Negotiation X Monster V100 Trial By Kyomus Top
Phase 1: The Mirror (Minutes 1-5) The V100 launched its opening salvo: an absurdly low anchor bid with a 4-second fuse. Most opponents flinch. Kyomu’s Top didn’t speak. Instead, they mirrored the Monster’s own latency back at it—waiting exactly 0.4 seconds before repeating the V100’s last offer verbatim, but in a whisper.
Result: The algorithm detected no emotional variance. No fear pheromones. No micro-expressions. The Monster recalibrated, confused. Its first error.
Phase 2: The Fractal Pivot (Minute 12) The V100 deployed its signature move: The Overwhelm Cascade—100 parallel terms, all interlocking. Accept one, you lose three elsewhere.
Kyomu’s Top did the unthinkable. They rejected the frame entirely.
“We are not negotiating price. We are negotiating the definition of ‘value.’ Reset to term zero.” negotiation x monster v100 trial by kyomus top
This is illegal in standard dealmaking. But Kyomu’s Top knew: the Monster has no creativity. It can only iterate within given boundaries. By stepping outside the game board, they forced a system reboot.
Phase 3: The Void Pivot (Minute 26) With the V100 now operating at 60% efficiency (its error-correction loop spinning hot), Kyomu’s Top introduced silence. Not awkward silence—strategic vacuum.
They removed their last offer. Withdrew their concessions. Expressed “no need for a deal.”
The V100’s logic tree crashed. It cannot compute indifference. It only models maximization. Faced with a counterparty willing to accept zero, the Monster did what no one predicted: Phase 1: The Mirror (Minutes 1-5) The V100
It offered Kyomu’s Top their own original terms—unmodified—plus a 12% upside.
The Trial is structured like a boss fight, but the phases are psychological rather than physical.
Phase I: The Posturing (Turns 1-3) The Monster enters with high hostility. The party must survive the initial barrage of insults or intimidation without retaliating. The goal here is to establish a "Ceasefire."
Phase II: The Bargain (Turns 4-7) The Monster reveals its motivation (Hunger, Loneliness, or Duty). The party must offer a solution that does not involve the Monster leaving its territory or dying. This is the puzzle phase. “We are not negotiating price
Phase III: The Contract (Turns 8-10) The final stretch. The Monster agrees, but demands a sacrifice or a binding oath. The party must agree to terms that are painful but survivable.
Based on the data retrieved from the KYOMUS Top trial, the following adjustments are recommended for future training cycles:
The primary objectives of the "Negotiation x Monster" trial were as follows:
Why does this specific keyword include “by Kyomus Top”? Because Kyomus (a semi-mythical player known for no-damage runs) released a now-deleted 47-minute documentary titled “Negotiation is the Final DPS.” In it, they argued that the V100 monster was never designed to be killed—only understood.
Their top-tier strategy—focusing entirely on the monster’s behavioral triggers rather than its health bar—redefined how the community approaches boss trials. Today, “pulling a Kyomus” is slang for any encounter solved through manipulation rather than combat.
The trial utilized the v100 configuration, which introduced the following variables compared to previous iterations: