Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-96.233.74.45-20140413040730/@comment-3146930-20140415003640

108.38.193.5 wrote: 142.46.3.131 wrote: What I don't get is that, when Juane shouted "Pyrrha!" she immediately understood what Juane wanted her to do (though, that was kinda noticeable)

What surprised me more is that when Juane then said "Nora!", she AND Pyrrha knew what to do: Nora would get on top of Pyrrha's shield, launch herself off and slam into the Death Stalker. But how did she know how to do that? They've litterally spent a bit more then 24 hours and the action they performed seemed unnaturally rehearsed.

Maybe Juane's Semblence is something to do with leading people? Not like Lelouch's powers but something simpler or smaller scale. Improvising or forming a plan on the fly, He said "Nora, Nail it!" and Pyrrha quickly thought "Nora can use my shield and her recoil to propel herself in the air and smash the Deathstalker's stinger, and Nora caught on to what she was doing. Plus you said it yourself the stinger was noticeably swinging around.

A lot of the time it simply comes down to drawing attention to something and coming up with ideas. During the start of their fight, they were kind of just attacking as best they could, leading to some damage to the Death Stalker, but not enough to really hurt it (it also caused Ren to get knocked out and Nora to push Blake off the bridge, oops). Jaune noticed the loose stinger and directed Pyrrha's attention to it. Then when he told Nora to follow up on it, she took his idea and made it better by getting Pyrrha involved, as she was the one that came up with the shield idea and Pyrrha understood immediately, probably by Nora's body language. Jaune may have directed them and come up with the winning idea, but the others still can think as individuals.