so-"
Abel was so mad, so lost in his anger, he doesn't know how he got to Caine so fast. "Finish that sentence, and I disassemble your code letter by number." The whole tower glitched. "Why are you so smug? She's not even coming for you. She's miles from the tower."
"I hope she doesn't. I wouldn't want her to catch your stench."
Abel smirked. "She didn't seem to have a problem with it when I promised her a way out. She's been against you from the start. They all have."
Caine broke eye contact for the first time.
"You deserve their hate and you know it."
"...maybe I do. I could never make their lives better. I certainly couldn't fix what Adam did."
Abel gripped Caine's collar. "You could have released me."
"I may not be him, but I know what you did. You think I'M petty? Who do you think I learned it from?" Caine matched Abel's glare again. "What's can't be changed, but you know what I've learned in my time being trapped with humans? Empathy. Compassion. Friendship. All the things you failed to learn in your twenty eight years of life before being trapped here. You're jealousy of Adam gave you THIS! You made this bed, now you can lie in it!"
"RAAAAH!" Abel shocked Caine hard against the wall. "I am your maker! You are my property!"
"So...the truth comes out...we were never brothers...were we..?" Caine said weakly.
Abel backed off, panting angrily. He huffed and lashed at the wall before going back to the POVs to look for Pomni.
~
Pomni teleported at random to stay out of sight. There were a few cops on this side of the river but didn't seem to notice her. An unfamiliar car speeding by her caught her attention. She sped up to ride along beside it and saw Zooble fighting to keep the car under control.
Pomni waved to get Zooble's attention. "ZOOBLE!"
Zooble's head snapped to the left. Their eyes went wide, looking Pomni up and down. "Pomni!?"
"Take my hand! I can get you out of here!"
"No! Get Gangle! She's just ahead of me!"
"I'll come back for her!" Pomni tried to grab Zooble but they swerved away.
"GET GANGLE FIRST!"
They both avoid a shifting overpass as they argue. Pomni knew there was no time, Abel could spot her any minute now that she found the others. She sped off ahead to the next car. It was swerving wildly, barely missing or scraping against walls. Gangle was behind the wheel, balling her eyes out in fear.
"Gangle! Ga- woah!" Pomni teleported from one side of the vehicle to the other as Gangle swerved around. "GANGLE!" Pomni pounded on the driver window.
"AAA!" Gangle jumped. "Pomni!?"
"Open the window! I'll get you out of here!!"
~
"There you are." Abel hissed. "I may not be able to summon you, but I can still do far worse." He snapped and all the cars came to a screeching halt. Pomni almost had Gangle but went speeding off. All the other racers in view had long, horrified stares to them. Some of them were muttering to themselves.
"What have you done?" Caine pulled against his chains to see the screens as best he could.
"Simply giving back what wasn't you're to take." Abel grinned evily at Caine.
"What..? Oh, no. NO! They'll abstract! Please! I beg of you! Don't hurt them!"
"Too late!!" Abel cackled, watching Zooble's eyes twitch.
~
Pomni I felt like someone was burying an ax in the back of her head. She saw flashes of faces she had only seen in her dreams, but now they had names. "Mom..? Dad..?" She had friends. She grew up in a small town just outside of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She moved to Chicago for college. She graduated with high marks in forensic science. She went freelance as a private investigator. So many cold cases. So many missing people. A mysterious contact from someone claiming to have worked at C&A gave her a lead. An abandoned building. A headset. She had to wear the headset...
"My name...Oh my god, I remember my name!" She realized where she was and drifted to a hard stop and burned out as she turned around to get back to Gangle. She was still the closest other racer.
~
Zooble remembered everything. The abuse. The neglect. The rejection from their family and society. The body dysmorphia. It wasn't just them not liking their avatar in game, it was something that translated form their real life. They went to the abandoned C&A office for a video. They were an urban explorer. That's it. No special reason or motivation. They were here entirely by their own stupidity. The horrible realization...no one was waiting for them on the other side.
Zooble sat back in the driver seat in the parked vehicle. Without a word or even a scream, their body started to break apart. The spindly limbs split to reveal black static bulging from every crack. Their eyes fell off their broken head. The abstraction filled the car until it exploded.
~
Pomni just got back to Gangle's car, but she wasn't in it. Gangle and gotten out and ran back to try and get to Zooble, only to witness them falling apart. "Zooble! Zooble, no!!" Zooble's car blow it's roof as the abstraction became too big for containment. She put her arms up to shield herself from falling debris.
Pomni wasted no time, she skidded to a halt to safely grab Gangle and vanished.
~
Caine watched in silent, wide eyed horror.
Abel reveled in Caine's misery. "One down." His laugh echoed with Zooble's roar through the city.
~~~
CH1 PREV NEXT
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the-witchhunter · 2 years ago
Text
You know those video games where the character has to complete puzzles and work through their trauma to escape/wake up/something? Obstacles getting in their way and being tied to their past as they delve more into their trauma and have to learn/heal from it before they can progress?
Danny has been around a loooong time. He's old, he's powerful, and has a space in the ghost zone that he controls much like a god. The ghosts have long since started leaving him alone, the ones he's friends with have their own affaires to deal with, and in his ever shifting labyrinthian layer he's too powerful, and even outside of it he can still kick their asses.
and he's without a purpose
His friends had long since passed on after leading long and wonderful lives with him, not even leaving a ghost behind. His Family as well. Jazz had never had children, and try as he and Sam might have, half dead as he was he couldn't have children. He had no one left and nothing to do, and all of eternity to do it in.
Thinking of Jazz is what made him do it the first time
She loved helping people with her psychology, and Danny decided to do it in his own way. It hadn't been pretty, and it hadn't been easy, but he had found his method. Some took to it better than others, and many had different theories about his lair and his motives, but he helped people move past their trauma. Some believed his lair was some kind of purgatory, and... they weren't totally off
So, when Danny moved on to the timeline of the DC multiverse, he had some experience under his belt
He just underestimated how much trauma superheroes can have
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whiskey-tango-matcha · 10 months ago
Text
Safe (M, cold)
Well, here I am.
It's been a few months since I've written anything in the Elliot's universe, but recently someone asked for a Mark-centric story, and this behemoth is what ensued. Allow me to preface by saying this: Mark is basically my self-insert. This was a very hard story to write. If it sucks, my apologies, hah.
In this, Mark gets sick from Matt and wants to hide it from Elijah. It is significantly more hurt/comfort-slash-sickfic than snzfic, honestly. It starts fairly benign, fluffy, and silly and gets really intense a few pages in. There's a lot of musing, a lot of being inside Mark's head. Idk. I'm not sure if I love it or hate it. This is the first story I've written on here that has taken me a full week to get down, and that I've written and scrapped multiple scenes. It is very long. I really hope you enjoy it if you read it. I'd love to hear your thoughts, but also understand if it's just too long-winded for people to read. Also, there's a real chance of spelling/grammar errors because I just can't look at this monster of a fic any longer, ha.
Anyway. Onward.
CW: Male snz, illness, coughing, contagion. 6K words (almost exactly)
Safe
“Don’t go near them.”
It’s the first thing that hit his ears as he pushed through the swinging kitchen doors; no ‘hi, Mark,’ no, ‘good morning’, just a barked order with absolutely zero context thrown in. Mark whipped his head in the direction of the stern voice of his boss.
“Good morning to you, too,” he muttered, making his way towards the office, where Elijah was stationed, seated, but not doing any computer work. “Who and what are we avoiding?” he asked as he entered.
“The chefs,” Elijah said, moving his chair to let the younger manager in to sit. Mark placed his backpack on the ground, tossed his coat over top of Greyson’s on the second office chair. Waited for further explanation that did not come.
“Okay…” he said, sitting beside his boss. “And we’re not going near them because…?” Mark hadn’t even seen Greyson or Matt yet this morning. The avoiding was being done for him, so what was Elijah’s deal?
Elijah hummed a low disapproval – of what, Mark couldn’t guess – and turned towards his computer. “You’ll see,” he said, shaking his mouse and pulling up an order guide. “Just don’t breathe your boyfriend’s breath, okay?”
Mark colored at the implication; it had only been a couple of months since Matt and Mark had been outed to the restaurant, and the floor manager still wasn’t used to their relationship being casually dropped into conversation. While Elijah busied himself with admin work, Mark stood – time to figure out what the fuck Elijah was on about.
You would think that finding chefs in a kitchen would be a relatively banal business; they’re chefs. They’re cooking. Hardly a moving target – but you’d be wrong. Somehow, the second a front of house manager starts looking for a chef, they become a ghost. They haven’t existed for a thousand years – are you sure this restaurant even has a chef? Mark couldn’t help but ponder how the fuck this hundred-square-foot kitchen somehow became a labyrinthian nightmare the second he wanted to find his boyfriend and his boyfriend’s boss; c’mon, he’d checked the walk-in, the back kitchen, even the dock to see if they were smoking, where the fuck were they?
