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[RWBY] RWBY Shorts

Gur40goku said:
So Jaune loses a sister to a petty theft and never tells his dad he let the guy go leading to his sister death, but does tell his dad he killed the guy?

How does this Jaune react to Roman capturing Ruby in Mt Glenn?

AndrewJTalon said:


He tries to... Nick figures out Jaune killed the guy. This is why he tries to train him to be a Huntsman, to focus his anger on protecting others. But Jaune can't tell him how he failed. How this is all his fault. Even though Nick wouldn't blame Jaune, Jaune will blame himself.

And Jaune is going to go apeshit over Roman capturing Ruby. This is his trauma button pushed down all the way.



you-know-you-are-in-trouble-when-spider-man-stops-talking-v0-arn64mszgerd1.jpeg
 
Just had a not ok idea.

Not feeling great so not gonna try to snip it but basically idea here


Ozpin watching and mentoring some of his students.

Closely mentoring two of them, ends up becoming friends with them.

Recruits them to the Salem fight. Few years of saving each other's lives and co-operation.

Duo get married and drop out of the fight because they're expecting a kid.

Let's say kid is 5. Ozpin dies. Wakes up his usual soul graft with the kid.


How do you tell your best friends that you're killing their son and there's nothing anyone can do?
 
The goblet of fire has two extra functions. The first and most well-known one is that the goblet shows a memory of the champions to show why, out of all the candidates, they were chosen.

The second, but forgotten one, is a failsafe against cheating. When all champions learn of a task before it begins, the goblet instead places them in a simulated world made from the knowledge of the judges and the champions, both past and present. The simulation is not limited to just three tasks, but to the entire world, with each moment passed the simulation getting harder and deadlier until only one remains, something that may take years in the simulation, but never has a champion survived that long. Nor does the goblet limit itself to the magical world; it takes from the non-magical world as well. That is the true horror of the simulation: the goblet keeps it realistic. If there is a slight possibility of something happening in the real world, it will happen in the simulation, just at a more escalated pace.

The champions are unaware that they have been placed in a simulation; to them, it is real.

The simulation does not kill the champions, something that many consider a cruel mercy. Instead, when a champion dies in the simulation, the world around them vanishes, and they are cast out. They awake in the real world, physically whole but mentally scarred, with faint scars from the worst injuries they endured — especially the one that killed them. There is no way to return to the simulation. The Goblet of Fire's judgment is not cyclical; it is definitive. Once they've died, the trial is over, no second chances.

All the while, the audiences can do nothing but watch the simulation. The goblet is not cruel, it is not kind. It judges.

Does anyone know how it might fit RWBY?
I'm thinking something like a semblance or a holodeck, but other than that I got no idea.
 
The goblet of fire has two extra functions. The first and most well-known one is that the goblet shows a memory of the champions to show why, out of all the candidates, they were chosen.

The second, but forgotten one, is a failsafe against cheating. When all champions learn of a task before it begins, the goblet instead places them in a simulated world made from the knowledge of the judges and the champions, both past and present. The simulation is not limited to just three tasks, but to the entire world, with each moment passed the simulation getting harder and deadlier until only one remains, something that may take years in the simulation, but never has a champion survived that long. Nor does the goblet limit itself to the magical world; it takes from the non-magical world as well. That is the true horror of the simulation: the goblet keeps it realistic. If there is a slight possibility of something happening in the real world, it will happen in the simulation, just at a more escalated pace.

The champions are unaware that they have been placed in a simulation; to them, it is real.

The simulation does not kill the champions, something that many consider a cruel mercy. Instead, when a champion dies in the simulation, the world around them vanishes, and they are cast out. They awake in the real world, physically whole but mentally scarred, with faint scars from the worst injuries they endured — especially the one that killed them. There is no way to return to the simulation. The Goblet of Fire's judgment is not cyclical; it is definitive. Once they've died, the trial is over, no second chances.

All the while, the audiences can do nothing but watch the simulation. The goblet is not cruel, it is not kind. It judges.

Does anyone know how it might fit RWBY?
I'm thinking something like a semblance or a holodeck, but other than that I got no idea.
What about making that the power of the crown?

A simulation where all your choices effect the world.
 
How do you tell your best friends that you're killing their son and there's nothing anyone can do?

Would Explain were the technique to submerge himself in the subconscious came from when he did it for Oscar

That is a skill you need for a very specific reason and making sure not to 'immediately' absorb you friends child sounds about right


What about making that the power of the crown?

A simulation where all your choices effect the world.
So both a lotus-eater/matrix style ?

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MOS192DUNI
 

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