We've done yashou jewelry and yashou makeup, which means it's time for yashou weaponry!
Cats are bare-knuckle brawlers -- sort of. Da Qing fights with his bare hands, but Da Ji has a moment where she's about to savage Zhao Yunlan, and she sort of gets ... a cyber kitty paw? I have no idea how we're supposed to interpret this. Maybe this is Shen Wei Vision, seeing the damage she can do despite the human woman she appears to be, or maybe it's a frame that was supposed to have more polygons laid over it, except that CG never happened. One way or another, Da Qing's little claw-hand is not an idle threat.
Most of the named yashou characters are also bare-handed fighters, but their magical punches trail equally magical CG colors. Flowers and cats get yellow, crows are black, and snakes are red.
On top of this, Ya Qing also has little feather darts so precise that she can apparently shoot them quill-first through air ducts and into people's throats for an instant kill.
Crow extras have more traditional armaments -- and you know, there are a couple details in the show where I'm just forever baffled that they just let these things die out of focus, and one of the big ones is the Crow Tribe swords. Unlike Shen Wei's weapon, these things are much closer to actual 长刀, in that they are actually swords, and also they are long. But what's really amazing about them is that they have a silver crow-foot claw for a pommel. It's a great detail! ...And alas, these are the best close-ups I can get you.
Snakes have two kinds of weapons. Most snakes have these absolutely gnarly-looking sickle swords, reminiscent of khopesh, and they show up frequently throughout the series. However, there's this one guy who shows up near the end with this naginata-looking thing. (I guess he's the lost Metal Gear protagonist, Polearm Snake.)
A few of the flower extras appear armed with what might be short knives, but honestly, they are just too far from the camera to tell. I hope they're brightly colored and tipped with deadly poison! It's the flower way.














