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The Archives => Homebrews (Archived) => Topic started by: Pair o' Dice Lost on July 30, 2009, 10:56:52 AM

Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on July 30, 2009, 10:56:52 AM
[ic="The Makings of a Myth"]"When the elves were a young race, elven parents told their children, 'If you don't finish your dinner, the demons will come up from below the earth and eat you.' The children laughed; the parents laughed; the demons weren't real.

When the pixies were a young race, elves told the pixies, 'If you don't follow our laws, the demons will come up from below the earth and hunt you.' The pixies sighed; the elves chuckled; the demons were a threat for children, not for a child race.

When the dwarves were a young race, the pixies told the dwarves, 'If you don't join the both of us, the demons will come up from below the earth and force you.'  The dwarves sulked; the pixies smiled; the elves smirked; the demons were a stale jest.

When the gnomes were a young race, the dwarves told the gnomes, 'If you don't join the three of us, the demons will come up from below the earth and kill you.' The gnomes rolled their eyes; the dwarves smirked; the pixies ignored them; the elves frowned; the demons were only a tale....

When the satyrs were a young race, the gnomes told the satyrs, 'If you don't join the four of us, the demons will come up from below the earth and kill us all.' the satyrs laughed; the gnomes chuckled; the dwarves and pixies and elves went to study the rumblings in the earth; the demons were looking to perhaps not be 'only a tale' after all.

When the humans were a young race, the satyrs told the humans, 'If you don't join all of us, the demons will come out of the earth and destroy everyone.'  No one laughed, for the demons were here."

--a traditional Daoine children's poem[/ic]

Centuries ago, the world of Dulra was a lush, unspoiled natural paradise.  The Aos Sidhe formed all manner of peoples and creatures from their homes beneath the earth, and they often walked among their children--elves, gnomes, pixies, leprechauns, and other fair folk--as gods among mortals.  Many centuries ago, the Aos Sidhe joined their children on the surface, living among them constantly, but would not explain why they abandoned their subterranean palaces.  A few centuries ago the Aos Sidhe left the world entirely and began sealing it off from the Otherworld; they became the Aos Si, no longer 'the people under the mounds' but 'the people formerly of the mounds,' lost to the fair folk yet so close to the world.  A handful of centuries ago, the reason for the Aos Sidhe's move to the surface world became clear: demons of darkest shadow, of fiercest flame, of hardest stone erupted from the heart of the earth and laid waste to the beautiful cities of the fair folk, destroying in a few turnings of the sun what the Aos Si created in the turnings of the generations.

If the Aos Si could not hold off these horrors, the fair folk certainly could not.  They retreated to other lands, to islands, to mountains, only to find that the demons followed wherever they went.  Finding no other recourse, the fair folk turned to the spirits of sky and sea--long enemies of the spirits of stone and flame, those who lay in the earth from whence came the demons--for succor.  Where before demons were reluctant to venture into the oceans, but capable, and hesitant to fly above the treetops, but determined, now they found their excursions over the sea to be met with storms and waves most strong, and their flights near the clouds to be met with winds and hail most fierce.  Most of the handful of fair folk races retreated to makeshift towns on and in the sea or floating cities in the clouds, while the bravest among them remained in the old now-ruined cities to hold off the blight or struck out from the new cities in order to kill the demons one by one from a place of safety.

Today, the battle for the land is mostly lost.  The forests are ash; the rivers, poison; the tundras, lava...the world has been renamed from Dulra to Ifrean, 'Hell' in the old tongues.  What few brave fair folk remain have settled in for a long, drawn-out, possibly futile conflict.  Too long complacent and set in their ways, the fair folk realized that their old methods were not working, and that the demons were slowly but surely destroying them one race at a time.  Their elders brought forth the ancient tomes of the Aos Si and called for their aid; as a last act for their children before sealing off the Otherworld forever, the Aos Si provided the spirits with the power and knowledge to send new creations to the world: Humans, djinn, and others joined the fight, bringing new ideas, new tactics, and new life to the aid of the fair folk.  Now there is a chance that the fair folk may live...now, the fair folk  and the younger races (now collectively called the Daoine, 'the People,' and the Oga, 'the Young') work together to reclaim their world.

[spoiler=OOC][ooc]I haven't been around here much since last summer and my last world kind of died, so I figured that now that I have a little more free time, I should work on another setting.  Where my last setting posited a living world where the trees and rivers are alive and friends of the major races, this one posits a dead world and an evil one with a heart of fire and iron that seeks the destruction of all.  As you've probably noted, I'm going for a strong Celtic theme for the "good guys" since I've recently started delving into Celtic mythology and want to see what I can do with it; the "bad guys" will probably be a smattering of evil things inspired by various sources, with a big darkness-and-fire-and-stone motif and a dash of undeath thrown in.  A bunch of the Celtic terms aren't exactly translated correctly (like the Sidhe/Si distinction), but I'm taking a few liberties in order to use real terms for these setting-specific creatures and places, so don't expect perfect accuracy. ;)

I'm making this up as I go along as things come to me, so I don't have a particular posting plan; feel free to ask for details on particular aspects and I'll do those next.  I'll be using the 3e D&D system, since unlike my last world I have a definite plan for this one--as a setting I'll be running come January or so (if all goes as planned...)--but I'll try to keep this mostly mechanics-light, at least in the beginning.  Next up (hopefully before this afternoon), the Daoine, the Oga, and the Demons.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on July 30, 2009, 11:07:12 AM
Actually I was looking to see a bit more of Glaesra- we can always use more positive-aimed worlds; I mentioned Glaesra in one of the old meta threads, but glad to see what you come up with this new world.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Acrimone on July 30, 2009, 11:24:19 AM
I like it.  It's got a well-set-out conflict, with a story that's easy to follow.  Now we want details.  Lots of details.

And maps.

And all that good stuff.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on July 30, 2009, 11:33:12 AM
The Daoine
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Of the hundreds of Daoine races originally given life, only a dozen or two remain.  The six Daoine given below are those who have a sizable population left and are not in danger of dying out, those who have a preponderance of adventurous/martially-inclined members, those who are capable of leaving the sky and sea, or those who are otherwise best suited for players.

[spoiler=Note]These descriptions are just an overview of what the races are known for, what they can do, etc.  Since they don't have monolithic racial cultures (since I hate those) or general racial quirks due to their biology (since their biology basically boils down to "magical beings made in the image of the Aos Si), cultural details will come with descriptions of the various floating cities, not with the races themselves.

The description of the races only covers aspects of them unique to this setting; if something isn't covered, assume that that aspect is the same as that of the usual mythological version of the race--for example, while selkies are very lonely and almost suicidally brave in general as a race thanks to being almost wiped out, they're still the usual sealskin-wearing ocean-loving creatures of mythology otherwise.

The mechanical notes are general trends and changes; exactly what the stats will be will have to wait for later when I get a better grip on the setting as a whole.  Each race gets one class that only members of that race can become, to distinguish them and to reinforce their theme.[/spoiler]

Elves
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[ic=The Elder Ones]"And lo, when the ifrit descended upon the palace, the elves did strike, leaping from their hidden perches and slashing at its burning eyes.  The ifrit did roar at them and fill the air with flames, and many elves did perish, but look--first blood!  Emboldened by the success of one of their number, the elves fought yet more furiously and landed a second blow ere the foul ichor from the first struck the earth.  One wound became two, became three, became more, as the elves defended the remnants of their ancestral home.  As the elven dead neared ten score and seven and the first warrior finally fell, so too fell the ifrit, his burning arms setting the bodies ablaze in a pyre.  The elves cheered for one moment, mourned their comrades in the next, and struck off the heads of every one of the ifritt's servants in the third.  So ended the Battle of the Western Chasm that day."

--From the epic The Last Days of the Realms on the Lake, verse 28 of 47[/ic]

The elves, being the oldest of the races, have the largest population and have made good use of this.  Their tactical abilities are unmatched in combat against the demons, their skill at overseeing the construction and organization of new cities is highly regarded, and their hospitality and friendship is legendary.  Alone among the Daoine, the elves lack the capacity for magic; though the Aos Sidhe did not forsake their earthen realms until after the creation of the dwarves, they knew of the demons long before then, and the elves were formed when the Aos Sidhe thought the demons were nothing more than minor evils.  Thus, where later races were gifted with that which would specifically aid the fight against the demons--gaining more powerful gifts as time progressed as the Aos Sidhe truly realized the demonic threat--the elves were merely gifted with the Aos Sidhe's remarkable life and wisdom.  Elves are effectively immortal, dying only to violence, and can adapt to practically any climate or terrain due to their resilient natures and keen minds (hence why the elves tend to spearhead the creation and relocation of new cities).  Though they do not have the magical ability of the other races, they are just as skilled in battle, relying on their supernatural resilience to defend themselves while they put centuries of experience to good use.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Elves have bonuses to every ability, resistance to energy and death, and are otherwise the peak of Daoine ability; however, they are utterly unable to use magic, whether personally cast or used through items, and beneficial magic cast on them is weakened just as harmful magic.  Elves are the only race able to become warblades.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Dryads
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[ic=The Vengeful Ones]"The dryad woke the next morning to find herself bound hand and foot many paces from her tree, just barely starting to feel the pain of separation.  Demons of glass stood over her, giggling with malicious glee and occasionally dropping molten bits of their skin onto her just to see her burn.  As she fully awakened, the laughing subsided and the glass demons scampered away, to be replaced with a demon appearing to be sculpted of shifting sand and ash.  The demon formed a mouth in its roiling form and smiled condescendingly.

'I see your certainty seems to have failed you.  Your claims that you will protect the forest have been proven false, and here you lie, being tormented by your lessers,' it rumbled.  'And now, to drive that point home, you shall be slowly but surely separated from your soul tree and die a very slow, very painful death.  What say you?'  The dryad glared at him as he carelessly lifted her in a newly-formed limb and inched her away from the tree.  'I say that though you speak the language of the People you are naught but a trained beast.'  The demon chuckled softly.  'Though most of our number are indeed naught but beast, surely you did not think we were all mindless drones of the earth.  In fact, I would have assumed you would liken us to you quite readily, to lessen the sting of being defeated so handily.  I am, in fact, the master of this land now.'  The dryad shook her head as best she was able and growled, 'Not defeated.  Pushed back.'

