She grew out of the wind, just like crops emerging from the soil. Chaska, a new wind element character in Nata, her growth is not gorgeous, but solid; without noise, but very real.
To make her grow into a capable character, what is needed is not empty slogans, but materials accumulated bit by bit. Free turquoise – from debris to fragments, blocks, crystals, just like the stones for building a house, no piece can be missing. Withered purple lily is her root, the product of the land of this new map Nata, which must be collected and accumulated bit by bit.
And those kinds of animal teeth, from immature to sophisticated, and then to the sharp teeth of the rampant tyrant, are like the process of a person growing from a child to an adult, stumbling and stumbling, all relying on gritting teeth to get through. It is not a matter of one day or one night, but to kill monsters, drop, and synthesize step by step. Only players who have really walked this road can understand the difficulty and weight of it.
The teachings, guidance and philosophy of “Dispute” are the nutrition in her mind. It is not enough to have a strong body, you also need ideas, skills, and rules. The Silk Feather and the Crown of Wisdom are not just words, they are real things that can only be obtained through hard work. Her talent, from level 2 to level 10, takes not only Mora, but also time and patience.
Her exclusive weapon, the red feather of the Starry Sky Vulture, is a big project. The materials of the magical smoke, the names of which are mysterious, need to be brushed, fought, and earned. There are three types of whistle materials, from guards to dragon crown warriors, not everyone can collect them all at once, they have to be polished every day and fought every game.
She is not strong out of thin air, but is “raised” step by step by all these materials, not less, not more. In this system, there is no luck, only sweat. Players must be able to endure loneliness and repetition to cultivate Chaska from an ordinary character to the strongest one in the wind.
Every bit of her strength is accumulated from piles of materials, just like a farmer who feeds a crop with sweat. This is the result of labor and the power of solid work.