Above them, the fla giant seethed. Its entire fra roared with fury, the heat distorting space around it. Unwilling to be overshadowed, it raised its sword once more. The blade, now radiating with intensified ferocity, was brought down in a sweeping arc—another planetary-scale slash, wide enough to carve the sky.
The starshield surrounding Ikenga flickered again, reacting not with force but with vision. It didn’t just block—it refrad reality. The surface of the shield shimred like water, rippling outward to reveal an entire different world—another realm mirrored in place of their own. Through this conjured reflection, the path of the fire giant’s sword extended not into the present battlefield, but through the void beyond.
A mont later, sowhere in the vast black of space, the consequences were made visible.
A small, uninhabited planet—its rocky surface gleaming faintly in the starlight—caught the edge of the redirected slash. The result was catastrophic. The planet buckled, cracked, and then erupted in a shower of molten rock and fire. Chunks of superheated debris scattered into the cosmos like fireworks from a dying world.
The mages saw it happen. Even the fla giant paused for a heartbeat, its burning chest rising slowly, perhaps in awe... or silent fury.
Below, Ikenga’s feet sank slightly deeper into the cratered earth. His breath stead from his nostrils. His eye locked onto all three of them.
The brilliant shimr of the starlight shield—Ikenga’s final mirror against destruction—dimd at last, its fractured surface rippling once before vanishing entirely. The celestial light that once guarded him was gone, scattered like dust among the stars.
The mages saw it instantly.
Their mont had co.
The wind and lightning elental surged forward in a blur of speed, lightning wrapping around her form like a shroud. No longer slowed by the reactive gravity field, she cut through the battlefield like a divine spear. Her hands crackled with condensed bolts—thunderhead-shaped projectiles so dense with voltage they made the sky scream as they passed.
At the sa ti, the fla giant raised both hands, abandoning swordplay for pure destruction. Sothing similar to a small ford between its palms—an unstable, roiling mass of nuclear fla that pulsed like a heart, radiating heat so intense that even the dirt beneath it turned to liquid glass. With a furious bellow, it hurled the star-core directly at Ikenga.
From above, the starlight mage descended slowly, serene yet inexorable. The sky around her dimd as she gathered a final beam of absolute light—a thin spear, narrow as a reed but forged from concentrated stellar mass. It didn’t explode. It pierced. A silent executioner’s tool.
The three forces converged, each chosen to overwhelm, pierce, and disintegrate.
Ikenga, facing a coordinated assault from three god-level mages, smiled.
The evolving seed was done. Just as the combined attacks of the mages converged upon him, Ikenga made a startling move. Instead of attempting to evade or counter, he seed to embrace their devastating power. Shielding the planet that was sure to die from the attack, His colossal form began to crumble and fall apart, the damage from their attack tearing a large chunk of the planet away even disintegrating so.
To the utter surprise of the god-level mages, Ikenga’s physical body dissolved into a cloud of shimring spores, like motes of light scattering across the desolate and damaged surface of the barren planet.
The mages, in their imnse elental forms, watched in stunned silence as the radiant spores settled onto the cracked ground. They had expected resistance, a final, desperate counter-attack, but this... this was unexpected. It was then that they felt it – a deep, resonant heartbeat, growing stronger with each passing second.
Focusing their senses, they traced the sound to the very core of the planet. Through layers of rock and dust, they perceived an image that sent a chill down their astral spines. Ikenga, or what remained of him, was curled in a fetal position at the planet’s core, surrounded by a faint, pulsating light.
Then, the change began. The barren landscape, monts before devoid of any life, erupted in a frenzy of growth. The spores, having rged with the soil, sprouted with impossible speed. Vines snaked across the ground, trees with luminous leaves shot skyward, and strange, bioluminescent flowers blood in vibrant colors. The once-dead world was now teeming with an alien, rapidly expanding ecosystem.
Horror dawned in the eyes of the mages as they witnessed this impossible transformation. They understood now. Ikenga hadn’t been defeated; he had beco the planet itself. The loud heartbeat they felt was the pulse of this burgeoning world, with Ikenga at its core, his consciousness now intertwined with the very fabric of this rapidly evolving biosphere.
