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Village Square / Re: Juuzou vs Bocchiere.
« on: November 17, 2015, 05:21:39 AM »
Growing increasingly irritated with the rubber, Juuzou would send out a surge of electrical energy through his feet and change the shape of the gold that he was touching (both the platform and throne) so that it would spike out and pierce through the rubber some that Bocch attempted to conceal him in.
His next move was to use the gold to escape the rubber by flowing through it like lightning. He stood in front of the rubber and the gold spikes that pierced through it.
Juuzou would raise his hand up towards the sky, "Enough of your insolence." He would launch a massive stream of lightning from his hand and send it upwards towards the clouds, "El Thor." The lightning would charge up the clouds surrounding the area, creating a Cumulonimbus cloud (or Thunder cloud).
Because the lightning that he shot out was made of his chakra, he was in full control it and would do so as he sent down two strikes of Lightning down over the area that the two of them stood. The attack would destroy the land, cracking the earth and burning the things it touched to a crisp.
Although rubber is an insulator, lighting is a very powerful discharge. To reach the ground, lightning must be powerful enough to travel through thousands of feet of air, which is also an insulator. If a discharge can't be stopped by that, then a few inches of rubber won't make a difference.
His next move was to use the gold to escape the rubber by flowing through it like lightning. He stood in front of the rubber and the gold spikes that pierced through it.
Juuzou would raise his hand up towards the sky, "Enough of your insolence." He would launch a massive stream of lightning from his hand and send it upwards towards the clouds, "El Thor." The lightning would charge up the clouds surrounding the area, creating a Cumulonimbus cloud (or Thunder cloud).
Because the lightning that he shot out was made of his chakra, he was in full control it and would do so as he sent down two strikes of Lightning down over the area that the two of them stood. The attack would destroy the land, cracking the earth and burning the things it touched to a crisp.
Although rubber is an insulator, lighting is a very powerful discharge. To reach the ground, lightning must be powerful enough to travel through thousands of feet of air, which is also an insulator. If a discharge can't be stopped by that, then a few inches of rubber won't make a difference.