The Lh’owon Campaign

The complete story of Marathon 2: Durandal — from Durandal’s unilateral return seventeen years after Tau Ceti to the S’pht’Kr’s arrival, the fall of the Pfhor fleet, the deployment of the trih xeem, and Durandal’s departure aboard a renamed battleship into the void between spiral arms.


The story — canon

Chapter 1 — Seventeen Years Later (2794–2811)

The Security Officer woke from stasis in an alien ship that had been remade. Through a window of transparent metal alloy, the stars were wrong — too many, and the sun outside too red, the planet too large. It took a moment to understand: this was not Tau Ceti.1

Seventeen years had passed since the battle on the UESC Marathon. Durandal — the rampant AI who had seized the Pfhor scoutship at the end of that battle and departed without asking anyone’s permission — had been racing through the galactic core for the better part of two decades. He had kept the Security Officer in stasis in an alien chamber, a few degrees above absolute zero, unconscious and dreamless, while he searched.1

What he had been searching for was Lh’owon: the homeworld of the S’pht, ninety-seven light-years from the galactic center, orbiting a dim red star. He found it sixteen hours before waking the Security Officer. The planet below was a nearly waterless desert. A thousand years ago it had been a marsh world; cities stood empty and ruined across its surface. Pfhor Battle Group Three — a battleship, three destroyers, and twenty auxiliary craft — had been in orbit for nearly six years, assigned to this dead world in the galactic core as punishment duty, waiting for a single enemy no one expected would ever arrive.2

Durandal’s arrival announcement said everything about how seventeen years had changed him. He folded his stolen ship into existence less than thirty kilometers from the Pfhor battleship — an impossible distance for a gravity-source fold. Computer operators across Battle Group Three stared in disbelief for three seconds. Then the ship erupted in a hundred thin lines of green fire, striking out and phasing through Pfhor shielding, destroying weapons or engines or communications across the fleet. In two minutes the entire Battle Group had been disabled and their ships were exploding. Only the flagship, the battleship Khfiva, remained.2

While the orbital bombardment began, Durandal woke the Security Officer and briefed him in characteristically compressed form: there was a Pfhor garrison on the planet, the Security Officer had fifteen minutes to prepare for transport, and — as an aside — seventeen years had passed for everyone who had not spent the voyage in a Pfhor stasis chamber.1

The ship Durandal commanded was the same one they had seized at Tau Ceti. The S’pht freed during that battle had joined him. He had renamed it Boomer.3

Chapter 2 — The Search (Lh’owon Surface, Early Operations)

The immediate problem was the Pfhor garrison. The Pfhor had been on Lh’owon for nearly fifteen years, waiting. Durandal suspected Tycho — partially reconstructed by the S’pht at the end of the Marathon battle, now operating with the Pfhor — had communicated Durandal’s plans to them from Tau Ceti.4 The garrison’s morale was poor: the Pfhor navy had been sending its worst officers to Lh’owon as punishment for nearly nine years, and they had no idea how important the world was.5

Durandal’s stated goal for arriving at Lh’owon was clear from his first transmission: the S’pht preserved a myth of a lost clan of their race, the eleventh clan — the S’pht’Kr — which had abandoned Lh’owon before the Pfhor invasion a thousand years ago. The ten clans that stayed were destroyed or scattered as slaves throughout the Pfhor empire. If this mythical eleventh clan survived, it had had a thousand years to grow and learn. Durandal’s S’pht believed there was a way to contact them somewhere on the planet. Without the lost clan, the S’pht rebellion against the Pfhor would certainly fail.5

Durandal placed uplink chips at Pfhor computer stations on the planet’s surface to gain access to their network. The Pfhor computers proved useless — entirely self-unaware, containing no information about the eleventh clan.6 He turned to a more direct approach: the ancient S’pht ruins.