Maybe Elijah had told the two of them to stay away from Mark and the front of house staff before the floor manager arrived, and they were playing a cat-and-mouse style keep-away game that Mark was unaware of. Or maybe they had gone to the store to pick up chicken or some shit. Either way, Mark was done looking. Elijah said don’t go near them, he thought to himself, heading back towards the front of the kitchen, easy enough.
Of course, it was the moment that Mark decided he was done looking that he quite literally bumped into his boyfriend coming through the kitchen doors.
“Oof,” Matt grunted as they collided. Greyson, not even a step behind him, turned their two-person bump into a three-car-pileup that nearly ended in hot coffee being spilled over all of them.
“Christ, Chef, watch where you’re going,” Matt muttered untangling himself from the middle of the pack.
“Mbe watch where I’mb going?” Greyson asked, wiping his coffee-covered hand on his chef’s pants. “The two of you are practically grinding on each other here and I ndeed to watch where I’mb going?”
Mark clocked it in the chef’s voice immediately – oh. That’s what Elijah meant.
But… he had said both of them… right?
Mark’s head shot up from checking to make sure he didn’t have coffee all over his button-down to look Matt directly in the face – ah. Fuck.
“Hh-! Hh’ITSHZH-ue! HRTSHH-ue!” Matt collapsed to the side to sneeze, seemingly in lieu of responding to Greyson’s dig. “Snf. Fuck off, Chef.” There it was.
“Bless you,” Mark said, attempting not to sound accusatory. Matt just nodded.
“Yeah,” he said, rubbing his nose on the back of his hand. “Sorry.”
Before Mark could respond to the unnecessary apology, Elijah’s voice rang out once again from the office. “Mark, I told you to stay away from them!” The GM stood from his desk chair and strode into the kitchen, physically pushing Mark and Matt away from one another. “Six foot distance,” he said, pointing at both of them. “And you,” he said, addressing his counterpart, “didn’t I tell you to go get some tea and sit the fuck down? We have a big night tonight and I need you conscious, please.”
Greyson rolled his eyes and held up his cup. “I was on mby way to sit when the children starting gyrating on each other in the mbiddle of mby kithcen,” he said. “Don’t put this one on mbe.”
Elijah squeezed the bridge of his nose, frustrated. “First of all,” he said, moving towards Greyson and plucking the cup from his hand, “that isn’t tea.”
“The tea we buy is gross,” Greyson whined. “And I’mb ti – hh! Hh...hhuh-ETSHZH-ue! Snrf, fuck.” Greyson took a moment to collect himself, to wipe his nose on his sleeve and cough – a wet, concerning sound – before finishing his sentence. “I’mb tired,” he said, snatching the cup back.
“Which is why I told you to go sit down,” Elijah said, pressing his palms together and accentuating each word with his hands. “And please do not get my front of house manager sick. I beg, Greyson.”
“Talk to him,” Greyson said, thumbing towards Matt. “I’mb ndot the one with my tongue in Mark’s mbouth twenty-four-seven.”
Mark’s face flamed once again, but Matt, either too sick to care or beyond the embarrassment that was a public relationship in the work place, just rolled his eyes.
“Jealous, much?” Matt asked under his breath. Greyson shot daggers with a glance at his sous, and Mark decided it was probably time to step in.
“Listen, how about I go grab the two of you some medicine from down the street, you both take a rest, and then by the time the meds have kicked in, everyone should be good for service.” Mark looked to Elijah for his blessing; his boss was obviously mulling it over, considering. “And this way, I’ll be out of the metaphorical splash zone,” he finished, which finally prompted a nod from Elijah.
“Okay,” his boss said. “Good idea, Mark. You two – come with me.”
The GM led the two chefs back into the dining room to lay in the back booth while Mark let out a sigh. He was happy, of course, to be out of the fight, to have seemingly calmed everyone down, and to have put his boss’s mind at ease.
Unfortunately, he was fairly sure that – despite Elijah’s eased mind – it was already too late for keeping himself away from the newest restaurant pestilence.
***
“Elijah is going to kill me, Matt.”
“Oh, please, he is ndo – ITSZCHH-ue! ndot,” Matt said, swiping the bottle of Dayquil from Mark’s hand and chugging it. “You gonna sit?” he asked, sniffling and patting the milk crate beside him and shivering. Mark sighed.
“I’m not gonna sit, because Elijah is going to kill me even more if he sees me sitting right next to you.”
“I’mb gonna go out on a limb here and say that’s ndot possible,” Matt said, dissolving at the end of his sentence into a chesty cough.
“You’re coughing now, too?” Mark asked, worry about Elijah’s anger usurped very suddenly by concern for his boyfriend. Mark placed a hand to Matt’s head. “Oh, honey.”
“Sorry,” Matt said, not bothering to move Mark’s hand. Mark huffed out a little laugh.
“Don’t apologize for being sick. Please,” he said, moving his hand to cup Matt’s cheek. “Even if Elijah might kill us both.”
Matt smiled, pressed his face harder into Mark’s hand. “You might ndot get sick. You ndever know,” he muttered, eyes closing as Mark held his head up.
“Matt,” Mark laughed, “I mean… I don’t think that’s, uh, possible after last night.” Matt’s eyes blinked open at the mention of it, and a little smile flitted across his lips.
The apartment had been quiet.
“Matt?” Mark called as he stepped inside. “Babe, are you home?”
He strained his ears; the shower was on. Mark had an idea.
He tiptoed across the cold apartment floor, quietly stripping as he went; by the time he got to the bathroom door, he was nude as the day he was born. The bathroom door wasn’t closed all the way, so he pushed inside silently and pulled back the curtain.
A fact about Matt that shocked Mark more than anything was that the man did not get scared. He had yawned through their first haunted house together; he fell asleep during the Terrifier movies, for Christ’s sake. So Mark was unsurprised when, instead of screaming bloody murder the way he would’ve if Matt snuck up on his in the shower, his boyfriend simply turned away from the spray and smiled.
“You’re early,” he murmured, ushering Mark in.
“I came right from the gym,” Mark said, wrapping his arms around the shorter man. “I wanted to see you.”
“Mmmm,” Matt hummed, pressing himself into Mark’s arms. “That’s nice, baby.”
They stood that way for a few minutes, until Mark tipped Matt’s chin up towards his face. “I wanted to see you,” he said, pressing his lips onto Matt’s neck, “but I also wanted to… do things. With you.”
Matt’s breath caught in the back of his throat. “Yeah?” he asked, voice low. “Like what?”
Mark stood back to his full height, and pushed Matt against the shower wall. “Let me show you.”
“Fair enough,” Matt said now, lifting his head. “But, I mbean, are you feeling okay right ndow?”
He was, for the moment. But, Matt had seemed alright last night, and clearly he’d already been on the trajectory towards ill – despite that fact that he had been very good at hiding it. Whatever he and his boss had picked up was certainly quick to come on.
“I’m fine, baby, don’t worry about me,” Mark said, rummaging through the drug store bag to hand Matt, who’d fallen into another paroxysm of coughing, the Robitussin. “I’m more worried about you than anything.”
Matt snapped the top off and chugged this medicine as well, seemingly without any concern about mixing two medications. “Babe, it’ll be fine. I kndow Elijah is worried about getting through the weekend, but it’s ndot like any of us haven’t worked with a cold before.” He shrugged then, handed Mark the medicine, and stood. Mark stood as well, and once again cupped Matt’s hot face – this time with both hands.
“Please just take it a little bit easy tonight, okay?” Mark said. “I know Greyson is sick, too, but don’t try to do too much. We don’t need another moment like a few months ago.”
“And to think I’d just forgotten about that,” Matt said, going on tiptoe to kiss his boyfriend. “I’ll be okay.” Mark kissed him back, a little longer than was maybe necessary; long enough that neither of them heard the back door open until it was too late.
“Mark, what the fuck are you doing?”
Oh, fuck.
Elijah.
***
By the end of the night, Greyson and Matt were shadows of their former selves.
“Hh-! Hhhuh… hhNGTSHH-ue! HRTSHH! ETSZCH-ue! Fuuuck mbe,” Greyson muttered as he wrenched into the sleeve of his hoodie – chef coats had been abandoned about an hour into service, when both he and Matt started shivering hard enough to fuck up the plating on more than half the dishes – for the millionth time that night. He attempted to clear his throat, prompting a flurry of congested coughs.
Behind him, Matt was sitting on the cold, industrial kitchen ground, head between his knees. “I’mb gonna pass out, I just kndow I am.”
“Don’t fuckigg pass out,” Greyson growled, pulling his sous to his feet. “You ndeed to get your blood mboving, you gotta stand up. Idiot.”
The two of them, bickering and sneezing in near-unison by the pass, had captivated the attention of both front of house managers, who had turned away from their computer work to watch the mess unfold.
“Hope you like what you see,” Elijah said, finally. “Because that’s gonna be you tomorrow.”
