Thread:An Advocate for Manga/@comment-26841482-20151104164512/@comment-25787298-20151106133752

Whoo. This is a big'ne. I want to say Matsumae, but Nishiki is dangerous.

I see Matsumaes Kagune wall being obstacle to get around or go through, leaving an opening for Matsumae to work with. Even that being successful shouldn't be able to do him in, So she'd probably settle to cut off his tail. Nishiki, seeing this is the case, would look for an opening for himself to capatilize on. Matsumae prepared for this, switches up her tactics, and fatally wounds Nishiki who left himself open due to his attemptive capitalization.

Nishiki falls back on Kagune usage, to which Matsumae has to recover from after most likely being flung. Matsumae would either flee at this moment, or if inable, she could try an "all out" attempt. Nishiki himself may try to flee, and if that was the case, then he'd be giving her the win, as she'd cut him off with her wall Kagune. She'd move in with her Rin-Koukaku (the tenticle version of her kagune) and entangle him for a solid strike with her sword; blocking any final attempt with her shield.

Overall, despite Nishiki's brute force and danger factor, Matsumae is a calculating opponent that doesn't lose focus easy, and can apply a legitimate stadegy to a necessary situation.