The demon shook what passed for its head.  'How can you say you have not been defeated?  You have no recourse left but to surrender.'  The dryad arched her back enough to slip one hand free of her bonds and gestured towards her tree.  'I have this,' she spat, holding up a small seed which the wind had carried to her palm.  'And now you will see just how defeated I am!'  She clasped the seed to her chest while jumping out of the demon's grip; by the time she landed, the seed had sprouted into a suit of armor and a spear of emerald light had appeared in her hand.  Shocked, the demon reared back in preparation to strike, but a bolt of lightning leaped from the spear into its face, followed by a beam of light to its abdomen, followed by a gust of wind which scattered its arms away, finally followed by blast of winter's chill.  With the forests's power to aid her, the dryad was more than a match for the demon, though this was one of the few remaining unspoiled forests on the earth and the smallest one at that.  Roots siphoned sand and ash away from the demon, rain turned him to clumsy muck, animals darted out to bash parts of him to pieces and retreated to safety; in the middle of it all, the dryad stood, focusing her hatred of the demons into a powerful surge of energy.

'I,' she hissed as she drove her hand into the demon, 'am mistress of this land.  You are an abomination fit for nothing but destruction and naught but a beast.'  As the demon dissolved, lightning bolts leaped from the clouds to obliterate those demons who had burned her earlier.  A single remaining flame demon remained at the edge of the forest; meeting her eye, it tried to flee, but was extinguished by a sudden downpour.  The dryad spoke to the empty clearing: 'They call themselves masters of the land.  Fools.  We are the land."

--From the chronicles of the dryad Laidir, famous warrior and powerful druid.[/ic]

The dryads were among the most affected of the Daoine when the demons struck; many died helplessly, unable to leave the trees to which they were bound.  However, the selkies were able to assist them: the selkies were able to combine some of the magic of their removable skins with the magic binding the dryads to their trees to allow the dryads to take the trees' souls with them.  As long as the dryad returned at each full moon to reestablish the bond for one night and rejuvenate themselves and the tree, they could travel as far as they wished without harm.  This made dryads tempting targets, as the demons could simply lie in wait in a forest and be practically guaranteed to find a vulnerable dryad to kill, but this wasn't the crippling weakness one would expect; since each dryad effectively had its own powerful nature spirit to draw upon, no longer spread thin through a whole forest and only connected to their dryads through a single tree and no longer tasked with keeping the dying forests alive, dryads found their magical powers increased tenfold, making them the most mystically strong race of the Daoine.  In return, the dryads taught the selkies druidic magic ("druid" meaning "as a dryad" in their tongue), allowing them to combine their natural shapeshifting abilities with the dryads' spirit magic.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Dryads are very wise and gain benefits with divine magic, but they are physically weak and must recharge their magic every month at their soul tree or begin to waste away.  Dryads are the only race able to become spirit shamans.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Dwarves
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[ic=The Crafty Ones]"The ship rounded the small ash-covered island and beheld the ruins of a town.  The ocean water turned a poisonous green where it touched the scorched soil of the beach, and remnants of buildings and carts littered the land from the shore to the tree line.  Many demons danced among the wreckage--it appeared that the town was recently destroyed.  At the appearance of the ship, several demons cried out in warning and excitement and ran down to the beach to attack as it came near.

Below the ship's deck, three robed figures huddled in conversation. 'Looks like we arrived too late.  They will be mourned,' said one.  'The least we can do is recover their bodies for proper burial and salvage what we can of their effects for their next of kin,' said another.  'Before that, though, I think some settling of scores is called for,' said the last.  'Agreed,' chorused the other two.  Immediately, the three dispersed to other parts of the ship; the first retrieved a jar of paint and drew a fresh set of runes over the set of markings on the deck, the second fetched some twisted rods of copper and bronze from a trunk in the hold, and the third spoke softly to the dryad and elves on board.  By the time the three had finished, the ship had come within a few handspans of the shore, and the demons were waiting for the ship to touch the beach before jumping over.

But that never occurred.  The instant before it struck ground, the ship's hull suddenly came alive with tracings of runes and jumped fourteen paces into the air.  The astonished demons craned their heads up to see the ship floating over them as several dwarves lifted the copper-bronze rods over the side.  As the rods were released, their strange shape was explained--each was covered with crackling lightning, so that in the instant before the demons were struck the sky appeared to open up in a storm.  Minor demons died by the dozens, but the stronger ones managed to follow the ship and eventually pierce the hull after many blows.  Though the elves began to look worried, the dwarves paid no heed, whispering to the wind and to the wreckage to hear from their spirits what had happened in this place.  When they were satisfied, they retrieved rune-inscribed arms and armor and jumped overboard, surprising the attacking demons and slaying them.  This done, they asked the wood spirits in the hull of the ship to please mend the holes in it; they daubed some fresh paint on the runes as the hull sealed, and climbed back aboard.  'Time to head home,' said the first dwarf, gesturing for the elves to return belowdecks.  'Yes, there's nothing we can do now,' said the second dwarf, calming down the elves who had cried out for demon blood.  'We just need to guide everything back home,' said the third dwarf, point at the wreckage that had lifted up off the ground to soar after the ship with a life of its own.  'They may have won this round, but we can rebuild,' all three said together, as they lifted off into the sunset."

--From the journals of an elven observer on the expedition ship Thiar Lochrann[/ic]

Where elves are Aos Si in all but name and dryads are the forest incarnate, the dwarves are spirits given form.  They speak to the spirits all around them with ease, and because of this they have a remarkable affinity for infusing magic into ships, floating cities, weapons, and other items--a few runes and a whispered word politely ask a wood spirit to move over and allow a wind spirit to take up residence in its wood to lift the ship, some pictographs and a gesture entice lightning spirits to skitter over and around some metal weapons, and constant encouragement from the dwarves allows the floating cities to remain in the clouds as they reinforce the courage and dedication of the cloud spirits holding them aloft.  Dwarves, being Daoine, are harmed by iron like the other fair folk (though much less so), but they can work miracles with copper and bronze, the primary metal used by the Daoine and Oga.  For this reason dwarves are valued warriors, because though they are not as fast as the elves nor as strong as the pech nor as sneaky as the selkies, they have a deep abiding hatred for the demons of iron and steel and can kill with greater ease those demons which harm other Daoine with a touch.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Dwarves can speak to the spirits around them, divining the future and receiving other miscellaneous benefits.  Their facility with runes gives them an affinity with magical writings and great skill with arcane magic.  Dwarves are the only race able to become wu jen.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Selkies
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[ic=The Solemn Ones]
Why, oh why, does the selkie cry
When the stars shine down on the emerald isles?
Why, oh why, does the sun's bright eye
Shine down to show no selkie smiles?

Because, my son, the demons run
Across the isles they once called home;
Because, my son, the demons one
By one despoiled the lands they'd roam.

The elves, at sea, sing cheerfully,
since of their lands some still remain.
The pech, at sea, smile cheerfully
because their lands less spoiled have lain.

The selkies, though, have nowhere to go--
Their lands shall be barren forevermore.
The selkies, though, have no one to know--
They shall see loved ones nevermore.


--An excerpt from the children's poem The Lament of Loch Ainnise[/ic]

A selkie's existence is bleak.  Every single piece of land selkies once inhabited is nothing but ash; every single Daoine not in the floating cities who was friend to a selkie was slain; there are fewer than one thousand selkies still left alive.  It wasn't always this way, as selkies were among the first to fight back against the demons.  That very fact, however, caused their anguish--after the Oga were created and the demons' momentum slowed, the selkies, working with other Daoine and Oga who could breathe water, turned back a major incursion of water demons, completely destroying all of the demons capable of attacking from below the sea and setting them back several decades.  Their celebration was short-lived, for the demons struck back in vengeance, capturing many selkie oracles and forcing them to reveal the lands, friends, and homes of all of the selkies to allow the demons to utterly annihilate them.  A single selkie escaped captivity and got back in time to warn one selkie city, and those 2,500 selkie lived; every single other one died as their homes were crushed, their lands were scorched, and everyone in their communities that they knew was murdered in front of them.  Since that day, selkie numbers have steadily diminished as they slowly die in battle; most believe that they should take as many demons down with them as they can when they die, because they have nothing to lose and they believe that there's no reason to preserve the species if the demons could win tomorrow.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Selkies are shapeshifters and are at home in the water, so they are able to shift their bodies for combat and other benefits.  Selkies are the only race able to become druids.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Pech
[/size][ic=The Strong Ones]Two demonlings carried a small figure--a pech comfortably into his second century--into the titan's presence, a skeleton on the left and a coal demonling on the right.  It didn't seem too afraid, looking around with mild curiousity and a bit of disdain.  A sun titan glanced up when the prisoner was brought in and dismissed the other demonlings he had been talking to.  "Ah, wonderful.  You've managed to catch one of the slippery buggers at last.'  The titan motioned them over and began questioning the pech about troop movements and other such information.  The pech answered willingly, though absently; he seemed preoccupied and was constantly turning his head this way and that to look around the camp.  He's frightened the titan thought to itself with relish and though he can feign nonchalance he can't bear to look at me.

As the titan was asking a question about copper reserves, the pech interrupted him in the middle of a sentence.  "All right, I've seen what I've come to see.  Let me down boys."  The skeleton and coal demonling looked blankly at him, at each other, and at the titan; the titan was about to order them to rough him up a bit when the pech yanked his hand out of the skeleton's grasp and squeezed the coal demonling's arm.  The arm crumbled to pieces and his victim screamed in pain.  The pech kicked the skeleton away, scattering his bones over several yards, and turned to the titan.  "Don't underestimate us because of our height.  We don't think your demonlings harmless because of theirs.  I've tolerated the debriefing so far, but send anything after me or make short jokes and you die."  The pech turned around and walked out.  With the rest of the camp's eyes on him, the titam felt he had to redeem himself.  "That's a tall order," he sneered at the pech's back.  Without stopping, the pech scooped up a stone, flung it around into the titan's face, and kept walking.  Seeing pieces of the titan's skull litter the ground, the other demons wisely decided to keep their little comments to themselves.[/ic]

The pech are a small race, about two feet tall on average, but they have the strength and quickness of a creature ten times their size.  This often leads them to be underestimated, but those foolish enough to do so quickly learn the error of their ways, usually through a broken bone or two dozen.  They tend to be fairly detached, lost in their own thoughts and interrupting conversations whenever they have something to add.  They're also quite laid-back, with one exception: short jokes.  Mention a pech's height (or lack thereof) at your own peril.  The other Daoine often deride Pech for being self-absorbed, but they cannot deny that the pech are quite useful.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Pech are Tiny size, but gain ridiculous bonuses to Strength and Constitution.  Pech are the only race able to become crusaders.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Extinct Daoine
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The Oga
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The Oga were created in great number by the spirits, but like the Daoine many of the Oga races have already been destroyed in their entirety by the demons.  There are more Oga than are listed here, but they tend to be few and far between, as the spirits are still experimenting with their powers and are no longer pressured to create thousands of beings at a time.

