Score a Clear or higher in Wisp Shoot (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in Sudden Death Rally (Easy) Score a Clear or higher in Sudden Death Rally (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in Turntable (Easy) Score a Clear or higher in Soul Smash (Easy) Score a Clear of higheer in Soul Smash (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in Hard Workers (Easy) Score a Clear or higher in Hard Workers (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in Final Battle (Easy) Score Clear or higher in Final Battle (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in Dancing Statue (Easy) Score a Clear or higher in in Dancing Statue (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in in Soul Smash (Easy) Score a Clear or higher in Coin Collector (Easy) Score a Clear or higher in Coin Collector (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in Blast Chase (Easy)
Score a Clear or higher in Blast Chase (Normal) Score a Clear or higher in Beloved (Easy) Score a Clear or higher in Beloved (Normal) Some can be purchased from the Shop, while others need to be unlocked by scoring in other missions. There are some Soul Arena missions that can only be unlocked when certain conditions are met. L1 Assassin, L10 Thief, L10 Gladiator, L20 Barbarian L10 Barbarian, L20 Monk, L20 Dancer, L20 Gladiator Note 2: When a discipline is obtained at Level 1, that is the normal discipline available to the character Note: The Swordsmaster Class automatically gets all Weapon Disciplines that are available to custom characters, but does not get the Soul of (Character) Disciplines.
Here is a list of all weapon disciplines, and what classes are able to use them, and at what level. These disciplines apply from then on to any custom character you have of that class, and give them acess to new weapon types. New weapon disciplines for Custom CharactersĪs you level up your characters in Chronicles of the Sword, the character's class will begin to aquire new Disciplines. Published by The Geological Society of London.Some Character Illustrations will appear in Valeria's Shop after you've completed certain objectives. Particularly popular as an antidote in plague medicines, the use of alicorn (unicorn horn) simples declined to extinction with the increasingly empirical approach to pharmacy of the mid-eighteenth century.
The supposed therapeutic application and wide range of delivery systems of all types of unicorn horn medicines are reviewed in detail for the first time. Further alternatives with supposedly similar properties included the (probably smectite) clays of Terra Sigillata Strigoniensis or Terra Silesiaca ( Unicornu Minerale), and an alchemical preparation ( Unicornu Solare). Debate raged as to which was the ‘true unicorn’ ( Unicornum Verum), narwhal tusks or mammoth ivory ( Unicornu Fossile) shavings and powders of both were incorporated into a bewildering array of medicinal mixtures while fraudulent alternatives flooding the markets required the employment of discriminatory tests. Increasing popularity as an alexipharmic, prophylactic and counter-poison through the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries led to rising demand and rapidly inflating prices. Reinforced by classical and medieval writers, travellers, biblical warrant and trade in narwhal tusk, the unicorn became firmly established in European mythology. Ctesias (fifth century BC) recounted contemporary Persian beliefs of white Indian animals which had a white horn, black in the centre and flaming red at the pointed tip, projecting from their forehead.