📌PURCHASE INFORMATION:
❗️This is NOT a key. This is an account activation!
❗️After payment, you will receive a 16-digit purchase code, which you must provide in the Correspondence with the seller in your personal account (
https://oplata.info)
✅The game is permanently associated with your XBOX account.
⚠️If at the time of purchase it turns out that you tried to purchase any content in a store region that does not match your location and you see an error message stating that your card´s region does not match the Microsoft Store region, there will be temporary purchase restrictions on that account (
https://www.microsoft.com/ru-ru/servicesagreement). We will offer you the option to have the game delivered to another account (price may change) or issue a refund minus a 25% fee.
📦DELIVERY METHOD:
🚀Account activation.
⏰Delivery times range from 5 minutes to 24 hours. All orders are processed manually during business hours on a first-come, first-served basis.
⌛️WORKING HOURS:
Every day from 10:00 AM to 10:00 PM Moscow time.
Orders are processed during business hours. If you purchase outside of business hours, please wait for a response from a manager!
↩️RETURN POLICY:
• Item received — No returns!
• Item NOT received:
Our fault — Full refund
Your fault (didn´t read the description, bought the wrong item, found it cheaper, no longer needed, not ready to wait, etc.) — Refund minus a 25% commission
🎁ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
• WANT A DISCOUNT? Leave a REVIEW and receive a GIFT CERTIFICATE for your next purchase!
• Check out our other products:
https://www.top.steamkeygift.ru/seller/1122843
• We can also pay for any game, program, subscription, or purchase from an international store for you. Contact us!
This DLC contains one Hunter, two Weapons, and one Tool:
- The Miko (Hunter)
- Ochita Mozu (Hunting Bow)
- Shinbatsu (Throwing Knives)
- Utsusemi (Katana)
Chisato Ryoko pressed her ear to the shrine bell to hear it sing of omens to come: plagues of beetles and frogs, crippling winters, a priest breaking their foot between cobbled stones. She clung to the bell the night the shrine burned, her family run off, the priests pushed from cliffs. But Ryoko remained. She alone witnessed the ronin who appeared and cut down each desecrator.
The ronin pulled Ryoko from the temple bell, pressed her ear to a sword, and abandoned her. She could hear a melody in the blade—it sang louder than the bell.
Ryoko cared for the shrine’s ruin, polishing the cinder ribs of torii gates, but the katana’s hum turned more brutal—hypnotic, even—until one day she left to silence whatever made it sing.
Entranced, she endured three trials:
She crossed a lake frozen with a thousand peering birds. A single glance would lock her soul inside their stilled wings.
She navigated ravines of a thousand bones, crawling with a thirst for things beyond water.
At last, that which made the blade sing appeared—a crane with a corruption of cicadas spooled from its infested, wounded lungs. The crane lanced her jaw with its bill and prayed.
“Rejoice, for each new hole is one more place for light to shine through.”
Ryoko broke the crane’s neck. The trees fell silent, and the trance ended. She ventured to the edge of the sea and listened to her blade once more. A new song hummed from the other side of the sunrise, where the water turned black and the hearts of damned men begged for holes and light.
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