>>6173224>A silent Willow gives malusescould be a thing...
>cheerleader timehopefully.
>Bradiamanteshe's a very nice character, and the story that revolves around her stars a much younger Stilladìa and helias, out to prove their mettle in a world that has yet to know how dangerous they are
it's tied to the snippet about Mouk Zelas last thread: when she first liberated the trade of Silt, as such infiltrating the Treviri Throne and setting up her very first political foothold, from which everything else would follow. Bradiamante and Ruggiero (who is the male MC in the story) have been instrumental to her rise and her first real success, so she is quite fond of them bothfeel free to read if you'd like! I'm especially proud of <span class="mu-i">Patina</span> the post-apoc webnovel but on the linked site there's all sort of short stories and one-shots. if you do, I hope you'll have a great time!
>turning my brain emptythe AnCap devil is cute! <span class="mu-s">cute!</span>
>>6173256>can't handle a slimenot if it gets into her hair, ewww
>a contract with a saintBradiamante is not a Saint, though. She is famous in the Thronelands and even elsewhere (Argia did know her) and she's considered the best skirmisher this side of the Holy Land, but she was not in league of Ansàrra. And correct, she was playing with the idea of using her if Carnaval felt like acting up. good work checking the archives anon
>she didn't give up her heart for poweroh, not at all
>>6173272>2 saints in the bagonly two?
>hinted to be Kishirra's loverno, that was Lugana Delebasse (same surname as your Master). Lugana died centuries before the Stilladìa came on the scene, so no chance to yoink her soul (her pokémon collection... forever ruined)
>Ansàrra didn't crack her skullsilly goddess doing silly things
>not looking good for ushave faith, anon
>>6173572I was thinking about time when writing it, though it wouldn't be the direct reference. good thinking tho anon!
>>6173411nay.
also,
Fate is cancer, save for my wife Saber who is perfect in every which way>>6173409That's where the name Bradiamante comes from! Or Bradamante, which is the most common variation.
To add some literature analysis to it, do you remember the scene where Eowyn takes off her helm revealing she is a woman? Well,
that scene and topos/trope, the reveal of the knight's actual sex, as well as the emphasis on her long blonde hair and usually her bright eyes, has its roots in Chivalry poetry starting in the 12-13th Century in Southern France, but the character/trope of the 'valiant Knight nobody can beat who is revealed to be a woman instead' really took Northern Italy by storm, and it became exceedingly popular, so much it started a rich oral tradition which then culminated in the two poems by Boiardo (<span class="mu-i">Orlando Innamorato</span> and Ariosto (<span class="mu-i">Orlando Furioso</span>), making the character even more popular.[cont.]