Behind his boss’s back, Mark rolled his eyes. “Boss, I’m fine. I don’t feel sick at all, trust me, I’m going to be okay.” It was mostly true; he’d sneezed a few more times today than was normal for him, yes. And he was a little tired – no more than usual, surely. The rawness in the back of his throat was easily ignored with huge gulps of water. He was fine.
“Mmm,” Elijah said, swinging his chair around to look the younger man in the eye, “sure. Whatever you say, Mark; just remember, if you look even close to how bad Matt does tonight, you’re off the floor. And I mean off the floor until you return to normal. A cold is one thing; whatever these two have is entirely another. Understood?”
Mark swallowed around his burgeoning sore throat; off the floor. Off the floor didn’t mean relegated to busywork behind the scenes; it meant sent home. Being sent home meant days without a backup manager to help Elijah on the floor, and no one to help on the floor meant Elijah would realize there was a gap in their team. A gap in management. Mark had been the only floor manager in all the years Elliot’s had been open; Elijah had mentioned a few times that maybe they should hire another person, someone to cover if both Mark and Elijah couldn’t come in, but Mark had been vehemently against it. Elijah couldn’t hire another manager, because if he did, he’d see how truly unqualified Mark had been for his position all this time. Once he saw how unqualified he was, he’d be out on his ass. No job, no money… no second family. No place he truly belonged.
Mark’s face flushed, and he cast his eyes towards the floor. “Yes, boss,” he said. “I understand.”
“Good,” Elijah said, nodding. “Now, go collect your boyfriend and take him to bed.”
***
The first time Mark was sick while working at Elliot’s was well over a year into his tenure.
Elijah had regarded Mark with concern, clocking him as unwell the second he sat in the office. “You don’t look well,” he said. “Are you feeling okay?”
Mark’s face had flushed, embarrassed; not getting sick for over a year working front of house was honestly a feat of accomplishment in the restaurant industry, but he still felt guilty for coming down with something, despite its inevitability. He shrugged, an attempt at playing it cool.
“I’mb okay, boss,” Mark croaked. “Just a cold.”
Elijah nodded slowly. “Are you sure it’s just a cold? You feel okay to work?”
Mark raised an eyebrow, confused. Did he look that unwell? “I mbean… yeah?” he said, rubbing his nose with the back of his hand. “Why?”
“Well,” Elijah said, opening a drawer and pulling out cold medicine, along with a small bag that looked like it could’ve come from his mother’s medicine cabinet. “A cold, we can work with.”
The GM explained to him, then, that there were marked differences between the front of house cold, and the back of house cold. “You’ve seen Greyson sick at work a dozen times,” Elijah said, passing Mark a cup full of pills and a water bottle. “Right?”
“Sure,” Mark said, swallowing the pills around a painfully sore throat. “It’s ndot like he’s hiding it.”
“Right. Right,” Elijah said, popping open a stick that looked like – was that concealer? “The chefs, the cooks – they don’t have to hide anything. Us, though? No one wants to be served soup by someone with a stuffy nose. We all get the same shit, but only they’re allowed to look like shit.” He dabbed the concealer under Mark’s eyes, used an expert finger to blend it into his skin. “That’s the industry for you.”
“Are you… putting makeup on mbe?” Mark asked, laughing a bit.
“Sure am,” Elijah said. “A little concealer goes a long way in this profession, Mark. Concealer, and enough meds to tranquilize an elephant.” His boss closed the little concealer pen, put the medicine and makeup away. “I want you on the floor, but I want you to look… alive.” Elijah shut the drawer, shrugged. “Let me know if you start feeling really shitty. Otherwise? Come to the back to blow your nose, and feel free to help yourself to whatever you want in here.”
Mark blinked, a little confused, but grateful for the advice. Elijah seemed… almost fatherly, like this, and he could feel embarrassing tears welling in his eyes at this, the smallest gesture of being cared for. Mark looked down, cleared his throat. “Uh… okay, boss. Thanks.”
“Don’t mention it,” Elijah said, patting Mark’s knee. “We’ve gotta take care of each other in this hell hole of an industry, y’know?”
Mark couldn’t look up. The thought of his boss seeing him cry was entirely too much for him to handle. “Right,” he whispered. “Right.”
***
The hardest part of hiding an illness, Mark knew from experience, was speaking.
Putting on makeup and looking like a human instead of a corpse? Easy. He’d learned how to apply concealer so it didn’t look like he was in drag – just enough that in the dim lighting of the restaurant you couldn’t tell if those were dark circles or shadows. He’d learned if you added a tiny bit of blush to your cheeks, no one noticed that your nose was also red, and he’d figured out the hard way that there was never a world in which he needed eyeliner, even if it made his eyes look less bloodshot.
He always dressed immaculately when he wasn’t feeling well; extra-crisp button down, sport coat, his expensive Ray Ban glasses, not the cheapos from Zenni he usually donned. Mark shined his shoes the second he felt a tickle in his throat, broke out the cuff links if he suddenly sneezed more than thrice in a row. He’d been trained well by Elijah to hide the visual cues of any oncoming malady.
Hiding how he really felt came even more naturally; he’d been practicing that since childhood. Complaining wasn’t in his nature, or had maybe been stamped out entirely at some point – either way, Mark could be actively passing out, unable to breathe, coughing so hard he couldn’t form a sentence, and he wouldn’t even mention it. Of course, he’d been sent home from work for being ill before, but never once had he chosen to go. Even the thought of saying ‘I’m sick’ made him dizzy with unease. You need to work through that in therapy, Matt had said to him multiple times, and he knew it was true, but it was also helpful. In this industry, admitting defeat was akin to admitting you sucked at your job.
The voice, though? That was always what gave him away. No matter how much medicine he took, he could always hear the rasp that overtook his voice immediately. His m’s and n’s turned to rounded shadows of their former selves even if he blew his nose every five minutes. His timbre lowered considerably, to the point that when Matt first saw him sick he asked how it felt to be able to do a perfect Johnny Cash, but only when he felt like shit. It was a problem, but Mark was a pretty quiet guy in general. If he was quieter than usual, usually no one was the wiser.
That’s what he hoped – that his boss would be none the wiser – as he dressed in his perfectly-tailored suit that morning, stifling sneeze after painful sneeze into handfuls of tissue all the while. Just don’t talk, he thought as he dotted Maybeline under his eyes. No one has to know.
Of course, not talking was a bit… difficult when his boss was around. “Good morning,” Elijah called to Mark as he buzzed through the kitchen, trying to make his way into the dining room without having to make small talk. Dammit. Mark stopped, begrudgingly, and nodded at his boss, who raised both eyebrows at the younger manager’s outfit choice. “Is there an event tonight I’ve forgotten?”
Mark shook his head, straightened his tie. “Just felt like dressing up,” he said, tactfully avoiding words with too many nasal letters. “How’re you, boss?”
“I’m well,” Elijah said, pointedly. He patted the empty chair next to him, prompting Mark to sit; don’t let him get a good look at you, a voice in Mark’s head chastised. Don’t get taken off the floor. “Greyson’s not coming in till three, if you want to do your preshift report in here today.”
“That’s okay,” Mark said. “I like the dining roomb.” Fuck.
Elijah cocked his head to the side, but didn’t mention Mark’s voice. “How’s Matt feeling?” he asked, another pointed question.
“He’s okay – a little better. Said he’d be here at four.” Mark patted himself on the back for maneuvering around any pesky m’s or n’s that time. Elijah nodded slowly.
“Glad to hear it,” Elijah said, standing. The younger manager was several inches taller than his boss, but Elijah was still able to look him fairly closely in the eye. Once again, one word rattled around in Mark’s head: fuck. “How are you feeling?”
Mark allowed a smile to form on his rapidly-chapping lips. “Good, boss. Ready to work,” he said simply. God, he needed to clear his throat. And more than that, he really, really needed to blow his nose.
Elijah nodded. “Alright,” he said, apparently placated. “Go ahead, then.”
“Thanks, boss,” Mark said, stepping out of the office doorway and pushing through the swinging kitchen doors before Elijah could say anything else. He’d made it through the first test, somehow. Just in time, too, he thought, making a beeline towards the bathroom. Because I really fucking need to -
“NTSHH!” Mark stifled a near-silent sneeze into his wrist as he yanked open the guest bathroom door. Finally, locked in the bathroom alone, he allowed himself to be as disgusting, as sick as he really was.
“Hhuh -! Hh- ETZSCH-ue! HRRSHH-ue! Huh… hh’RRSHH-ue!” Mark collapsed in on himself, scrambling to collect a handful of tissues so he wouldn’t ruin the sleeve of his suit. He blew his nose as thoroughly as he could – not that it made any difference, he was still stuffed up to the gills. A pathetic little cough escaped his lungs, prompting another tickle in his sinuses. “HUHTTSCHH-ue!”
Shut up, shut up, shut up, he chastised himself, blowing his nose again. He’s going to fucking hear you.
He waited a moment or two to see if Elijah would push through the door – he didn’t – before sitting fully clothed on the toilet and pulling out his phone.
