> The contents of this section were crafted by a true [Forger]. So long as sufficient power is provided, all listed Skills may be attained without time or count limits.
Excited as she was to get to the Skills, Malwine still took note of the text that preceded them. The [Forger] thing again.
Just what the hell were those? All she knew still was what she just confirmed—they had abilities somehow related to Skills.
She delved back into the text.
> Before anything else, take note of the rarity of the first Skill which you manifested. It will most likely be a Common, and most of this text works around that assumption, but should you have attained an Uncommon, that is a boon and a curse by itself. Though you have been educated in the matter, it would be wise to revisit the subject for certainty’s sake.
>
> Should your first Skill have been Common, recall you should limit yourself to choosing Skills of Common, Uncommon, Normal, and Rare rarities. If your Skill is Uncommon, there are two paths you could head down. One is riskier than the other. Should you choose to attain Common Skills, you will limit yourself in the same manner as though your first Skill had been a Common.
>
> The alternative would be for you to never choose a Common at all. This will make your range fall into Uncommon, Normal, Rare, and Epic rarities. This will also mean you may never get many Skills that would be helpful, if not outright required by, your future education.
>
> Whether Epic Skills are worth it to you is something only you could tell. Simply remember the consequences of going out of balance. You could survive getting an Epic outside your range just as you could survive getting a Common, but the weight will negatively impact your Skill growth, not only for that category, but for all others.
>
> Effects may take a long time to manifest, but a Skill too far deviated from your range will grow beyond the bounds of the others, especially if you give it a Trait, an Aspect, or worse yet, both. The Class category you place a Skill of high rarity into will outshine the others, slowing down the progress of the Skills there. The same applies in reverse, as it would drag the Class category down, to be pushed down by its counterparts.
>
> Imbalance exists even within your range, but that is why it is called such. It is the range of imbalance that your Classes can bear without having their potential crushed. The difference in weight scales linearly as rarities progress, though all attempts to quantify it have failed.
>
> You can always improve the rarity of a Skill, steep as the cost may be, but you will never be able to do the opposite. Whichever choice you make, ensure it is one you are certain you will stand by.
In some ways, it was a rehash of what Alaric had told her. Granted, at her age, she wouldn’t have known of this without being nosy… though her little uncle had neglected to mention the penalty applied to categories.
That made her take it considerably more seriously.
So what you’re saying is… I fucked up, basically. I could have worked out a better range around Epic. Maybe not with it as the lowest—definitely not—but, I could have skipped Uncommon and Normal. I could have just gone for Rare and up.
Malwine winced. She’d basically made her range the same someone starting with an Uncommon would have. Somehow, she had to push [Meditation] up. She had to figure out how to evolve it. No matter the cost.
She expected to find the Skills then and there, but instead she found yet another warning. Her [Remote Reading] usually focused on transferring the text over, so much that she would only notice details about the page itself if they were overt, but in this case, something was obvious.
Red lines were drawn on each side of the warning, pointing at it, and the last line even bore that color. Apparently, even the people of this world knew how to make ominous text stand out properly.
> As a young noble lady, your education has undoubtedly been focused on management and scholarship. Though you may wish to immediately attain Skills that mesh well with your Skill-less capacities, you should first consider the following.
>
> You will always have people, be it guards or servants, capable of protecting you. That does not guarantee that they will. As such, though your impulses may tempt you not to, you should select at least one of the following for each category.
>
> May you never need to use them.
To Malwine’s surprise, they were formatted as a table—not unlike how the words in the manuscript she had recently been browsing.
What differed, however, was how immediately upon her focusing on that section, a panel appeared before her.
Under the
category:[Toughness]
Common
Passive Skill that applies a hidden bonus to your Endurance based on its current Skill level. Levels through Endurance's growth from usage.
[Handheld Weaponry]
Uncommon
Skill that increases control and proficiency for weapons that fit within the palm of your hand. Levels through practice in the usage of said weapons. Note: This is a combat Skill.
[Damage Reflection]
Uncommon
Passive Skill that returns a percentage of all damage dealt to you to the source of the damage, capped at 100%. Levels through usage.
[Dodging]
Uncommon
Passive Skill that applies a large hidden bonus to your Speed and Dexterity whenever you are under attack. Levels through usage.
