Fate's Slave - Shadow Slave X Honkai Star Rail-Chapter 466: Green Combos
The loading screen dissolved into motion as the game rendered a vast coliseum beneath a storm-tinted sky, tier upon tier of stone seating curving upward into shadow while banners depicting long-dead factions snapped in a wind that did not seem to exist anywhere but in the physics engine, and Sunny found himself controlling a towering figure in onyx armor whose three-horned mask gleamed with a faint, ominous sheen, the odachi resting across his shoulder like a slab of night given shape. Opposite him stood Silver Wolf’s avatar, a stylized combat version of herself outfitted in exaggerated cybernetic gear that pulsed with neon accents, her stance loose and cocky even in idle animation as if she had attempted to translate arrogance into polygons. Across the arena, two additional figures materialized in pillars of light, their usernames hovering above them in stark white text: The_HERTA and Luh_loyd.
The first resolved into a woman whose appearance struck Sunny as strangely unsettling, not because she looked monstrous or grotesque but because she resembled an aged reflection of someone who had never been meant to age at all, porcelain features sharpened by maturity, long ashen hair cascading beneath a pointed witch’s hat while mechanical joints glinted subtly at her wrists and collarbone, her elaborate dress combining academic austerity with theatrical menace. Having never encountered the real Herta, Sunny could only interpret the design as an elaborate homage, perhaps a fan’s idealized version extrapolated from incomplete data, yet the character’s idle animation — head tilting with clinical curiosity, fingers tapping an invisible calculation — conveyed an intelligence that felt almost invasive even through the screen.
Beside her appeared Nightwalker, young-looking man with strange, nebulous silver eyes, beautiful features, and dark, flawless skin. He wears a luxurious, flowing tunic and has long hair tied with a piece of metal wire. Despite his youthful appearance — he looks barely old enough to be called an adult. A faint distortion shimmered around him, as though the air itself recoiled from prolonged proximity, and the name House of Night surfaced in Sunny’s memory/
Silver Wolf leaned forward slightly, lips curving into a smug half-smile that radiated absolute confidence.
"This is going to be easy."
The match began with a thunderous clash of sound effects and particle bursts as both teams surged forward, abilities detonating across the arena in cascades of light and shadow that reduced the dignified coliseum to a kaleidoscope of overlapping animations. Sunny, lacking even the most rudimentary familiarity with the control scheme, moved Mongrel with cautious deliberation that contrasted sharply with the frenetic precision of their opponents, his attacks emerging a fraction too late, his defensive inputs arriving a fraction too early, the rhythm of combat slipping past him like water through an open hand. Nightwalker closed the distance with alarming speed, chaining strikes together in sequences that seemed less like individual attacks and more like a continuous phenomenon, each hit flowing into the next with mechanical inevitability while Herta’s character attacked from afar with Abilities that had no rhyme or reason.
Also... they. Just. Kept. On. Teleporting!
Within moments Sunny’s stock counter dropped, the armored figure hurled backward in a spray of sparks before dissolving into respawn light, and although he reentered the fight with renewed determination, the pattern repeated itself with humiliating consistency. Silver Wolf fared little better despite her aggressive playstyle, her avatar darting and blinking across the arena in bursts of digital afterimages only to be intercepted, trapped, and dismantled with ruthless efficiency that suggested their opponents had rehearsed these sequences thousands of times. The match concluded with brutal finality, both of their characters launched beyond the boundaries of the stage in synchronized defeat while triumphant effects crowned the opposing team in exaggerated celebration.
For several seconds neither Sunny nor Silver Wolf moved, their real-world bodies frozen before the screen as the defeat banner lingered with almost mocking persistence.
Then Silver Wolf’s composure disintegrated spectacularly.
"No, no, no! They were playing meta! Those losers only play Z tiers... and you! Your combos are green! Have you ever played a fighting game in your life?"