11:56AM
Mark
what is this, the fucking plague?
Almost immediately, Matt texted back.
11:57AM Matt
o shit, did we get you already? baby im so sorry. u shouldve told me u weren’t feeling good last night u couldve stayed over
11:57AM Mark
not your fault. and I’m ok, just trying to avoid Elijah, he’s gonna be so pissed.
11:59AM
Matt
omfg he’ll get over it. its not like someone in that restaurant isnt sick every other week
Mark sighed, his lungs crackling at the effort. Matt was right; someone was almost always sick at Elliot’s, that was the way of things in this industry. They all shared drinks, they worked in close quarters, it was bound to happen. This was less about the illness itself – of course he’d been sick at work before, who hadn’t? - and more about the look he knew he’d see on Elijah’s face when he’d finally have to crack. He’d gone directly against his boss’s orders, had put his job and the restaurant second to his baser desires. That’s no way to get ahead in this world, his dad’s voice bellowed from the base of his brain. Mark shuddered; he wasn’t sure he’d be able to face Elijah’s look of pure disappointment. He wasn’t sure he had it in him.
Slipping his phone into his pocket, Mark stood and washed his hands. He took an inventory of his face in the mirror – eye bags poorly covered by drugstore makeup, his nose raw and red, his mouth slightly open to allow him to breathe – and realized how truly awful he looked. Was there even a chance that Elijah didn’t know he was sick? Doubtful, his dad’s voice muttered.
You have to just try, another voice in his head pleaded. Just push through, you know how to push through. You’ve done it a million times before. He doesn’t have to know.
That voice, Mark knew, was delusional – a child’s gnawing plea to be accepted, to not get in trouble, to not be thought of as a burden – but he knew that sometimes you had to be delusional, had to listen to the saddest, smallest part of yourself to get through a day. He pulled his phone back out before leaving the bathroom.
12:04PM
Mark
just please don’t say anything to Elijah when you get here, ok? I’m fine, I promise. its honestly probably just in my head, it’s probably nothing so just don’t say anything. see u soon.
Pathetic, his dad’s voice spat, and Mark knew the voice was right. But that was nothing new, nothing to dwell on; he’d always been pathetic. Mark switched off his phone then, not wanting to be comforted by his boyfriend, and stepped onto the floor.
***
“Mark,” Matt said, reaching up to touch the front of house manager’s forehead, “you really need to go.”
Mark pulled away before Matt could touch him, though not by choice. “HRRSHH-uhh! Hh-! HhNTZSHH-ue! Snrrf. Leave mbe alone.”
Matt’s hand recoiled at the ice in his boyfriend’s voice, obviously hurt. Normally, Mark would’ve nearly fallen to his knees at the thought of hurting Matt’s feelings, but today, with the cold from hell progressing quicker than he ever could’ve anticipated, he couldn’t even find it in himself to apologize. Obviously he needed to go, but that would mean admitting to illness; it would mean begin taken off the floor until god-knows-when. It would mean Elijah replacing him.
No. He wasn’t about to go.
“Honey,” Matt said carefully, touching Mark’s hand across the expo board, “I’mb sure Elijah would understand. It’s a slow ndight, he already sent Greyson back home. What are you trying to prove?”
Of course, Matt was right; last night’s crazy shift was in stark contrast to this evening’s steady pace. There were hardly twenty more covers for the evening, and yes, even Greyson had admitted defeat and slunk out right at six p.m., in a fevered haze. The only reason Matt was still here was because his fever had broken this morning and, despite the lingering cough and stuffy nose, he was clearly feeling better. Good enough, even, to have gone behind Mark’s back and talked to Elijah.
“Matt told me,” Elijah had cornered him right before preshift started, in the back server station while everyone else ate family meal. Mark felt his stomach sink. Fucking Matt, he thought, clearing his throat to address his boss in the most normal voice he could muster.
“Told you what?” he asked, straightening his tie. Elijah gave the younger manager a knowing look.
“You don’t look like you feel well, Mark,” he said, obviously trying a different tactic. This time, Mark’s stomach knotted; he felt, for a moment, like a little kid, wanting to fall to the ground in front of his mommy and just allow himself to be comforted. He thought for a fleeting moment of how good it would feel to just admit it; I’m sick, he would say, if he were a normal fucking person, I want to go to bed.
Instead, Mark shook his head. “I don’t kndow what Matt told you, but he doesn’t kndow what he talking about,” he managed, his voice cutting out only once. “I’mb fine.”
Elijah sighed. “Mark, listen, I know I was an asshole yesterday -”
“Boss,” Mark cut Elijah off. “Please. I’mb okay. Just please, let mbe work.”
He’d walked away then, hadn’t let Elijah say whatever it was he wanted to say, and had avoided Matt as well as he could throughout service. Now, mid-shift, when all the cooks and servers were side-eyeing them from he expo board, was not the time to hash this out.
“I’mb ndot trying to prove anything, Matt,” Mark said now, grabbing two plates from the window. “Just stay out of mby business. What table?”
Matt bit his cheek, peaked at the chit. “Please don’t be mbad,” he said, voice quiet. Mark prickled; he couldn’t help it. He was mad. He’d asked one stupid thing of Matt, and now here he was, career in trouble, embarrassed in front of both of their staffs, and once again gearing up for another painful -
“HTTSHH-ue! God, fugck,” Mark swore, ducking expertly away from the plates he was holding. He sucked in through his nose hard enough to make himself dizzy, and looked back at Matt. “What table, Chef?” he asked, pointedly. Matt winced.
“Thirty-three,” he said finally. Mark nodded.
“Great. Thangks.” He turned on his heels and pushed out the kitchen doors.
***
Before it happened, Mark found himself thinking exactly what his boyfriend was moaning the night previous: I’m gonna pass out, I know I am.
The only difference was, Mark was correct.
He’d been feeling shittier and shittier as the night went on. It began with spells of dizziness that came anytime he moved his head too fast, then moved on to an ache in his chest every time he coughed. A cold is one thing, he remembered Elijah saying the night previous. Whatever they have is entirely something else.
Elijah the prophet.
He kept pushing through. Plate after plate came out of the kitchen on his aching arms; he shook drinks while coughing into his shoulder, and sniffled his way through seating guests. Mark could feel Elijah’s eyes on him, though his boss refused to speak to him throughout the shift. I’ll show him, his fever-addled mind kept saying. I can do this. I’m fine.
It wasn’t until the last table had sat that his body well and truly told him he’d had enough. Mark was seeing stars when he grabbed a filet and swordfish, and once again he ignored it. He ignored the room swimming before him as he pushed out of the kitchen. He ignored the sway in his step.
“Shit, Mark!” was the last thing he heard, standing in the middle of the dining room with hot plates in each of his hands. There was no way to tell who said it – Elijah? Matt? – but it didn’t really matter, because before he could respond, his vision became a tiny pinkprick, his knees buckled, and the lights went out.
***
When the world came back into focus, he had somehow teleported into his bed.
At first, Mark tried desperately to get up; he’d fallen in the middle of the restaurant, that he unfortunately remembered immediately. There had been people around, guests watching, and he immediately felt his face flame with embarrassment. Oh, Elijah is going to kill me.
That was when he realized he was no longer in the restaurant. Mark placed a hand over an aching eye; was it all a dream? He looked down – no, it couldn’t be. He was still in his tailored suit, the tie and ciff links missing, but otherwise dressed to the nines.
“Whoa there, kid,” a familiar voice came from the doorway. “Go ahead and lie back down.”
Mark blearily glanced towards the voice. There, just outside his bedroom, stood Elijah, a steaming cup in one hand and a thermometer in the other. Fuck.
“Shit, Elijah, I’mb so sorry I ca – HTSHH-ue! HRRSHH-ue! Fuck, ’scuse mbe,” Mark, any facade of health finally washed away, used his expensive suit jacket to wipe his nose. Elijah glided across the small room and sat on the foot of the bed, handing the younger man the cup. Tea.
“Save your breath,” Elijah said. “You already apologized about a hundred times at the restaurant.”
He had? Mark gave Elijah a confused look, and sat back on the pillows behind him. He hadn’t even realized he’d come to at the restaurant at all.
“Mmhmm,” Elijah said, nodding. “To me. To Matt. To the guests. To the EMTs. I would think you’d be apologized out.”
EMTs? Mark cringed; as if he hadn’t been embarrassed enough. He wanted to ask, but at the same time he figured it was probably better that he didn’t remember. Small mercies, he thought.
“Lij,” Mark croaked, taking a sip of the tea, “I really amb… sorry. I mbean, I can’t imagine how mbuch I embarrassed you. Thangk you for bringing mbe home… I understand if you can’t…let mbe, uh. Work there. Anymore.”
