Post by Egao, Egao Everywhere on Dec 17, 2014 16:50:00 GMT -8
Hi again! I made a Servant for a Fate RP and want a Master. I prefer someone who honestly WANTS to thread with me because I don't want you to flake on me. I won't blame you for flaking me because I think that would be because I'm not who you thought I was. So do know what you're getting into when RPing with me xD i won't take it personally.
So, about my Servant. Since apps are hidden, I'm going to put it in the spoiler tag.
She's a pretty blank slate char. I'm open to all ideas. I do think that Good or Neutral characters would work better with her. You don't have to be a extraordinary Master. You can be an extraordinary Master. Go with what you want. I want to have fun and experience stuff with people. Especially new people.
So, about my Servant. Since apps are hidden, I'm going to put it in the spoiler tag.
HEROIC SPIRIT:
TRUE NAME:
Lady Fu Hao, posthumously named Mu Xin.
CLASS:
...ANOTHER CASTER....but she wields an axe!
CONTRACT:
N/A.
ENABLE PVP DEATH?:
Yes.
CANON:
N/A.
OOC NAME:
Chapel.
FACECLAIM:
FIRE EMBLEM, sanaki kirsch altina.
NOBLE PHANTASM:
NAME OF PHANTASM:
Shengjicui
PHANTASM CLASS:
Anti-unit.
RANK OF PHANTASM:
C++
DESCRIPTION: Xin was fond of collecting. Her treasuries were buried with her in a tomb that wouldn't be uncovered until 1976. Besides jades, potteries, and cowries (currency at that time), she had over a hundred of weapons with her, including battle axes, the symbol of her martial strength. She can make use of any weapons in her collection as a Noble Phantasm.
Besides using the weapons in her collection, Xin can add more. If she were to get her hands on it, Xin can steal the weapon and use it. Due to the limitation of Xin's powers, she can only take Noble Phantasms that are equal or lower than her phantasm's rank. If the weapon were wielded or owned by a man, Xin may be able to wield it for a period of time though she cannot add it to her collection (if a Noble Phantasm, it would be regardless of the phantasm's rank.)
Though she may be able to wield some Noble Phantasms, she is not the rightful owner and so cannot draw out their full power.
NAME OF PHANTASM:
Xiongwei De Xinxin
PHANTASM CLASS:
Anti-unit.
RANK OF PHANTASM:
B
DESCRIPTION: Xin was a capable diviner and priestess. Being a collector, Xin has great knowledge of various materials, though her favourite had always been human bones and blood. She used her background as a priestess to make her soldiers more confident with the odds of a battle. They believed they were being guided by the gods and had their protection and strength. Although Xin believed she had such power, she did not think herself to be a very competent priestess for their victories to be solely attributed to the divine.
Given the proper materials, Xin can perform small rituals to predict the location of a target. She can also put herself in a self-induced hypnotism for a temporary, powerful intuition ability to sense any danger or great misfortune in the near future. But her greatest ritual involves human sacrifice, where she can call upon the gods to temporarily boost the parameters of her and her allies. The greater the sacrifice, the stronger are the effects. But as she is only considered to be an "average" priestess, Xin's ritual brings only up to B-rank maximum on all parameters no matter how large the sacrifice is.
The sacrificial ritual can be done in the very battlefield. Though the effects are not as great as it should be, it is very flexible and fitting for Xin who is a front line fighter.
PERSONALITY:
ALIGNMENT:
NEUTRAL EVIL.
BRIEF PERSONALITY: Xin is very lighthearted, laughing at jibes rather than be affronted, even if there were slanders against her character. It seems like she is hardly ever serious, adapting her posthumous name, casually reasoning that it was only fitting for someone who was already dead. She knows herself very well. There is the glimmer of confidence and majesty about her. She holds herself regally and moves gracefully as if she were in a dance. But her speech is casual; there is a connection that makes it possible to reach with someone as glamorous as her.
But this dazzling light about Xin is a riddle of unknown danger. She knows others well too, and she is not afraid to manipulate them. Xin has only been ever loyal to her husband and son. She has no qualms disregarding the lives of others for her own cause. Though it is rationality that drives her to commit atrocities, she also takes satisfaction on them. Deep inside her, there is a strong lust for blood, an extreme form of adrenaline shaped with the need for violence.
Her pursuits are selfish. She carefully treads to them and though she takes excitement in fighting, Xin does not take unnecessary risks and so hardly goes to extreme means. She can be negotiated with, but hardly trusted. But should her favour be won, she will be a hard-working, dedicated ally who will put her own interest behind.
LEGEND:
Not much is known about Lady Fu Hao. Her existence was first uncovered by the studying of oracle bones, which wished for her good health an childbirth. When her tomb was excavated, archaeologists were delighted to see that it has not been ransacked. Through these discoveries, it became a definite proof that Lady Hao was the first ever woman general of China.
