Deepwoken Earth Piercer |link|
So Harran did what Earth Piercers were made to do. He placed his palm on the living rock. He sang the mantra not as a shout, but as a whisper: “Break not the earth. Pierce the lie.”
Allows penetration to exceed the 50% cap, directly converting high strength into raw damage against armored targets.
Harran’s punishment was not death. The Church cursed him to memory. They shattered his body into seven stone fragments—the one at the Docks was the last—and scattered them across the drowned lands. Each fragment preserved a moment of his dissent. And each fragment, if touched by a Deepwoken with a pure Resonance, offered a choice. deepwoken earth piercer
"In secret places, where the earth is old A sword lies hidden, forged from the planet's gold With blade of darkness, and a hilt of light The Deepwoken Earth Piercer shall pierce the night"
He was standing on a cliff that no longer existed, in a time when the Song of the world was still untarnished. Before the depths rose. Before the greys. He wore not his own body, but that of a giant—a Deepwoken of impossible attunement, his flesh woven with stone and root. His name was Harran the Sunderer . So Harran did what Earth Piercers were made to do
With the Deepwoken Earth Piercer in hand, Eira discovered that she could indeed pierce the fabric of reality. She saw hidden patterns and connections that bound the world together, and she began to understand the ancient secrets that lay hidden beneath the earth's surface.
Eira, now armed with the Deepwoken Earth Piercer, became the key to a great and ancient struggle. With the Keeper's guidance, she embarked on a quest to stop the Order and protect the balance of the planet. As she journeyed across Eridoria, the sword's power grew within her, and she became a beacon of hope against the darkness. Pierce the lie
However, Eira soon realized that she was not the only one searching for the Deepwoken Earth Piercer. A dark organization, known only as the Order of the Shattered, sought to claim the sword for their own purposes. They believed that with the sword's power, they could control the very fabric of reality and reshape the world in their image.