South Wave, Royal Fencing Style
Name: South Wave, Royal Fencing Style - Rafale
Tier: C-Tier
Cost: 20 Magoi/Stamina
Weapon Type: Sword/Cutlass
Class: Offensive
Range: 3 Meters
Duration: 1 Post
Cool-Down: 3 posts
Description: Rafale is a flurry of cuts and stabs to an opponent (a total of 10) in the same stance moving only the arm and wrist to create different cutting orientations and attacks, without stopping if some of the attacks are parried or miss their target. It requires an extremely stable stance, which doesn't necessarily mean stable footing, and the off-hand must grab the waist and perform an arch in the opposite direction of the attack. The blade moves very quickly, at a speed of 15 m/s. Each cut or stab can barely go past the skin and just start to touch tissue and muscle, but each attack summed does considerable damage to the body, in all.
Name: South Wave, Royal Fencing Style - Doublé
Tier: D-Tier
Cost: 10 Magoi/Stamina
Weapon Type: Sword/Cutlass
Class: Offensive
Range: 5 Meters
Duration: 1 Post
Cool-Down: 2 posts
Description: Doublé is an attack executed after a normal parry, the Riposte technique or Coulé. It's a move executed after one of those techniques is used where the fencer's blade executes a complete wrist circle, finishing on the opposite side, the side where the parry departed from. It's very difficult to defend since this technique takes advantage of an opening in the opponents guard created by the technique used before it. It requires a good deal of experience and control of wrist movements. The blade travels at a speed of 10 m/s during the attack, and causes cuts that barely go past the skin and just start to touch tissue and muscle, making it a technique used to cause small, but sometimes decisive, wounds.
Name: South Wave, Royal Fencing Style - Feinte Remise
Tier: D-Tier
Cost: 10 Magoi/Stamina
Weapon Type: Sword/Cutlass
Class: Offensive
Range: 2 Meters
Duration: 1 Post
Cool-Down: 2 posts
Description: The Feinte Remise technique involves the fencer making a feint, a fake-attack, that doesn't actually go all the way to the opponent. It's objective is tricking the opponent to guard the quarter of his body where that fake-attack should've landed and, afterwards, replacing the attack with an actual cut to the opposite quarter of his body, without withdrawing the arm. It requires a great deal of concentration and observation skill, as well as an excellent wrist job and footwork. The blade flies, in both movements, at 10 m/s. If the attack hits it's mark, the cut barely goes past the skin and just starts to touch tissue and muscle.
Last edited by Arsham Zubayr on 22/04/14, 09:23 am; edited 3 times in total