Mukuro Ikusaba (
corpsewarblade) wrote in
avalononline2021-08-27 01:18 pm
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Entry tags:
- danganronpa: mukuro ikusaba,
- dc comics: stephanie brown,
- fate/go: izo,
- fate/go: kadoc zemlupus,
- fate/go: oda kipposhi,
- fe3h: byleth eisner,
- fe3h: claude von riegan,
- final fantasy xiv: emet-selch,
- genshin impact: childe,
- gintama: toshirou hijikata,
- hellsing: walter c. dornez,
- little fires everywhere: izzy richardson,
- star wars: mitth'raw'nuruodo,
- suisei no gargantia: ledo,
- the elder scrolls: finn onaru,
- the secret world: lee jongdae
Ninth: A Tactical Decision (Text; anon)
(TW: Murder/Sororicide, Betrayal, DR Spoilers)
[The last few months had given Mukuro a lot to think about- especially with regard to her own death back home. One part still didn't make any sense to her:
What had she done wrong? Why had Junko killed her?
...It was with those thoughts swimming around in her head that she sent another late night message to the network.]
27 AUG XX, 0324
Reviewing the strategy from a recent battle at home. I want to understand the rational for the decisions taken.
A soldier is engaged in a stealth/undercover mission. However, they have made a mistake that risks the operation's success, and have not realised their error.
The mission commander is in a position to eliminate the operative to preserve their mission, without exposing themselves in the process.
Is that course of action reasonable? To put it another way- under what circumstances would you consider sacrificing one of your own men to ensure a mission's success or to prevent it's failure?
Don't feel you have to answer.
🔪
[The last few months had given Mukuro a lot to think about- especially with regard to her own death back home. One part still didn't make any sense to her:
What had she done wrong? Why had Junko killed her?
...It was with those thoughts swimming around in her head that she sent another late night message to the network.]
27 AUG XX, 0324
Reviewing the strategy from a recent battle at home. I want to understand the rational for the decisions taken.
A soldier is engaged in a stealth/undercover mission. However, they have made a mistake that risks the operation's success, and have not realised their error.
The mission commander is in a position to eliminate the operative to preserve their mission, without exposing themselves in the process.
Is that course of action reasonable? To put it another way- under what circumstances would you consider sacrificing one of your own men to ensure a mission's success or to prevent it's failure?
Don't feel you have to answer.
🔪
no subject
Where I'm from people don't come back after they've been killed but that would add an additional complication onto planning a mission strategy. Is return to active duty immediate? Are there any lasting side-effects of revival?
A commander would have to make decisions like that so I can see why you never reached that rank.
But you're right. You know if something goes wrong or you mess up then you're the one to blame.
no subject
oh yeah
sorry lol
so like where i come from
there's this big like uhhh
god machine i guess
called gaia
and sometimes shit happens
like cosmic eldritch next level shit
and gaia needs a little help to not get uh
like what the fuck destroyed or idek
bad
so it sends out these bees like literal bees except they're sorta machines too
anyway u swallow one and u get magical anima powers
ta dah
also it makes you hella immortal
you kinda
get rebuilt by the bees
i mean i guess the worst you get is
remembering you died
experiencing it
fucks some people up i tell u what
but physically its fine there's no real side effects
as far as anybody knows
but this is why anyone who has power in the world is like
GOTTA HAVE SOME OF THOSE
i bet i coulda got scouted by like
the illuminati lmao
only i'm like
under contract
no subject
Having something that could make you functionally immortal would be beneficial in a combat engagement.
But if people remembered dying that would increase the trauma response as you said.
...I wouldn't want to swallow a bee either.