Satyrs/Nymphs (Fauns)
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[ic=The Numerous Ones]"...and that naturally brings us to the topic of the Oga and their service in the armies of the Daoine.  It has been observed by several critics that the Oga were meant by the Aos Si to 'pull us out of a rut' as it were, to modernize our thinking and allow us to adapt to the demons' tactics; why then, they ask, do many Oga go on the crusades against the demons?  After all, we would not dream of sending our literal children to battle, so why would we condemn the races of 'the Young' to the same fate?  I aim to dispel this misconception in the next few minutes.

Yes, the Oga serve admirably as alchemists, tacticians, educators, and other positions which allow them to remain safely in the Floating Dominions--and they have created many new devices and strategies that have served us well--but the fact remains that the Aos Si intended also for them to serve in battle, as the situation on the ground is quite different from the theoretical battles fought out on maps.  The Oga adapt well in such situations, and are best suited to command in the field.  As well, their talents for misdirection, stealth, and improvisation are quite helpful when scouting or ambushing the enemy.  Which brings me to an important point, as I can see many of you wondering 'Sir, if we value them for their guile and stealth, why then are most of the Oga regiments composed of the loud, boisterous, somewhat dim satyrs?'

As I'm sure most of you learned Daoine realize, each race has its purpose.  The fauns, to be perfectly blunt, were created to breed like rabbits; the satyr fauns are numerous enough to provide many soldiers, and the nymph fauns are...well, not germane to this discussion.  While I would never advocate something so crass as sending in hundreds of satyrs to sacrifice themselves for an advantage, which would make us no better than the demons...the fact remains that, with their great numbers, satyrs are...somewhat expendable.  They have a strong group mentality, as evidenced by their propensity for alcohol-induced and, shall we say, rather intimate celebrations, so they are more likely to sacrifice themselves for their fellows.  They are at home in the burrows and warrens under the late forests, and thus are excellent (and, as mentioned, expendable) scouts.  All in all, ladies and gentlemen, if we are to win this war, we must be much more aggressive, and the satyr race, as much as it pains me to say it, is well suited to achieve this through their actions and through their blood, if necessary."

--From a speech by General Morrigan to the Fae Courts, regarding the use of Oga in the military[/ic]

The satyrs and nymphs, collectively known as fauns, are the proverbial runt of the Oga litter.  They are concerned with the more base pleasures in life, they fight carelessly and rely on overwhelming numbers, and are widely considered to be a few seeds short of a pine cone.  This changes when copious amounts of alcohol are imbibed--apparently the Aos Si had a sense of humor, making the satyrs able poets, deft gymnasts, and admirable warriors exactly when no one wants to go near them--but in general they are seen as brutes more than anything else.  Why they alone among the Oga are, not to put too fine a point on it, so unsuited to any useful pursuit besides serving as the rank and file soldiers (for satyrs) and servants/laborers (for nymphs) is a mystery only the Aos Si can answer, but some speculate it might have something to do with the drastic difference between their sexes; perhaps they were intended to be a somewhat inferior race, to allow the other Oga to better serve their purpose?  Nevertheless, while fauns are looked down upon by the Daoine, the rest of the Oga are as well to a certain extent, so it isn't a major handicap--in fact, many exploration or commando parties like to have fauns along to liven things up and boost morale.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Satyrs and nymphs are reworked to make them playable; 5 HD and 2 LA are unnecessary for what are essentially goat-men with pipes and beautiful women.  They focus more on Dexterity and speed for satyrs and Charisma and magic for nymphs, but both have sneaky and/or tricky abilities.  Satyrs and nymphs are the only race able to become dragon shamans.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Humans
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Humans are their usual adventurous, irrepressible selves, turned up to 11; all of the Oga were created to be spontaneous, quick-witted, innovative, and so forth, and humans are head and shoulders above the rest.  Humans are unchanged mechanically, and are the only race able to become factotums.

Sylphs
[/size][ic=The Quiet Ones]The demons crept through the woods--rather, a smoldering handful of glorified torches formerly known as a wood--not wanting to alert the accursed fae creatures they were ambushing.  Despite their best efforts, a small, crudely-formed rock demon came down too heavily on one leg and snapped a twig.  Instantly, the fae ahead of them vanished in a blur of movement and sparkles of green and gold light.  The demons stopped short and darted glances back and forth, like hounds who had suddenly lost their prey's scent.  The two demons among the group who had more intelligence than the dumb rocks of which they were formed rolled their eyes at each other.  The stone titan and the earth oni--for that is what they were--moved together to plan.

'Most likely their spirits-cursed invisibility again, my liege,' muttered the titan to the oni.  'They wish to make fools of us, looking about for them when they remain there, silently laughing.'  The oni made placating gestures: 'Be calm, my warrior; should this be the case, it is easily rectified.'  With a negligent wave of his hand, one such as a human might use to swat an insect, the oni caused the entire clearing to explode in shards of stone and horrible flames, pulverizing everything within hundreds of feet.  The lesser demons cackled and snarled, the bipedal ones clapping their limbs; surely none had survived that, and they would soon become visible?  When no mangled bodies appeared falling out of the sky, the demons began growling, and the oni frowned.  'Perhaps they are flying, my liege, and managed to avoid your curse,' the titan suggested, 'as many of them, pathetic though they are, know that those of use made of stone have power over the same.  Allow me,' he finished, as he clapped his hands together in front of him.  Dozens of the shattered tree trunks rose from the ground and burst fully into flame, then shot forwards, filling the air with blazing projectiles.  To no apparent effect.

The titan pondered for a moment, and was about to suggest something else, when suddenly a flame demon with them sputtered, died out, and turned to ash.  The oni and titan turned as one to regard the ashes, and before their eyes another handful of them were extinguished.  The titan opened his mouth to speak and was able only to choke out 'My lord, are...you finding it diff...icult to breathe at...all?'  In the next moment the pressure eased and air returned; all the demons took a deep breath, and all felt some thicker-than-usual air wend its way into their lungs (or what passed for them, in the elemental demons).  Within seconds, only the oni and titan remained standing, for unlike the animal demons they did not need to breathe except to speak; the rock demons should have survived, but had been shattered from the inside.  The oni waved a hand, spat out whatever was inside him, and disappeared in a flash of dark.  The titan managed the same a few moments later.  When they showed no signs of returning, the air gradually coalesced into beings of air, then mist, then clouds, then finally of flesh.  The sylphs--for that is what they were--nodded among themselves, satisfied.  The demons didn't know the cause of their deaths, at least not yet; with a few gestures, they arranged to go lure another group of demons to their doom.[/ic]

The sylphs are creatures of elemental air, and their signature quality is the ability to dissolve themselves into pure air and turn back.  This is quite useful for ambushes, for camouflage, and for mundane tasks such as flying messages and the like.  Their one quirk as a species is that they do not speak aloud.  Not because they can't, but because they won't: a sylph using air to speak would be like an elf coughing up pints of blood each time it wished to convey its thoughts, and though they could of course make vibrations with their bodies, they find that as attractive as any Daoine would find communication via interpretive dance.  Instead, they use their own sign language which by now most Oga speak.  Few Daoine bother to learn it, being as set in their ways as they are, so often sylphs are assigned to out-of-the-way tasks like scouting or painting tall buildings or messenger duty so the Daoine can relay order to them through other Oga--which is just how the sylphs like it, as it allows them to be alone with their thoughts and play in the wind.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]The sylphs can fly and turn themselves to air, so they're essentially raptorans with gaseous form and a few tweaks, mechanically speaking.  Sylphs are the only race able to become favored souls.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Undines
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[ic=The Formless Ones]Two undines held off the demonling swarm, one slashing at flaming limbs with blades formed of saltwater and scattering bodies of putrid flesh with a fist holding the strength of an ocean wave, the other pounding glass arms into sand with a hammer of waterfalls and sheltering himself and his sister from sight with morning fog.  The demons and undines clashed at the top of a cliff, the demons trying to reach the hamlet on the shore below, a town holding the last living nixies.  In one instant, they were two vaguely-bipedal columns of liquid sapphire, standing against all comers; in the next, they became yards-wide sheets of flowing cerulean to hamstring those who fell for the lure.

Soon enough, the numbers took their toll, and the undines were pressed up against each other, almost merging together as pounding fists and raking claws separated parts of their bodies one splash at a time.  An ifrit controlling the enemy sneered over the din, "This is the best the water spirits offer to oppose us?  You send your so-called champions, and they are borne down under sheer numbers, yet one of my number can slay near-limitless numbers of you spirit-created folk without tiring!  How is it we haven't slaughtered all of you living near the seas?"  As the demons bore the undines to the ground, they dissolved almost completely, falling to mindless puddles.  The demons scattered the puddles and splashed in them, mocking them with every breath.

As the demons turned to leave, the puddles slowly but surely trickled across the ground, dripping into the sea beyond the cliff.  By the time the demons arrived down at the hamlet, having burnt, tunneled, or swum through the rock, the undines had completely drained into the sea.  As the ifrit drew breath to order the final attack, a cresting wave knocked half the demons off their feet.  The ifrit jumped out of the way, then looked up...and up, and up, to find that the sea wasn't the sea after all, but a group of undines disguised as the breakers; the actual ocean was held off by dams a few yards off.  As the hundred-foot-tall ur-undine reached down to crush him, he had time for one final thought: Oh. THAT'S why.[/ic]

The undines aren't a race so much as a huge body of water given sentience and broken up into smaller beings.  They can change their shape at will into whatever is necessary at the moment (though their appearance remains that of living water), and they can merge with each other for short periods of time to share memories and skill.  Like the sylphs they tend not to talk, but they will if necessary; they just prefer not to form vocal apparatus or create vibrations unnecessarily, as it is physically taxing on top of maintaining a cohesive body structure.  Undines are nigh-impossible to kill for good, as they can lie in puddles for years yet return to consciousness instantly when the rest of their bodies are returned to them, though by now the demon lords have mastered the trick and taught it to a few demonlings.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Undines have the ooze type, the ability to reshape their body, and bonuses when in the same space as or when adjacent to other undines.  Undines are the only race able to become scouts.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Goblins
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[ic=The Dark Ones]"You know, I wonder how it feels to be a goblin?  Knowing that you call on the same spirits that empower the demons in order to 'fight fire with fire' (sometimes literally) must be amazing and terrifying at the same time.  The demons never expect it, on the one hand...yet at any moment you might give into the urgings of the spirits and lay waste to your comrades.  What a lonely, lonely life."

