Master of Faster
He/Him
25
December 12
Goldenrod, Johto
Straight
Mauville Gym Leader
Champion
"With great speed comes great responsibility."
TAG WITH @joshdevlin
Josh Devlin
the beginning of the end [gym]
POSTED ON Jul 15, 2023 0:19:46 GMT
Josh and Raikiri had built up a massive lead as they had crossed the arch for the second time. They could coast during the last lap and the challenger would never be able to catch up. It was his race to lose. Thoughts swirled in the Gym Leader's mind as the phantoms of Mount Pyre drew the course ahead of him. During Operation Meteno, Josh had ridden on Articuno's back alongside the Composed. That day, they had achieved incredible speeds on their way to the meteoroid. As the Zeraora ran up the slope, the question seemed to etch into his mind, buzzing like a Cutiefly on the wall. Did Lars have his head in the game? Was the trust between Avatar and Patron compromised? Or was he distracted by something? If only Josh knew the suffering he and the Iceborne Mirage were going through, it would explain why the race was such a blowout.
As the two sped up the incline, the Zeraora still blinking red and rider still hearing a klaxon-like sound that was beginning to annoy him, the sudden curve caught Josh off guard. He pulled back on Raikiri's reins hard, releasing almost all leg pressure from his mount. His loud shout echoed all over the course, the deceleration causing him to nearly ragdoll face-first into his mythical ride's neck. Only the cocoon he was secured in saved him. Even so, the sudden deceleration was painful. Raikiri, too, roared, intense showers of sparks flying from his paws, feeling they were on fire from the tremendous friction produced by the sharp braking. If they didn't kill as much speed as possible quickly, they were going to pinball around the Dead Man's Curves ahead!
tGpOCrth
Dead Man's Curves, as they were called, were forbidden in the design of Hoenn Racing Federation tracks for the very reason the two teams of legendary Pokémon and riders were about to display. Both Pokémon tested the mental and physical capabilities of their riders, Josh Devlin 's ZERAORA whipping his innards back and forth like the swishing body of an aquatic serpent. Even at the slower speeds the dangerous corners mandated, the pressure it put on him was tremendous, perhaps even painful. By the time the duo had rounded the fourth corner, the physical stresses on his body caused him to misjudge a curve, sliding along the outer ethereal wall and agitating the scrapes the electric-type had already suffered. The ZERAORA's heart raced as he pushed his limits for his trainer.
Several seconds later, Laurence Anderson might experience similar stresses on his body, his ARTICUNO banking back and forth at almost perpendicular angles to make the repeated tight turns. The back-and-forth could easily have been intense enough to be vertigo-inducing. The ice-type's talons scraped one of the turns' inside ethereal walls, upsetting the duo's rhythm, sending them on a collision course with the next curve's inside phantom barrier. The Iceborne Mirage had maintained just enough speed to recover lift and maneuver through the rest of the snake-like section with ease. Little did they know that the phantoms' dirtiest trick was coming up, and almost at the end of the race, too... CHECKPOINT 8Prompt: If it weren't enough that the Dead Man's Curves the racers had just passed induced muscle soreness in their Pokémon, the ghosts' single most devious trick was coming up. A long straightaway let Pokémon build up speed just in time for a dive to an extremely wide lower section of the track. It was all a trap; the incline left the leap semi-blind. There was a second incline on the bottom with a yellow, orange, and red, arrow-shaped heat zone at its peak: a prominent indicator that racers were expected to make a complete 180 as soon as they reached the lower part of the course. Furthermore, unlike the rest of the course, there was no ethereal wall beyond the heat zone. While the incline would help Pokémon stop, Pokémon that were going too fast might not be able to do so in time to avoid a long fall into Pyre Lake!
Target Number 1: 125 (Reaction)
Special 1: Pokémon do not apply ranks in Speed to this Obstacle. Pokémon that roll beneath this Obstacle's Target Number will lose 1% Stamina for every 2 points by which the Target Number exceeds the Pokémon's Total Roll. Pokémon that roll beneath this Obstacle's Target Number by more than 35 are unable to slow down in time and fall off the course, DISQUALIFYING them from the race.
Laurence Anderson ·
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