http://estaunsinterius.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] estaunsinterius.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] paixaorpg2009-03-10 10:26 pm

Bring It On (Active, Closed)

Character(s): Sephiroth, Tanaka Hajime
Content: A demonstration is in order.
Setting: J. R'handom Park (no, really; it's located in H6)
Time: Mid Afternoon, Early Week 3
Warnings: ...None yet.

Sephiroth felt rather dubious about this whole affair. He was there to meet a man he did not know, who had abilities he also did not know. This, in and of itself, was not a major issue. He'd done it countless times before.

What he felt dubious about, then, was not the meeting itself, but rather the nature of this man's abilities. He'd never had any particular use for cheerleaders; indeed, they were nearly nonexistant in Midgar, except at sporting events whose nature Sephiroth had never quite seen the point of. The fact that this one was supposedly capable of performing in such a way that it boosted one's performance measurably was what he found interesting - and a bit on the silly side, if he was being quite honest.

Still, he had said he would see this ability for himself. What else could he do but show up, and hope that he wasn't wasting his time.

[identity profile] upgrade2hat.livejournal.com 2009-03-11 08:01 am (UTC)(link)
He kept up his end of the work; his work rarely involved splitting his attention, but that was the idea. Tanaka wasn't backing down. There was something resembling relief, however, when Sephiroth finished. The cheerleader stepped back, crossing his arms behind him and catching his breath. He nodded back at the word of praise. "Dai sei ko," he replied.

Tanaka quirked his head for an instant at the question, before adjusting his glasses. "Spreading my attention is possible, and I have done it before. But smaller groups are preferred; the more there are, the less likely they are to be in sync with their goal." A small pause for breath. "Also, without the other members of my team here to work alongside me, I cannot be sure how far I can stretch my focus."