mud/docs/research/bending/bending-arts.md

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The Bending Arts

Reference material for elemental manipulation systems, divorced from source fiction. Intended as design input for a MUD element/magic system.

The Four Elements

Each element embodies a core philosophical principle:

Element Principle Jing (Combat Stance) Origin Creature
Air Freedom Negative (evasion) Flying bison
Water Change Neutral/adaptive Moon spirit
Earth Stability Neutral (wait, then strike) Badgermole
Fire Power Positive (aggression) Dragon

How Bending Works

Bending operates through martial art motions - hands and feet channel internal energy (chi) outward to interact with an element. Advanced practitioners minimize physical movement; the most powerful can bend with thought alone.

Each art derives from a real-world martial arts tradition and has a distinct movement vocabulary. The element responds to the practitioner's intent, emotion, and spiritual state as much as their physical form.

The Fifth Art: Energybending

Predates the four elemental arts. Manipulates life force directly rather than external elements. Requires spiritual integrity - an unstable spirit risks corruption and destruction. Can grant, remove, or restore elemental abilities.

See energybending.md for details.

Individual Art Files

Design Notes

Key properties that make this system interesting for a game:

  • Asymmetric balance: each element has genuine strengths and weaknesses, not just cosmetic differences. Water needs water nearby. Fire can generate from nothing but loses power in eclipse. Earth needs ground contact. Air excels at defense but its philosophy discourages lethal force.

  • Sub-arts as progression: each element has rare specialized techniques that serve as natural advancement paths. Metalbending, bloodbending, lightning, flight - these are endgame abilities earned through mastery.

  • Philosophy matters mechanically: a firebender fueled by rage hits differently than one connected to life force. An airbender with worldly attachments literally bends worse. The internal state affects the external power.

  • Environmental interaction: water needs a source, earth needs ground, fire draws from the sun. The environment is not backdrop - it's the resource system.

  • Counter-play: each element has natural counters and synergies. Understanding your opponent's art matters as much as mastering your own.