--A naive Daoine commenting on the plight of the poor goblin people

"Nah, it's not like that at all.  The spirits don't control us, we control them.  I mean sure, we like fire a lot.  I mean, a lot, y'know?  But it's not like we're going to burn the Floating Dominions to the earth any day now!  That fire goes right at the demons and nowhere else.  We wouldn't burn a single soul among the fae."

--A proud goblin magus

"Uh, Magus Scath?  Last month your shadow wave hit an undi--"

--The proud goblin magus's assistant

"I said, the FIRE goes right at the demons!  We wouldn't BURN a single fae!  Ha ha shut up ha ha ha!"

--The magus

"Right, sorry."

--The assistant."[/ic]

Goblins are the result of a pact between the spirits of the fae and the spirits of the demons: each side would form creatures from the power of the other as a peace offering to remind both that, whatever the fae and demons did, the spirits themselves were the same at the core and had simply chosen different sides of the conflict.  The goblins use the powers of fire, shadow, earth, and other demonic magic to defeat the demons with their own strengths.  The demons are constantly taken aback by this, first because their own fae spirit race of water demons was mostly destroyed by the selkies and aren't common anymore, and second because where the Daoine are exceptionally long-lived and the Oga almost as much, the demonlings are constantly being created and renewed from the depths of the earth and thus know only what the demon lords teach them (which doesn't often include goblins due to forgetfulness).  For their part, the Daoine welcome the goblins' aid while remaining suspicious of their motivations--justifiably so, as the demon spirits can influence them at times--but most goblins are loyal servants of the fae who strive exceedingly hard to prove themselves.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Goblins have special dispensation to ignore the magic school/descriptor restrictions the other races are subject to (the details of which will be coming in the Magic section), and have some at-will spell-like abilities, but are otherwise fairly weak physically and mentally, being frail and somewhat unstable.  Goblins are the only race able to become warlocks.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Minor Oga
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The Demons
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There are practically an infinite variety of demons--at least, the Daoine haven't seen a month go by without some new monstrosity climbing out of the depths--but the ones given here (known as "demon lords" and classified into distinct races) are the most powerful and most feared.  A handful of these demons are capable of slaughtering an entire city by themselves, so are often sought out for destruction more often than the hordes of lesser demons (the "demonlings").  Where most of the lesser demons are no more than insane, rapacious beasts, the few greater demons of the kinds listed here have achieved true sapience and turn the minor annoyance of hordes of destructive creatures into an organized, lethal threat to the fae.

Ifrits
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[ic=Beast Lords]The night was young, the sky full of clouds.  Three demons skulked into view of the last city on the western islands, one ifrit and his two wolf demon retainers.  The ifrit strolled up to the walls with a fluid gait, looking around at the defenses casually while appearing not to move his head.  Four selkies upon the walls called out to him, asking his business; he was disguised as a satyr with two dogs, so they most likely took him for a messenger.  He called out something indistinct and continued to the wall, ignoring their further cries.  Reaching the wall, he lightly pressed his palms against the gate and tested their strength; yes, this should do nicely.

Stepping back, he bowed his head for a moment, then took a deep breath, inhaling for a minute or more.  There were movements and sounds above, now, as the guards realized something wasn't right.  The ifrit threw back his head and gave an unearthly scream and increased in size twenty times over, growing fangs, tentacles, wings, and other limbs with purposes mysterious and terrible.  From the waste down, he was a column of roiling magma; from the waste up, a beast out of the worst nightmares.  Grinning at the selkies looking up at him in terror and hatred, he whispered "Hello, little seals.  You will make a fine bite or two."  Faster than they could see, he snatched them all in one hand and swallowed them whole, then crushed the wall with his hands, the magma of his body destroying most of the debris.  Having entered unchallenged, he returned the magma to legs--strong ones, suitable for jumping--and stomped through the city, terrifying all who saw him.

He suffered many wounds as defenders struck at him through windows and from behind hastily-erected barriers, but there was no coordinated assault and so his wounds had more than enough time to heal as he crushed the defenders one by one.  At last, when the city was a smoking ruin full of dismembered corpses and blood, the ifrit returned to his normal form, slightly winded.  As the wards on the city prevented him from returning to the earth below, he walked out of the city limits and sunk below the ground.  The coal demons were there only to find and destroy the foci for the wards; he would return in the morning to find the city's ruins defenseless, and then he would build his palace on the ruins.  The demonlings might rise to kill and maim and then return to the depths, but the ifrit was here to stay.[/ic]

The ifrits are among the more powerful sort of demon lord; they are referred to as Beast Lords due to their ability to change shape and their propensity for assuming gigantic and terrible forms, but also for their preference for consuming the corpses of the fae they kill.  Ifrits cannot maintain their largest forms for long, allowing them to be killed if attacked after resuming their normal forms, but minor changes such as fangs and flaming skin can be sustained indefinitely, so no two ifrit look alike and attacking them is usually impossible without several dozen Daoine or half again as many Oga.  They have dominion over the demons whose forms are mockeries of the fae and natural animals of the world--huge wolf demons with coats of night, two-headed vultures, and other monstrosities.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Ifrits are the fiends and genies of the world; they can change from their normal form (slaad stats) into any evil outsider or elemental with 2 rounds of concentration, with a Master of Many Forms-like ability to mix and match abilities to a certain extent.  Physically, ifrits are fairly magic resistant and have high AC.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Oni
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[ic=Chaos Lords]"It was the first time I'd seen one in broad daylight.  We were walking through the Fields of Ash when we saw her, sitting there staring at the sun.  We were obviously frightened--there were only eighteen of us left after the last battle--but we prepared an ambush just the same.  We waited until we were sure the oni wasn't paying attention to its surroundings, then struck her with all of the weapons and magic at our disposal, using frost weapons because she was obviously associated with fire and the sun.  Thirteen javelins and five ice shards struck her skin, causing her to roar in pain and look around for her ambusher...we tried to move out of the way, but too late.

With a thrust of her palm, she blasted a crater in the Fields; suddenly, half of our number were a score of yards below the ground, soon shredded by shards of glass conjured out of the air.  We struck her again, and she roasted another two with beams of hottest white flame.  With a barked word, she disappeared; the demons can't turn invisible, so she must have translocated herself.  We looked around frantically, and I was fortunate enough to see her cold, hate-filled eyes staring out from a hole in the ground as she charged.  I wasn't able to shout a warning before she leaped out and decapitated our commander with claws of shadow; I made my escape while she was busy butchering the rest of them.  So to answer your question, no, I don't think you can take an oni with just the two of you."

--Sean Fhunduir, human veteran[/ic]

Oni are conduits of pure chaos, which they shape into horribly destructive magics.  Where ifrits can stride into a regiment of a hundred Daoine and kill most if not all of them, oni can accomplish the same from a score of yards away simply by waving a hand.  Their ability to strike from range is necessary, because they are not nearly as resilient as other demon lords, able to be killed by a group of threescore and ten most times rather than the tenscore required to strike down most other lords.  They are also the tactical masters of the demons; they are able to hide demonlings--with shadow and mist only, for invisibility is the province of the fae--and transport them instantaneously to where they are needed, making them a fierce and unpredictable foe.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Oni are essentially the oni from Oriental Adventures with several fewer HD that can cast sorcerer and cleric spells innately like dragons can.  They have quite high mental scores but are weaker physically and have no defenses such as natural armor, resistances, etc.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Rakshasa
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[ic=Elder Lords]"In the year 12998, the first--and last--incident of a rakshasa attacking a Dominion Aloft was recorded.  The cloud city was one of the more remote settlements, over a day's travel from the others by air, as the hawk flies.  A being of absolute blackness shaped like an elf with a tiger's head rose from the ground below it and struck dead every one of the eightscore defenders of the main gate with a glance.  Raising its hands, the rakshasa was surrounded by a pulse of sickly green light which blinded every fae in the city.  Several scribes were among the group of a dozen survivors, in order to give us this account, but the rest of the city was utterly destroyed in fire and flame, in shadow and night.  The entire city broke apart and crashed to the ground, leveling the forest beneath it and killing every animal and plant for acres around, so potent was the rakshasa's curse.

Why the rakshasa struck, I do not know.  We had never seen a rakshasa on the offensive before, nor have we seen one since.  Most of the other demon lords have a mindset similar to the Daoine way, even able to speak at length in our tongue, but rakshasas...rakshasas are to us what our most learned mages are to the most minor sand demon.  We cannot begin to fathom their thoughts, but we can be grateful that they are not turned upon any more of our homes."

--Leannta the Wise, scholar[/ic]

Rakshasa are the most powerful demon lords, bar none.  They have never (with a single exception) ventured above the surface of the earth, being mostly occupied with guiding the demon lords in their conquests.  Any fae who attempt to strike at the heart of the demons' forces run afoul of the rakshasas below approximately three thousand feet in depth, so the fae are forced to stay on the defensive, unable to harm the demons at their strongest like the demons can strike at them.  They are accomplished sorcerers as well as warriors: an army of eight thousand selkies believed one rakshasa to have ordered their destruction, and when they confronted him he was able to hold off 97 of their best blades while hardly moving at all, annihilating the rest with magic in a particularly gruesome fashion while so occupied.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Take a standard rakshasa, increase the DR to 15/--, advance them to around 20 HD (including their innate casting), and gestalt them with cleric.  These guys are badass.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Titans
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[ic=Deep Lords]"One could easily argue, sir, that the titans are among the worst foes we face.  Not that they are particularly intelligent, nor are they particularly dangerous with iron or magic, but they are the source of our foes.  Yes, good sirs, I mean that literally--have you not wondered why, of all the demon lords, the titans appear as nothing more than overgrown demonlings?  You see, the titans create those demonlings from the elements below the earth and from their own flesh.  These demons are linked to their creator, allowing them to be used as extra eyes and hands and granting them what rudimentary intelligence they possess; when not being controlled by a titan, demonlings have little to no tactical ability and kill indiscriminately, but that changes drastically with a guiding mind directing their mindless hatred.  Only the sheer number of minds to be controlled at once stops the titans from coordinating them well enough to grant them a semblance of actual intelligence; thank the Si that the demonlings follow the titans in mind as well as body."

