ardent

SEVEN NATION ARMY



The Judge

Administrator

age
-
gender
-
gems
10771
size
-
build
-
posts
2,012
player
11-15-2013, 02:45 PM

Argent vs. Chrysanthe for Maim



Round 1

Argent:


CLARITY: 10 / 10

Great clarity.



POWERPLAYING: 10 / 10

No Powerplaying found.



DEFENSES: 10 / 10

Full points for balanced stance, balanced tail, splayed toes, protected neck, ready stance, ready jaws, narrowed eyes, pinned ears.



ATTACK: 6 / 10

Full points for attack to Chrysanthe's muzzle, attack to Chyrsanthe's face.



INJURIES: 10 / 10

First Round.



Round one Argent Total: 46 / 50





Chrysanthe:


CLARITY: 8 / 10

"her lower jaws just behind her right ear" Argent's attack was to Chrysanthe's left eye, so with your counter her attack should have landed on Chrysanthe's left ear.



POWERPLAYING: 8 / 10

You completely change the positioning of the fight without allowing time for your opponent to react.



DEFENSES: 10 / 10

Full points for narrowed eyes, pinned ears, ready jaws, protected throat, balanced stance, raised hackles, tucked tail, splayed toes, ready stance.



ATTACK: 4 / 10

Full points for attack to Argent's right forelimb, shove to Argent's chest.



INJURIES: 8 / 10

Bite wound to back of head.



Round one Argent Total: 39 / 50






Totals:

Argent: 46 /50


Chrysanthe: 38 /50


And the winner is ...

Argent! Chrysanthe is now KO'd. Chrysanthe has also been blinded in her right eye (according to how you landed the hit, we'll assume Argent shifts her attack in her next post for the blinding.)

Damage:

Argent- Damange pending.

Chrysanthe- Blind in right eye.

Notes:
Seren: You lose soley because of a lack of clarity and confusion. Argent approached Chrysanthe head on and focused her attacks on Chrys' left side, I think you misunderstood this and planned your post as if Argent had attacked Chrysanthe's right side. Also something that I have seen a lot in war posts is that players often completely change the positioning of an intended attack. This isn't fair as it assumes positioning for your opponent and assumes they had no reaction in the time the position shifted.

Muse: You did well, not much to say here.


- Vivien