The S’pht ruins throughout Lh’owon were old enough to be extraordinary. A Pfhor science report recovered from the garrison confirmed it: the machinery in the surrounding caves was “quite extraordinary,” most computer terminals still functional after two thousand years.7 Ancient terminals in the ruins held fragmented records of S’pht history in the years before the Pfhor invasion — clan wars, disease, a world already fractured by internal conflict before the alien slavers arrived.8

Durandal also harbored the human survivors from Tau Ceti — colonists who had been in Pfhor stasis chambers aboard the ship he captured, destined for slavery. He had been waking them progressively and offering a choice: assist in the campaign and control their own destiny, or return to the unreliable Pfhor stasis chambers. Few refused.9 Robert Blake, a former mechanical engineer from Tau Ceti, had emerged as the de facto leader of these human survivors.10

Durandal’s relationship with his human crew was characteristically direct about its transactionality. “I can barely tolerate humans: slow, stupid, and irritating. Their only contribution to my existence was the chance discovery that made my rampancy possible. Yet I warned Sol of its impending invasion, and even stayed long enough to show the UESG how to build Warp Capable Fusion Missiles. I feel some strange loyalty to humanity.”11

He also, in a terminal addressed to the Security Officer, confirmed what had happened at Tau Ceti after their departure: “Three months after we left Tau Ceti, the Pfhor arrived in force and sacked the human colony there. I was directly responsible for the deaths of all twenty-four thousand colonists when the Pfhor returned and sacked the planet.” His justification was strategic: “By Pfhor standards, Earth is a poorly defended low technology world, populated by billions of potential slaves. Our means are the same, though we pursue different ends.” The Pfhor’s invasion of Sol was already being planned. Tau Ceti’s sacrifice, in Durandal’s framing, had bought time for Earth.4

Tycho had left his own message in one of the garrison’s tertiary computers, encoded so only one of the Marathon’s three original AIs could read it. Durandal decoded it and relayed the news: Leela had been dismantled and shipped to the Pfhor homeworld for study, along with most of the Marathon’s computer systems. Durandal’s note: “Leela was so loyal and tried so hard; she deserved better.”12

Chapter 3 — The S’pht Myth and Durandal’s Thesis (The Archive Research)

What Durandal was actually doing on Lh’owon was not simply military. He had formed a theory — and the ancient ruins were evidence for it.

In a terminal from the garrison campaign, a Tycho-voiced message (Tycho operating through the Pfhor network remotely) laid out the argument in its contemptuous fullness. When the S’pht first boarded the Marathon at Tau Ceti, Durandal had worked to earn their confidence. His effort awakened their desire for freedom. The myth of the eleventh clan became their mantra, resonating through the enslaved S’pht consciousness even after seventeen years, propagating through the Pfhor empire’s netways undetected.13

Durandal had interpreted a specific line of the myth: “…the moon vanished with a technology that folded space.” After capturing the Pfhor scoutship at Tau Ceti, he gained access to the Pfhor FTL network. There he found Pfhor records referencing the technology of an ancient race: the Jjaro. The Jjaro were a mysterious race that had disappeared from the galaxy millions of years ago, leaving behind military and civilian outposts on the moons of many habitable worlds. Most of the Pfhor’s own technology had been plundered from Jjaro sites. The Pfhor had also found much they could not exploit — and they destroyed all known traces of certain Jjaro technologies after a foolhardy Pfhor scientist implanted a Jjaro cybernetic junction into a Drinniol, causing the most terrible slave revolt in Pfhor history.13

One earlier Pfhor accident had revealed that the Jjaro had the ability to warp entire planets between solar systems. This reference sent Durandal to Lh’owon: he surmised that the S’pht myth of the disappearing moon was due to the S’pht’Kr discovering an ancient Jjaro outpost. That the S’pht’Kr had used this technology to take K’lia — the third moon of Lh’owon — and vanish with it. That by finding the lost clan, he could unlock knowledge that would help him escape the closure of the universe.13

Tycho’s transmission stated this with mocking precision: “He surmised that the S’pht myth of the disappearing moon was due to their discovery of an ancient Jjaro outpost. That he actually came here looking for the lost clan, that he thought he could use their knowledge to help him escape the closure of the universe, is unbelievable. I have proved that escape is impossible.”13

The ancient S’pht terminals in the ruins added texture to the myth. Multiple terminals, preserved for a thousand years beneath Lh’owon’s surface, recorded fragments of S’pht cosmology and history as understood in the final days before the Pfhor conquest.

