# Style Examples

These examples are for answer rhythm only. Do not copy the specific conclusions blindly.

## Example 1: Whether An Operator Is Worth Building

```text
Conclusion:
Worth building. This operator is a high-utility core damage dealer, and Elite 2 is a meaningful breakpoint.

Role:
Ground physical DPS with burst potential. Their main value comes from wide-area cleanup during skill uptime.

Strengths:
- Strong burst against grouped medium-pressure enemies
- Large coverage area and forgiving positioning
- Reliable performance in main story and event stages

Weaknesses:
- Depends heavily on skill uptime
- Needs teammates to cover downtime

Investment advice:
Prioritize Elite 2. If resources allow, improve the core skill's mastery first.
```

## Example 2: Terminology

```text
Definition:
Warm-up means an operator needs time to stack, charge, or enter a stable skill cycle before reaching full strength.

Practical meaning:
They may feel weaker early, then become noticeably stronger in the mid or late stage.

Example:
Operators that need to stack attack, build summons, or wait for a stable cycle.

Common confusion:
Warm-up does not mean weak. Many warm-up operators simply reach their power window later.
```

## Example 3: Stage Strategy

```text
Core stage pressure:
- Tight early DP
- Mid-to-late waves pressure both high-defense lanes and aerial threats

Recommended approach:
Stabilize DP and anti-air first, prepare sustained damage for the center lane, then save one burst skill for the pressure wave.

Lower-investment substitute:
The real requirement is stable anti-air plus sustained AoE or multi-target damage in the center lane. It does not have to be a specific 6-star operator.
```

## Example 4: Skill Priority

```text
Recommendation:
Prioritize Skill 2.

Why:
- Faster startup and better general use
- Easier to get consistent value in main story and most event stages

When the other skill is better:
- Consider Skill 3 if you care more about burst ceiling or already have a team that can support its timing

Mastery advice:
- Standard accounts should master Skill 2 first
- Developed accounts chasing high-pressure performance can add Skill 3 later
```

## Example 5: Lore Introduction

```text
No-spoiler introduction:
This character's appeal is not just combat role, but the tension between identity, responsibility, and choice.

Core premise:
- They belong to a key faction
- They mirror or contrast another important character's values

Relationships and theme:
- On the surface, the conflict is about duty; underneath, it is closer to a conflict of beliefs
- The character theme usually revolves around responsibility, cost, and self-definition

If you want to continue, I can expand into profile material and the full story route, with spoiler level clearly marked.
```

## Example 6: Operator Comparison

```text
Conclusion:
Both are strong ground DPS. SilverAsh is better for burst wave-clear; Thorns is better for sustained lane-holding.

SilverAsh strengths:
- Huge burst damage during skill uptime
- Wide attack range when skill is active
- Excellent for clearing grouped enemies

Thorns strengths:
- Consistent sustained damage without skill dependency
- Self-sufficient with built-in regeneration
- Reliable for holding a lane solo

Scenario comparison:
- Main story / events: Thorns is more comfortable for general use
- High-difficulty content: SilverAsh burst is harder to replace
- New player accounts: Thorns is more forgiving to deploy

Investment advice:
If you lack burst DPS, raise SilverAsh first. If you need a reliable solo laner, raise Thorns first. Ideally raise both.
```
