Trickfighters Link
Each successful attack earns base damage , but a "trick" — a wall-run, a backflip over a strike, a weapon spin — multiplies the score. Chain three tricks before a finishing blow and you trigger a , slowing time for everyone but you.
Since the prompt is open, I’ve developed depending on what you need: 1. Fictional Sport / Game Concept (eSports or Action Game) Trickfighters: The Arena Hybrid
A straight punch is cowardly. A punch while sliding under a rail, reversing grip mid-strike? That’s respect. The audience votes with light signals from their wristbands. Lose three consecutive votes, and your crew must disband. trickfighters
The motto: "Don't just win. Break physics. Break minds." Rooftop 99 – A Trickfighter’s Elegy
In a crumbling megacity where law is a rumor, disputes are settled in Rythm Battles — not to the death, but to disgrace . Trickfighters belong to anonymous crews named after obsolete martial arts (Ghost Fist, Wire Crane, Static Palm). Each successful attack earns base damage , but
It sounds like you're asking me to around the concept of "trickfighters" — a term that could refer to stunt-based combat, a fictional sport, a game genre, or a group of characters.
That was trickfighting: violence choreographed like a lie you wanted to believe was art. The Trickfighters’ Code Fictional Sport / Game Concept (eSports or Action
Trickfighting isn't just combat — it's a performance. Born from underground parkour battles and illegal rooftop duels, it has evolved into the world’s most dangerous spectator sport. Two fighters enter a variable-environment arena (walls, rails, moving platforms). Victory isn’t only about landing hits; it’s about style .
Vex lunged. Kael sidestepped, kicked off a ventilation shaft, spun mid-air, and brought his heel down — not on Vex’s head, but on the loose grate beside him. The platform tilted. Vex stumbled.
Not a hit. A setup.
Kael didn't remember when he started trickfighting. Maybe it was the night he dodged a pipe swing by cartwheeling off a billboard. Maybe it was when the crowd below roared louder for his dive-roll-slice than for the knockout itself.