Saturday, May 31, 2025

Lazarus Negotiates Peace. Everyone Dies Anyway








– In the Grimdark Future, Only Save Scumming Survives –

The continuing chronicle of Rogue Trader Lazarus and the Intergalactic Clown Car he calls a crew.

So. It’s 11:03 PM. Dave logs on late—glowing, content, and mildly suspicious from date night. “How’s it going?” he asks, with the cheerfulness of someone who wasn’t just murdered by a robot octopus.

How is it going?

Well, Dave, we got slaughtered. Then went shopping. But silver lining: we found the missing crew, hooray! Downside: they’d been flambéed by a multi-tentacled horror whose hobbies include turning skulls into yogurt. Fortunately, the Emperor invented save scumming, so we graciously rewound the timeline and declared it all a very vivid hypothetical.


Enter Team Lazarus: Take 2

Thus reassembled—two snipers, two meatshields, one Rogue Trader, and one guy who thinks plasma burns build character—we charged heroically toward the lair of Mr Tentacles. While Zaph and I explained the extreme hazards of melee combat with such a foe (e.g., becoming a fine red mist), Craig—our beloved vector of chaos—rushed in “for a better look.”

Craig’s definition of “look” involves poking with his face.

Combat began.

Sir Vegetable (Craig’s warrior persona) promptly took cover behind himself, declaring he couldn’t risk scratching his new black armor. A bold tanking strategy: self-preservation via mild sulking.

Pasqal (Dave’s tech-priest/tactical savant) mapped out the field with all the gravitas of a war-room general, strode forth to apply some sacred flesh-rending, and… whiffed. Thoroughly. We all blinked. He covered the moment by casually tapping the robot with an axe and lobbing a toxin dart at its metaphorical kidneys. Result: one angry dent.

Yriliet (Zaph’s “Xenos have no rights” sniper) called it a torture construct and promptly aerated it. Mr Tentacles, now thoroughly annoyed, spun up and blenderized Pasqal into deli meat.

Lanto (Zaph’s backup sniper) put another hole in the metal monstrosity, which prompted it to float over and turn Argenta (Dave’s other character) into extra chopped liver. We are now 50% less priestly.

Lazarus (me, obviously) took stock, declared Yriliet “Best Sniper in the Galaxy,” and ordered a follow-up shot. She obliged—Mr Tentacles was decommissioned with extreme prejudice. It’s not love. It’s tactical and hot.

Pasqal reassembled himself with whatever techno-witchcraft keeps him ticking, investigated the wreck, declared it a heresy against sacred cogwheel alignment, and vaporized it.


Back at the Opera House of Secrets and Inadvisable Deals™

We brought the assorted limbs of Mr Tentacles to Tervantias, the world’s sketchiest shopkeeper. While poking around his lab, we discovered his caged pet Space Marine, Ulfar, who had that “gladiator-for-hire” vibe and a deep loathing for small talk.

After what can only be described as advanced haggling, Lazarus secured Ulfar’s services in the arena. (Argenta, meanwhile, curled up for a post-evisceration nap.)


Gladiator Prep: Nothing Screams ‘Teamwork’ Like Height Disadvantage

Naturally, we decided to recon the enemy. A nastier collection of Dark Eldar you’ve never seen—led by Marazhai, a literal war criminal who once kidnapped and tortured us. Lazarus, leaning hard into diplomacy, fired up the Universal Translator to assert dominance.

“I am Rogue Trader Lazarus! Bow before me!”

What came out was: “Where is the toilet? My armor is rusty.”

Undeterred, Lazarus tried the ol’ “we have a common enemy” pitch. Marazhai almost bit, before strutting off to the arena with his murder kittens.


Let the Games Begin (and Immediately Go Off Script)

Round One: we were tossed into a match with 2 Sslyth (giant murder-snakes), 4 gladiators, and 2 snipers positioned on platforms. Snipers with elevation. Because of course.

Giant Ulfar couldn’t fit behind anything, but that didn’t stop him. Pasqal opened with a stun grenade that temporarily benched three gladiators. Ulfar roared into the gap, punched a snake, then mule-kicked a gladiator in the pancreas. This was the high point of Vegetable’s day.