[Self-Defense]
Rare
Skill that increases your ability to deflect and counter attacks to your person. Levels through practice with defending yourself. Note: This is not a combat Skill.
[Shieldwork]
Rare
Skill to create spherical shields around yourself, or around parts of you. Note: This Skill requires a Root to use, as it accrues either [Toll] to sustain itself, or inflicts a heavier [Integrity] penalty for damage absorbed while [Toll] is unavailable.
Wow, Malwine gaped at it. Hey, [Once and Forever], you could learn a thing or two from this. Look at it, nicely formatted and everything!
Though she knew more options for the other categories awaited, she decided to consider the ones for
first.[Toughness] wasn’t particularly appealing. None of Malwine’s own Skills told her specifically how to level them—if only [The Things We Do For Family] did!—but she suspected none of them would require her to raise an attribute like this.
And Endurance did not sound fun to raise, unless she managed to get herself some sort of regeneration ability at minimum.
But worse of all, the Skill was Common.
Though she certainly did appreciate the book mentioning how these Skills were meant to be leveled.
Malwine was also quick to dismiss [Handheld Weaponry] for petty—arguably dumb—reasons. She really wanted that magical whip. She certainly wouldn’t be a cowboy rogue-bard in this life, but she would stick to her principles, and those principles somehow included wholehearted belief in the existence of whips that doubled as universal tools.
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For similar reasons to her dismissal of [Toughness], [Damage Reflection] outright required her to take damage. She didn’t even want to find out how that was quantified.
[Dodging] was simply lackluster. Just a hidden bonus, specifically while under attack? She might have considered it—if briefly—had it been a constant thing, but the Skill was just bad as it was.
That one was also thrown out immediately.
Okay, how is [Self-Defense] not a combat Skill? Malwine glared at it for a moment. It seemed like a strange distinction to make for a Skill that was literally about countering attacks.
Then again, it was clearly meant for defense. Was this perhaps what the table’s creator—the [Forger]—who put it there meant?
Malwine frowned. It was a useful Skill, but that… It wasn’t as tempting as she expected it to be when she saw that very same Skill on OBeryl’s, even if it made sense.
It wasn’t as exciting, she supposed. And again, she might have been reaching that conclusion out of pettiness. She would undoubtedly have to fight, in this life, with as many enemies as her grandmother and mother clearly had. Enemies she had all but inherited.
[Self-Defense] could be useful, but it felt like settling.
Malwine wished for more.
[Shieldwork] sounded far better, yet it reminded her of the problem that perpetually loomed over her—the curse. Her [Toll] was crippled to a ridiculous degree. Someone with 4.6k [Toll] could probably use that Skill at leisure.
But Malwine didn’t have 4.6k [Toll], not in practice.
She wanted to grumble, to kick things. An impulse born of that anger she’d once been so quick to, once upon a time in a life that no longer was. She buried it, just as she had back then.
My [Integrity] is still good, though…
She could pay for it that way, could she not? It would clearly not be optimal—the phrasing made it sound as though the cost was greater for it—but it could work.
She could have [Shieldwork].
No, she would. The curse might be a problem for now, but she refused to let it make her hold herself back.
It would not be a problem forever.
As such, Malwine added it to her list, even if it did mean she'd have to plant a second Root soon.
She wasn’t a complete idiot—though she doubted it would get to that point from a book meant for literal children, Malwine didn’t want to immediately start filling up Skill slots.
Not even for
.The next category came with only 5 Skills.
Under the
[Daze]
Common
Skill that allows you to disorient a target whose Resilience does not outweigh yours. Levels through usage.
[Mental Static]
Common
Skill which, at will, generates disruptions that will not affect you, but will hinder the work of anyone attempting to use intrusive
[Clarity]
Uncommon
Passive Skill that boosts your resistance to being deceived by
[Enhanced Memory]
Uncommon
Skill that enables you to lock in on a subject or event to memorize it with greater effectiveness, full extent to be determined by Skill level and your Resilience. Levels through usage.
[Mental Defense]
Rare
Passive Skill that enables you to bear and counteract attacks performed by
Oh, this sucks.
