A string of matches followed—robots rolling, stalking, clambering, each with its own mad purpose. With every round, the crowd grew more heated, bodies pressed tight in the stands, a river of sweat and static and shouts. The air vibrated with tallic shrieks, the bass of distant speakers, and the coppery tang of ozone.
Suddenly, a buzzer blared—louder, more urgent. The battered overhead speaker crackled: “Final round! All bets closed. Combatants to the ring!”
The crowd surged, a living tide. Ray felt it rumbling up through the steel beneath his boots, chanting and pounding. “Widow! Widow!” grew into a guttural roar, the air alive with adrenaline and expectation.
From opposite ends, the combatants strode into the arena—no more scrap-pile bots, but armored titans, each over two ters tall. Kraken, all scorched plating and a battered skull insignia, stomped forward on piston-driven legs, red sensor eyes blazing, claws flexing for oil. It moved with savage certainty, each step a challenge.
Blue Widow entered on the far side—sleek, blue and chro, segnted visor aglow, a coiled tail-cable twitching behind. Her plasma-blade fingers hissed with barely controlled nace. Battle scars marred her shiny fra.
The announcer’s voice sliced through the noise: “Final match! House favorite—Kraken—versus Challenger—Blue Widow! Fight!”
The cage door slamd. The bots collided—steel on steel, thunder in the servos. Sparks. Smoke. Kraken lunged, claws slicing a molten line across Blue Widow’s chest. Widow spun, plasma blades searing, scoring armor and spraying tal. The stench of burning lubricant burned Ray’s nose; the crowd’s chant rose higher, voices rging with the machine shrieks.
Kraken lashed out, claws hamring Blue Widow into the cage. The bars rattled, and a shower of sparks splattered the first rows. Soone beside Ray cursed, stumbling back. Arty leapt to his feet, fist raised, voice hoarse: “Co on, Blue Widow!”
Widow rebounded, tail-cable lashing out—entangling Kraken’s legs. For a heartbeat, they locked, a tangle of blades and claws, servos screaming, electricity arcing in the smoky air. Every impact was a drumbeat, every second stretched thin with tension.
Ray's eyes were glued to the ring. For a mont, he could see himself in those machines—broken, patched, but refusing to yield. He glanced down at the battered helt in his lap and at the scorched plating of his own new bot.
Kraken tore free, plating dented and leaking, and drove its claw through Blue Widow’s shoulder. But Widow twisted, plasma cutters blazing, and with a burst of blue-white fire, severed Kraken’s arm at the elbow. Oil sprayed in a black arc; the crowd shrieked in awe and fear.
Sparks. Thunder. A final crash. The cage lights dimd as the battered giants staggered apart, smoke curling from their joints. Overhead, a digital banner flickered: VICTORY—BLUE WIDOW
For a breathless mont, the world shrank to that battered ring—pain, power, and glory distilled in steel. Ray pressed his hand to the battered helt in his lap. In this world, even scraps could rise—if only for one shining, violent mont.
After the bot fights concluded, Arty stretched, a wide grin splitting his face. “Yo, gotta take a leak. Brb,” he announced, swaggering down the tribune stairs without a care in the world.
Ray’s interface pinged softly—a ssage from Alyna.
Alyna: Having fun with your tech-guru?
Ray smirked, a genuine, private smile.
Ray: Yeah. Just watched two humanoid bots beat the scrap out of each other. It was… inspiring. You?
Alyna: Taking a break from coding. Your mother is an amazing teacher, did you know that? She’s explaining old-school network architecture. Says it’s like digital archaeology.
Ray’s smirk softened, thinking of all the evenings his mother had tried to lure him into netstrider training—her patient voice echoing, Try it, Ray. Plug in. Find your edge. He never had the mind for it, but she’d never stopped believing he might.
Ray: She knows her stuff. Best in the business, back in the day.
Alyna was still typing a reply when—
The world detonated.
A monstrous, rust-streaked shipping container ca screaming out of the sky. Its shadow sliced across the arena, a fleeting, geotric eclipse that swallowed light, hope, and sound. The impact was an apocalypse—a deafening, wet, final crunch as concrete, steel, and living flesh were compressed into instant, unrecognizable ruin.
The tribune buckled with a hideous shriek of tearing tal, collapsing into a rolling avalanche of splintered steel and shattered bone.
For a split second, Arty could see everything with a surreal, horrifying clarity: kids with faces sticky from neon-colored synth-snacks; old techies, laughing at so shared, esoteric joke; parents, friends, lovers, all pressed together in a vibrant, living mosaic.
The next heartbeat—they were gone. Erased. Life snuffed out, bodies mangled into a crimson pulp beneath the tons of collapsing steel—a wet, hideous sound that thudded through Arty’s bones, sticky and unforgettable.