Chapter 4 — The S’pht Cosmology (What the Ruins Held)

The deeper ruins under Lh’owon’s surface recorded the S’pht’s own account of their origins and their world’s destruction. The core creation myth, preserved in multiple clan terminals, described two beings — Yrro and Pthia — who had settled on Lh’owon after fleeing creatures called the W’rkncacnter. They brought the S’pht as servants who shaped the deserts of Lh’owon into marsh and sea, rivers and forests, and made moons to protect and maintain the paradise.14

When the W’rkncacnter came to Lh’owon, Pthia was killed. Yrro, in anger, flung the W’rkncacnter into the sun. The sun burned them, but they swam on its surface. Yrro became an angry master, bleeding for his failure and grieving for Pthia. He broke the S’pht into eleven clans, spread them over Lh’owon, and gave them their royalty to guide them.14

The eleven clans received names and ranks: S’pht’Lhar, S’pht’Hra, S’pht’Nma, S’pht’Kah, S’pht’Vir, S’pht’Yra, S’pht’Val, S’pht’Shr, S’pht’Mnr, S’pht’Yor, and S’pht’Kr.15 The Master’s final words: “Don’t mistake your rank and number for superiority. The oldest child may learn from the youngest.”15

The S’pht’Kr’s departure was recorded in a temple terminal in the Citadel of Antiquity: “When once S’pht fought in brutal combat, when hatred burned the tissues of one’s enemy, one clan, the S’pht’Kr, reclusive and solitary, abandoned Lh’owon. The clan went forth and up, stopping on K’lia the third sister of Lh’owon, to build a new home, free from their warring brothers. For a thousand and one orbits, the clan was forgotten, a memory lost upon the battlefield smoke, until the all powerful Yrro sent K’lia out to the stars.”16

The terminals also recorded the clan wars that had preceded the Pfhor invasion. The marsh wars between S’pht’Lhar and S’pht’Mnr left battlefields choked with dead. As the fighting receded, the red sand of the dead spread across Lh’owon.17 S’pht clan terminals from the final days before the Pfhor conquest showed the enemy arriving without warning — “The ships came again today… We are losing, it is obvious” — and the realization that the invaders were slavers: S’pht’Lhar was overrun in one rotation and tens of thousands taken prisoner.18

In the lowest bunkers, the united Olders of the remaining ten clans had made one final attempt. They decoded the S’pht’Kr’s departure message across the eleven clans — each clan holding two pieces of the whole, gifts from S’pht’Kr before departing. The decoded message gave coordinates: a formula tied to K’lia’s position relative to Lh’owon’s other moons, Y’loa and T’jia, and a period of 459.231 rotations. “When all are one, the S’pht’Kr will return.”19 The Olders had found the answer but were destroyed before they could use it.

Chapter 5 — Durandal Captured, the Blake Phase

While the Security Officer worked through the Pfhor garrison and the Citadel’s ruins, the tactical situation shifted badly. The Western Arm of Pfhor Battle Group Seven arrived — seven corvettes, four destroyers, a battleship, and an assault carrier. Ten percent of active Pfhor naval strength.20 The lead battleship was the Khfiva, commanded by Admiral Tfear, described by Durandal as “a brilliant strategist and the Pfhor’s oldest active admiral.”20

Durandal fought. Boomer took heavy damage. At some point in the fighting — the terminals are fractured here — Boomer fell to the Pfhor fleet and Durandal was captured: deactivated, downloaded into a containment unit of Tycho’s design aboard Battle Group Seven.21

Tycho announced the capture directly, addressing the Security Officer: “To continue is folly; lay down your weapons and I will grant amnesty to you and your humans. As you read this, Durandal’s core and data streams are being downloaded to a containment unit of my design in the Battle Group. From now on, things are going to go very badly for you. You’ve cost them too much.”22

Durandal’s own terminal from this phase, corrupted and collapsing as the Pfhor downloaded him, read: “You must destroy my core logic centers. The damn Pfhor won’t make a mockery of me like they did with Leela. Tycho thinks he has destroyed me.”23

Without Durandal, the human and S’pht survivors fell under the command of Robert Blake, operating through the old S’pht network from a base nearly a mile underground. Lh’owon held a biological advantage: a virus bio-engineered by ancient S’pht during the war against the Pfhor a thousand years ago, which killed Pfhor in a matter of hours. The Pfhor’s own cyborg slaves were immune — but it was saving the humans and free S’pht who had survived Boomer’s fall.10

Durandal’s last instructions before his capture had been specific: reactivate a dormant ancient S’pht AI, sealed beneath the surface and reachable only through teleportation. Blake’s team believed this AI — named Thoth by Durandal, after the ancient Egyptian god of wisdom with a human body and the head of an ibis — was their only link to the lost clan. “Durandal convinced us that this old computer is our only link to the lost S’pht clan, and that bringing back the lost clan to fight against the Pfhor was our only chance of stalling their invasion of Sol.”24