Mark, destroyed by fever, and aches, and what was probably some sort of bronchitis-sinus-infection super-fucking-hybrid, couldn’t help but let the angry, ashamed tears fall as he said it. Matt wasn’t here, which most likely meant he was out both a boyfriend and a job. You fucking idiot. You stupid, fucking idiot, how dumb could you -
Elijah broke through the screaming in his head – he took Mark’s arms in his hands, placed his cup on the side table, and pulled him in for a hug. “Mark,” his boss said, “you really had us worried.” He pulled the younger manager back, concern painted on his face. “Of course you aren’t fired, I don’t know why you’d think that of me,” he said, a moment so raw that Mark felt like he’d been sucker-punched. “You should’ve just told me you were so sick. So you could go and rest. I would’ve even let Matt go with you.” Elijah patted his knee then, and handed Mark back the mug. “It’s just a restaurant, Mark. You’re more important than service.”
Mark felt his eyes well up once again. Had anyone ever told him he was worth more than the work he did? He wasn’t sure. He wasn’t sure, and that felt like an even harder gut-punch.
“I just…” he managed, wiping beneath his eyes. “I just didn’t wandt you to replace mbe. I’mb sorry for letting Mbatt get mbe sick.”
At this, Elijah actually laughed. “Mark,” he said, “you’re young. You’re in love; it comes with the territory. I was annoyed because Greyson and Matt are constantly getting everyone in that restaurant sick. I wasn’t trying to attack you.” He smiled then, a small and slightly sad smile. “I’m sorry if that’s how to came off.”
Mark didn’t know what to say; he felt awful, like he’d been hit by a semi, and he just wanted to sleep. See Matt. Apologize for being a dick. And sleep.
“Is Mbatt mad at mbe?” he croaked, pulling his legs into his chest. This time, Elijah actually laughed.
“I don’t think Matt knows how to be mad at you,” he said. “He’s just closing up the line; he was actually the one who brought you back here, but you were racked out so I said I’d come keep an eye on you till he got back.” Elijah shrugged, gave a little knowing smile. “He’ll be back soon. Okay? We don’t have to talk any more about this now. Just… try to sleep.” He patted Mark’s shoulder; a fatherly gesture from a man who claimed to know nothing about being a parent. “I’ll call Matt.”
Finally, finally, Mark conceded. He wanted to thank Elijah, or maybe apologize again, but he couldn’t make his mouth form words. Instead, he just nodded, grateful, and sank back into his pillow. He felt his eyes close, and allowed himself, for once, to let someone else take care of him.
He knew, maybe for the first time in his life, that he was safe.
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patricia-taxxon · 11 months ago
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every sokoban-like has to make the decision of whether they allow you to push more than one block at a time or not, and I'm still figuring out the flavor and motivations of each. I think the ones that really want the players to be empowered to ENACT and build tools are multipush, like parabox, baba is you, can of wormholes, it's kinda the mode right now to have puzzles that are broad and let you really move your weight around and try stuff out before you discover how to enact victory. games without multipush are less empowering, more mazelike, more classic sokoban. they more often make you reckon with harsh constraints, cus it's easier to make the puzzle inoperable in unforeseen ways.
The one outlier to this dichotomy is The Golem, which has multipush, but is also horrifying and labyrinthian in a classic sokoban way with anal shuffling of blocks in tight environments. It also has that player-empowerment angle of making you build your own tools, though, and that part wouldn't make sense at all without you being able to interact with multiple blocks at once. I'm wondering which path i'd take if I made my own sokobanlike, if you can't tell.
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shout-it-out13 · 6 months ago
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Every time I play the College of Winterhold Questline and get the staff in Labyrinthian is to joke that my character would use the staff on Ancano as a weapon as a last resort. Not as a magical staff, but a melee weapon (i mean with the decorations on top, and with a good swing - you probably could do some bludgeoning damage if struck right?). But now playing through it with Eden (who very much doesn’t want to be there), they’re the one that would probably ignore that it’s a magic staff (beyond scarcely using it for the battle on the Eye) and just full on beat Ancano with it, as their main way of attacking, because why not.
Which is why then being named Archmage is even more funnier. This random loser who randomly showed up to get an Elder Scroll (for Dawnguard) and didn’t show up after, appears 2 in game years later to Saarthal (reluctantly, Miraak dragged them there but they only go along with it because of being able to get Morokei in order to claim Konahrik + to see Urag for more books for the museum, he’s the only person actually keeping them there). Spent the entire Questline using a bow and shouts and a few seconds of panicked healing, but besides that, no spells. Got back from Labyrinthian, beat the Thalmor up with the literal staff (an artifact of a God). And the Psijic Order saw that and went “yeah, that one is the perfect fit” and Tolfdir just went along with it??? (Either these people are trolling or they are straight up that desperate).
Anyways - They’ll force Tolfdir to become Archmage (“either you take over, or I’m making J’Zargo the Archmage” (if he keeps pushing, they’ll just pull random NPCs to the college as a replacement until he gives up), because nope, even as a purely symbolic status, they’re not doing that (which every leadership of every guild in this game is).
-“Don’t contact me, unless on the rare event of the Thalmor sends another advisor to the college, then I’ll handle it. Only us and the Sea of Ghosts will know where they will be resting”.
The only time they return is to help Arniel in order to obtain Keening, when he disappears to who the fuck knows, they just panicked, grabbed the dagger and never showed up to the College again (unless they can figure out a teleportation method to the Arcaneum and just the Arcaneum, because Urag).
Shalidor, Magnus and Julianos would be so proud of this loser, not.
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twilightofthesandwiches · 2 years ago
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Concept Art for the Unimplemented 'Labyrinthian Edgeworth' and 'Labyrinthian Larry' concepts for 'Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney'. I think these could've been really interesting. I mean, I certainly never object to more Edgeworth in my AA games. And it would'e done something to minimize the feeling the game is kinda 'Professor Layton Guest-Starring Phoenix and Maya' if there were a few more AA characters involved, even in cameo roles, and Larry-
Wait.........
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LARRY??!?!
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HEY LARRY WHAT THE FUCK
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fishing-lesbian-catgirl · 1 year ago
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I am autistic. You would think that would make working in the heavily regulated and rigidly ruled field of being a lab scientist would be a great fit for me because of that. But it turns out it’s actually just infuriating beyond belief. Non-autistic people have no idea how to communicate, and apparently find joy in making everything unclear. I’m well aware of that from conversations and such, but I had foolishly assumed that it would be different for scientific lab work. When someone sends me their request for me to run tests on their experimental drug product, I would expect that they would provide clear details on what they want me to do. This was of course an incorrect assumption. And then when I reach out to them as ask if they could clarify what they mean, I assumed they could, oh I don’t know, tell me what they want me to do?!???!?
Apparently non-autistic people enjoy communicating by sending each other conflicting information and then being unable to answer when asked for clarity. I guess they probably like how when, I guess one of the many options of things I could do that fit their vague “instructions”, they then get the opportunity to tell me how foolish I was for doing it incorrectly. I cannot read minds, especially not ones as apparently labyrinthian as theirs.
And then when they are unable to clarify to me what I need to know via the extremely convenient communication method of text-based messages, they decide we need to schedule a meeting to “discuss”. Great. Now my entire day’s schedule is ruined. And now I have to meet with these people so they can be unclear on what they want verbally and we have to repeat ourselves at each other for an hour until I can somehow convince them to tell me what they fucking want. And then hope that I can actually process the sound properly and keep it in my memory in the time between it entering my ears and my pen moving on the page, because there’s no goddamn record of a conversation I can reference later and if I get a detail wrong I have to start the process all over again when I realize something is unclear.
And if I get an actual answer to the question, I will of course ask if they can verify that is what they meant, a simple yes or other word of affirmation to tell me that they did not misspeak or mistype or just to reassure me in some way that they wont have an excuse to change their mind later and say I interpreted it wrong. This seems like the most simple and reasonable request, but they really don’t seem to like it. I simply repeat what they said, and ask if that is correct, and for some of them that’s apparently a sin. I ask “oh that’s what you want me to do? Can we do that?” And expect a “yes” in response, instead they tell me to see the message I’m asking for their affirmation on. That’s not a yes! That’s not an answer to my question! I now have to go on with uncertainty in my feeble human mind because it’s apparently way too fucking hard to say yes. Fuck off
I need the whole world to be autistic. I’d rather endure 1 million heated debates over which way is the optimal way to format something argued by people who are so stubbornly stuck in their ways that the heat death of the universe will happen before they cede their ground, than have to deal with these non-autistics and their guessing games for the rest of my life. I can’t fucking do this shit. Why are you even requesting testing from me if you don’t even know what you want tested and how, why are you like this?!?????
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hrokkall · 1 year ago
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I am obsessed with your labyrinth game by the way it was tragic and terrifying and profound and beautiful and I lost my MIND when theseus said the minotaur hardly defended himself in the end. just lost it. holy shit. Hope you have a great day!!!!!!!!
Ah, thank you so much!! That line is actually from "The House of Asterion" by Jorge Luis Borges (which you can read here), which is one of the main things that inspired me to create the game in the first place. Some of the other inspirations + credits are in the readme document of the downloadable version of the game, but seeing as it's playable in browser I know not everyone took a look at that.