Our snipers eliminated their snipers with practiced efficiency. Yriliet downed the snake attacking Ulfar, who shouted “thanks!” by immediately shooting a nearby gladiator and diving in to help Sir Vegetable, who was… underwhelming. The tankiest member of our crew now had a visible inferiority complex.

Still, we won. The crowd roared. Lazarus posed heroically. Vegetable flexed—briefly—before Ulfar’s shadow made it awkward.


Arena Round Two: When Your Arch-Nemesis Joins the Party

Plot twist! The champions were dropped into the ring—and one of them was Marazhai. Lazarus tried again to convince him to switch sides.

This time, it worked.

Yriliet stared daggers. Ulfar laughed, until he realized it wasn’t a joke. Marazhai slaughtered one of his allies, did a stylish acrobatic flip, and landed on our side. The crowd loved it. Lazarus gave a victory nod. Yriliet muttered something about “mistaken priorities.”

Pasqal charged into a cluster of three gladiators, cleaving indiscriminately and wondering aloud where Sir Vegetable had wandered off to.

Yriliet coolly executed the enemy team’s leader, Ablas.

Now it was Vegetable’s time to shine. Lazarus pointed dramatically. “Vegetable, be a hero!”

Vegetable charged… missed… and slammed the ground with all the majesty of a toddler in a bouncy castle. He hit nothing. Nada. The hammer had fallen, but not in any impactful way.

To his credit, he did eventually take out one champion. Pasqal mopped up the leftovers with the exasperation of a man covering for a younger sibling who forgot their pants to school again.


The Aftermath: We Win! (No, We Don’t.)

The crowd was rapturous. Our enemies were paste. But then the judge stood, peered into the pit, and declared:

“Technical foul. You lose.”

Apparently recruiting your torturer mid-fight violates some obscure arena etiquette. Shopping privileges were threatened. Lazarus sighed. Yriliet glared. Ulfar considered switching back.


Next Time, on 

Warped Expectations:

  • Will Yriliet and Lazarus ever rekindle their now-burned bridge of romance?

  • Can Sir Vegetable overcome his crippling case of Astartesphobia?

  • Will Pasqal ever miss again? (Unlikely.)

  • Will the Judge revoke our punch card discount at Space Costco?

Find out in the next thrilling installment. Provided Craig doesn’t accidentally trigger the boss fight again. 


Chip leader on the damage scoreboard

Saturday, May 24, 2025

There are worse things than boredom

 

Title: Trial by Arena, Betrayal by Bastard, Redemption by Knife


There are worse things than boredom.

So much worse.

Last week we had achieved the unthinkable: peace, stability, and a rapidly accumulating stockpile of side quests Lazarus refused to acknowledge. Aboard our rogue-traded slice of hell, things were quiet. Too quiet. Like a horror film soundtrack with all the violins cut out.

Enter Yriliet, requesting a private audience with Lazarus—an event that, statistically speaking, ends in one of two ways: steamy romance or galactic calamity. Spoiler: it wasn’t the sexy one. She wanted to explore a mysterious system. We, mistaking this for a side quest with actual loot, agreed. What followed was betrayal, gassing, kidnapping, warp-space abduction, drug-fueled torment, light beatings, and recreational mind-worm insertion. You know, standard Tuesday.


In Which Lazarus Is Tried, Tortured, and Slightly Poetic

Lazarus, desperate for a moment’s peace, was instead offered a front-row seat in a hallucinated Inquisition trial courtesy of his new parasite pal. Because nothing says “relax” like being psychically indicted while concussed.

Then came the real trial. Marakezai, our snake-themed nemesis, was sentenced to fight in the arena, which was a rare instance of us agreeing with Dark Eldar jurisprudence. Lazarus was meanwhile deemed unworthy of court drama and casually discarded like Tuesday’s servitor waste. Just as he was preparing to expire melodramatically in a pile of refuse, he was rescued by a literal space clown—the Harlequin, speaking exclusively in beat poetry and eldritch riddles.

Armed with a cryptic verse and a budget pistol, Lazarus staggered through Commoragh’s underworld, pausing every ten metres to vomit and/or brood.