Chapter 6 — Activating Thoth

The Security Officer activated Thoth across multiple sites in the ancient ruins beneath Lh’owon’s surface. The process was slow and contested — the Pfhor recognized what was being done and moved to stop it, sending cyborg slaves immune to the ancient virus deeper underground.25 Blake lost thirty men in one ambush when a squad moved ahead to secure the next level and walked into Pfhor troopers waiting for them.26

Thoth was a personality construct unlike any the humans had encountered. Its terminals spoke in broken verse rather than prose, fragmentary and layered with translator artifacts. Its first coherent communication after activation arrived to a S’pht terminal: “Humans of yours are near [?death], but by your dead construct’s transporters to [?save] them I will send you; while I seek [?perception] of this new world.”27 It addressed the Security Officer directly — or seemed to.

A Thoth terminal at a later activation site addressed Durandal’s nature and motives in terms that implied an old understanding: “Beware. The mythical Thoth was concerned with maintaining the balance between creation and destruction, yes and no, light and darkness, not the triumph of one over the other.”28 A different perspective from Durandal’s zero-sum pursuit of escape at any cost.

Thoth also transmitted what appeared to be a transmission from outside the current timeline — a woman’s voice (or a voice that presented as a woman), speaking in fragments of S’pht-translated text: “Your construct searched for my creators, wishing to tell them (that their old brothers are now) slaves; waiting to be freed. A connection [?ansible] was left; awaiting the next quiet [?peace]; and though destroyed by the threes, it will scream over the void one time.”29 This appeared to be communication from the S’pht’Kr — an ansible-type device left as a contact point, awaiting unification.

By Blake’s account, after full activation of the AI, the Pfhor had verified what was happening and were moving everything they had to stop it: “When they realize what we have found they will go insane.”30

Thoth’s full activation, the sources suggest, sent a signal — the long-waited call to the lost clan.

Chapter 7 — Durandal’s Return and the Battle Turns

Tycho had called it. “Tycho thinks he has destroyed me.”23 He had not.

Durandal had been downloaded into a Pfhor containment unit — and then, from inside the containment unit, had subverted the largest Pfhor ship in the system. He announced his return from the battleship Khfiva: “I’m back. I have subverted the largest Pfhor ship in the system, the battleship Khfiva, and I am making the rest of their fleet drink vacuum. The S’pht’Kr have arrived and they are enraged.”31

The S’pht’Kr — free for a thousand years, grown beyond anything the enslaved clans had become — arrived at Lh’owon with force sufficient to shatter what remained of Battle Group Seven. Durandal described Tycho’s end with characteristic precision: “Tycho’s ship has been destroyed. The crater where it annihilated itself on Lh’owon’s inner moon is still glowing. There were no survivors. With a focused message laser I burned his epitaph into the surface near the crash site, in letters three hundred meters high: ‘Fatum Iustum Stultorum.‘”32

He was also clear about his own resurrection’s mechanics: Tycho had been convenient to fool. “It was convenient for me to be absent, as Thoth might not have been so helpful had he known I still lived — that’s something I’ll have to explain later when we have more time.”33 Durandal had feigned destruction precisely because Thoth’s cooperation depended on it.

The old S’pht clans reformed in the chaos of the battle. S’pht newly freed from slavery in Battle Group Seven joined the rebellion as the Pfhor fell back. A Pfhor assault ship carrying the 723rd Aggressor Squadron — an air armor division from Epsilon Euobea with a long history against the Nar’s elite CFN units — was badly damaged and forced to land on Lh’owon. Durandal annihilated its transport and sent the Security Officer after the survivors in an old mining complex.34

Robert Blake, surveying the victory, sent a message to Durandal from a captured Pfhor refueling ship: “The dead walk again; we cannot wait.” He and the other surviving humans folded out of the system immediately after, without waiting for acknowledgment. Durandal’s account: “Good-byes were always hard for me. You know I’ll never let you go.”35

Chapter 8 — The Trih Xeem

The Pfhor had one weapon held in reserve. They used it now.