--A Daoine military scholar briefing a new officer[/ic]

The titans aren't very threatening on their own, being little more dangerous than a score of demonlings and little more resilient than a rickety fence, but their power is in numbers.  A titan can form demonlings out of the surrounding terrain at a rate of about three per hour, more if the land is diverse enough to allow multiple kinds of demonlings to be created.  Titans always know where the demonlings formed of the terrain are and whether they still live, but demonlings they create from their own essence are their eyes, ears, and hands.  They cannot create many of these, as creating even one leaves them weakened for days, but titans have a lot of time to work, and the effort is well worth the time spent, as countless Daoine could attest if they still drew breath.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Titans are essentially advanced elder elementals with the half-fiend template and the ability to sacrifice health to create demonlings, but they are composed of more exotic elements in addition to the normal ones.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Liliths
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[ic=Corrupt Lords]The lilith caressed the elf standing next to her and crooned sweet nothings into its ear.  A human a yard or two away, bound hand and foot with chains of iron which burned its skin, struggled to escape and strike the lilith.  Her elf had, until a few hours ago, been the bound human's comrade in the army; the gash across its throat and organs spilling down its front showed in gruesome detail why that was no longer the case.  Soon the lilith tired of tormenting the human and left the animate corpse to stand unblinking in front of her dais.  She stepped slowly toward the human, savoring its increasing fear, and grasped its chin in her hands.  "You would make a fine slave, I think; strong but dim, so nothing of importance would be lost in the transformation.  And just think," she mocked him with false cheer, "you and your little friend could spend eternity together, paying your old friends visits to entice them to join you!"

"I'll never serve you willingly," the human grated, "so stop trying to persuade me.  I'll die anyway, so just kill me and get it over with.  At least I won't feel your profane magic corrupt my body."  The lilith smiled wickedly, her mouth stretching wider than looked physically possible.  "That is where you are wrong, my sweet.  You will be able to cherish every second of it."  She placed her hand in his, and as she touched it, the skin began to rot and dissolve.  The skin flaked off in putrid chunks, then the muscle tore like frayed rope, then the fat oozed onto the floor, and so on until only the bone remained.  The human stared at his hand in horror, moving it frantically in an attempt to shake it off.  "No! No! This can't be happening!  Aos Si protect me!"  The lilith traced a finger up his arm, spreading the transformation as she went.  "Save your last breaths, human.  They can't hear you now."[/ic]

Where most demonlings are at least composed of fire and earth and other natural things, which the fae can accept if not love, the foul creations of the lilith are absolutely abhorrent, anathema to everything the fae hold dear.  Worse yet, not only can they animate the corpses of fallen fae--which is bad enough--they can also transform a living fae into an undead one, forcing the subject to watch himself die and undie, experiencing a few hours of the agonizing sensation of being trapped and helpless in an undead body until their mind is finally destroyed.  Liliths are rare among the demon lords, and even rarer because they are the first the fae attempt to kill, but their progeny are plentiful, defending territory the demons acquire while the demonlings go off to raid.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Liliths are basically advanced death knights with lots of necromancy abilities and the ability to turn enemies to undead at a touch as create greater undead.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Demonlings
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Demonlings are essentially parts of the earth given a twisted sort of life.  Coal, glass, earth, stone, magma, sand, sand--any material found under the earth can be turned into a demonling.  Fire, darkness, blood, and other sort of substances or concepts of that ilk can be given life as well, but only by being created by titans, so whereas other demonlings can be spontaneously generated by the corrupted earth of the depths, these sorts are purposefully created and thus are often the most cunning and powerful of their kind.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]Any minor monsters of CRs 4 to 12 qualify as demonlings; add the half-elemental or half-fiend template and add some abilities appropriate to their elements (glass demons might have fire vulnerability and light abilities, for instance) and you're good to go.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on July 30, 2009, 11:37:05 AM
Quote from: AcrimoneI like it. It's got a well-set-out conflict, with a story that's easy to follow. Now we want details. Lots of details.

And maps.

And all that good stuff.

Details are coming; the names of the races are up and I'll be filling in their details today, and then I'll move onto the world as a whole.  Can't promise any maps at the moment, since my artistic skill is as close to nonexistent as it gets, but I'll see if I can get a graphic designer friend of mine to work out a sketch soon-ish.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 03, 2009, 12:12:29 PM
Okay, all the races have their descriptions up; I had a surprise meeting Friday and then went out of town for the weekend, so I apologize for the delay.

Next up I'll be doing geography and the world plus some cultural notes, so if there's anything in particular you want to see (floating cities, Daoine society, whatever) let me know.  Otherwise, I should have basic info up by later today.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 03, 2009, 01:57:52 PM
The Floating Dominions
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[ic]"So shall we abandon our homes to them that rise from the depths, offering naught for resistance but surrendering all?" spake him that ruled, he of the crown.  "Nay," spake them that served, those of the staffs, "We shall not abandon our homes, offering naught for resistance and surrendering all.  Yet hear, O King, the lamentations of the children and weeping of the parents, for much death has arisen and o'erwhelmed our people."  Rose the queen from the golden throne and declaimed.  "Lose hope shall we not; surrender dare we not; yet retreat to safety and strike therefrom, we must, to oust the vermin which now infest our lands," spake she.  "Bargains have we struck with spirits of air, of cloud, of rain; with spirits of sea, of rivers, of streams; with spirits of field, of forest, of mountain.  They shall shelter us and deliver us, I am certain, should we entreat them so."

From the walls issued a chorus.  "O Queen of Fae, we the Ones with the World see your plight, hear your entreaty, and feel your anguish.  Indeed shall we shield you, should you quit the fields lost to you and enter our demesnes."  They of the staffs spoke as one: "This task is within our grasp.  If retreat to the sky and sea we must, retreat to the sky and sea we shall, bearing our cities aloft and adrift with us and abandoning those in forest and vale.  This shall be the work of a fortnight; then shall our peoples live free among the clouds and the waves."  She and he who ruled bowed to the spirits and the women and men of the staffs.  "So shall it be recorded," spake they, "so shall it be wrought."


--From the Ballad of the Hundredfold Dominion, a tale of the formation of the new cities.[/ic]
Ever since the fae were forced to leave their homes behind (or at least remove all but a token force to safety), they have done all they can to reclaim them.  In the meanwhile, however, they have put forth every effort to ensure that their new (and hopefully temporary) homes have all of the comforts and beauty of the old.  Cities in the clouds possess vast orchards and forests to provide food as well as places to go for peace and quiet; cities on the seas exhibit the same artistic grandeur of the now-ruined metropolises.  The cities in the clouds are referred to as the Dominions Aloft, and the cities in the seas as the Dominions Adrift; collectively, both compose the Floating Dominions.

Geography
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[ic=A Geography Lesson]"And what happened that morning?" the pech priest trilled from the top of his stack of books.  "If you remember my stories from last week, my sons and daughters, that day was the day our gods left the Bastion.  No, no, do not look frightened; they didn't hate us, they were trying to escape the Evil Ones, just as you and I have left.  No, in fact we left with the gods, as they left to make ready the way we would follow to the clouds, and not a moment too soon.  Earthquakes and thunder split the land, tearing our beloved fields into six parts."  The children gasped; quakes and thunder were the most terrifying thing imaginable to the fae living in the clouds, for it meant their city was liable to fall.  "That is where our brave brothers and sisters now live, holding off the demons.  In fact," the priest continued, pointing at a pair of siblings around their tenth summers, "I actually have a brave brother and sister there, as my older siblings are there still, fighting off the threat.  I haven't seen them in over eight hundred years; can you imagine being away that long?  They were supposed to travel to the Besieged to meet me, but by the time I arrived there the demons had already given the cities their name, so I told them to come here with me.  They didn't get my message in time, and ended up back in the cities of the Bastion, and haven't been able to leave since."  The priest closed his eyes for a moment; the children stayed respectfully silent.  "And so, dear children, that is why I must leave you today; I am leaving with a dwarf and two selkies to land on the Twins and then cross the ocean to find them and bring them home."[/ic]
There are thirty-eight continents on Ifrean--mostly glorified islands, really, and not continents as most would call them.  The smaller twenty-two are scattered enough that no warning was able to reach them before the demons appeared; those continents are already irrevocably transformed into ash and lava and blight, and are mostly irrelevant to the fae except that having so many smaller islands gives the demons plenty of staging grounds.  Of the remaining sixteen continents, two are demon-dominated; no cities remain except ruins, and the fae there only remain to fight the demons and because they are deep enough in demon territory that sending forces for extraction would be a useless sacrifice.  Five more are small enough that the demons can't really build up a large enough force to destroy the cities, which are simply under perpetual siege--there isn't enough room to mass troops, and demons can't come up through the bottom of the city or from the water.  Three more never had any inhabitants, so while the demons occupy the land it is mostly unspoiled.  The remaining six were originally a single massive continent, which was broken up first when the Aos Sidhe emerged from the earth and again when the demons invaded.  The continents are relatively close together, allowing for easy access and reinforcements for the fae over the bays and seas separating them; this continent is occupied by demons around the edges and mostly destroyed, but the center with all of the waterways is held still by the fae; the situation is mostly a stalemate, with the fae surrounded and unable to expand and the demons unable to attack without becoming encircled themselves.  The continents were never given individual names as such (for why would one name the land when one is the land?), and if they were the names would have been changed along with the world's, but they do have names collectively for ease of reference: The abandoned 22 are known as the Lost, the 2 still supporting fae resistance are known as the Twins, the 5 isolated ones are known as the Besieged, the 3 unspoiled ones are known as the Pure, and the 6 main ones are known as the Bastion.

