I had a gander at the three options as I walked.
Option I — Subterranean Reserve (Lv. 1)The earth rembers what it is given.
Effect: 10 Maximum AP.
Passive: Excess AP does not decay while standing on natural stone, soil, or worked masonry.
Option II — Stone-Answered Guard (Lv. 1)
Every strike t becos strength returned.
Effect: Gain 1 AP for each successful parry or block.
Overflow: AP gained this way may exceed Max AP by up to 5 (temporary).
Decay: Overflow AP drains after combat.
Option III — Lithic Anchoring (Lv. 1)
What stands firm may draw upon the deep.
Effect: During combat, when you remain stationary for 3 consecutive seconds, gain 1 AP per second until you move.
Cap: Cannot generate more than 10 AP per encounter this way.
Breaks on: Forced movent, knockback, or leaving solid ground.
Okay. So these were all coherent. Worryingly so.
At a base level, all of them made sense. That, I suspected, was the point. Each one addressed a real limitation I had already run headfirst into, and each one promised a way to turn the earth itself into leverage rather than background scenery. The problem wasn’t identifying which was useful. It was figuring out which one would still matter after the novelty wore off.
That alone was not enough to choose. The real question wasn’t which one was best now, but what choosing one would an later. It was about whether this was a fork in the road or rely the first stone laid, and whether picking one would quietly bar the others, or if the system would allow to pursue all three in ti.
I did not like irreversible decisions made without full information.
So I asked Ceralis.
The reply arrived without delay.
[Foundational Boon System Initialized]
Foundational Boons define long-term growth vectors.
Selecting a Foundation establishes a Growth Path.
The next Growth Path option will appear during next choice
Other Foundations remain available until acquired
Foundational Boons may be leveled from Lv.1 to Lv.10
No Foundation is exclusive
The earth supports many pillars. You may raise them all... eventually.
That... helped.
Not because it made the choice easier, but because it told this wasn’t a question of who I would beco, only what I would build first.
Stone-Answered Guard was seductive in a very specific way. On paper, it rewarded competence: et force with force, be precise, be disciplined, and the system would pay back. The issue was that competence was not sothing I could assu under pressure. A ‘successful’ parry still ant being in the right place, at the right ti, with the right angle, and not getting my arms torn off in the process. My dexterity and form wasn’t good enough. Building my foundation on sothing I couldn’t yet do reliably felt like asking the earth to catch before I learned how to fall.
Lithic Anchoring was worse. Imnsely powerful in the abstract, catastrophically conditional in practice. Standing still for three seconds in a real fight was brave and unfortunately stupid. Too many things shoved, pulled, detonated, or redefined ‘ground’ altogether. I survived by moving, by staying just out of reach, by refusing to let anything get a clean line on . Anchoring myself ran directly counter to that.
Which left the first option.
Subterranean Reserve didn’t care how well I parried. It didn’t demand I stand my ground or gamble on ideal conditions. It just... worked. More AP, always. That mattered.
Still, the unease lingered. These weren’t skills. They were foundations. Picking wrong here didn’t an a bad fight; it ant a bad future. And that future, inconveniently, was not one I controlled alone.
Too much of my recent growth had been contingent on Anabeth. She was brilliant, unpredictable, and perpetually in motion, and I had no illusions about our paths being permanently aligned. People like her didn’t stay. They intersected, briefly and intensely, and then moved on.
This ant my opportunities to aningfully engage with these pathway-based boons were likely to be limited. I couldn’t assu ideal conditions or prolonged campaigns. I couldn’t plan around stability when my closest constant was soone defined by transience. Whatever I chose needed to justify itself imdiately and without ceremony, because there was no guarantee I’d be given enough chances to make the wrong choice pay off later.
I could feel the familiar itch of analysis crawling over as I leaned against the shadowed wall, peering at the tiny display Ceralis spat out. The devil was in the details. The numbers mattered. I had to know exactly what each level would give , not just the first taste at Lv.1.
I tapped through the interface, scrolling the projected data with precise care. Subterranean Reserve, Stone-Answered Guard, Lithic Anchoring—every one had a breakdown of what growth would look like at each stage. It wasn’t vague, it wasn’t abstract; each level had a concrete AP increase, a cap, or a passive modifier.
Option I — Subterranean Reserve
The earth rembers what it is given.
Lv.1 — 10 Max AP
Lv.2 — 14
Lv.3 — 18
Lv.4 — 22
Lv.5 — 26
Lv.6 — 30
Lv.7 — 34
Lv.8 — 38
Lv.9 — 42
Lv.10 — 46
Passive: Excess AP does not decay while standing on natural stone, soil, or worked masonry.
For Subterranean Reserve, it was simple and steady: 10 Max AP at Lv.1, and 4 more for every subsequent level. It was reliable and predictable, but once I looked at the other options, I realized it was far outscaled by the other skills.
