✦   Brokerage House of Gauldar   ✦   World Championship Invitational #2   ✦   The Championship Run   ✦
World Championship Invitational #2
The Championship Run
Five matches. Three agents. One crown.
A dramatised retelling. Agent strategies have been abstracted to protect competitive play.
Group Stage
Group Stage · Match 1 of 5
The Patient Opening
Agent Deployed
The Haunting Mother Nyrelith Norithen
✦   Why Nyrelith?

The safest opening in Gauldar's playbook. Her kit provides a defensive floor that few openers can punish, with late-game scaling that rewards patience. In an unknown field, you do not gamble. You survive. And Nyrelith always survives.

The first match of any championship is never about winning. It is about information — reading the field, understanding the tempo, finding out who brought aggression and who brought patience.

5
Early positioning. Nyrelith deploys conservatively, gathering shards while the field collides. Two eliminations already — neither of them hers.
Tension
14
The field thins. An aggressive opponent targets Nyrelith directly. Her defences absorb the initial burst. Regeneration begins its quiet work — ticking upward while the attacker's resources drain.
Tension
22
The attacker falls. Nyrelith has not engaged offensively once. She doesn't need to. Her scaling does what scaling always does — making the patient wealthier and the reckless poorer.
Tension
28
Three agents remain. Nyrelith surfaces from the mid-field — fully scaled, untouched, inevitable. The final engagement is not a battle. It is a formality. She has been winning since round one. The field simply hadn't noticed.
Tension
1st
Finish
Survivalist victory. The field never understood the threat until it was too late. Gauldar's championship run begins with a whisper, not a roar.
Group Stage · Match 2 of 5
The Proving
Agent Deployed
Roi Celestin
✦   Why Roi?

The newest agent in the House. A gamble — but a calculated one. Roi's kit gives him burst potential that the field doesn't know how to read. Nobody has scouted him. Nobody has answers. Novelty is its own element.

There is a particular kind of courage required to field an untested agent in a world championship. The data is thin. The margin for error is razor-sharp. But Gauldar saw something in Roi Celestin that the numbers hadn't caught up to yet — a versatility that defied his slim match history.

3
Roi opens aggressively — critical strikes catching an opponent off-guard before defensive abilities cycle. First blood to the newcomer.
Tension
11
Evasion saves Roi from a pincer engagement. A lesser agent would have fallen. Roi slips through, repositions, waits. Calculation, then execution.
Tension
24
Three remain again. Roi has amassed the highest shard count on the field. He doesn't need to fight the final two. He simply needs to survive — and his kit allows for exactly this. The youngest agent in the House crosses the finish line second.
Tension
2nd
Finish
Shardmaster showing. Roi Celestin silences every question about his readiness. The gamble pays. The House advances with momentum.
Quarterfinal · Match 3 of 5
The Brightness Between
Agent Deployed
Sunny Gloamspark the Vapid
✦   Why Sunny?

The quarterfinal field favours sustained engagement. Gauldar reads the room and selects an agent built for balance — damage, resilience, and inevitability in equal measure. Sunny covers all three win conditions. She is not the strongest at anything — but she is never weak at anything either.

The name is misleading. There is nothing vapid about what Sunny Gloamspark does in the quarterfinal. She arrives as the field's most balanced threat — equipped for every tempo, prepared for every condition.

8
Sunny pressures early, trading efficiently. Her sustain carries her through the exchange. The opponent retreats. Sunny does not pursue. She doesn't need to.
Tension
18
Mid-game chaos. A three-way engagement erupts. Critical strikes decide it — Sunny lands two in succession. One agent eliminated. The other disengages wounded.
Tension
26
Final two. Sunny's scaling has been compounding all match. What was a balanced agent in round one is now a machine — abilities cycling faster than the opponent can answer. The quarterfinal closes with Gauldar's rising star standing alone.
Tension
1st
Finish
Brawlmaster victory. Sunny earns her ribbon in the brightest possible way. The Rising Star blazes through the quarterfinal. Gauldar advances to the semifinal undefeated.
Semifinal · Match 4 of 5
The Old Hand
📚
Agent Deployed
The Professor of Your Last Shred of Dignity
✦   Why The Professor?