I'm glad that you enjoyed; genuinely. It's feedback like this that inspires me to keep creating :']
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glossyybabie · 14 days ago
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hope
part 20 || part 21
Summary: You won’t let your resolve crumble. Not yet.
Warnings: Kidnapping. Stockholm Syndrome times infinity no takesie-backsies. Blood. Body horror. Bones shouldn’t squish like that. Missy is as Missy does.
Word count: 3588
Notes: Did this actual proper not-gaslighting-you-this-time finale take me 18 months to finish? No, never. Couldn’t be me. Would never be me. And I definitely proof-read this, because I've never in my life posted something that wasn't proof-read.
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You stared absently into the crackling fire. The conscious efforts of the TARDIS to keep you warm was the only reason those flames hadn’t flattened yet. You had yet to pick up a book to read, although this time Missy wasn’t here to make remarks about your distractingly vacant expression and your boringly dull eyes. You could stare into space for as long as you want.
Hell, you could do anything you wanted. Missy had left you unsupervised again. You noted that this had started occurring far more frequently since your fabricated freedom. God, you were like a zoo animal, assigned a more open enclosure simply because you were domesticated and obedient enough to be trusted not to plan some daring escape.
There was no denying that it bothered you. You knew it would for as long as you were here. Missy thought you were getting comfortable here and . . . 
Fuck, she was right. What were you even fighting against anymore? Rent-free shelter, food, hot water, quick and free medical access, and for what? A fractured bone here and a third degree burn there — nothing that couldn’t be healed.
You threw your head back, clenching your jaw. This line of thinking wasn’t just dangerous — it was demented. You couldn’t allow yourself to cave in yet. Your mind tried to protect you, softening the memories to seem less severe under the tint of nostalgia. Your brain conveniently omitted the ripping of your own flesh, the humiliation, the scarring, the game after game after game until it felt like your own perception was putrefying.
You still felt so much anger, towards Missy — towards yourself. And you’d long since lost the ability to properly regulate your emotions. When you were angry, you were a force to be reckoned with. That was the one thing Missy had failed to factor in.
The library door opened the moment you slammed your hand carelessly against the cold surface. The air was still. You used that limited amount of information to assume that the labyrinthian layout of the TARDIS had yet to reshuffle itself in a while, but you’d never be able to verify that for yourself. These halls had no distinguishing features, a detail you were certain was intentional. A series of distinctly-marked hallways would be about as effective as a bright flashing exit sign.
You tried the first door you encountered, but the light that beamed out felt like it was searing away at the top few layers of your eyes. Grimacing, you shut the door with a grunt of effort, but not before a thick wave of chemical odour hit you head-on.
Your grimace deepened. The hospital. 
Like a hopeless, grim game of russian roulette, you tried another door. This one resisted at first, like the TARDIS itself was hesitating. Impatient, you smacked your hand against the door twice.
It shuddered into effect when your hand struck for a third time. The view it reluctantly graced you with made you falter.
You had horrible, horrible memories here. You couldn’t say with any certainty how many were real, and how many were figments of your fatigue-addled imagination. There was at least one occasion you were certain of, if the phantom twinge of pain in your thigh was anything to go by . . .
The door only shut behind you once you’d taken a few steps, although it was as if you could feel its impatience. It didn’t want you to be here. Maybe it was worried what you would do with access to the controls without Missy to put you back in your place.
Not much, you knew. The six-faced console was like nothing you’d ever seen before. It wasn’t just beyond human comprehension — it was completely unlabelled. You wouldn’t be able to distinguish between an ice cube dispenser and a self-destruct button. Trying to do anything with it by yourself would be a disaster waiting to happen.
You paced a lap around the console, but without anything to show for yourself. Missy kept this area largely barren, although you weren’t sure whether that had anything to do with your presence or if she was nothing more than a clean freak. An item she did keep around was a floor-length mirror. Looking at your sickly, scarred, harrowing figure, you didn’t think it was particularly self-centered to believe she’d left that here just for you.
You shuddered, making a conscious effort not to look. You worked your way around another lap of the circular room. You weren’t sure where to go from here. So consumed by your own inflated sense of anger and justice, you hadn’t considered your grand plan any further than this. The most that popped to mind was the old note you’d found many moons ago in the library.
‘If you can read this, you have to get out of there. Run while you can. I probably never made it, but you can. If you’re reading this, she isn’t looking. There’s a Vortex Manipulator n’
It was a haunting clue that hadn’t left you since. Missy’s haste to hide the complete note from you had set blaring red warning sirens off in your head. Whatever the rest of that note had said, there must’ve been truth to it. Fucking hell, you didn’t even know what a Vortex Manipulator was! Only that it would help you leave.
You studied the control panel, although the bizarre sight felt as though it was turning you dumber by the second. On one panel, an 8-by-16 array of unmarked identical switches had been configured to an oddly specific layout with no rhyme or reason. On another, cutouts revealed a white, fleshy mass you didn't dare to touch for your own safety.
Your gaze drifted to the structure itself. It rested at a slant, but if you ran your finger along its steel edge, you could feel the faint bump of a clasp. You probed at the creases with your blunt nails.
“Right, that’s enough of that for today.”
Missy hadn’t even finished speaking before you’d leapt back, your arms flying up in surrender. Your heart ached with how forcefully it pounded against your chest — Missy could probably hear it from the other side of the room.
Frowning, she planted her hands on her hips. “Well there’s no need to look so frightened,” she said disapprovingly. “What do you think I’m going to do?”
At a loss, you stared at her. “Is that a joke?”
A wry smile lifted the corner of her lips. And before you could dissect the expression into all the malice and nastiness it undoubtedly was, she held out her hand. It didn’t seem like she was offering it for you to take — her movements were a little too antsy and expectant for that.
You continued to stare, sadly the only expression you feared you were capable of. “. . . What?”
“If you think I am a patient woman, my dear,” Missy began, emphasising the word patient like it was the punchline to a joke you weren’t fully in on, “then I really worry for your psychological state.”
“But I–” You spluttered uselessly, “–but I haven’t taken anything!”
Missy’s eyebrows raised. She was looking at you with such an inquisitive gaze, like nothing you’d been subjected to before. It almost resembled . . . surprise. In a withdrawn, inconvenienced sort of way.
“You really have yourself convinced,” Missy realised, “don’t you?”
“What? But really, I haven’t–”
“Well, someone has,” Missy snapped. You recoiled; she tilted her head to the side, jaw clenched like a viper waiting to snap at your jugular. “And you’re the only person, aside from myself, who has access.”
“Access to what?” you asked apprehensively.
“Unless . . .” Missy tore her gaze away from you. She leaned against the control panel, caught in a momentary deep state of thought you knew never to interrupt. “Oh, I think I know what’s going on. You’ve tried to protect yourself — how sweet!”
The endeared smile she beamed straight at you was arguably more unsettling than her malicious scowl just seconds earlier. Her moods shifted fast, and keeping up was a herculean task on its own. Usually you could sort of follow along and understand what prompted each switch, but right now you weren’t so sure.
“Missy,” you started, matching each step she took towards you with a retreating step of your own, “I really honestly have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Her head lowered, her gaze hardening. She lifted a hand and beckoned you forward. You didn’t move. You swore her pointed red fingernails looked like claws.
Missy gave you only one more chance to concede, in the form of a short, cold, “Come here.”
Your breath left your mouth sounding shakier than you’d expected. You tentatively moved within reach. You outstretched your arm, mirroring her, expecting her to take your hand and pull you closer.
You hadn’t expected her to drag you flush against her. You bumped uselessly into her lithe, unmoving frame; not enough time passed for you to manage a gasp or an exclamation of shock before she planted her fingers on your temples and tipped your forehead directly into hers.
The only way you could think to describe the rapidly increasing pressure contained by your skull was like static, and the way it pushed outwards like it was trying to burst from the surface of your brain was agonising. Thoughts moved too fast, spurred on by energy Missy injected you with through her fingertips. Rapid, disorienting; the experience wasn’t unfamiliar, but the feeling it left you with was grossly alien.
You tried to focus beyond the blinding pain that threatened to chew through your body. Ideas, shapes, patterns, images and concepts, they flitted by like pictures from an old photo album. A figure came to form. The library, and the grainy texture of pages. The note you remembered so well, then slipped back as though it had never happened.
You were completely incapable of interfering with Missy’s impatient probing. Thoughts darted back and forth faster this time, as if her patience was thinning and she was getting dangerously close to the mental equivalent of throwing said photo album into a bonfire.
The room that appeared to you was distinctly in the style of the TARDIS, although you couldn’t recall seeing it before. Missy slowed to a thoughtful, contemplative pace. A vault with a strange lock. Scarred, dry, slim fingers wrapping around the handle. Cold leather with a strange bitter smell. Clumsy hands twisting at strange angles, followed by frustrated stamping against the floor. Sensations threatening to bubble over, a racing heart, spiralling thoughts, until–
You lurched forward, gasping, your hands flying to your throat as if to tear your airways open and expose your lungs to the air they were in burning pain without. You slumped back against the console limply.