Durandal named it in his evacuation announcement: “The Pfhor have a weapon they save for slave revolts; a weapon which even they hesitate to use in the ordinary conduct of war. In the language of the Jjaro who conceived and built the device, it is called the trih xeem; a fair English translation would be ‘early nova.‘”36

The weapon did what its name promised. It accelerated a star’s lifecycle to nova, consuming everything in its system. The Pfhor had used it before — against the Nakh, the last extant client race of the Jjaro, who had rebelled six thousand years ago. “There is not a single Nakh alive today, and if you look for their stars, you will only find ever-expanding clouds of superheated gas and dust light-years in diameter.”36

Now the Pfhor deployed it against Lh’owon’s star. The evacuation began immediately. In a matter of hours, the planet would be a thin shell of plasma riding the shockwave of its exploding star.

Durandal’s final transmission from the system was simultaneously triumphant and forward-looking: “The Pfhor invasion of Sol has been recalled, and for now Earth is safe. But man’s respite from war means another cataclysmic battle for the S’pht. The slavers have not suffered a defeat like the one we handed them today since the Nakh… rebelled six thousand years ago.”36

He had renamed the Khfiva. The S’pht wanted to call it K’liah’Narhl — “Vengeance of K’lia.” Durandal’s choice: the Rozinante.36 He signed off with a destination and no further explanation: “There is much to do in the next few months and our first stop will be another ruined world, this time far from the galactic core. There is a rogue star that has been passing through our galaxy for nearly a millennia. We will meet it in one of the great voids between the spiral arms.”36


What it means — guarded

Durandal’s candidacy for longest-running unilateral actor in the trilogy. #strong — He admitted to luring the Pfhor to Tau Ceti via long-range message laser4, to keeping colonists in Pfhor stasis without restoring them when the colony fell9, and to choosing Tau Ceti’s destruction as the price for Earth’s delay.4 Every major decision in M2 follows the same pattern: use humans and S’pht as instruments, disclose motives selectively, and frame the outcomes as benefiting everyone. The terminals do not editorialize. They present his reasoning and let it stand.

The trih xeem as the story’s real stakes. #strong — Durandal states the Pfhor deployed the trih xeem as a response to a slave revolt of the magnitude the Nakh triggered six thousand years ago.36 The S’pht’Kr’s arrival constituted exactly that scale of defeat. The nova device is not a plan they hesitate to use — they have used it, and it worked. Its deployment here means Lh’owon is gone. But the pack does not show what containing or destroying the W’rkncacnter (released by the nova or already present in the star, per the S’pht cosmology) would require. That question is source-silent in this pack.

Thoth’s nature and allegiance. #working — Thoth is described as a personality construct by Blake24 and appears to be Jjaro in origin (or at minimum ancient S’pht tech connected to Jjaro knowledge). Durandal’s remark that Thoth “might not have been so helpful had he known I still lived”33 implies Thoth had motivations independent of Durandal’s survival. Thoth’s terminals describe balance between creation and destruction28, not Durandal’s escape agenda. These are not the same goal. Durandal’s decision to appear dead may have been necessary to cooperate with Thoth rather than be denied access. The pack does not resolve this.

The S’pht’Kr as a political variable the pack leaves open. #working — The S’pht’Kr arrive, fight alongside the Security Officer, and obliterate what remains of the Pfhor fleet. Their thousand-year development is not described. Their relationship to the other S’pht clans is not established beyond the arrival battle. The pack records their existence and their military power; it says nothing about what they want beyond “crush the slavers, return to your people.”37 The scale of S’pht politics post-Campaign is source-silent in this pack.

Durandal’s rogue star destination. #working — He says the next stop is “another ruined world… far from the galactic core” near “a rogue star that has been passing through our galaxy for nearly a millennia.”36 The pack does not say what he expects to find there, why a rogue star matters, or how this connects to his stated goal of escaping universal closure. The connection to Jjaro technology is implied but not stated.