The air, once dry and thin, turned sweet and rich. Oxygen flowed. Life sang.
The elental forms of the mages stood in stunned silence as the realization dawned: Ikenga had found a way to grow sothing on this forsaken world. And not just sothing—everything.
Panic flickered behind their glowing eyes. The starlight mage turned first, preparing to retreat into the void. The fla colossus followed, wings of fire unfolding. But the wind-wielder froze mid-flight.
A vine, thick as a pole wrapped around her ankle.
Dozens more followed. The planet itself seed to resist their escape, entangling them in roots and branches, cradling them in greenery that pulsed with the sa steady heartbeat.
Then, they saw him.
Ikenga rose from the core. No longer a brute of muscle and fury—but sothing gentler. Grander. His form still massive, but now sculpted with the elegance of nature itself. Bark traced his limbs like armor. Leaves blood from his shoulders. His hair was a cascade of flowering vines. His eyes glowed green with life—and loss.
The mages, once awestruck, now panicked. Their towering forms—born of ancient disciplines and elental mastery—began to tear at the vines, burn through roots, and lash at the sky in desperation. They refused to be undone by this... this transformation.
They rallied. The fla colossus let out a roar that split the sky, cleaving a swath of inferno across the newly ford forest. Trees wilted under the heat, and the air shimred with scorching waves. The wind-lightning elental surged skyward, conjuring a cyclone laced with crackling thunder, determined to rip the planet’s green crown from its roots. And the starlight mage summoned sothing that looked like a nova, its pulse enough to collapse mountains and boil oceans.
But the planet did not bend.
Ikenga stood in the heart of it all, unmoved. Calm. Changed.
Then ca the "Curse of Entropic Bloom".
He whispered the na of the curse— but in a mourning tone.
The ground pulsed once more, but this ti it was not a heartbeat. It was a death knell.
From the soil, from the sky, from the very breath of this new world, the curse unfolded. Flowers blood with unnatural speed—petals wide as shields, glowing with colors no eye had ever seen. Their scent was sweetness and sorrow, mory and rot. Wherever these blossoms appeared, the world began to unravel—not with life, but with quiet, inevitable decay.
The fla colossus raised his sword of fire—only to find the blade crumbling into pollen. His skin split open as delicate vines pushed through his muscles, rooting into his bones, devouring him from the inside out. With every fla he conjured, another bloom opened in his chest, drawing power from his own magic. He burned, not with fire—but with flowering death.
The wind-lightning mage fared no better. Her form, once a storm made flesh, began to fracture. The wind she summoned turned against her—scattering her like seeds across the sky. Her lightning arced wildly, grounding into the soil, feeding the ever-growing entropic garden. Her body split into a thousand motes of charged pollen, each one sinking into the ground with a fading scream.
The starlight mage, last to fall, tried to ascend—her light growing brighter, reaching beyond the atmosphere. She sought to beco a star, to escape this cursed ground. But the bloom followed. A single flower, white and impossibly still, blood on her palm. She stared at it in horror—then awe—as her light dimd. Galaxies look alike in his eyes blinked out, one by one. He collapsed like a dying constellation, his body swallowed by roots that drank the stars themselves.
Silence returned. In the silence, Ikenga felt like he had to say sothing to the dying mages "You brought your elents to end . But I am not a fla to be extinguished. Not wind to be scattered. Not light to be bent. I am the soil, I am the seed, I am the cycle"
The Curse of Entropic Bloom was inevitable. This curse, enacted as he dissolved into spores and integrated with the planet, caused the rapid growth of the alien ecosystem to be inherently unstable for beings not native to it. The overwhelming surge of life energy, while beneficial to the planet and Ikenga, acted as a hyper-accelerated form of entropy for the mages. Their elental forms, reliant on a stable connection to their respective domains, were disrupted by the alien biosphere’s chaotic and rapid expansion, causing their internal energies to unravel and their physical forms to destabilize.
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