Sunny turned his head slowly, studying her with the detached curiosity one might reserve for an unfamiliar species exhibiting unexpected behavior, his gaze traveling from her clenched jaw to the furious tapping of her foot and the faint flush of indignation coloring her cheeks, and the contrast between her reputation as a Stellaron Hunter and the petulant outrage before him struck him as profoundly unimpressive.
"No idea what a green combo is supposed to be. All my attacks are black. And no, I have never played a fighting game. It is almost as if I said that I’ve never played this."
Her teeth ground audibly.
"Rematch them. Now."
Sunny rolled his eyes with theatrical exaggeration, yet complied with a flick of his thumb, selecting the option while reflecting that indulging her tantrum was likely the fastest path to restoring silence. The lobby reformed, offering character selection once more, and he glanced sideways at her screen as a thought occurred to him.
"Should we be playing Z tiers or whatever?"
She did not respond, her expression tightening in a manner that triggered his suspicion rather than alleviating it, and after a moment he narrowed his eyes.
"The characters we are using are all overpowered, aren’t they?"
Still nothing, which was answer enough.
Sunny exhaled through his nose in quiet resignation, concluding that their opponents were not abusing unfair advantages but simply outperforming them despite those advantages, a realization that settled over him with the cold clarity of unwelcome truth.
The rematch loaded, and this time Luh_loyd selected a character from Clan Valor called Whispering Blade, a knight clad in muted tones whose presence flickered in and out of visibility even during the selection animation, while The_HERTA remained faithful to her previous choice. The match commenced, and almost immediately Whispering Blade vanished entirely, leaving only a faint distortion to mark his passage as he circled unseen. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
Sunny attempted to track him, rotating Mongrel’s stance cautiously, yet the attack came from nowhere, a flurry of strikes that erupted behind him with surgical precision, locking his character into a punishing sequence that he could neither interrupt nor evade, each hit resetting the stun just long enough to continue the chain while shaving away his health with methodical efficiency. The experience was profoundly irritating, not because it was painful or frightening but because it robbed him of agency, reducing his participation to passive observation while the opponent executed a rehearsed routine.
Across the arena Silver Wolf fared even worse, her avatar repeatedly caught in Herta’s elaborate setups, launched into the air only to be intercepted by precisely timed follow-ups that converted minor openings into catastrophic losses, her frustrated noises growing increasingly audible with each failed recovery.
Reduced to his final stock, Sunny started pressing buttons, his character dissolving into a blur of afterimages that granted heightened perception within the game’s mechanics, however that worked, and instead of attacking blindly he observed, cataloguing the timing of inputs, the spacing of strikes, the recovery windows that determined whether a sequence could continue or collapse. Combos, he realized, were not random flailing but structured conversations between moves, each one creating the conditions necessary for the next, and Whispering Blade’s invisibility was merely a delivery system for that conversation rather than its substance.
Before the inevitable final blow arrived he tested his own abilities with deliberate experimentation, noting the cooldown indicators, the frames of vulnerability at the end of animations, the range at which hitboxes connected reliably, and although the knowledge came too late to salvage the match, it settled into his mind with quiet permanence.
Defeat claimed them again.
Silver Wolf emitted a sound that could only be described as wounded outrage, collapsing back in her chair as if physically struck by the result.
Sunny, however, remained composed, controller resting loosely in his hands while his gaze lingered on the screen not with frustration but with intent concentration, the analytical part of his mind already reconstructing the encounter in search of leverage points, inefficiencies, exploitable habits. Losing, to him, was not an emotional event but a data acquisition process, a temporary condition rather than an acceptable outcome.
He did not speak immediately, because speech was unnecessary when the solution required action, and as the option for another rematch appeared he selected it without consulting her, his posture straightening subtly, shadows at his feet stirring as if responding to an unspoken decision. Sunny did not allow himself to remain defeated any more than he allowed himself to remain ignorant, and somewhere behind his calm expression a quiet certainty took shape that the next time the match began, it would not end the same way.







