>>5341744“It isn't a BAD idea.” you correct, gesturing to the room. “But staying down on the bottom floor is. Her best bet would have been to cut them all down on the first floor with that kicking Death Slash she has, then leapt up to the top floor and done it again. Or if she were trying to conserve power, use her phantom as a shield to get up to the second floor immediately, and use it to cover her while cutting the ones up there down as swiftly as possible.”
“Those tanks seem rather slow to turn, so despite their power they are the least-threatening weapon in the room.” Raditz says, gesturing as she rushes into their midst and starts swinging her sword. The tanks are too slow to turn on her in time, allowing your daughter to cut a path of destruction through the middle of them. Which leaves the weapons all pointed at each other, instead of at the door like they were originally. Meanwhile the crossbow and gun wielders on the second floor are shooting away at her Pursuer, most of their shots glancing off of the phantom's heavy-seeming metal armor. Each swing of its spectral sword fells another machine, it moves methodically and without flare as each attack is the minimum movement necessary to inflict maximal damage. But some of the shots and bolts stick into the phantom, especially a ballista bolt the width of your forearm fired from the body of one across the room. It pierces clean through Chaya's phantom under its right arm as it draws back for a swing, staggering the spectral warrior for a couple seconds in which it is pelted by several other projectiles. “And her phantom warrior bound to that sword is powerful, but only against threats that it can face head-on. It is clearly far weaker to damage from the sides and back, where its bulky shield can't block.”
“Ohhh, I get it.” Caulifla says, understanding dawning. “She's underestimating them, and not thinking super strategic-er-ally!”
“Haha, basically kiddo.” you say, ruffling her hair as her mispronunciation brings a small grin to your face. But then her face scrunches up a bit as she has a thought, and after a moment mulling it over asks you.
“So why aren't you telling her to fix it?” she asks you seriously. “When we're all trainin', you always point out our mistakes so we can improve. So why aren't you tellin' her that now?”
Well? How do you answer her?
>She asked me to come watch her, not criticize her technique. If she wants my opinion on how she's fighting, she's old enough to ask>This isn't training, and she isn't trying to improve her technique. She's putting on a show for her fans, who want to see her show off with flashy moves>This is why Dreadzone isn't real war, unlike the one you all went on against the Hive. Ask her how did she fight back then, when you were fighting alongside her compared to now?>Other(write in)