Board Thread:Wiki Management/@comment-27150398-20180211135035/@comment-26153757-20180211215809

There was a battle page that I read recently that I really liked which was http://deathbattlefanon.wikia.com/wiki/Roman_Torchwick_VS_Jacob_Frye

To start, the matchup itself is really good and makes perfect sense. These two can-wielding gangsters were a great match. Secondly, the fight was awesome and really well executed especially with the startup of it involving Roman walking through the streets of London and while pickpocketing civilains, Jacob Frye was angered when he noticed Roman had took his money as well. And the fight itself was epic, while it may have been kind of short but it was realistically short to how long the fight would actually last and didn't feel dragged on any longer than it needed to be. It was well-paced and had cool moments. One of my favorite parts of the fight was actually how well it was started with these beginning paragraphs:

''Jacob runs straight at Roman, who fires several shots of dust at him. Jacob dives and rolls to dodge them, and brings out his revolver. He fires four more shots at Roman, who dodges the first one, but the other three hit, stunning him. Jacob uses this opening to get close. Jacob hooks him in the face with his right, and slams down on his head with his other arm. He grabs Roman by his throat and prepares to stab him with a hidden blade.''

''Jacob: Shame. I expected a real fight.''

Roman: Who said we were done, idiot?

''Roman then shoots at Jacob's feet and sends both men flying from the explosion. Jacob is badly injured from the blast, but some medicine helps him recover. Roman then uses his hook to escape atop a passing train. Roman takes out some fire dust crystals from his pocket and throws them in Jacob's direction.''

Roman: I'm afraid this... is where we part ways.

Not only is the action great but as a RWBY fan I love how well it portrays Roman's character and is perfectly accurate to how he would act, speak, and react in this fight. I don't know anything about Assasin's Creed and Jacob Frye ( well anything beyond from what I learned from his analysis) so I can't actually judge whether or not he stayed true to Jacob's character but considering how well he did with Roman I think it's safe to say that he represented the other character accurately as well.

Overall, a cool and personally I feel to be an underrated battle. Also, I don't want to spoil the result for anyone but I will say that I think the victor was the correct choice as well.