She was one of the 60 wives of King Wu Ding, who cultivated alliances with neighbouring tribes by marrying one woman from each. One of those was Lady Hao, who took advantage of the semi-matriarchal slave society to climb up the ranks. She began by providing the king accurate divination, a skill inherent from her tribe, with the use of oracle bones. She predicted the weather, determined enemy attacks, and read the fortune of the royal family. Although merely one of the many priestesses under the king, Lady Hao upped her competitors by performing rituals to assure good fortune and strength for the kingdom.
Initially, Lady Hao only intended to secure herself some power for a steady life of luxury but she soon fell in love with the king and decided to give all of herself to him. She proved herself further by participating in warfare. Lady Hao was insightful in that she entered the world of men calculatingly and slowly, knowing that if she were rash, she would lose favour from her husband and be ridiculed. To convince him to allow her into the military circle, she said that she would be able to decipher the future better if she were present during councils.
Once was the only chance she would get and it was all that she needed. Under such guise, she was able to inject ideas into the generals. Her effort was expertly subtle, but it did not wholly go unnoticed. They received her presence well and they gave word to the king to continue allowing her to join. Lady Hao then twisted her predictions so as to make the king believe that it would be necessary to have her in the front lines to make certain of victory. Once in the field, Lady Hao went all out, using the words of a diviner to boost the moral of the soldiers while being an example of a warrior herself. Having brought the king many victories and good fortune, she won his full confidence and was entrusted with rituals, such as offerings to the gods and their ancestors, tasks that were reserved for the king.
With the king being a reputable man in the kingdom and having such king's trust, it wasn't long before Lady Hao would also have the people's confidence. She led many military campaigns, where she would defeat the Shang's arch nemesis, the Tu-Fang, in one decisive battle, and engage in the earliest recorded, large-scale ambush in China. She was given fiefdoms at the borders to repel and invade foreigners. Lady Hao was the most powerful military leader of her time.
In pursuit of Lady Hao's supernatural talent, King Wu Ding sought to lengthen Lady Hao's lifespan, but her health deteriorated and she died before him. Lady Hao was only in her thirties, but she had smiled and laughed like an old woman who have already seen and felt the joys and pain of what life could offer. Her husband made a huge ceremony in her honour and buried her with treasures, including objects she had collected herself for her burial.
-------------
skill parameters
▲ strength: D
▲ endurance: D
▲ agility: C
▲ mana: B+
class skills
▲ Magic Resistance: E
▲ Riding: B
▲ Territory Creation: B
personal skills
▲ Charisma: B
▲ Chinese Martial Arts: A
▲ High-Speed Divine Words: C
TRUE NAME:
Lady Fu Hao, posthumously named Mu Xin.
CLASS:
...ANOTHER CASTER....but she wields an axe!
CONTRACT:
N/A.
ENABLE PVP DEATH?:
Yes.
CANON:
N/A.
OOC NAME:
Chapel.
FACECLAIM:
FIRE EMBLEM, sanaki kirsch altina.
NOBLE PHANTASM:
NAME OF PHANTASM:
Shengjicui
PHANTASM CLASS:
Anti-unit.
RANK OF PHANTASM:
C++
DESCRIPTION: Xin was fond of collecting. Her treasuries were buried with her in a tomb that wouldn't be uncovered until 1976. Besides jades, potteries, and cowries (currency at that time), she had over a hundred of weapons with her, including battle axes, the symbol of her martial strength. She can make use of any weapons in her collection as a Noble Phantasm.
Besides using the weapons in her collection, Xin can add more. If she were to get her hands on it, Xin can steal the weapon and use it. Due to the limitation of Xin's powers, she can only take Noble Phantasms that are equal or lower than her phantasm's rank. If the weapon were wielded or owned by a man, Xin may be able to wield it for a period of time though she cannot add it to her collection (if a Noble Phantasm, it would be regardless of the phantasm's rank.)
Though she may be able to wield some Noble Phantasms, she is not the rightful owner and so cannot draw out their full power.
NAME OF PHANTASM:
Xiongwei De Xinxin
PHANTASM CLASS:
Anti-unit.
RANK OF PHANTASM:
B
DESCRIPTION: Xin was a capable diviner and priestess. Being a collector, Xin has great knowledge of various materials, though her favourite had always been human bones and blood. She used her background as a priestess to make her soldiers more confident with the odds of a battle. They believed they were being guided by the gods and had their protection and strength. Although Xin believed she had such power, she did not think herself to be a very competent priestess for their victories to be solely attributed to the divine.
