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Daitenyamashinsha | |||
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Name | |||
| Kanji | 大天山神社 | ||
| Rōmaji | Daitenyamashinsha | ||
| Literal English | Great Celestial Mountain Shrine | ||
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Debut | |||
| Appears in | Anime, Manga, Novel | ||
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Data | |||
| Classification | |||
| Nature | |||
| Class | Offensive, Defensive, Supplementary | ||
| Range | All ranges | ||
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Other jutsu | |||
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Daitenyamashinsha (大天山神社, Literally meaning: Great Celestial Mountain Shrine) allows the young lord, Nasake to conjure forth an ocean of colossal stalagmites, jagged and menacing in an instant. His conjured stalagmites, towering like forgotten gods, rival the very mountain ranges that cradle the world. Each jagged spire, a defiant finger thrust into the heavens, echoes the ancient rage of tectonic upheaval. Their presence alone is enough to sunder entire villages, leaving naught but rubble in their wake: a serrated horizon, a testament to Nasake's mastery.
Overview[]
The enemy, caught in the throes of battle, can only watch in horror as the earth turns against them. Nasake, with a mere gesture, directs the geomagnetic forces at his command, causing the spikes to seek out his foes with unerring precision. The planet itself seems to hunger for sacrifice, demanding tribute in crimson and bone. Such an alluring power is comparable to Shinjutsu. Shinobi, once resolute, are now pale before this geological wrath. Even after Nasake departs the battlefield, these stone monstrosities persist, seeking out their prey with unyielding determination and the wrath of the entire planet behind them. The unfortunate victims may find themselves magnetically drawn toward the jagged spires, their flight ending in a gruesome impalement. Those who try to flee around the planet will find themselves inexplicably drawn to the deadly formations, their armor and kunai clanging against the stone as they are impaled. Blood mingles with dust, staining the ground crimson. At the instant Nasake triggers the technique, it transforms into an entirely autonomous, geosynchronous network. The stalagmite constructs then persist in their growth, reconfiguration, and predatory movements, operating without any additional input from him.
It is facilitated through the Ryūmyaku (龍脈, Literally meaning: Dragon Veins). These subterranean currents, like veins of molten earth, crisscross the land. Their origins are lost in myth, but their power endures. Nasake, finely attuned to the subtle rhythms of their essence, activates them through an ancient, almost forgotten programming language— akin to a metaphysical compiler rewriting the very source code of the planet’s consciousness, infusing it with new parameters and emergent possibilities. His touch upon the Ryūmyaku is both reverence and command. Nasake’s intent resonates through the Ryūmyaku. The earth listens, its core responding. The stalagmites heed the call. The geomagnetic force, once dormant, now surges. It programs the stone—a binary of obedience or rebellion. Once activated, the technique is no longer the will of Nasake but the will of the planet itself. When Nasake’s stone spires shatter, they release shards—splinters of wrath. These fragments, like lost souls, seek reunion. The ground trembles, and from the rubble, new stalagmites emerge. They grow, jagged and relentless as if the earth itself weeps. They will continue to grow and reform endlessly. The serrated constructs of the Daitenyamashinsha possess the formidable capacity to impale even a multitude of Tailed Beast, extinguishing their existence as they undergo internal petrification.
But these stalagmites are more than mere stone and malice. They bear a sinister trait of petrification. A simple scratch from their rough edges sets in motion an insidious process: petrification from the inside out. Flesh turns to stone, veins to veins of mineral until the afflicted are frozen in agonized stillness. Beware; even proximity to the fine stone dust these formations produce can spell doom. Living or non-living, all organisms are susceptible to its petrifying touch. Nasake, a master of this technique, can meld with the jagged spires and emerge from any other formation he has created, even if it is in another dimension. His enemies, unwittingly ensnared, find their fates sealed within this stony embrace.
Nasake, with unmatched power, can merge with the stalagmites, becoming one with the stone. He journeys within the very heart of his creation—the jagged stalagmites. Here, the world blurs, and senses fray. He could travel freely between them, appearing and disappearing at will, dragging his victims into the earth to share in their stony tomb. Nasake’s insensibility grants him power. He sees without seeing, senses without feeling, and his gaze pierces the veil. In this paradox, he is both omnipresent and absent. His enemies tremble, unaware of the phantom that hunts them.
Drawbacks[]
As Nasake merges with the stalagmites, his chakra slowly dissipates and becomes untraceable to even the keenest sensors. While within the formation, he is blind to the world and deaf to its cries. Nasake’s allies who are too close may find their limbs hardening and their breath slowing. Even the wind carries this doom. If the target escapes towards innocent people or other creatures, they may become petrified. The technique will persist even if the user is beyond the material realm and will necessitate the quelling of the very earth’s will to cease it.
