![]() ![]() These are all basic worm-like enemies you have fought before. Leshy will periodically summon minions to assist him in combat. Use Curses to damage Leshy during this attack and then move on once it is safe to do so. What it does do, however, is prevent immediate counterattacks. Since you are likely not near Leshy at this point, this attack is not a threat. This attack is easy to avoid as it tends to come out after Leshy has used another attack. Leshy rears back its head and slams it down three times. The attack moves slowly, so time your roll just when it is close and you will pass right through it. This attack is quite thick, but not thick enough to make rolling through it impossible. ![]() Leshy summons a ring of spikes around him and then pushes them out in an expanding wave. This attack does not come out instantly, and instead, has a clear telegraph followed by a delay in the star fully emerging. This attack takes up a large portion of the arena.ĭodge away. Leshy unleashes a large star of spikes that erupt from the earth surrounding him. This attack is telegraphed, and the landing zone for each orb is clearly marked. Leshy lets out a volley of globules that coat a large portion of the arena. Walking works well enough, although rolling is safer. Simply move out of the way to avoid this. In addition, Leshy will leave a trail of spikes that will deal damage on contact. Whilst underground, Leshy is invulnerable. eying this theory so hard YES the bit where Narinder be unfazed on how it would affect his siblings I Iike to think Nari be cool if his siblings lose their faith and followers becuz as long he stays in power…in control…he can do things his way and when you’re the last god standing…who can stop you rlly the others would hate him for a while…but what does it rlly matter in the grand scheme of things Narinder is death after all…and death is eternal ….Leshy buries underground and travels to a new location. And so the strife between Narinder and his siblings began.Īnd I like to think, in a complicated way, it’s one of the reasons why Narinder would have let go of his grudge after you complete the Resurrection ritual quest. Maybe, as far as Narinder was concerned, he had thought it through with his siblings in mind.īut Shamura had to choose between Narinder and their godhoods because power isn’t something you just let go of. If the crowns of his siblings starve and die, it will be fine because his siblings would still be alive (like what happened to Haro’s crown). If that meant he would be the last God left in the Lands of the Old Faith, then so be it. Sacrifices are no longer sacred and death as punishment is no longer consequential when pledging yourself to another god could bring them back.Īs one of the characters has said, a god is nothing without their flock.īut did Narinder care? No. ![]() Why contain death? If a god could resurrect, it spells bad to the other gods. When Narinder got bored, he created the Resurrection ritual that broke “ancient vow and primordial bond alike.” Traditions stagnate and appetites augment, nonetheless. Truly peculiar, ‘twould then seem, has appetency to invite the novel and the new, break ancient vow and primordial bond alike. And yet he was the inevitable the obstinate and irresistible. Things in which their constancy must transpose. While others dealt with flux chaos, famine, pestilence, war. When you have the Resurrection Ritual and Narinder asks you to resurrect someone, something about his line after finishing the quest caught my curiosity: ![]()
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