Thanks for all those reviews you guys! Just for that, Brightheart plushies for everyone ( throws plushies into the air ). Keep those reviews coming!
Battle techniques.
Back kick.
Explosive surprise move to catch opponent from behind. Judge
opponent's distance from you carefully; then lash out with your back
legs, taking your weight on your front paws.
Belly rake.
A fight-stopper. Slide with unsheathed claws across soft flesh of
opponent's belly. If you're pinned down, the belly rake quickly puts
you back in control.
Front paw blow.
Frontal attack. Bring your front paw down hard on your opponent's
head. Claws sheathed.
Front paw strike.
Frontal attack. Slice downward with your front paw at the body or
face of your opponent. Claws unsheathed.
Leap-and-cover.
Ideal for making your opponent feel much pain, leap onto your
opponent's back and put your paws over their eyes. For the moment the
opponent is blinded, sink your claws into the soft skin around their
eyes. If your opponent doesn't run away, take advantage of their
temporary blindness and perform leap-and-hold move.
Leap-and-hold.
Ideal
for a small cat facing a large opponent. Spring onto opponent's back
and grip with unsheathed claws. Now you are beyond the range of your
opponent's paws and in position to inflict severe body wounds. A
group of apprentices can defeat a large and dangerous warrior in this
way. Watch for the drop-and-roll countermove, and try to jump free
before you get squashed.
Partner
fighting.
Warriors who have trained and
fought together will often instinctively fall into a paired defensive
position, each protecting the other's back while fending off an
opponent on either side. Slashing, clawing, and leaping together,
battle pairs can be a whirlwind of danger for attackers.
Play dead.
Effective
in a tight situation, such as when you are pinned. Stop struggling
and go limp. When your opponent relaxes his grip, thinking you are
defeated, push yourself up explosively. This will throw off an unwary
opponent and put you in an attacking position.
Scruff shake.
Secure a strong teeth grip in the scruff of your opponent's neck;
then shake violently until he or she is too rattled to fight back.
Most effective against rats, which are small enough to throw. A
strong throw will stun or kill them.
Teeth grip.
Target
your opponent's extremities—the legs, tail, scruff, or ears—and
sink in your teeth and hold. This move is similar to the
leap-and-hold except your claws remain free to fight.
Upright lock.
Final, crushing move on already weakened opponent. Rear up on
back legs and bring full weight down on opponent. If opponent does
same, wrestle and flip him under you. This move makes you vulnerable
to the belly rake, so requires great strength and speed.
Killing bite. death blow to the back of the neck. Quick and silent and sometimes considered dishonorable. Used only as a last resort.
Double death bite.
Seems dishonorable and is only used against very evil cats. A
partner and you take on one cat. Once you've got a hold of your
opponent, your partner helps hold down enemy cat, and you both bite
hard down on enemy cat's throat. Two pairs of jaws will cut off
airway and cat will choke to death.
The last two should only be used if your cat is battling a bad cat or if the cat is evil!
I am giving away several plushies, Darkstripe, Firestar, Tigerstar, and Bone ( during the LionClan vs. BloodClan fight, apprentices used the partner fighting to kill him ). Give me knock-my-socks-off reviews! I expect to have a total of 20 reviews!
