Not sure why mister Mohawk insists on a precise strike against an unseen target when repeated applications of something blunt and hard does the job just as well. They're pastries, not deer.
Mister Mohawk wants to teach them precision and efficiency. First you learn to precisely oneshot kill them. You then apply that knowledge to truly make them suffer.
Not sure why mister Mohawk insists on a precise strike against an unseen target when repeated applications of something blunt and hard does the job just as well. They're pastries, not deer.
Well, beating them to death is exhausting, for one thing. The kids won't be very helpful if they tire themselves out on the first yukkuri. After all, the problem is that there are way too many of the wretched things.
After all, the problem is that there are way too many of the wretched things.
So use poison. Or repellents. Or both. No reason not to.
What a child SHOULD be taught is to go find their parents to inform them of the infestation, who will then apply a toxin of their choice to the area or the general vicinity of the property. That's how they do it where I'm from. It works for us.
I mean, we also don't make a sport out of torturing pest animals, so I guess culture is a thing too.
Now you're arguing the merits of chemical methods vs direct extermination, instead of precise stabbing vs blundgeoning.
I feel like we'd probably use less poison IRL if rats and the like were dumb enough to come out of their holes just because they heard someone say hello.
Rats are smart and run away from large scary things, so we have to rely on the dangerous and expensive poison. Yukkuri are dumb and challenge humans, so no poison required.
The smart way to exterminate a family would be to kill a few kos, so the rest go in mommy's mouth. Then mommie and remaining kos, then the father who should be attampting revenge.
In the first page they stated that the number of Yukkuri is abnormal and very high, maybe is safer for the fields to kill them with weapons than poison everything.
In the first page they stated that the number of Yukkuri is abnormal and very high, maybe is safer for the fields to kill them with weapons than poison everything.
Maybe. It's still probably a bad idea to let kids get in there though. Worst case scenario, they end up getting Spark'd, and we don't know what that does to a human exactly, or how powerful dosu's actually are. (From what I've seen at least.)
we don't know what that does to a human exactly, or how powerful dosu's actually are. (From what I've seen at least.)
In my time on this site, I've seen dosu Spark's vary from "gives humans a light sunburn" to "Melts Armored vehicles". So, yeah, the power of a Dosu spark depends entirely on the author. So there is no standard, aside from maybe "Potentially dangerous".