The weapon sheet should be treated like a technical concept board rather than a single illustration. Think of a clean orthographic presentation on a neutral grey studio background with four evenly spaced panels in a 2×2 grid. Each panel must share the same camera height, consistent lighting direction (top-left key light with soft fill), and identical shadow softness so the viewer reads it as one engineered system. Overall canvas proportions are square or slightly horizontal (1:1 or 4:3). The weapon is always centered in each quadrant with no perspective exaggeration. The goal is clarity of mechanism, not dramatic posing. Top-left panel: Full Staff Mode. The weapon is shown perfectly horizontal. It appears as a 74-inch matte-black reinforced staff with subtle industrial segmentation. The shaft is slightly thicker at both ends, tapering very gently toward the center coupler. The central feature is a mechanical locking ring—dark titanium with faint bronze inlays—but it sits flush and closed. No blade edges are visible; instead, there are tight seam lines along both ends indicating internal folding mechanisms. The surface is matte with faint wear polishing along grip zones, suggesting repeated handling. This version should feel inert but structurally dense, like a sealed industrial tool. Top-right panel: Deployed Dual-Cleaver Staff. Same camera angle and length, but now both ends are extended. Each end transforms into a broad cleaver blade with forward-biased mass. The blades Mehr sehen