She wanted too many of them.
There was also a somewhat disturbing detail she couldn’t help but notice—more than one of those Skills referenced
So
Malwine frowned before her eyes widened. Oh.
That was not a comforting thought.
I can’t believe I’m saying this, but [Enhanced Memory] looks like it’s out.
Well, Malwine had her note-taking panels from [Write Anywhere] at the ready. That would have to do, even if the Skill refused to level, and she had learned the hard way that she could and would mess her own panels up.
Her eyes narrowed. Wait a minute…
Was her
Malwine summoned her Skills panel. The warning she’d read earlier spoke not only of rarities, but of Traits and Aspects as well. Both of which she had on her
She’d been so focused on the fact that [Write Anywhere] was Epic that she hadn’t considered how it might be outweighed in other ways. If whatever effect having both a Trait and Aspect caused to deserve the text calling it ‘worse yet’ applied here, then even her unranked Skills could be affecting it.
Leaning on her senses slightly, she focused on that vague imbalance she’d felt before, and strangely enough, she found it would line up. It wasn’t much, but her
It was a somewhat startling realization. Whenever she next got the chance to make or add a Trait to her Skills, she might find herself forced to give it to a Skill that wasn’t one of her Unranked ones… perhaps even just to one without an Aspect.
Malwine thought back to what the text said, the part that implied this imbalance of Skills and categories was not something that could be measured. Knowing where the line was drawn or how to calculate it would have been the only thing that could lessen her frustration, yet it was apparently impossible.
She looked back at the table before her—she had work to do. [Daze] and [Mental Static] were weak options even without accounting for the fact that she now knew she couldn’t take Commons. They were weak in general, as well. ‘Disorient’ was a vague description for an attack, and its dependence on the opponent’s attribute likely hindered its likelihood of success anyway.
The latter just sounded like it might slow an intrusion, or make it more difficult, but it seemingly did nothing to prevent or counter such a thing.
Subpar Skills. When did I get this judgmental about Skills? Though I guess pickiness is the right card to play here, anyway.
The picture the
[Clarity] and [Mental Defense] appeared to arguably do similar things, except [Mental Defense] was the vastly superior option. Not to mention the phrasing of this description for [Clarity] made it sound like it was meant to guard against deception specifically, while [Mental Defense] seemed to encompass attacks in general.
Then again, maybe deception doesn't count as an attack? OBeryl had had both Skills, after all.
If she had to choose just the one, [Mental Defense] would win any day. Still, the matter of why her great-grandmother had both Skills stuck with her.
Maybe I'll find out someday...
As far as these first two categories she’d browsed options were, Malwine found she remained fairly confident in her picks. Neither was perfect, and [Shieldwork] wouldn’t be working for her in optimal conditions for a long time, but they fit for her.
Malwine wished she could see how the party was going. How much more time did she have?
For how much longer would the books be where she knew them to be?
Of the two… there was one she wasn’t willing to miss out on.
Not at all.
You have attained the Forged Skill [Mental Defense]
We are never truly safe, not so long as our minds are not unassailable. This will not provide that, but it is a start. Your resistance to mental attacks, regardless of which attributes or Class backs them, will be greatly enhanced. Damage caused by mental attacks, depending on severity, will be either negated or mitigated. Effectiveness increased by both Skill level and Resilience. Resilience is boosted by, and contributes to the effectiveness of this Skill.
Interdependent to
Trait: None
Aspect: None
That’s some… nice wording, okay. Apparently, this being a Forged Skill was worth making the distinction over. The Skill itself was even stronger than she expected.
Malwine relaxed slightly. [Shieldwork], she could risk. If the books looked like they were moving, she would rush for it still, but for now, there were more options further along. Hopefully.
As she went to turn the page with her mental vision, Malwine found what appeared to beat footnote, with several lines to it.
> Endurance is the defense within
> Resilience is the defense within
> Adaptability is the defense within
> The defense within
Wait. Is this like a quiz or do even they not know?
Malwine found she was almost concerned for whenever she got to the
To be fair, out of Charisma, Luck, and Presence, I don’t know which I’d rely on to defend myself, either.
Probably none.
She pushed the already-fleeting concern out of her mind.
The next page awaited.