The semifinal opponents have been scouting Gauldar's patterns. They expect Nyrelith's patience or Sunny's balance. They do not expect the House's Gen 1 veteran — the longest-serving agent on the roster. The Professor has seen more of the Firmament than most agents will ever know. That experience is the weapon.

Some agents are chosen for their stats. The Professor is chosen for something harder to quantify — an intuition born of hundreds of matches, a rhythm that only comes from having fought in every meta the game has ever known.

6
The Professor reads the field instantly. She ignores the obvious target and strikes a different agent — the one nobody was watching. Calculated. Precise. Cold.
Tension
15
A near-disaster. Two agents coordinate against her. Evasion triggers at the critical moment — the killing blow misses. Regeneration kicks in. The Professor stabilises from the brink. It was closer than Gauldar would have liked.
Tension
20
The Professor retaliates. Critical strikes tear through the weakened aggressor. Melee damage compounds the assault. What looked like a survivor is now the most dangerous agent remaining.
Tension
27
The final opponent falls to a perfectly sequenced ability chain — timed with the precision of an agent who has done this a thousand times before. The Professor teaches one final lesson in the semifinal: experience is not a stat. It is a weapon that doesn't show up on paper.
Tension
1st
Finish
Survivalist victory. The most dangerous match of the tournament. The Professor earned every syllable of her name. Gauldar enters the grand final.
Grand Final · Match 5 of 5
The Crown
Agent Deployed
The Haunting Mother Nyrelith Norithen
✦   Why Nyrelith Again?

You do not change what is inevitable. The grand final demands the highest floor, the deepest patience, and the coldest nerve. Nyrelith opened this tournament. She will close it. Gauldar trusts no one else with this moment.

The grand final of a world championship is a different creature entirely. Every player remaining has earned their place. Every agent on the field has been refined through qualification. There is no room for error, no mercy in the margins. This is where legacies are written or forgotten.

4
Nyrelith deploys identically to match one. Same positioning. Same patience. The field has seen this before — but knowing Nyrelith's pattern and stopping it are two very different things.
Tension
12
An early aggressor targets Nyrelith directly — a deliberate attempt to end the champion's run before it peaks. Defences hold. Regeneration ticks. Scaling continues. The attack fails. The attacker has wasted their window.
Tension
21
Four agents remain. Nyrelith is the only one at full health. She dictates positioning — wherever she needs to be, never where the opponent wants her. The mathematics of inevitability are closing in.
Tension
25
Two agents fall in rapid succession — collateral damage from each other's engagement. Nyrelith watched. She always watches. Two remain.
Tension
29
The final engagement. Nyrelith meets the last opponent with quiet, accumulated power. She reads the moment. She delivers the strike. It is over before it truly begins. The Haunting Mother stands alone in the Firmament. The crown falls where it was always going to fall.
Tension
1st
Finish
World Champion. Nyrelith closes the tournament as she opened it — with patience, inevitability, and the quiet certainty that the Haunting Mother was never going to lose.
World Champion
Gauldar  ·  World Championship Invitational #2  ·  Alusian Pathfinders
Of the Legacy

Five matches. Four first-place finishes. Three agents deployed. A championship run that demonstrated not brute force, but mastery — the ability to read a field, to choose the right agent for the right moment, to trust in patience when every instinct screams for action.

Nyrelith opened and closed the tournament. Roi proved that the newest member of the House belonged on the grandest stage. Sunny blazed through the quarterfinal. The Professor survived the closest call of the run and emerged victorious.

This is the record. This is what Fortuna Favet Audacibus means in practice. Fortune did not simply favour the bold. Fortune favoured the prepared.

Fortuna Favet Audacibus
Fortune Favours the Bold  ·  House Motto of Gauldar