Harmonic Composer
Auntie
She can hear the bad move before the cards admit it.

Auntie discovered that reshuffles could be heard before they could be understood visually.
Her piano lessons, recitals, and experiments became the foundation for harmonic feedback systems that make Battletaire matches sound alive.
The family machine
- She listened to the reshufflerGrandma's machine did not only move cards. It produced tones, warning hums, and ugly little harmonics before reality settled.
- She turned noise into feedbackAuntie made momentum, danger, combos, and reshuffle instability audible so players could feel the match changing.
- Her systems became the sound of pressureWhen Battletaire sings, clicks, warns, and swells during a steal or reshuffle, that is Auntie's side of the family table.
What harmonics reveal
Reshuffles produce audible harmonic signatures. Some warn of instability, some signal strong momentum, some reveal dangerous probability chains, and some emotionally influence the players at the table.
Auntie's systems let players feel momentum and danger through sound before they can fully explain what changed.
What she built
Her work introduced singing cards, reshuffle melodies, harmonic warnings, combo cadences, and emotional synchronization music.
Experienced players say a Battletaire match sounds alive because Auntie taught the table how to sing when probability starts bending.
What came from this
Singing cards
Cards carry tonal feedback tied to motion, danger, and momentum.
Reshuffle melodies
Large probability shifts announce themselves before the board settles.
Combo cadences
Fast play develops rhythm players can learn to trust.