I want more of strategist Shen Jiu. Like yes he has issues, yes he's lovable, yes the ships are amazing but he's supposed to be fucking smart. I want fics where he's the puppetier. Where the sect knows his reach and is terrified of it. I want fics where he knows EVERYTHING. All the dirt, all the traps, secrets everywhere everyone, and everything. I want a crazy Shen Jiu who's AMAZING at being the strategist. I want him to control economies. Sway the entire Jianghu because he feels cute today. Fuck the scum villain I want a villainous strategist and his equally uncanny martial siblings who are just as efficient and terrifying.
I want a strategist Shen Jiu so scary that even heavenly demons stay away from Cang Qiong because honestly wtf is that.
So I fought the single rapier world number 112 at a tournament a few weeks ago, and other than being a lovely human being who beat me thoroughly like 11-5, I did get this nice attack which I feel warrants some more analysis.
I was essentially trying to recreate a method of attack that I've seen some Olympic epee fencers do a few times, wherein they quickly duck beneath their opponent's point to score. Like so:
The problem is though, this is often contingent on your opponent going for an attack of their own - and my opponent unfortunately does not take the bait. Rather, he retreats and moves out of distance, preventing me from scoring in the traditional epeeist way.
However! While the original plan failed, it did present an opportunity for a fun play. As I crouched suddenly and agressively while moving forward, my opponent, having some self preservation, retreats a little. While he does this, he drops his guard slightly, moving from seconde (defending the outside line with wrist pronated) to quarte (defending the inside line, wrist supinated)
This, naturally, exposes his outside line.
In that moment, I was able to extend my point, pronate my wrist, and launch a fleche (an attack where the back leg passes over the front, creating an explosive running attack) which lands cleanly onto his chest/shoulder area.
The benefit of pronating my wrist is it creates opposition.
While Olympic epee is governed by electric score boxes which have built in delays to officiate afterblows (In epee, once a light goes off, the other fencer has only 40 milliseconds to land their afterblow), HEMA is a lot more based on the judges discretion. Thus, it is much more important to make it clear that any afterblow is parried or significantly out of time.
By pronating my wrist, and placing my blade on my outside line so that my long edge faces his blade, I was able to both attack and move his blade clear as I did. In doing so, I pretty much pre-parry any counter he has at his disposal. While his blade does get out at the end and potentially clip my leg a teeny bit, this is easily over an acceptable tempo where an afterblow can be given, and therefore, the three points for a thrust to a chest was awarded to me!
To be honest though, a lot of this analysis is fun to do after the fact, but my body moved before my brain could process what it was seeing properly, so I'm thanking the training and muscle memory for this.
Anyway I'm still not really sure what I'm posting on this damn website so like if anyone has bothered to read all of this, and liked it, please let me know and I'll keep at it!
could I request aventurine, ratio, jing yuan with reader playing chess or go and feelings bloom like for Lakan and Maomao's mom
Check and Balance
Tags: Aventurine x Reader, Ratio x Reader, Jing Yuan x Reader, Platonic Relationships, Chess, Strategy, Intellectual Banter, Mentorship, Slow-Burn Interaction, Gentle Humor, Slice of Life.
Warnings: Mild Violence (Chess Metaphors), Mild Emotional Themes, Trauma References, Mentions Of Loss/Grief, Occasional Dark Thoughts, Intellectual Tension, Occasional Strong Language (Mild).
The game began before you even touched the board.
Aventurine leaned back in his chair, the low amber light of his office glinting off his glasses. Between his fingers, a gold chess piece spun lazily — the king, of course. His grin was a study in elegance and provocation.
“Careful,” he said. “A single move can ruin a perfectly good reputation.”
You raised an eyebrow. “You’re assuming I have one to lose.”
His laughter was soft, musical, and disarming. “Touché.”
The chessboard between you was no ordinary set; the pieces were made of fine crystal, each embedded with micro-circuits — Aventurine’s idea of aesthetic excess meeting functionality. Every captured piece recorded your match data, turning your casual game into an investment algorithm.
“So this isn’t just chess,” you said, setting your pawn forward.
“Nothing ever is,” he replied.
He matched your move instantly. He didn’t even look down. The sound of the pieces clicking into place was oddly soothing, almost hypnotic.
Aventurine treated the board as he did life — a stage for bluff, rhythm, and misdirection. His smile was a weapon; his silences, traps. Each move you made seemed to reveal nothing to him, yet somehow he always responded in perfect tempo.
You decided to test him.
“You’ve calculated everything, haven’t you? Even losing?”
He chuckled and finally leaned forward, forearms resting on the table. His eyes caught the light like fractured gemstones.
“I don’t calculate losing,” he murmured. “I calculate the worth of losing.”
There it was — the philosophy that defined him. Every piece, every gamble, every smile had its price. To Aventurine, risk wasn’t chaos but currency.
Halfway through, he made a move that seemed careless — advancing a rook where it could easily be captured. You hesitated. It was a trap. It had to be.
“You’re thinking too long,” he teased. “Hesitation is how fortunes are lost.”
“And overconfidence is how cons are caught.”
The words slipped out sharper than you intended. He froze, just for a fraction of a second, and you saw something flicker behind his expression — something old, painful, human. Then it vanished beneath the familiar grin.
“Touché again,” he said softly.
When you took his rook, he didn’t flinch. In fact, he looked… satisfied. It was only when the game neared its end that you realized he’d been maneuvering you toward an intricate exchange. Your victory was genuine, but his loss served a purpose.
“You win,” he said, surrendering his king with a flourish. “And now you owe me a rematch.”
“Why? You lost.”
“Exactly,” he said, eyes gleaming. “Loss creates opportunity. You’ve given me something to play for.”