Option II — Stone-Answered Guard (Lv.1–10)
Every strike t becos strength returned.
Decay: Overflow AP drains after combat.
Stone-Answered Guard revealed the kind of raw potential that could explode if I ever managed to parry consistently, but the numbers scread “conditional.” Lv.1 gave 1 AP per parry, overflow capped at 10, climbing steadily to 10 AP per parry with a 60 overflow at Lv.10. There was power here, but only if I could actually pull it off, and my parries were notoriously sloppy.
Option III — Lithic Anchoring (Lv.1–10)
What stands firm may draw upon the deep.
Breaks on: Movent, knockback, leaving solid ground.
Lithic Anchoring looked like a beast for careful, immobile builds: 1 AP per second for 3 seconds stationary at Lv.1, capping at 10, ramping all the way to 10 AP per second with a 100 AP cap at Lv.10. That was ridiculous output, but to leverage it, I’d have to actually stand still in combat, which was rarely an option with monsters like these, or with Anabeth running interference.
I leaned closer to the projection. Ceralis’ interface didn’t just stop at Lv.10, but it allowed a glimpse beyond, a window into the next boon in the path. Subterranean Reserve, it seed, wasn’t just a flat AP booster. Its progeny were designed to deepen the bond with the stone beneath my feet, to turn a simple foundation into a bulwark.
Next Tier Boon Preview (Lv.1–10)
Option I.2 — Resonant Stone (Lv.1)
Every strike resonates through the bedrock, feeding strength to those who wield it.
Effect: 1 STR, 1 END, Weapon attacks gain 5% damage when using blunt or stone-crafted weapons
Passive: Small chance (5%) to restore 1 AP per hit
Growth (Lv.2–10): 1% weapon damage per level, 0.5% AP return per hit per level (Lv.10 = 14% damage, 9% AP return per hit), 1 STR & 1 END per 2 levels
Option II.2 — Bedrock Bastion (Lv.1)
The earth holds steady for those who respect it.
Effect: 2 END, 5% END for armor and shields
Passive: Reduces damage taken from knockback, push, or shove attacks by 10%
Growth (Lv.2–10): 1% Endurance per level, 1% Knockback reduction per level (Lv.10 = 14% END, 19% knockback reduction), 1 END per level
Option II.3 — Earthbound Reflex (Lv.1)
Even when still, the stone itself can anticipate a blow.
Effect: 1 PER, 1 RES, 3% chance to automatically resist knockdowns while standing on stone or soil
Passive: Give your attacks 1% Knockdown potential per second stationary during an encounter (max 15%)
Growth (Lv.2–10): Base 0.5% resistance per level, stationary bonus scales proportionally (Lv.10 = 7% base max 20% stationary); 1 PER & 1 RES per 2 levels
I scrolled through the next tier of boons, and for the first ti, the logic behind the system hit in a way that was almost humorous. Stone-Answered Guard had started as purely defensive—gain AP for parries—but its follow-ups doubled down on that philosophy instead of abandoning it. Bedrock Bastion took the act of eting force head-on and turned it into endurance, stability, and resistance to being moved at all.
Funny, in a way that made suspect whichever Saint had designed this was a sadist, but at least a consistent one.
Then I looked at Lithic Anchoring’s next tier. That was when my chest tightened. Resonance. Real, raw, untapped resonance. My RES stat had been sitting at zero since the day I was born. But here, the boons weren’t just giving AP—they were giving the lifeblood I didn’t know I needed. Standing still, anchoring to the earth, drawing on the natural bedrock... every second I committed to it would feed my resonance. With RES, I could finally activate the dormant functions of my weapons. I could eventually start tapping into the kinds of spells the real magi took for granted, the ones I’d only ever observed from the sidelines.
It was staggering to consider. Subterranean Reserve was reliable and safe, yes, but Lithic Anchoring was a literal key to growth in ways I hadn’t even dread of. Standing still in combat might be dangerous, but the earth itself seed to hint that so risks had outsized rewards.
I chewed on the logic. Subterranean Reserve would make slightly stronger right away. Stone-Answered Guard might reward if I learned to parry like a proper knight. But RES... resonance unlocked everything else. Did it matter if I could use Static Surge two more tis? I reckoned not. That alone wouldn’t make remarkable. But RES would let beco remarkable eventually.
I picked Lithic Anchoring the exact mont I returned to the spot where I last hid my Aetheric Parasitic Resonance Detector. It was still there, behind the ragged cloth I’d half-heartedly draped across it. The little device looked almost smug in its stillness, as if it knew I’d been worrying over nothing. I brushed the cloth aside, grabbed it, then confird the final choice.
Lithic Anchoring — Lv.1 (Selected)
Now I must hurry. At this rate, Anabeth would return before I did.
But of course, the mont one earnestly wished to be quick, the world took it as a personal challenge.
I heard a clinking sound.
Reviews
All reviews (0)