Black Knight

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Revision as of 23:35, 26 June 2007 by imported>Baltar (adding critical hit)
Black Knight You're fighting The Black Knight

As you're walking down a path in the Black Forest, your way is abruptly blocked by a formidable-looking knight, dressed entirely in black armor.

"How original!" you exclaim. "I suppose this is the point at which you say 'None shall pass,' then, right?"

"No," says the Knight, "this is the point at which I be stompin' yo ass."

Hit Message(s):

He lances you with a lance. A lot. Ouch! Ow!

Critical Hit Message:

He stumbles and manages to cut his own arm off with his sword. "Damn, Gina," he says, "it's a flesh wound!" Unfortunately, you didn't dodge the jet of blood from the wound, which is ichorous and icky. Ickorous? Oof! Argh! (sleaze damage)

Miss Message(s):

He swings his sword at you, but stumbles and misses you. "Damn, Gina." he says. "I so clumsy!"

He swings his sword at you, but you quickly sidestep. "Damn, Gina." he says. "You so agile!"

He tries to pound you with his shield, it doesn't do much damage. "Damn, Gina," he says. "This shield so flimsy!"

He tries to lance you, but since you're not a boil, it's difficult going.

Fumble Message:

You stand six paces in front of him. Since he can only move three paces forward and then two to the right or left, he can't hit you. Checkmate! (FUMBLE!)


After Combat
You acquire an item: black sword
You acquire an item: black shield
You acquire an item: black helmet
You acquire an item: black greaves
You gain ~36 <substat>.

References

  • Obviously, refers to the Black Knight from Monty Python and the Holy Grail with the lack of arm being a flesh wound and "None Shall Pass".
  • This refers to the Black Knight from the 2001 film Black Knight starring Martin Lawrence with the "I be stompin' yo ass" comment.
  • In the television show "Martin", Martin Lawrence's character's catch-phrase was "Damn, Gina!"
  • Fumble message is a reference to the knight chess piece which moves in an L shape.
  • The hit message saying "He lances you with a lance. A lot." refers to Lancelot, a knight. Note the last three words.