He smiled — not his usual, calculated grin, but something quieter, almost real.
And for once, you realized that Aventurine didn’t play chess to win.
He played to feel the stakes.
Ratio examined the chessboard as though it were a theorem — beautiful in its precision, irritating in its imperfections.
“A game of intellect,” he said, “is only as good as its participants.”
“Then I suppose you’re satisfied,” you replied.
He tilted his head, amused. “Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.”
The Intelligentsia Guild’s library was quiet except for the occasional clink of ceramic as tea cooled beside him. Books towered in disciplined chaos — a cathedral of thought where Ratio seemed entirely at home.
When he moved his first piece, it wasn’t a declaration of challenge but of inevitability.
You responded in kind, mirroring his move.
“Symmetry,” he noted. “An aesthetic but inefficient strategy.”
“And yet it unsettles you,” you countered.
A faint smile ghosted across his lips. He didn’t deny it.
Ratio was not a man who enjoyed unpredictability, yet chess required it. Every time you made a move he hadn’t anticipated, a spark of genuine interest lit behind his crimson eyes.
“You’re defying my projection model,” he said after your fourth move. “That shouldn’t be possible.”
“Or maybe your model assumes I think like you.”
He paused, fingers resting lightly on his bishop. The silence stretched just long enough for tension to coalesce.
“That,” he murmured, “is precisely why this is fascinating.”
For all his reputation as a cold intellectual, Ratio became animated in the heat of analytical combat. The board transformed into a battlefield of logic and psychology — every piece a statement, every counter a rebuttal.
“You’re approaching this emotionally,” he observed midway through.
“And you’re approaching it clinically,” you replied. “But emotion is part of cognition.”
He blinked. “A philosophically debatable claim.”
“Everything’s debatable to you.”
That earned the faintest of laughs. “Naturally.”
The match stretched on for nearly an hour, punctuated by long intervals of silence — the good kind, full of thought. You noticed how Ratio never broke his posture, how his focus was absolute, but there was something else too: admiration.
When he finally spoke again, his voice softened.
“You remind me of why I prefer opponents over admirers,” he said. “You contradict me.”
“You mean I make you wrong sometimes.”
“Exactly,” he said with a small nod. “And there’s no greater gift than being proven wrong — it refines truth.”
You made your last move — checkmate.
Ratio didn’t look surprised. Instead, he studied the board for several seconds, then leaned back and smiled — genuine, unguarded.
“A well-constructed argument,” he said. “Elegant and decisive.”
“It’s just chess.”
“Nothing is just anything,” he replied, sipping his tea. “This was a dialogue in motion.”
As you began resetting the pieces, he added quietly:
“Next time, perhaps we discuss philosophy instead of simulate it.”
“You mean debate?”
“Naturally,” he said again, the faintest glint of amusement in his eyes. “I concede only in one domain — conversation.”
The courtyard was serene, brushed with the gold of evening. Wind rustled through bamboo, scattering sunlit patterns across the board laid between you and Jing Yuan.
He stifled a yawn. “You’re sure you wish to play? I tend to drag my games out.”
“That’s fine,” you said, smiling. “Patience is part of the lesson, isn’t it?”
“Ah,” he chuckled. “You’ve been talking to Yanqing.”
The Arbiter-General’s reputation as the “Dozing General” preceded him, yet the title belied the quiet sharpness in his golden eyes. He made his first move slowly — deliberate, almost lazy, but you sensed it was the product of calculation rather than lethargy.
Jing Yuan played chess the way he commanded armies: with foresight disguised as ease.
The first few turns passed in silence. The air was filled with the soft tapping of chess pieces, the occasional chirp of a distant bird.
“You’re not talking,” you noted after several minutes.
“Words can cloud thought,” he said, moving a knight. “And clarity is rare enough these days.”
“So you prefer silence?”
He smiled faintly. “I prefer what’s necessary.”
He spoke like a man used to both power and reflection — the kind of balance forged through centuries of leadership.
When you captured one of his bishops, he didn’t react. He merely looked at the board and adjusted his cape slightly.
“You saw that coming,” you said.
“Of course,” he replied, voice calm. “Sometimes letting a piece fall opens the field.”
There was no arrogance in his tone — only patience. You realized then that Jing Yuan didn’t play to win so much as to understand. Every exchange was a lesson, every sacrifice a meditation.
As the sun dipped lower, he began speaking again, voice almost wistful.
“You know,” he said, “I used to play with someone else like this. She was far more aggressive than you. Every move a battle cry.”
You hesitated. “And what happened?”
He smiled, soft but sad. “Time happened.”
You didn’t press further. The melancholy that lingered around him was as much a part of his legend as his wisdom.
When the game reached its endgame, you found yourself at a disadvantage. He’d subtly steered the board, guiding you toward a quiet checkmate.
“You could have ended it sooner,” you said.
“Perhaps,” Jing Yuan replied, leaning back. “But what would be the point? A swift victory teaches nothing.”
He began to reset the board himself, hands steady and deliberate.
“You know,” he added, tone light again, “Yanqing once accused me of being too slow even in play. I told him wisdom requires rest between moves.”
“That sounds like an excuse for napping.”
His laugh was low, genuine. “You see through me too quickly.”
As you played another round, the lanterns flickered to life across the courtyard. The world grew softer, quieter.
“Mastery,” Jing Yuan said, almost to himself, “isn’t about predicting the next move — it’s about accepting it when it comes.”
He looked at you then, eyes reflecting both the fading light and centuries of calm.
“So,” he said gently, “what have you learned from today’s game?”
You smiled. “That patience is harder than strategy.”
“And yet,” he replied, moving his first piece again, “it’s what keeps us human.”
The game continued, unhurried and endless — a meditation shared between two minds who found peace not in victory, but in understanding.