He stared, wide-eyed, trembling, as the screams filled the air—echoing, clashing, growing shrill with unimaginable terror. A child’s wail, high and piercing, was cut short. A mother’s voice, raw and animalistic, scread, “My baby—!” But the only answer was the steady drip of blood from the twisted wreckage, the thick dust swirling in a single, cold shaft of sunlight, and the endless, rising static of disaster—blaring alarms, panicked, overlapping comms, the entire world sliding out of control.
Arty’s knees buckled. The fractured concrete bit through the fabric of his jeans as he collapsed, bile burning the back of his throat. He vomited, choking on the taste, and wiped his mouth with shaking, gri-stained fingers, his eyes watering. His interface buzzed frantically, trying to place a call, but all he could hear was the roar of the dying crowd and the ringing, profound silence that followed.
“Oh fuck, oh fuck. Please no. Ray-man, please respond—please—” Arty’s voice cracked, raw panic ripping through him. His mind raced, a frantic slideshow of flashing images: Ray waving, Ray’s rare, tired smirk, Ray… gone. He can’t be dead. He’s—he’s—
He staggered upright, weaving around the twisted, monolithic hulk of the fallen container. His hands, scraped and bleeding, scrambled over torn, sharp tal, searching. Not Ray. Please, not Ray.
A new sound cut through the chaos—a tallic shriek, as if the earth itself were being gutted. Then a seismic crash shuddered through Arty’s bones. He spun, the world a dizzying blur, and saw it.
A loader ch—twenty feet tall, heavily modified—was rampaging through the yard. Jagged and thick armor plates jutted from its industrial fra like broken teeth, its hydraulic pistons and bolted-on cannons gleaming in the bloody, dust-filtered light. Its twin red floodlights cut through the haze, scanning for anything left to destroy. Gunfire, sporadic and ineffective, crackled from sowhere in the chaos. Bullets sparked uselessly off its reinforced hull. The loader’s massive, clawed arm snatched up a heavy trash bin and hurled it into a group of fleeing survivors. The bin landed with a bone-breaking, gut-churning crunch. tal, trash, and flesh exploded outwards—a man’s arm, a flash of pink hair, all vanishing beneath the wreckage.
“Run!” soone shrieked, their voice thin with terror. People scattered, stumbling, clawing at each other, trampling discarded tech and neon snacks underfoot. Arty’s legs tensed, every rational instinct screaming at him to flee. But sothing made him stop—so fragile, desperate hope, so all-consuming dread—forcing his gaze back to the epicenter of the collapsed tribune.
The twisted, mangled tal shifted. No—sothing beneath the ruin was moving.
It rose—slowly, relentlessly, like a nightmare clawing its way into reality.
Standing over twelve feet tall, it was a living engine of annihilation. Midnight-black alloy plates, overlapping like the carapace of so demonic insect, layered its powerful form. Each surface was intricately etched with a network of blood-red micro-circuitry, pulsing with a hellish, internal light.
From its broad, armored shoulders, a pair of arms unfolded—the upper limbs were massive, bulging with cybernetic muscle, ending in heavy, crushing claws tipped with talons made to tear and rend; lower, another set of arms, smaller, more dexterous, but no less lethal, clearly built for speed and precise manipulation. Razor-edged, obsidian-black spines erupted along its powerful forearms, each one glowing with a cold, predatory nace.
Its chest was a fortress of interlocking, reactive armor plates, protecting a core that blazed like an exposed, unstable reactor. Volatile crimson energy throbbed within, shooting flickers of light through a web of glowing conduits—like the arteries of so terrible, chanical beast. Pistons and thick, carbon-fiber cables bulged at every joint, flexing with an inhuman, terrifying power. Its digitigrade legs, built for speed and stability, ended in hooked, talon-like claws.
But the head—the head was what froze Arty’s heart in his chest. A long, angular helt, segnted and predatory, was broken only by arrays of advanced optical sensors and four burning, malevolent eyes: two huge, molten crimson optics, and two smaller, more focused ones, coiled with a cold, calculating hatred, set deep within the armored mask. No mouth. No discernible face. Just blade-edged armor and dark, unfeeling sh—an impassive, rciless visage. Twin, scythe-like blade-horns arced back from its skull, framing a cascading mane of tallic, prehensile tendrils and thick, fiber-optic cables that writhed and quivered with a life of their own.
It radiated pure, focused intent—not just a machine, but a predator. The very air around it seed to warp and crackle with raw power; motes of red light crawled across its dark hide, and arcs of contained electricity danced across its armored joints.
The loader ch, so monstrous just monts before, now looked almost fragile in comparison. The juggernaut’s burning, four-eyed gaze locked onto the loader, and for one eternal, silent mont, the world seed to hold its breath.
Then, in a motion almost too fast for the human eye to follow, it dropped low—paused—and exploded forward, charging on all fours, every limb a piston of focused violence, tearing up chunks of earth and debris with each powerful stride.