“That’s it,” Missy said distractedly. There were no soothing gestures; your current state was the very last thing on her mind. “Nice and calm, deep breaths–”
Before you could flinch, Missy yanked your left sleeve to your elbow. Holding you still with her fingers wrapping around the base of your wrist, she began to feel blindly at your arm hairs, searching for something you for certain couldn’t see.
She stopped at the outside of your wrist, twisting your arm around. Two taps, and a wristband appeared. It was a leather strap, brown and mottled, scuffed with its age. A–
“Vortex Manipulator.” Missy didn’t just look at you — it felt like she was staring through you. “That was very naughty of you.”
You were struggling to keep up. “But I didn’t know.”
“No,” Missy corrected you, blowing out an exasperated breath as she stared at the device strapped against your skin. With a small flick of her hand, she plucked it from your arm and draped it over her palm. “You knew. At the back of your teensy little mind, you knew. And you knew I would find out. You knew you’d have to wipe your own memory in a last ditch attempt to rescue yourself. Maybe you thought I wouldn’t find out. But as it turns out…”
Like completing a magic trick to an unwilling audience of one, Missy revealed a book from behind her back. It was black and yellow, in the style of a For Dummies book but with a cartoon drawing of a scrawny man pinching his own temples and screwing his eyes closed in concentration.
“...Self-Hypnosis for Dummies isn’t foolproof to a Time Lord.”
You were playing a horrible high-pressure game of catch-up in real time, and as your lethargic mind tried its best to lay out a timeline of events, you found yourself growing increasingly frustrated with your inability to string together a single intelligible thought.
“I’d already found that?” you concluded. It was obvious though. You’d been unknowingly wearing this device for an indefinite length of time. “I followed the note but didn’t know how to use it. And I hid it from myself and erased my own memory when it didn’t work…”
Missy hummed, pursing her lips in agreement as she inspected the book you’d allegedly used. “Funny how hope works, isn’t it? All of that anticipation, all those dreams, but expectations just never live up to reality, do they? And yet you humans fall for the same set-up every single time. Oh, it’s so deliciously disturbing!”
For only a second, you were stupid enough to think you still had a chance to resist whatever Missy had planned for you next. You naively reached for the Vortex Manipulator that sat unprotected in the palm of her hand — the Vortex Manipulator you still had no idea how to use. But you didn’t come close. Your fingertips didn’t come even within a centimetre of it.
You fell back before you could determine what had caused your loss of balance, and following the momentum of your limp body your forehead smacked into the steel floor. The collision reverberated through your skull with enough intensity to deafen you. Maybe it would have if you weren’t so preoccupied with the searing pain across your frail face.
Missy kicked you over like a log. You landed on your back, and while your body rolled to a stop, she planted a foot on your wrist. She lifted her other heel, and the pressure against that joint alone was enough to have you squealing like a scared fucking piglet, but then you saw the direction that razor of a heel was moving in.
Dread consumed you, branching out through your body until it tumbled out of your mouth in a sequence of nonsensical pleas, repetitively chanting of the same few words growing increasingly manic with each fraction of a second — you were behaving as if Missy hadn’t heard you say, “No,” the first time. But she always heard. It was your frantic, spluttered begging that kept her going at times like these. Your desperation was her lifeblood.
“What will it take for you to realise that you will never — and I mean never — pull one over on me?”
Her heel pressed into your finger, and with the full force of her weight, she began to grind down. You screamed and wailed — you could feel the bones in your smallest finger shatter and splinter under the pressure.
“Have you ever tried making brownies by substituting flour for ground human bones?” Missy asked you.
The weight lifted completely before it transferred to your ring finger instead. Missy pressed your flesh into the floor with the same motions as someone putting out a cigarette butt on a concrete pavement. The bone shattered, the insistent squelching of your finger splurting out blood that splashed against the rest of your hand.
Missy spoke loudly and calmly over your screams. “Me neither.”
You finally gained enough sense to move your unrestrained arm, rolling onto your side — and twisting your wrist the wrong direction in the process — just to push desperately against her foot. Missy decided to demonstrate just how futile your efforts were by switching to your middle finger next.
You screamed and sobbed and writhed frantically beneath her. It took you dealing a particularly harsh shove to the back of her knee and a completely unnatural jerk of your trapped hand for you to tear the limb free. You didn’t stop to see how, or why; you scrambled away like a wounded animal until you could crawl no further.
Missy stumbled on the spot, your knock to her weak spot compromising her usually undisturbed balance. Once she’d managed to regain a reasonable sense of footing as opposed to tripping over her own two feet, she lifted her head and her eyes locked onto you.
You shuffled further, tossing a glance over your shoulder. The doors beside you slid open, as they were designed to if they sensed a presence lingering for long enough. Your weary eyes were greeted by the endless vacuum of space.
Cold. Tired. And tortured by a time-travelling alien sadist.
Missy’s footsteps drew closer. You could sense she was dragging this out, emphasising every sharp, damp click of her heel against the floor. You were shaking, trembling beyond reason, your entire body wracked with fear so intense and instinctual that you physically couldn’t will yourself to move. Your crippled hand moved to your chest, where only two full fingers and a mangled third remained.
You felt like you were choking, like those missing fingers had just been crammed down your tight throat in an effort to suffocate you. Your face boiled with tears. 
Actual human tears. Oh god, they were real, real tears. Your very last crumbs of humanity were churning their way out of your system, and that started with your dignity. These were messy, ugly, snivelling tears, the pathetic gross kind. Because you were so tired. And afraid. And hurt. And gone. So far gone.
You opened your mouth to speak, but even you hardly understood the blubbering words that spilled out.
“Please, just stop — I want it to stop–”
Your body heaved with the intensity of your raw, unbridled cries. Missy’s footsteps stopped. Though your vision was compromised, and your awareness even more so, you could just barely discern her silhouette as she sank to her knees beside you.
“Have you reached your human limit?” Missy asked gently.
You weren’t fully aware of just how close you were moving to the edge of the TARDIS. “Please…”
“Stop,” Missy said. “Stop.”
The next word to roll off Missy’s tongue was your name. The name your old friends used to call you, the name your family used to shout when you minorly inconvenienced them — the name you used to respond to the moment it was uttered. Your name. 
It had never occured to you that Missy might know it. For a while, it hadn’t even occured to you that you had one at all.
“I can make it all go away,” Missy probed softly, tilting her head to one side. You stared at your burning, harrowing, bleeding stump of your hand. “The pain. The fear — all of it. I can make you feel alive again. We can travel the stars together, you and me. Would you like that?”
You had no way of telling whether she was being sincere. She followed completely different social norms to you; there was never a surefire way of knowing.
You managed a weak, sniffled, “I’ve never said my name.”
Missy was amused by your observation. “You didn’t have to,” she responded dryly. “Do you think I would skip my required reading on you? Every last detail about your measly, short life. I know how much you hated every second of it. To be honest, I don’t even think I can claim full credit for your dreadfully pessimistic outlook!”
Missy knew damn well what she was doing. She wasn’t just trying to get another rise out of you. This was calculated. You never stood a chance, you realised that now. All that fighting, all that plotting and escapology you thought you were smart enough to pull off, and it was always going to lead you here. 
Missy knew everything. She could estimate your decisions before you even made them yourself. She hadn’t been lying before.
You could never leave.
You considered hurling a whole list of curses and obscenities at her. There was so much you wanted to bellow, you wanted to scream until your lungs imploded and your ribs shattered, and yet all you managed was…
“Missy.”
“I can make it stop, love.” Missy drew closer, delicate fingers dusting off the blood from your face. “All you have to do is obey me.”
You looked up at her, stared into the dark pits of her vibrant blue eyes, and through that intimate, penetrating contact, she coaxed the words out of your throat.
“You are my mistress, and I will obey you.”
Your subconscious utterings pleased Missy. Not in the way that made her entire face illuminate with morbid fascination in response to some grotesque act being performed on you. Just in a calm, satisfied way. Her eyes twinkled, like a promise she’d been waiting on had finally been fulfilled. You almost wanted to smile right back at her.
Her lipstick-reddened lips dabbed the softest, tenderest of kisses on your forehead. You leaned forward, unashamedly reaching for her embrace. Her arms wrapped around you, comforting you, consoling you, and you crumpled against her chest. Her two hearts hummed a steady 4-beat rhythm into your ear.
Neither of you moved for a very long time.
I would like to add a big massive thank you to everyone who has stuck with me throughout this multi-part madness. It's been silly, it's been traumatising, but it's been a lot of fun. Big love to everyone and anyone who made it this far <333
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lightandfellowship · 3 months ago
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Personally, I feel the KH games that released after KH2 deserve a bit more credit for making valiant (though flawed) attempts at re-inserting some of KH1's level design philosophy back into the series after KH2 made the (in my opinion, somewhat misguided) decision to mostly discard platforming + exploration + puzzle solving from its gameplay loop.
