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    1. MelonHead 12 yrs ago
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Mostly given up on this post by post business

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I reiterate: *clunk clunk clunk clunk*


'The floor was stone, and so his heavy metallic footsteps echoed with a dull thud with each step, perhaps giving away his approach, not that stealth was a factor Judgement ever relied upon.'

Basically even I wrote clunk clunk clunk.
“The elements, how quaint.” Kaelin did not see in a conventional sense, he perceived the flow of energy around him in its most primal form. This in turn gave him a greater insight into someone’s intentions than he should have, for he could see the flashes of colour that signified muscles preparing to exert themselves, or kinetic energy about to be released. In this case he saw the sudden increase in movement in the water particles that were held tight together initially in the form of ice. That was what alerted him milliseconds after his foe activated his ability as to his intention.

He raised one hand dramatically, and the ice slowly melting into water intensified the process of transferring through states tenfold. It still formed a river in the sky, but if one looked particularly closely they would note it steaming as water evaporated under the intensity of Kaelin’s power. It shot towards him, and almost as quickly disintegrated in clumps, evaporating into the air as steam or falling to the ground far short of Kaelin, as the material through which his foe utilized his ability was rendered useless by Kaelin’s power. It was as if the water had been met by a gushing torrent of flame in mid-air, and if Kaelin was of the type he certainly could have done just that, but he decided this internal combustion of his foe’s attack would be far more intimidating.

He did not launch his own counter, only stared at his foe as the snow and ice melted around him, running in small rivers across the terrain as it was profoundly altered by the presence of the two near-gods who fought upon it.
<Snipped quote by MelonHead>

Well this is why I'm doing this; you learn something new every day
Question is, is there logical time for him to do anything? Im going to go out on a limb here and say yes.


Usually. Interrupts are how we try and integrate the natural ability to react to changing situations into Arena combat, the moment your character makes his intent known there's potential for Khan to change his own movements. It's why subterfuge is also useful, because it reduces this logical time for people's characters to react. If your attack only became apparent a second before you collided and launched your attack, Khan's options would be heavily limited, for example.
<Snipped quote by MelonHead>

But since I've already said that I fired the bullet, doesnt that mean there's no time for him to disarm?
The whole point was that he was off balance after charging me, and I was counter attacking, leaving him no time to do anything else


Called an interrupt, if there's logical time for him to do anything before your shot, he can do it before your actions are complete.
@MelonHead

They also had a little over a year to make it.

A little over one year.

Honestly I'm surprised there's not more.


Well, Oblivion, Skyrim and even Fallout 3 also have a fair share of bugs, I think it's just a natural effect of so many possible things that can go wrong.
@MelonHead

New Vegas is Obsidian.


Huh, didn't know that, point still stands though, big game, lots of bugs.

No, wait, Bethesda is the publisher, remember, Obsidian made it.
Yeah, Bethesda is amazing but the scale of their games tends to leave a lot of bugs milling about, got to make them multiple saves.

If Khan forfeits then certainly, I'll move onto the next round.
I think they mean they're literally stuck, as in you have to finish Dead Money before you can leave.
<Snipped quote by Vordak>

Seems awfully hard to dodge a bullet when the barrel is pressed into the opponent's gut if you don't have some form of super speed

But then again, what do I know


If you let someone get that close to you with a gun you're an idiot, but there's a reason why the cardinal sin when facing an unarmed person with a gun is to stand that close to them, you're essentially pitting your reaction speed against the time it takes to disarm someone of their gun. There are plenty of real life humans who I'm confident could disarm me faster than I could react, like that crazy American preacher dude for example.
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