Arty felt it deep in his marrow—the primal, atavistic terror of prey before an apex hunter. All the world shrank to this single, heart-stopping mont of dread. The very air itself vibrated with fear, with the collective, silent grief of too many lives lost in a single, brutal instant. Arty had seen countless chs in his life, from sleek corporate security models to jury-rigged junkyard monstrosities. But he had never seen anything like this. This wasn't a machine. This was a chanical god of wrath, given form.
Blue Stahli - ULTRAnumb
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The loader ch pivoted, its targeting sensors a frantic blur of green and red, instantly locking onto the impossible speed, the impossibly aggressive blur, hurtling straight for it. Twin cannons, thick as tree trunks, whined with a rising, tallic keen as they lowered, acquiring the juggernaut now heaving itself from the splintered wreckage of the tribune. Sparks, sharp and painful, jumped in the loader’s single, Cyclopean optic as the targeting system scread.
The juggernaut lunged, a living manifestation of crimson light and predatory violence. Its two massive, clawed upper arms gouged deep, parallel scars into the resisting concrete, tearing chunks away. The servos in its powerful, piston-driven legs shrieked like tornted spirits with every thunderous stride, shaking the very ground beneath the shattered arena. Too close to shoot, the loader’s combat AI must have scread internally.
The loader’s primary hydraulic arm wailed, a high-pitched shriek of tortured tal, as it swung. A monstrous, steel-reinforced claw, large enough to crush a groundcar flat, whistled through the air, a devastating arc aid directly at the juggernaut’s head. But the juggernaut moved like liquid shadow, a terrifying, chanical grace. It slipped under the crushing blow, its armored back scraping a shower of brilliant sparks across the cracked concrete. In a split-second counter-attack, its smaller, razor-sharp lower claws shot out, raking savage, molten lines across the loader’s thigh plating. tal, thick as a bunker wall, shrieked and tore like cheap canvas as the juggernaut’s talons shredded the armor.
The loader retaliated instantly, its powerful, servo-driven leg firing like a massive piston. The blow landed with the sound of a thunderclap, a concussive shockwave hamring the juggernaut back through a roiling cloud of pulverized dust and splintered debris. Concrete shattered under its clawed feet as it skidded across the arena floor, leaving deep furrows, but it didn’t fall. It simply absorbed the imnse kinetic impact, its heavy fra shuddering once, and ca on again, the rage burning hotter, brighter, in its four glowing, malevolent eyes.
The loader’s main cannon bood, a deafening, chest-rattling blast that echoed through the shattered, makeshift coliseum. A high-explosive shell slamd into the juggernaut’s left shoulder, the impact ripping through armor, almost severing the massive arm from its torso. Shards of black and red plating spun away in a glittering, neon-lit arc, like deadly confetti. For a split second, the loader’s terrified human operator, within the hulking machine, could see the raw, crimson light pulsing in the juggernaut’s grievous wound, growing brighter and more intense. Then, with an audible, almost organic squelch, obsidian black, tallic flesh crawled over the damaged area, sealing the wound, repairing the catastrophic damage in terrifying real-ti.
A twisted, tallic roar, a sound that wasn’t ant for human ears, erupted from the juggernaut’s chest as it launched itself forward. All four of its powerful arms splayed wide, it was a living engine of pure, focused vengeance. Its smaller, more dexterous lower arms darted out, their sharp talons hooking deep into the loader’s chest plate, anchoring the juggernaut in place. The massive upper arms swung down in a brutal, double-fisted hamrblow—the impact caving the loader’s heavy chest armor inward, the thick tal folding with a teeth-rattling, deafening shriek of dying steel.
Desperate, the loader lashed out, its claw grabbing the juggernaut’s arm, attempting to crush the life from it, to tear it from its socket. But the juggernaut’s very fra erupted in a blinding display of arcing, defensive electricity, blue-white bolts snapping and crackling, the feedback overloading the loader’s already strained servos. Using its lower arms as leverage, the juggernaut propped itself up and, with a horrifying, calculated precision, drove its larger, clawed arm deep into the main joint of the loader’s remaining limb. Hydraulic fluid, thick and black as crude oil, hissed and sprayed, a toxic mist painting the arena floor in grotesque streaks.
Now the two titans were locked in a deadly, intimate embrace, claw against claw, a cacophony of whirring, over-stressed actuators and screaming, straining servos. Summoning its last, desperate reserves of power, the loader managed a final, gargantuan effort, hoisting the juggernaut overhead, swinging it like a grotesque, chanical ragdoll. The juggernaut’s body crashed through a ruined concession stand, splintering twisted tal, scattering half-lted, garishly colored neon snacks and other mangled debris across the ground.
A note from Lord Turtle the first
Juggernaut Mode:
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