Redemption by Knife, Reconciliation by Bad Life Choices

Stumbling across Yriliet mid-ritual, Lazarus ripped a blade from her trembling hands and declared with righteous fury, “Yriliet is mine. You can’t have her.”

He then stabbed her tormentor, which—while romantic—did little to improve their odds of surviving. Yriliet, gaunt and haunted, asked the only question that mattered: “Why would you rescue me?”

Lazarus, still bleeding from half a dozen metaphysical wounds and the entire concept of leadership, whispered: “I forgive you.”

And like that, our cross-species will-they-won’t-they rekindled over shared trauma and murder. Adorable.


Gladiators, Gunpoint Negotiations, and Dealings with a Scaly Devil

Their quest led them to the Pit—home to Malice, Snake Man Supreme, who was training slaves to fight in the arena. Lazarus attempted diplomacy. Malice declined. Lazarus fixed a broken machine nearby. Malice re-considered. Ultimately, he offered assistance—but only if Lazarus would kill the Commissar, a rival poacher of prime human meat.

Classic quid pro quo: you fix my mechanical baubles, I blackmail you into political assassination.

They accepted. As one does.


Sisters, Snipers, and Shattered Allegiances

The trail led to Sister Argenta, now inconveniently in service to the Commissar himself. She did not take kindly to Lazarus holding hands with Yriliet and refused to betray her commanding officer.

The Commissar, for his part, claimed he was nobly training escape squads and had already sent two to hijack a shuttle.

We nodded sagely, betrayed Malice, and left with what we thought was the moral high ground. Yriliet called it a trap. Yriliet was, as usual, completely correct.


Malice in Wonderland: The Pit Fight from Hell

Back at the Pit, Argenta confronted Malice while the snipers flanked. The plan was simple: survive until the Commissar’s troops arrived. This lasted roughly six seconds before Malice’s goons shanked Argenta into the dirt.

Yriliet went full sniper-goddess, popping heads like she was playing whack-a-heretic. Lazarus, meanwhile, adopted the role of slightly unhinged tactical coach. “Kill that one. No, that one. Ooh, good shot!”

The Commissar arrived with “elite” troops—who immediately died with the usefulness of a flammable airlock curtain. But they provided a meat distraction, allowing us to mop up and finally end Malice.

One boss down. Just several hundred more to go.


The Arena: Chimera, Trauma, and a Side of Betrayal

Seeking the rest of our crew (and, if we’re honest, better loot), we stepped through a portal straight into betrayal. The Commissar delivered a betrayal monologue so clichéd it nearly came with PowerPoint slides. He escaped. We were tossed into the arena with two warp-chimeras, Argenta, Yriliet, Lazarus, and ten of the Commissar’s “best.”

Argenta found a flamer and introduced one Chimera to the joys of spontaneous combustion. The other Chimera immediately turned three elite troops into bloody soup.

Lazarus, battle-weary but brilliant, hatched a plan: pull the chimeras into reality with gunfire, then kill them. It worked. Sort of. We killed the beasts. The troops turned on us. We killed them too. Efficient betrayal recycling.

Argenta then spotted one of her former trainees chained up and begged for rescue. Yriliet warned against it—pointing out we were injured, half-equipped, and had about as much chance of saving anyone as Craig does of navigating a puzzle.

Lazarus chose mercy. With sniper precision, he ended the prisoner’s suffering.

Sister Argenta added another layer to her ever-expanding PTSD lasagna.


Harlequin Redux: Clowning Around with Prophecy

Through the next portal, we reunited with the Harlequin, who delivered another cryptic verse while Yriliet screamed incoherently—either from psychic trauma or poetic overload.

Lazarus translated: “Find your friend, kill the evil, flee dramatically.” Roughly.

The Harlequin told us to follow “the winged vanishing dudette.” We did. It led us to Pascal.

Pascal was halfway to becoming a dark eldar appliance. Lazarus, not a fan of body mods, told him to rip it out. Pascal declined, citing certain death. Lazarus relented—grudgingly.

We left the torture world behind, one crew member heavier, several layers of sanity lighter.


Lesson of the Day: Betrayal is like death. You never think it’ll happen to you—until you’re face-down in a gladiator pit, dodging chimera poop and poetry at the same time.

Warp willing, see you next session.