Given the proper materials, Xin can perform small rituals to predict the location of a target. She can also put herself in a self-induced hypnotism for a temporary, powerful intuition ability to sense any danger or great misfortune in the near future. But her greatest ritual involves human sacrifice, where she can call upon the gods to temporarily boost the parameters of her and her allies. The greater the sacrifice, the stronger are the effects. But as she is only considered to be an "average" priestess, Xin's ritual brings only up to B-rank maximum on all parameters no matter how large the sacrifice is.
The sacrificial ritual can be done in the very battlefield. Though the effects are not as great as it should be, it is very flexible and fitting for Xin who is a front line fighter.
PERSONALITY:
ALIGNMENT:
NEUTRAL EVIL.
BRIEF PERSONALITY: Xin is very lighthearted, laughing at jibes rather than be affronted, even if there were slanders against her character. It seems like she is hardly ever serious, adapting her posthumous name, casually reasoning that it was only fitting for someone who was already dead. She knows herself very well. There is the glimmer of confidence and majesty about her. She holds herself regally and moves gracefully as if she were in a dance. But her speech is casual; there is a connection that makes it possible to reach with someone as glamorous as her.
But this dazzling light about Xin is a riddle of unknown danger. She knows others well too, and she is not afraid to manipulate them. Xin has only been ever loyal to her husband and son. She has no qualms disregarding the lives of others for her own cause. Though it is rationality that drives her to commit atrocities, she also takes satisfaction on them. Deep inside her, there is a strong lust for blood, an extreme form of adrenaline shaped with the need for violence.
Her pursuits are selfish. She carefully treads to them and though she takes excitement in fighting, Xin does not take unnecessary risks and so hardly goes to extreme means. She can be negotiated with, but hardly trusted. But should her favour be won, she will be a hard-working, dedicated ally who will put her own interest behind.
LEGEND:
Not much is known about Lady Fu Hao. Her existence was first uncovered by the studying of oracle bones, which wished for her good health an childbirth. When her tomb was excavated, archaeologists were delighted to see that it has not been ransacked. Through these discoveries, it became a definite proof that Lady Hao was the first ever woman general of China.
She was one of the 60 wives of King Wu Ding, who cultivated alliances with neighbouring tribes by marrying one woman from each. One of those was Lady Hao, who took advantage of the semi-matriarchal slave society to climb up the ranks. She began by providing the king accurate divination, a skill inherent from her tribe, with the use of oracle bones. She predicted the weather, determined enemy attacks, and read the fortune of the royal family. Although merely one of the many priestesses under the king, Lady Hao upped her competitors by performing rituals to assure good fortune and strength for the kingdom.
Initially, Lady Hao only intended to secure herself some power for a steady life of luxury but she soon fell in love with the king and decided to give all of herself to him. She proved herself further by participating in warfare. Lady Hao was insightful in that she entered the world of men calculatingly and slowly, knowing that if she were rash, she would lose favour from her husband and be ridiculed. To convince him to allow her into the military circle, she said that she would be able to decipher the future better if she were present during councils.
Once was the only chance she would get and it was all that she needed. Under such guise, she was able to inject ideas into the generals. Her effort was expertly subtle, but it did not wholly go unnoticed. They received her presence well and they gave word to the king to continue allowing her to join. Lady Hao then twisted her predictions so as to make the king believe that it would be necessary to have her in the front lines to make certain of victory. Once in the field, Lady Hao went all out, using the words of a diviner to boost the moral of the soldiers while being an example of a warrior herself. Having brought the king many victories and good fortune, she won his full confidence and was entrusted with rituals, such as offerings to the gods and their ancestors, tasks that were reserved for the king.
With the king being a reputable man in the kingdom and having such king's trust, it wasn't long before Lady Hao would also have the people's confidence. She led many military campaigns, where she would defeat the Shang's arch nemesis, the Tu-Fang, in one decisive battle, and engage in the earliest recorded, large-scale ambush in China. She was given fiefdoms at the borders to repel and invade foreigners. Lady Hao was the most powerful military leader of her time.
In pursuit of Lady Hao's supernatural talent, King Wu Ding sought to lengthen Lady Hao's lifespan, but her health deteriorated and she died before him. Lady Hao was only in her thirties, but she had smiled and laughed like an old woman who have already seen and felt the joys and pain of what life could offer. Her husband made a huge ceremony in her honour and buried her with treasures, including objects she had collected herself for her burial.
-------------
skill parameters
▲ strength: D
▲ endurance: D
▲ agility: C
▲ mana: B+
class skills
▲ Magic Resistance: E
▲ Riding: B
▲ Territory Creation: B
personal skills
▲ Charisma: B
▲ Chinese Martial Arts: A
▲ High-Speed Divine Words: C
She's a pretty blank slate char. I'm open to all ideas. I do think that Good or Neutral characters would work better with her. You don't have to be a extraordinary Master. You can be an extraordinary Master. Go with what you want. I want to have fun and experience stuff with people. Especially new people.