The Dominions Aloft tend to remain above this area of the world, both to ensure that they have a safe place to put more forces and equipment down and to ensure the cities below aren't attacked from the air or from a route hidden from ground defenders.  There are eighty-three known Dominions Aloft--some drift away for long periods without contact, or are hidden and maintaining metaphysical silence because the demons have come too close, so there may be a handful more than 83 in existence.  The Dominions Adrift, in contrast, prefer to remain clumped together in the ocean far from land, or remain around the Pure in hopes of finding an opening to drive them out; two float just out of the demons' reach near the Besieged and send in gear and troops when possible, without which the cities would most likely have fallen years ago.  There are nine Dominions Adrift on the surface of the ocean and another two below the surface, the former mostly composed of Daoine and the latter more evenly mixed.  Each of the six continents possesses a single city, so the 6 of them, the 83 Dominions Aloft, and the 11 Dominions Adrift are collectively the Hundredfold Dominion.  One hundred is a luck number to the fae in their battles against the demons (as it is the number of Aos Si who interacted with the fae and became a pantheon of sorts), as are 83 (the number of divine spirits) and 19 (the number of fae who survived the first demon assault to warn the cities), so they attempt to keep the number of cities as close to these as possible, splitting off a colony from a large city if one goes missing or joining two if another returns.

Religion
[/color][/b]
[ic=Communing with the Spirits]A lone dwarf sat on his bed, feet dangling above the floor.  He whittled a wand out of wood which would soon be added to his collection of experiments; this wand was to hold a new spell like the other seven wands he had carved, and hopefully the spell would prove useful against the demonic threat.  As he carved, he murmured thanks to the spirits for aid in his spells and asked that his craftsdwarfship be sufficient to hold the spells on the first try, for the wands were needed at the front lines.  "Oreiades, Sapling Brother and Heart of the Forest, I thank you for your gift of wood."  He heard a whisper in his mind in response; the spirits didn't speak to everyone who spoke to them, but the dwarves had always had a special relationship with the spirits, and the Aon Ag Dulra often provided touches of welcome and reassurance.  "Aquilo, Breath of Wisdom and Bringer of Inspiration, I thank you for your gifts of woodcraft and arcane knowledge."  There was no response this time, but he continued whittling all the same.  "Lakhesis, Coastward Breeze and Giver of Fortune, I beseech you to make my carving straight, the wood strong, and the spell perfect."  With a final few strokes, he completed the wand; the runes in it sprang to life with a hearty orange glow.  "I knew you would provide for me, O Spirits.  Until next time."[/ic]
There are no gods as such on Ifrean, and the fae are not a very religious sort.  (Having your world turned into a hell on earth will do that to you.)  Instead, they venerate the Aos Si and the spirits of the world--not as supplicants to a deity, but as citizens of a nation who are entitled to protection and carry out the rulers' wishes in turn.  The Aos Si obviously do not answer prayers, as they have sealed themselves off from the world, but every so often a breach in the seal of the Otherworld allows the Aos Si to send dreams, spirits, and other aid.  The spirits of the world are quite active--the Oga owe them their very existence, after all--and are worshiped as a group; there are, however, 83 powerful spirits who are the most powerful of the spirits and serve as their "rulers," as far as Daoine scholars can make out the inner workings of spirit "society."  (Any scholar will tell you that any attempt to resolve the "mindset" of the spirits in terms the fae can understand requires judicious use of quotation marks and qualifiers.)  These 83 are known as the Aon Ag Dulra, "those who are one with the world," and are worshiped by the Daoine and Oga (and spoken to by dwarves) in exchange for divine power.

The 83 Aon Ag Dulra include Boreas, Auster, Aquilo, Vulturnus, Thuellai, Favonius, Skeiron, Apeliotes, and Zephyrus (spirits of the nine winds); Amphitrite, Galatea, Leukotia, Phorkys, Selemnus, Kymopoleia, Psamathe, and Telkhines (spirits of the seas); Meliai, Anthoussai, Mainades, Oreiades, and Epimelides (spirits of the land); and several others, though the mentioned ones are the most commonly venerated.

Magic
[/color][/b]
[ic=To Send a Dominion Aloft]After three hours, the mages lowered their staffs.  "It is done.  Is everyone inside?"  The wizards looked around them to make sure that, indeed, everyone who was to live in the new Dominion Aloft was inside the city, and none were standing outside gawking at them.  With a nod, the leader began the chant for the second portion of the casting; now that the city was enchanted to be lighter than air, it needed to be sent up to its place in the clouds.  Over the course of half an hour, the city slowly lifted until it was far out of sight of the ground.  The wizards finished their chanting, sealed the spell, and returned to their home city to begin preparing for their next casting.

In the new city, the fae marvelled at the wonders of their surroundings; this city had been built for a group of fae who had been isolated on the Twins for so long, hiding and moving from place to place, that the younger among them had never seen a proper Dominion.  The houses were lit with globes of cheery golden light; fountains dotted the streets, shooting water up into the air in exotic shapes; shifting runes on the walls allowed the spirits in the houses to welcome them to their new home, while invisible creatures formed by the spirits of air bore travelers to higher-level windows and through the streets.  Illusions wafted through the air, amusing the children, and tiny summoned creatures frolicked in the fields.  While the younger fae stared at everything, the elders glanced at each other and smiled.  It was good to be home.[/ic]
Magic is one of the few constants in the societies of the fae.  The Daoine are all highly magical creatures (minus the elves, of course) and use this magic to brighten the lives of all who live among them; the Oga need to study or devote themselves to the spirits to gain magic, but they produce more outlandish illusions than the Daoine can dream and their innovative spells are unmatched.  Creatures of air, water, and wood live side-by-side with them all, and the fae learn from an early age that magic is to be used for the betterment of all.  The fae are expert wonderworkers and charmers, entertaining themselves at home and befuddling the demons in battle.  They are quite good at seeing the future, though not so clever at that as with their illusions and enchantments, and many Oga mages count shapechanging among their favorite pastimes.

The demons' magic is evil magic, used solely for war.  The creation of demonlings by titans and the construction of magical barriers are among the few non-destructive uses of demon magic, but demon magic of all sorts is completely un-subtle (calling it "dramatic" would insult the fae's artistic talents), with even the most minor effects being accompanied by roaring, blinding flashes, and shards of material flying every which way.

[spoiler=Mechanics][ooc]The fae are only capable of casting spells of the Abjuration, Divination, Enchantment, and Illusion schools, as well as spells of other schools with the air, water, healing, or light descriptors (so they can summon air creatures or create water even though that requires Conjuration, and they can shapeshift into natural creatures as desired).  Demons can cast spells of the Conjuration, Evocation, Necromancy, and Transmutation schools plus fire, earth, death, and darkness spells.  The fae gain their divine spells from the Aon Ag Dulra and the Aos Si, and can choose from nature- and trickery-related domains; the demonlings gain their abilities from the demon lords based on the school (Conjuration and Evocation from oni, Necromancy from liliths, and Transmutation from ifrits) while demon lords gain their powers from rakshasas, and can choose from death- and destruction-related domains.[/ooc][/spoiler]

Demographics
[/color][/b]
Regrettably, where a census on most worlds deals mostly with addition, a census on Ifrean deals mostly with subtraction: removal of races from the master record, lowering the headcount of each race, and generally watching the trendline of population sink lower and lower over time--though fortunately the rate of decline has slowed to a crawl since the creation of the Oga, and there have even been minor jumps in the population for a year or two at a time.

[table=Daoine Demographics]
[tr][td]Race[/td][td]Current(ish) Population[/td][td]Average Lifespan*[/td][td]Maximum Lifespan[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Elf[/td][td]2,450,000[/td][td]820 years[/td][td]Infinite[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Dryads[/td][td]93,200[/td][td]600 years[/td][td]1,700 years**[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Dwarves[/td][td]32,700[/td][td]570 years[/td][td]1,200 years[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Selkies[/td][td]12,200[/td][td]80 years[/td][td]1,900 years[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Pech[/td][td]17,400[/td][td]240 years[/td][td]2,200 years[/td][/tr]
[/table]
*Average lifespan is that of a soldier/explorer/etc., given the age at which members tend to leave the Dominions, their level of self-preservation, and so on, not necessarily the age to which most members of the race live.
**If a dryad returns to his or her tree and merges with it again, the dryad essentially stops aging while so bound, and after a decade or two begins to reverse the effects of aging, so theoretically a dryad who spends time in its tree for a few dozen years every century has no maximum lifespan.

[table=Oga Demographics]
[tr][td]Race[/td][td]Current(ish) Population[/td][td]Average Lifespan*[/td][td]Maximum Lifespan[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Fauns[/td][td]6,730,000[/td][td]30 years[/td][td]270 years[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Humans[/td][td]238,000[/td][td]40 years[/td][td]130 years[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Sylphs[/td][td]128,000[/td][td]70 years[/td][td]720 years[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Undines[/td][td]192,000[/td][td]110 years[/td][td]840 years[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Goblins[/td][td]114,000[/td][td]90 years[/td][td]630 years[/td][/tr]
[/table]
*See Daoine table note

[table=Known Demon Demographics]
[tr][td]Race[/td][td]Current(ish) Population*[/td][td]Average Lifespan**[/td][td]Maximum Lifespan[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Demonlings[/td][td]In the 13-digit range at least[/td][td]2 years[/td][td]Unknown[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Ifrits[/td][td]148,000[/td][td]125 years (est.)[/td][td]Unknown[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Oni[/td][td]107,000[/td][td]120 years (est.)[/td][td]Unknown[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Titans[/td][td]198,000[/td][td]60 years (est.)[/td][td]Unknown[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Liliths[/td][td]11,570[/td][td]10 years (est.)[/td][td]Unknown[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Rakshasa[/td][td]Even one is too many[/td][td]As if they die[/td][td]You must be joking[/td][/tr]
[/table]
*Extrapolated minima based on the number of each in battles, their power relative to races of fae, losses on each side, and limited divinations.
**Estimated average age, based on repeated sightings of recognizable demon lords.

[spoiler=Note][ooc]The exact numbers are there for relative scaling, but the big picture is this: The fae are vastly outnumbered, their warriors die well before their time, the Oga outnumber the Daoine but die much faster, and in general the demons are running a war of attrition...and winning handily.[/ooc][/spoiler]
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 04, 2009, 02:12:55 PM
The formatting makes the race posts easy to read...