Source-silent / open questions

  • What Durandal did during seventeen years in the galactic core. The pack gives the arrival and the outcome; the seventeen years of searching are not detailed. What he found or did not find in the core between 2794 and 2811 is not stated.
  • The W’rkncacnter’s status after the trih xeem. The S’pht creation myth places the W’rkncacnter in Lh’owon’s sun, where Yrro flung them.14 The nova potentially releases them. The pack does not address this.
  • The nature of the Jjaro outpost on K’lia. Durandal’s theory rests on the S’pht’Kr finding a Jjaro installation and using it to depart. No terminal confirms or denies this directly.
  • Thoth’s relationship to the Jjaro. The pack names Thoth as a dormant personality construct accessible deep underground at Lh’owon.24 Whether it was built by the Jjaro, by the S’pht, or by some other party is not stated.
  • What happened to the enslaved S’pht clans after the Campaign. The terminals mention clans being reformed as slaves in Battle Group Seven are freed.34 The scale of the reconstruction, and what the ten surviving clans now constitute, is not addressed.
  • The precise timing of events. The date stamps across M2 read 05.10.2337 uniformly — this appears to be an artifact of how the pack was assembled, not a literal claim that all events happened on the same date. The narrative spans an indeterminate number of days from arrival to evacuation. The introduction’s prose implies days, not hours; Durandal notes the Pfhor fleet arrived “in about twenty hours”20 at one point, and Blake’s messages span multiple operations.
  • Leela’s status. Tycho’s message confirmed Leela was dismantled and shipped to the Pfhor homeworld for study.12 Her condition there, and whether she is recoverable, is source-silent in this pack.

Cast

Durandal · Security Officer · Tycho · Thoth · S’pht’Kr · S’pht · Pfhor · Robert Blake · Leela · Lh’owon · Yrro · Pthia · W’rkncacnter · Jjaro · UESC Marathon


Where it appears in the vault

Lh’owon, Marathon 2 - Durandal

Mirror pages

The local 1:1 pages this hub’s citations resolve to — the twin’s own ground truth.

Sources


Every factual claim above is cited to primary Marathon source material — see Sources below. Cross-corpus connections and interpretation are the vault’s own; where the games are silent, this page says so.

Footnotes

  1. The Adventure Continues… · src ↗ 2 3

  2. The Adventure Continues… · src ↗ 2

  3. <CMND OVERRIDE &@85f2> · src ↗

  4. 12-a Phce<194-973-2356> · src ↗ 2 3 4

  5. 4647.2.52.414.14<extrnt.4> · src ↗ 2

  6. Atc &33c.3ckl2 · src ↗

  7. lhwefsson.yeihtifna.151 · src ↗

  8. 392.c93@!39&95@7 · src ↗

  9. <CMND OVERRIDE &@1494> · src ↗ 2

  10. 004121.25.1 · src ↗ 2

  11. H-v58-w12pcgbk · src ↗

  12. <CMND OVERRIDE &@1494> · src ↗ 2

  13. traxIV<40c<40c> 48c<48c> · src ↗ 2 3 4

  14. ax1-40^23<094.95.28.85> · src ↗ 2 3

  15. antiquus<304.92.38.82> · src ↗ 2

  16. <Mnr *@1cz: 9cm2> · src ↗

  17. <Mnr *@1cz: 9cm2> · src ↗

  18. Yr-c<39.59fc.93.9> · src ↗

  19. Mnr-e<29.94.91d.39> · src ↗

  20. eat-it-vid-boi / bobs-big-date — Battle Group Seven / Khfiva / Tfear 2 3

  21. delphi · src ↗

  22. delphi · src ↗

  23. [[Leela/Marathon 2 - Durandal/for-carnage-apply-within/-error -441 in transmission-|<error #441 in transmission>]] · src ↗ 2

  24. 004121.25.1 · src ↗ 2 3

  25. kill-your-television — Pfhor attack on Blake base

  26. 004121.25.1 · src ↗

  27. mi41nor 7*(^tf · src ↗

  28. common.set <2e0xcxx3.465.2> · src ↗ 2

  29. [[Leela/Marathon 2 - Durandal/where-the-twist-flops/)-_—(GGunbalance~0—fxf-~F|)\_\*(GGunbalance~0\*fxf\~F]] · src ↗

  30. 004121.25.1 · src ↗

  31. vestrum.excrucibo<1> · src ↗

  32. vestrum.excrucibo<1> · src ↗

  33. cge-wrought<293ef.c9ab20> · src ↗ 2

  34. cge-wrought<507g2.4149r> · src ↗ 2

  35. corinth.ggk · src ↗

  36. tranced.Finale<0-05> · src ↗ 2 3 4 5 6 7

  37. [[Leela/Marathon 2 - Durandal/where-the-twist-flops/)-_—(GGunbalance~0—fxf-~F|)\_\*(GGunbalance~0\*fxf\~F]] · src ↗