4 hours ago, KerenRhys said:She didn't throw her secrecy plan just to see some action but to save at least one of her clansmen. And seeing that he struggled against three peasants, there's nothing implying that Nerishma (or any other unnamed guard of the caravan) could have beat a Niten-trained samurai. So, she may have been the only one able to easily kill him and limit the losses on the Crane side.
You're also jumping to conclusion pretty quickly on Satsume's assassin being Kachiko's brother. With Scorpion being the "obvious" choice and Kachiko's brother being the first suspect mentioned, it looks a lot like a false trail and something to add tension between the two lovers. It's far too "easy" for him to be the real culprit.
I also feel that some people are forgetting that those stories are not only targeted toward people who already know the different clans like the back of their hand. I'm thinking of your distate of the focus on pursuit of perfection. I'd guess it's because you already know that's one of the (if not THE) Crane main theme, but that's not the case for newcomers. So it's very important to put some focus on it for them to have a feeling of what is important to that clan. I think we'll see similar focus (which will seem obvious to returning players) for the future Clans' introduction story.
Well, I honestly didn't know that obsession with perfection was one of the defining traits of the Crane. If that's the way it is, then fine, but I just felt it was portrayed rather poorly in this story.
And quite frankly, the fact that he was able to take three opponents at once (who had ambushed him, no less), peasants or no, speaks quite highly of Nerishma's skill. I don't know whether he could have taken the ronin or not, but I see no reason to think he couldn't, and I can't imagine that two or more guards couldn't have handled the ronin if they worked together.
As for Kachiko's brother being the assassin, I think it would depend a lot on how they portrayed it. If they just played it straight, then yes it would be a very unsatisfying story. What gets me, though, is that it's far too obvious that that's the "wrong" conclusion to jump to. Again, the story is far too over-the-top in its portrayal (piling on the evidence), so there's not really any dramatic tension for the reader, even if there is for the characters. In fact, the more I think about it the more I think that the main problem with this story is that it's simply too close to the characters, and could have benefited from taking a step or two back. As it is, the only way I can really see this particular element being resolved satisfactorily would be if it ends up being a double-bluff, where Hotaru ends up dismissing Kachiko's brother as a suspect in favor of some other candidate, only to have it end up having been him the whole time.
3 hours ago, YasukiKaito said:I think that one thing we should maybe keep in mind is that a lot of these first fictions might be written with a new audience in mind, that hasn't spent the last 20 years reading AEG's fictions. So I think some 'clunkiness' or straight forward writing is to be expected, and is warranted. Not everyone is going to know what Niten, or the proper honorifics (-ue, -san, -sama etc.) are, and I think the writing should be accessible to new players. I guess what I'm trying to say is that we probably should not be judging the writing or fictions based on the groundwork that they are laying right now with the first few stories.
(I mean I thought it was a good story, but that's just me! )
For me, the clunkiness doesn't really come from the explanations, but rather just that the writing style just didn't seem to fit the setting. Again, I think part of this is a result of the narration just being too close. Don't try to put us in the characters' heads. Take a step back and let us watch the characters a bit from an outside perspective, rather than trying to be so "over-the-shoulder".
3 hours ago, WHW said:The dude was a samurai. They fought a duel like civilized samurai and she gave him a honorable death (instead of capturing him alive, torturing and then beheading in public). If she did anything else, she would be a terrible example of a Crane to have your first exposition as a reader to.
Which brings me to something I will criticize this fiction for: it feels like a fiction made by an Old L5R Writer writing for Old L5R Readers in New L5R World. I don't think this piece works very well as first introduction to the world - it's not something I would show someone who is interested in trying out the new card game but didn't engage with the lore of old one.
Well, why even bother having the ambush occur as portrayed in the first place, then? Why not have an ambush take place when Hotaru's not trying to hide her identity? Why even have her trying to hide her identity in the first place, when it doesn't even succeed? If all we're trying to establish is that peasants are hungry, Hotaru can fight, and Kachiko's really well informed, then there are many other ways to accomplish these things much less awkwardly. The whole thing doesn't really make much sense other than to scream, "HOTARU DOESN'T REALLY HAVE A CLUE WHAT SHE'S DOING!"
19 minutes ago, Kubernes said:"Fighting the desire to smile, to rush at Kachiko and embrace her, Hotaru simply bowed." Kachiko touching a flower whose meaning is secret love? Hatoru wanting to kiss her or be with her now ? Geeeeeeeezzzzzzzzz
I was going to comment about how ridiculous it was for hanakotoba to even have a flower meaning "secret love", since hanakotoba is probably practiced by many, so it wouldn't remain a secret very long. Then I looked it up and it's apparently a real thing for gardenias to mean that. Still doesn't make it any less stupid, but I guess I at least can't fault the author for that one.
1 minute ago, Builder2 said:This was explained. Kachiko is the most beautiful woman in the Empire. And when it's a Crane making that assessment of a Scorpion, you know that it is both 1) accurate and 2) untainted by bias.
Is that really a good enough reason, though? Physical beauty is hardly a reason in itself to be that obsessed with someone, especially when one knows (as Hotaru clearly does) that Kachiko is a manipulative seductress. Maybe we'll find out that Kachiko's brother has somehow been drugging Hotaru's tea?