Just noting that for now. I hope to get around to reading them and their intriguing introduction stories more in depth later. If I do not respond in a few days, feel free to PM a reminder to me.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 05, 2009, 10:16:42 AM
Quote from: Light DragonThe formatting makes the race posts easy to read...

Just noting that for now. I hope to get around to reading them and their intriguing introduction stories more in depth later. If I do not respond in a few days, feel free to PM a reminder to me.

Is that a hint to spoiler-block the other post as well? ;) I suppose I might as well do that anyway.

Don't worry, I'll be sure to remind you.  It's good to know someone's reading, though this is taking longer than I'd like to get everything thought out and posted.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 05, 2009, 11:59:02 AM
I have always wondered why elves live forever. Is their health also remarkable? Are their organs immortal perserved. Do the organs stop aging at some point? Can people buy and sell elven organs and do anything with them (transplants, magic?) or is it just the way they work (like 900-year old) sea turtles... especially since these elves are particularly blessed by the Aos Sidhe.

I thought the dryad story was annoying and pointless until I read the description about how the demons actually didn't initially know that the dryads would have magical powers or be able to act far from their trees- then I could appreciate the section more! :)

the flying dwarf ship story was very intriguing. I would be interested in hearing more about dwarven runic magic.

The selkie story allows for some interesting World of Darkness end-of-the-world feeling. I can see the noble warrior race storyline- similar to Lan Mandragoran in Wheel of Time being the last of Malkier, or Aragorn being the last King of ??? in the Lord of the Rings.

Quote# The last leprechauns died several dozen years ago after a force of iron demons disguised themselves as the cauldrons the alchemically-gifted leprechauns had scattered all over their village; five hundred-some leprechauns were murdered in their sleep, and only after a band of satyrs happened upon the remains of their village did they discover the cause.
The gnomes weren't able to escape the demonic assault, so they tried to hide their race among the demons, appearing as jewel-like stone demons. It worked for ten years until an oni discovered them, and the last gnome died of his injuries after reporting all of the gathered intelligence to nearby leprechauns.[/quote]
This is also hilarious.

the fiction for this would sounds like if it is expanded- it will be very intriguing.

Kobolds and cloud cities?

The feel seems very light, but also dark at the same time- something you achieve better I think than Changeling: the Dreaming accomplishes.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 05, 2009, 12:12:47 PM
I like the varieties of demonlings; from Coal to Glass. Are there also silicon and oil demonlings? How do they move- do they splash around? I suppose they contaminate the ground.

Is there any internecine strife among the demonlings? Since it seems that some minerals and elements may damage others? Or do they not fight because they are really under the Titans' control?
-
I almost feel sorry for the Satyrs' after that General's speech.
-
The Gensai make me recollect the scene in Space Balls where Dark Helmet says that "Evil will always triumph over good because good is stupid."
-
Q: Did you ever read Ethshar by Watt-Evans, or the Runelords series by David Farland... some of the feel of this reminds me of them. (Especially Runelords- with the demons coming from below the earth with an almost unstoppable army that spoils the world.)
-

-
So what do the demons get from destroying the world? (I may have missed it if it was mentioned earlier)
-
I like how the stories and the text are very well integrated.
-
Placing the posts in spoiler blocks may make the presentation look neat- but I will warn you this- it may discourage some casual lookers from reading and seeing something interesting. I would hate to decrease the amount of page-views just because I find the display aesthetically pleasing- it is pleasing, but it is also a bit troublesome to have to open everything manually.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 05, 2009, 12:15:28 PM
The sylphs are elementals of air... but all other elementals are demons? Is the reason for the difference simply because the other elementals are earth/mineral-based elementals?

Quotethe demonlings are constantly being created and renewed from the depths of the earth and thus know only what the demon lords teach them (which doesn't often include goblins due to forgetfulness).
This (in the goblin description) is a good explanation for something I was wondering-- why the demons were often so foolish.

Good work
~LD.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 05, 2009, 01:27:01 PM
Quote from: Light DragonI have always wondered why elves live forever. Is their health also remarkable? Are their organs immortal perserved. Do the organs stop aging at some point? Can people buy and sell elven organs and do anything with them (transplants, magic?) or is it just the way they work (like 900-year old) sea turtles... especially since these elves are particularly blessed by the Aos Sidhe.
I thought the dryad story was annoying and pointless until I read the description about how the demons actually didn't initially know that the dryads would have magical powers or be able to act far from their trees- then I could appreciate the section more! :)[/quote]the flying dwarf ship story was very intriguing. I would be interested in hearing more about dwarven runic magic.[/quote]The selkie story allows for some interesting World of Darkness end-of-the-world feeling. I can see the noble warrior race storyline- similar to Lan Mandragoran in Wheel of Time being the last of Malkier, or Aragorn being the last King of ??? in the Lord of the Rings.[/quote]The pixie army didn't seem as though it would usually be very effective in the war. I assume they were eliminated early during the hostilities.[/quote]The centaur/selkie relationship seems intriguing. But why were the centaurs living in the middle of the sea?[/quote]the fiction for this would sounds like if it is expanded- it will be very intriguing.

Kobolds and cloud cities?

The feel seems very light, but also dark at the same time- something you achieve better I think than Changeling: the Dreaming accomplishes.[/quote]I like the varieties of demonlings; from Coal to Glass. Are there also silicon and oil demonlings? How do they move- do they splash around? I suppose they contaminate the ground.[/quote]Is there any internecine strife among the demonlings? Since it seems that some minerals and elements may damage others? Or do they not fight because they are really under the Titans' control?[/quote]Q: Did you ever read Ethshar by Watt-Evans, or the Runelords series by David Farland... some of the feel of this reminds me of them. (Especially Runelords- with the demons coming from below the earth with an almost unstoppable army that spoils the world.)[/quote]So what do the demons get from destroying the world? (I may have missed it if it was mentioned earlier)[/quote]Placing the posts in spoiler blocks may make the presentation look neat- but I will warn you this- it may discourage some casual lookers from reading and seeing something interesting. I would hate to decrease the amount of page-views just because I find the display aesthetically pleasing- it is pleasing, but it is also a bit troublesome to have to open everything manually.[/quote]The sylphs are elementals of air... but all other elementals are demons? Is the reason for the difference simply because the other elementals are earth/mineral-based elementals?[/quote]This (in the goblin description) is a good explanation for something I was wondering-- why the demons were often so foolish.[/quote]Good work
~LD.
[/quote]
Thanks!  Anything in particular you want to see next?
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 06, 2009, 10:51:01 AM
QuoteAnd what happened that morning?" the pech priest trilled from the top of his stack of books. "If you remember my stories from last week, my sons and daughters, that day was the day our gods left the Bastion. No, no, do not look frightened; they didn't hate us, they were trying to escape the Evil Ones, just as you and I have left. No, in fact we left with the gods, as they left to make ready the way we would follow to the clouds, and not a moment too soon. Earthquakes and thunder split the land, tearing our beloved fields into six parts." The children gasped; quakes and thunder were the most terrifying thing imaginable to the fae living in the clouds, for it meant their city was liable to fall. "That is where our brave brothers and sisters now live, holding off the demons. In fact," the priest continued, pointing at a pair of siblings around their tenth summers, "I actually have a brave brother and sister there, as my older siblings are there still, fighting off the threat. I haven't seen them in over eight hundred years; can you imagine being away that long? They were supposed to travel to the Besieged to meet me, but by the time I arrived there the demons had already given the cities their name, so I told them to come here with me. They didn't get my message in time, and ended up back in the cities of the Bastion, and haven't been able to leave since." The priest closed his eyes for a moment; the children stayed respectfully silent. "And so, dear children, that is why I must leave you today; I am leaving with a dwarf and two selkies to land on the Twins and then cross the ocean to find them and bring them home."
Very sad story.

Comment on Numbers: With so many islands, even though small and considering the extremely long lives of the fey- I really think that the numbers should be a bit higher. Right now the comparison of demons v. fey numbers are a bit ridiculous, even considering the Ona numbers added to the fey's.

Particularly I would expect more dwarves and pech- I understand why the Selkie and the Dryad numbers are low; however.

With 83 dominions aloft and all the islands I would figure that the fey's side should have something along the lines of this number of defenders...

The absolute minimum would be about what you seem  have:
10,000 per dominion aloft times 83= 830,000-1.5 million; 22 islands x 20,000 per island = 440,000-1.5 million (any less than 5 million however, though, should be easily overwhelmed by hundreds of millions of demons); dominions adrift (~200,000)

But considering the forces they are arrayed against I don't think that the losing side here can be any worse off than a 1:10 or 1:15 ratio or else they should just get flattened immediately- especially considering how the demons' magic is more powerful (it seems to be at least- despite the demons' lack of intelligence.)
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 06, 2009, 11:03:27 AM
QuoteUndines are elementals of water, so they're not the only ones. Essentially, the demons are allied with the spirits of fire, earth, and shadow below the earth, so the fae allied with those of air, water, and light, as mentioned in the intro. There could always be exceptions (like the goblins and water demons), but in general the spirits have chosen sides.
Thank you for clarifying- I missed that earlier.

And moving the IC out of spoilers still preserves a nice look for the page layout.

Requests for next?
1. Dwarven Runic magic (as mentioned previously)
2. Historical Magic Items?
3. Still pushing for Demonic factions (but I understand you said that was open to GM preference- but still I don't see how the fae could still survive given all that they have been through without some serious problems with the demons).
4. More on the Underground. (A tale of a goblin raid on the underground?)
5. Adventuring Party ideas.
6. Famous personalities?/philosophies of battle? a list of the already mentioned differences of opinions on the fae's side.

... I am not really certain about many things to request next- the setting seems fairly straightforward and self-contained as is. I think though that hopefully that list of ideas may spark something of interest to you.

--
The more I read this, the more I need to recommend you immediately pick up "The Runelords" series by Farland even though I know it is on your reading list.