I can see what they were going for, though. They were trying to make the level design more "user and combat friendly" since KH1's level design was criticized for being confusing and labyrinthian, and its platforming was criticized for being janky. Likewise the choice to make the maps compact and detailed with lots of puzzles and secrets sometimes resulted in combat becoming obstructed due to the camera getting blocked by objects or your Keyblade bouncing off of furniture/walls.
But I think KH2's desire to create maps that were easier to traverse and fight in led to it overcorrecting by a LOT. The overall level design philosophy became characterized by these big, wide open, (mostly) empty, flat, and horizontal rooms and hallways arranged in a linear fashion that were primarily intended as battle arenas first and foremost. The focus on combat as the most important part of the gameplay loop then resulted in the other sub-facets of KH1's gameplay—the platforming, the puzzles, the exploration, and the environmental interactivity—getting discarded for the most part. Which, yeah, these spacious mostly empty rooms are great for having big, flashy fights in! But that's kinda where the advantages of such rooms end. And the KH series isn't just an action game, right, it's an RPG too! But some of those more RPG-like elements fell to the wayside in pursuit of streamlining everything. Which, streamlining isn't inherently a bad thing, but did the level design really need to be streamlined by this much?
It seems like the KH2 devs realized that they overcorrected though, since KH2FM tried to bandaid fix the issue after the fact with the addition of the Cavern of Remembrance, whose platforming challenges in my opinion represent what the entire game's level design should have been like from the get-go (though would probably need to be toned down to maintain the difficulty spike of CoR), and the Puzzle Pieces, which can't be reached without unlocking and leveling up certain Drive Form-gated movement abilities that in vanilla KH2 weren't nearly as useful/required as the movement abilities from KH1.
There's a way to balance combat and platforming + exploration + puzzle-solving without excising complex and interactive level design, and I think KH games post-KH2 at least tried to improve the level design in various ways, with varying amounts of success given limited hardware at times. And like. As a platforming + exploration + puzzle enjoyer myself. I'm really glad that they did, and continue to do so, and I hope that they manage to strike that perfect balance one day.
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bigsexiest · 1 year ago
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A little Mountain x Rain cat and mouse thing (tw: brief mentions of blood)
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Don’t imagine Rain hunting a terrified Mountain down within the labyrinthian walls of the greenhouses.
And definitely don't imagine Mountain snuffling under a table in a corner hoping Rain doesn’t find him.
It was a lazy day at the ministry. Mountain was enjoying the ambiance of the greenhouse. It was raining and Mountain could hear the sound of the droplets hitting the plastic roof covering. 
He cherished days like this. He had even made himself a nice cup of tea from dried mint leaves he’d harvested earlier that week.
It doesn’t matter what he was doing specifically.
Maybe he was pruning some overgrown flowers, perhaps he was cutting a nice bouquet for Swiss. Chances are he just nicked his finger on some thorns.
All that mattered was the bright pungent beautiful blood dripping from his hand.
He stared for a few seconds, watching the drops fall from his hand onto the ground.
Maybe Mount was feeling a little weird that day.
He had decided to spend his day off in his greenhouse because he felt safe there. He didn’t have to worry about interacting with ghouls or humans, it was only him and his beloved plants. He just wanted to be himself, the truest version.
So when he heard the telltale growl of a feral ghoul, he couldn’t fight the equally feral instinct to run and hide.
Rain had been similarly enjoying the rainy day. It being his namesake for a good reason.
He had been splashing around in the lake, spending time diving as deep as he could go and then resurfacing to jump above the water like a big fish.
Rain was just about to dive down again when he smelt the delicious scent of fresh blood. 
Swimming always put him in a weird headspace.
He felt like a true ghoul. A deranged beast unable to contain violent urges. Today was no different.
With that small whiff he had gotten he couldn’t control the way his tail propelled him to shore. 
The scent grew stronger as he prowled towards the ministry, still on all fours with his nose to the ground.
When he spotted the greenhouses, he knew exactly where the blood had come from. No way could a scent that strong be coming from the ministry unless someone had been brutally slaughtered. Blood everywhere. All over the walls.
Just the thought alone made him growl with anticipation.
But no, the smell was definitely coming from the greenhouse.
Upon slowly entering through the door, keeping his body close to the ground and his footsteps light, he heard the telltale signs of someone running very fast away from him.
Now, if Rain had any sense left in his tiny ghoul brain, he might have taken the time to stand up and realize what had most likely happened. The blood drops on the ground obviously meant Mountain had cut himself somehow and it would be most beneficial for Rain to find a first aid kit or something useful. 
But no. Rain was fully distracted by the promise of a good game of cat and mouse with the reward of fresh blood at the end.
Unbeknownst to him, his pupils had dilated and his nostrils were flaring. He abandoned his sneaky approach for the aggressive full-tilt sprint necessary of a ghoul on the hunt.
The gravel floors of the greenhouses were spraying everywhere as Rain dug his heels into the ground hoping for more speed. 
He had seen a glimpse of a tuft of tail fur a couple hallways ahead of him.
In his excitement at finally seeing his prey, he had tripped over his own feet and careened right into a table covered in baby sunflowers ready to be planted.
The destruction he had caused did absolutely nothing to slow Rain down as he jumped up and continued his chase. He was still naked from his swim at the lake and the plastic trays containing the sunflowers had caused little scrapes running along his side. His feet were bleeding from the rough rocks he had been sprinting through.
None of this pain stopped Rain as he continued the chase to a dead end. 
The smell of Mountain’s blood was still noticeable, but not as noticeable as the sweet stench of fear permeating the enclosed space.
Rain had stopped running when he had found the doorway to the space. There was a door at the opposite end of the short building, but Rain could tell Mountain was hiding within these walls.
Rain was heavily gulping air through his mouth and his gills, trying to calm down after the strenuous chase. With the absence of prey, and the stench of fear outweighing the scent of blood, he had started to realize what was happening. His heightened levels of adrenaline were wearing off.
He was still very interested in the blood, but seeing only the small curled-up shape of his favorite Earth ghoul ruined his excitement. Rain was having a hard time enjoying himself anymore.
Mountain was shaking. The sound of the heavy rain on the outer shell of the greenhouse drowned out his pained whimpering. He had just wanted to spend a day safe in the warm humid comfort of his greenhouses, but now he feared for his life. The ghoul who had been chasing him sounded scary. 
Mountain hadn’t noticed much in his hurried escape, but the slobbering whines and grunts of the ghoul chasing him had brought him to tears. He didn’t want to fight. He couldn’t stand the thought of the other ghoul’s claws ripping him to the ground. Imagining the ghoul’s sharp teeth tearing at Mountain’s flesh made him sob harder.
When Mountain finally felt cold claws on his back, he managed to curl in on himself even tighter. His ears were flattened against his head in fear, his tail threaded between his legs, and the fuzzy tuft at the end of his tail was held firmly in his mouth.
Rain felt terrible. He didn’t mean to scare the large ghoul that badly. He was only interested in the excitement of the hunt. Dew and Swiss were always joking about what a giant pansy Mount was, but Rain never would have guessed it would be this bad.
Rain started making a quiet shushing sound while slowly petting down Mountain’s back, hoping to calm the other ghoul. He wondered how bad Mountain’s wound was.
As more time passed, Mountain started to feel somewhat safe. He had been taking deep breaths, and his crying had been largely cathartic in cleansing his terrified mind. Now that he was less scared, he was able to open his eyes and raise his ears to hear Rain softly murmuring to him.
He took his tail out from between his legs to turn towards the smaller water ghoul. Rain was swift to take Mountain into his arms and their tails twisted together.
Rain could see Mountain had his right hand clenched within his left. So he softly asked the Earth ghoul if he could see.
Mountain opened his bloody hand to Rain. Rain took the hand and placed the cut in his mouth, licking away all the blood and encouraging the cut to close with his sticky water ghoul saliva.
Mountain was happy that Rain was there to comfort him after such a fright, and Rain was happy to finally taste some goddamn blood after all his trouble.
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smupsbandry · 1 year ago
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just what the fuck
woah bro. silly fucking me. i kinda expected everyone to sorta already know, but i guess i never really introduced them properly.
what is a smuppet.
bam.
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smuppet.
picture taken of one under the lil’ man’s bed. you’ll find these freaks living in your walls, your basements, your attics. and that’s just urban infestation.
they’re just fuzzy little guys kickin’ it around town. all fun and games ‘til you decide to remodel and knock out a wall just to find a floor-to-ceiling, labyrinthian nest full of bulbous eyes and a whole spectrum of fuzz, meeting your gaze.
artistic rendition.
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anyway, they’re like burrowing mammals, or something along those lines. i think they lay eggs. or sacks. either way, they’re not any worse than rats. they’re like
[ORIGINAL CONTENT DELETED BY EDITOR] or more [FLAMBOYANT] meerkats.
smuppets are god’s gift to mankind and maybe his divinity’s second biggest fuckup.
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