Arena of Spirits: Trial by Stardust
Prologue: The Flicker Above
Niko Suhara barely sleeps on the eve of the biggest fight of his life. He sits on the highest roof of Zarune Academy, his eyes fixed on distant city lights shimmering with unknown promise. Midori, his closest friend with a shock of green hair, sits beside him. “You’re worried you don’t belong—again,” she teases gently. Niko stares down at the badge in his hand, cool metal cold against his skin.
“I don’t think I’ll even get past round one,” Niko sighs. Behind the facade, he isn’t sure. No one fro—the slums ever wins at Starbound. It’s a storied tournament: only spirits come away unscathed in soul or limb. “Remember what your gran said? If you don’t walk the stars, you’re stuck in dirt,” Midori reminds with a nudge. The noise of the Academy’s growing crowd hums in the distance, flowing in with the chill wind.
Would you stand in the sand and fight if you knew the rules could shift anytime? That’s been Niko’s looming question. For Midori, the reason to fight is different: validation, recognition, and honor.
Chapter 1: The Grand Crowd Calls
At dawn, the city squares empty into the coliseum, a bold silver ring suspended over real, open sky. Tournament flags ripple. The opening ceremony stalls as coordinators spot Niko trying to rehearse side forms tight in a corner. There’s waiting, tension sparking among hopefuls.
“Pretty tough turn this year,” mutters Juuzou—a senior clash, old wounds lining his brown arm. New lights dance along the eastern arc. Unlike others, Niko hasn’t trained for this. He just had farm chores and broken sticks. “Yeah,” he says, eyes flat as steel.
That first match draws thirty thousand pairs of eyes.
Are you the sort who circles the fight, or do you charge in before you overthink it?

Chapter 2: Rite of Fire
Niko steps into Starbound’s main ring, noticed now for dull homespun clothes, a sprig of wild herb tucked behind his ear—a promise not to change. Faced with Linh Sato, the quick-tempered favorite, his pulse jumps from old fear. Ringside, Midori tenses with hands balled up, ready to yell if the need strikes.
Spectator cheers hit a fever pitch. Niko kneels in the sand, whispering gratitude to whoever faces him. Linh laughs, stomping sharp. “I heard you plant carrots for luck. They’re about to dig you under,” Linh taunts. Touch low, sharp, it bounces right off.
Linh dodges with the chill style her clan made famous. Flick—smack—grip—
The science behind combat? Predicting once you read. Sometimes, having heart means taking the punch and thinking next step, not whether your stance looked cool.
Midori and Juuzou argue on the bench how attacking the legs will be key; neither convinced Niko knows. He dodges, awkward at first. Fresh bruises rack his shins in round one: lesson stamped fast—movement before pride. “Again! Move again!” someone shouts.
Stats Don’t Lie
Tournament watchers claim tradition breaks the determined; fewer than 8% of underdogs in Starbound pass the first round. By the fourth hit, Niko gets wise: Linh’s footing is always softest after breaking left, post-reversal.
Niko swings wild at first, missing more than he lands, but that’s new info gained. Announcers compare his progress to ancient matches: no rookie since Mizuchi’d dared feint against Clan Sato.
Did you ever have a teacher that showed you pain isn’t always failure? Niko’s limbs are stiff but his will runs unwrecked. Stamina: tested.

Gallery of Grit: Behind Their Warpaint
Between rounds, bored twins Taz and Koru tease traders selling pins engraved with each combatant’s mark. There used to be fifteen founders of this annual showdown; now hundreds join, each carrying wild stories, few melting the top ice pack.
“He thinks kindness is magic armor,” Koru sneers—not seeing Midori smile cool as glass.
Zarune principal Amar Tiel keeps sharp eyes on the field from a floating seat, arms hidden. He’s looking for the right mistake, not the right win. Below, the matches run too close and fast. Juuzou disinfects his elbow scrapes using grass juice, sharing past defeat stories with Midori, both drawn deep into Niko’s reckoning with odds and blood and trust.
Chapter 3: Moves Unwritten
The Starbound’s core strength: rules bend with sudden surprise. Partway through, one arc light fizzles, and a patch of dark shifts patterns in the ring. Midori’s lips press thin. Niko reflexively covers Linh from flying debris—taking the scare himself. The stand roars. Judges swap notes fast—should they pause fights, restart?
“Right, heartbroke rookie,” breathes Linh, steady now in eye. The match twists; she drops rules, pivots the wrong way, and creates an opening nobody would wager on. Nobody except Niko. He dives but not to win clean. Instead, he steadies her and says, “You’re better with the smooth turn, worry less about pace next time.” The crowd doesn’t expect respect in blood-and-winner arcs. Juuzou mutters, “He’s undone his own win, what is he playing?” Midori squares shoulders. “That’s why I believe in him.”

Others Lie in Wait
Backstage, quiet drama grows near the board of combatants. Wilder clans bet heavy on Niko falling in the sand by sundown; odds bloat. Strategic supporters throw caution, plug holes in rulebooks searching for outs. In their darker corners, ancient fighters recall their first missteps—and those they’d let fall for an edge. “Some learn slow. Others end standing alone, all others gone,” Juuzou warns.
Between Rounds: Real Dirt, Brave Heart
Blood worked out, bandaged badly, Niko sits by the locker window, lost in the clouds floating casual and easy beyond stadium wires. He fingers the badge again. His gran said, “Every wound’s luck added. You’ve got more to spend.” Ryan, distant now, reminds him: “Don’t lose face; lose one more fear.” They laugh, bleed together, check who is left for round two. Some names haunt the field. A stranger with pale eyes marks Niko for something deeper than the match. The unseeded fighter, barely rumored, slips past every hoop with ease: Jin from Southroads—a ghost in bone white, who never lost in closed-ring brawls. Forewarning knots in gut. Is Jin the real test?

Cliffhanger: Fights Above
Sundown drops amber lines on the ring. Storm signs flicker. As riotous cheer dies, Jin waits with a tilt of the head—unreadable. The string of fate feels drawn taut. “We both know this doesn’t end today,” Jin whispers under breath. Niko never backs down, just closes his eyes: “I want to find a road out, not a reason to quit.”
With the most unlikely duo set to clash—rookie bleeding but savage, the ghost unbeaten and cool—Zarune’s main referee calls mix fight. Stakes push high, history begs for a break free from record. Is it worth setting heart on light if you’ve nowhere else to burn out? All waits in flux.