But in the last one you go into umbra's memory yourself and tell him that he "did not kill him" refering to when ballas then makes teshin kill issah. Then you go through chasing him down in different missions re-living his memory's blah blah blah. You then build umbra and his dumbass escapes. Ballas then says to umbra that he created him before the lotus comes in and destroys umbra. So then going back to where umbra is distressed then trys to kill ballas. Also in the memory sequences the scene continues to become even more infested the further you get (Indicating what happened to Teshin). So then Teshin jumps out at Issah and kills him. Teshin then can't fight back his illness any longer and he turns into one infested boi Ballas then orders Teshin to kill his son. Throughout the memory's teshin is incapable of speeking.Later Ballas tells Issah that it is time then proceeds to tell you you through telepathy that he will watch him die. During each memory sequence we see Ballas, Teshin's son (Issah), and Teshin. For this to make sense you have to remember that throughout the quest you have to chase down umbra and use transference to access his memory. Ballas then comes out behind a rock and tells him to "Howl all you won't" and "it won't bring him back". We see umbra who looks at himself and then howls (cries maybe). According to its Codex entry, the Skiajati is a normal Nikana "grafted" from Umbra's flesh.So lets start at the beginning of the sacrifice quest.The weapon utilizes a similar model to the shikomizue or jotō katana, best described as a swordstick or staff sword.The word सखि (Sakhi) is Sanskrit for friend.The स्क character of Devanagari makes the sk- sound, making स्कयजति a phonetical approximation of the weapon's name.This way, however, the origin of the sk- radical is left unclear. An alternative, simpler, interpretation uses यजति (Yajati), Sanskrit for sacrifice, reflecting the name and theme of the quest.This can either tie into the sword's relationship with Excalibur Umbra, with Umbra being Latin for shadow or to the weapon's passive ability to cloak its user.Σκιά (Skia) is Greek for shadow, while जाति (Jati) is Sanskrit for birth.However, there are no Nikana stances containing finishers. Due to the special ability of this weapon, stances with finishers in them would be useful in proccing the effect.The cloth piece is a fixed part of the sheath and not a removable cosmetic. ![]()
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