You may also like Samurai Cat Goes to Hell- Will there be any anthropomorphic creatures in this world... I have the image of controlling a cat-character (and I never play animal characters... but this seems appropriate for the setting) in samurai garb wading into the depths of hell and striking down thousands of demonlings with a holy sword.

http://www.amazon.com/Samurai-Goes-Hell-Mark-Rogers/dp/0312866429
Amazon Key Phrases: Key Phrases: transport devil, angel gun, transport demon, Baby Face, Ubersaurus Rex, Route One (more...)
??? Transport Demon... This really says it all about the story.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 06, 2009, 12:44:29 PM
Quote from:  830,000-1.5 million; 22 islands x 20,000 per island = 440,000-1.5 million (any less than 5 million however, though, should be easily overwhelmed by hundreds of millions of demons); dominions adrift (~200,000)[/quoteBut considering the forces they are arrayed against I don't think that the losing side here can be any worse off than a 1:10 or 1:15 ratio or else they should just get flattened immediately- especially considering how the demons' magic is more powerful (it seems to be at least- despite the demons' lack of intelligence.)
only[/i] thing going for the demonlings is numbers.  It may take a hundred or so of the weakest fae soldiers to kill an ifrit (though experienced officers/explorers/PCs could probably do it in a group of about ten starting around level 6-ish given exceptional tactics), but the weakest fae soldier can take a dozen or so demonlings before falling.  The ability of the fae to gang up on the demon lords after taking out the demonlings is what's let them survive thus far; the ability of the demonlings to take out a handful of soldiers every battle is what's causing their numbers to dwindle.

QuoteRequests for next?
1. Dwarven Runic magic (as mentioned previously)
2. Historical Magic Items?
3. Still pushing for Demonic factions (but I understand you said that was open to GM preference- but still I don't see how the fae could still survive given all that they have been through without some serious problems with the demons).[/quote]4. More on the Underground. (A tale of a goblin raid on the underground?)
5. Adventuring Party ideas. [/quote]6. Famous personalities?/philosophies of battle? a list of the already mentioned differences of opinions on the fae's side.[/quote]You may also like Samurai Cat Goes to Hell- Will there be any anthropomorphic creatures in this world... I have the image of controlling a cat-character (and I never play animal characters... but this seems appropriate for the setting) in samurai garb wading into the depths of hell and striking down thousands of demonlings with a holy sword.

http://www.amazon.com/Samurai-Goes-Hell-Mark-Rogers/dp/0312866429
Amazon Key Phrases: Key Phrases: transport devil, angel gun, transport demon, Baby Face, Ubersaurus Rex, Route One (more...)
??? Transport Demon... This really says it all about the story.
[/quote]after[/i] Runelords....

2) I've deliberately left vague the other races of fae that survived beyond those given here, and tried to leave the nature spirits more mysterious than the air and water ones; if you want to have an anthropomorphic animal fae, go right ahead.  They probably won't be a major part of the setting, but they most likely exist somewhere, and I had been meaning to mention one or two in the IC parts in future posts.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 06, 2009, 01:11:02 PM
The Fae at War
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[ic=Best of the Best]After two hours of packing gear, double-checking mission goals, and rehearsing tactics, the four were finally ready to go.  This team had fought together for a score of years--Sean Fhunduir, human warrior extraordinaire and only survivor of the Massacre of Fasach Desert; Croi "Pyro" Scath, powerful goblin warlock and tutor of the arcane arts; Ian Dioltas, ancient pech priest and the first pech to successfully extract fae from the Besieged; and Bris Farraige, selkie shapeshifter without peer and retired head of the War Council of Odheas City.  The regiment of satyrs traveling with them had grumbled about "babysitting a bunch of washed-up [expletive]s," but their tune changed faster than a selkie on a rampage when they found out exactly how competent this quartet was.  Now, they waited politely for the four to enter the cavern (well, as politely as sober fauns ever do, anyway) and hesitantly asked questions about their assignment.

"Sorry, you know we can't tell you anything," Sean informed them regretfully.  The priest looked up from his haversack and asked, "What do you mean we can't--" before Croi stepped on his foot.  "We'll never get them to shut up if we start," he hissed.  The priest ignored him and turned to the satyrs.  "You will be distracting a legion of demonlings, thirtyscore strong, while we perform our mission below."  The satyrs began to grumble; why can't we do something useful? they asked, and why do you get all the fun?  "We," the priest continued, "will be searching out the titans who created these demonlings and killing them."  The satyrs stopped grumbling instantly; one raised his hand, after some encouragement from his fellows.  "How many titans, did you say?"  Bris rolled her eyes: "He didn't say, but there are at least three."  After some solemn debate, the satyrs pushed another of their number forward, who proclaimed, "Since you are all specialists, we think you should be the ones to kill the titans, while we mop up the demonlings."  The quartet concealed smiles, and the pech patted the satyr on the knee.  "I'm certainly glad we have your approval."[/ic]
The nature of their enemy forces the fae to fight two wars.  One war pits the rank-and-file armies of the fae against the inconceivably massive swarms of demonlings; the other pits those fae who survived the armies into service killing demon lords, retrieving artifacts, performing reconnaissance, and otherwise doing what massive numbers and beginner's luck can't.  It is these brave souls upon whom the hope of the fae races rests, and the demon lords have learned to be fearful when after slaughtering a hundred fae they see a handful more step out of hiding.

Weapons and Tools
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[ic=Descent]The party squeezed through the opening of the cave and found themselves in an open area devoid of any demonlings...so far as they could see, at least, given that the party was in complete darkness.  There was a rustling sound and a whispered prayer to the spirits of the sun and fields, and a flower on the priest's tunic began to glow.  Ian hopped up on Croi's shoulders and the two lead the way deeper into the cavern.  They soon came to a dead end, and everyone looked to the human.  "Excellent," Sean muttered as he examined the wall.  "This will work nicely."  He took a small leaf out of his pack and held it out, its stem just meeting the wall, while he concentrated.  After a few moments, roots began to grow with blinding speed all through the wall and deep into the stone, covering a two-foot-by-four foot area in front of them.  They waited about a minute as the roots thickened, causing the wall to crumble, and a covering of leaves grew over the door; the wall rumbled ever so slightly as the roots continued undermining the wall.

When the rumbling subsided, a small mushroom grew out of the leaf cover about where a doorknob would be on a door about the same size as the leaf cover.  Croi put his ear to the door, listened for a moment, and nodded.  The selkie grabbed the mushroom and twisted; the barrier of leaves opened silently to reveal a passageway through the stone with a small glimmer of light at the end, from the pech's glowing flower illuminating another living barrier at the other end.  As they moved to close the door, the human held up two feathers, whispering to one "General Gnath" and to the other "Insertion successful.  We're in and undetected."  He connected the feathers to a sprig of holly, where they began to beat like wings and flew out of the cave to deliver their message.  "All right, folks," he said as the leafy door shut, "let's get this over with."[/ic]
The Daoine (particularly the dwarves) have developed many enchanted items to help them combat the demons, and the Oga countless more.  A selection of their most well-known inventions are given here.

Dawnlily
This small gold and white flower absorbs sunlight every day at dawn; once it has absorbed this sunlight, it can release it at a word, brightening the area as natural daylight for up to 10 minutes per day or as a torch for up to one hour per day (the duration need not be continuous).  The dawnlily may also be used to produce a sunlight or sunbeam effect; 2 minutes' worth of stored daylight is consumed each time this function is used.

Spiritfletched Bow
This +3 distance elemental-bane longbow appears to be a set of wings taken from a freakishly large bird, usually a raven.  As a swift action, before the wielder fires an arrow, he can pluck a single feather from the bow and touch the quill to the arrow; the feather will adhere to the arrow in place of one of the existing fletchings.  If the arrow hits a non-fae living creature, it will shatter into a partially-real copy of the bird whose feathers were used in the creation of the bow with a flash of light; this topaz-colored phantom will irritate its target, dealing 1d4 damage each round and imposing a -1 penalty to skill checks, AC, and Reflex saves (multiple birds stack).  Each bird has an AC of 20, a fly speed of 50 feet (good), and 1 hit point, and disappears if the creature it is attacking dies or if the creature moves more than 20 feet away from it.  Each bow regrows plucked feathers in the light of the moon; if more than 7 feathers are plucked before the bow has a chance to regenerate them, the bow loses its enhancement bonus and bane property until all of the feathers are regrown, and up to 20 feathers may be plucked before it loses all magical qualities until exposed to moonlight.

Door into the Mound
This item appears to be a simple oak leaf, but it hides a great potential.  When a creature presses it to unworked earth or stone and concentrates for 2 rounds, the leaf forms roots that burrow through the earth and create a tunnel to the next open space they find.  The tunnel takes one round to burrow through 30 feet of earth or stone; once the process is started, it cannot be stopped until an open space is reached.  When the tunnel is completed, a door composed of leaves forms on each end, with a mushroom for a doorknob.  The doors can only be opened from the direction from which the tunnel was formed, and they close on their own if unattended, but if the doors are held open creatures can pass through in either direction.  Doors into the Mound come in 2ft x 4ft tunnel and 4ft x 6ft tunnel varieties.

Silversheen
A vial of silversheen holds up to three doses of the substance.  A single dose is enough to coat a single outfit of clothing, suit of armor, or tower shield in silversheen, or two tunics or smaller shields.  When a creature is wearing silversheen clothing or armor or using a silversheen shield for cover, it takes on a mirrorlike shine; all attackers who successfully strike the creature must make a Reflex save or be blinded for 1 minute.  In addition, the creature gains the damage reduction of any creatures within 30 feet (which overlap as normal) and can overcome their damage reduction automatically--for instance, an elf in silversheen breastplate fighting a glass demon with DR 10/bludgeoning and an ifrit with DR 15/good, he would gain DR 15 against the glass demon (since the ifrit overcomes his own DR), he gains DR 10 against the ifrit, and he can overcome both of their DR.  Silversheen wears off 1d8 minutes after application.

Whisper Aloft
This item comes in three parts: a blue feather, a yellow feather, and a sprig of holly.  A creature can send a message to any other creature, regardless of distance, by speaking the creature's name into the yellow feather and a message of 30 words or fewer into the blue feather, then touching both to the holly leaf.  When it does so, the feathers adhere to the holly leaf and the contraption begins flying toward the target of the message, covering 1 mile each minute.  When the whisper aloft reaches its destination, the holly sprig grows a berry; if the intended recipient plucks and eats the berry, he hears the message in the sender's voice and receives a mental image of the item's surroundings at the time the message was sent; the holly grows another berry after each one is plucked, to allow a message to be reviewed multiple times.  If a creature other than the intended recipient eats the berry, it takes 1 Con damage from the berry's poison and does not hear or see the message.  Other creatures can experience the message if the recipient places a berry into their mouths willingly, without coercion.  If the recipient cannot be reached after 1 day (if it is dead or in a sealed room, for instance), the whisper aloft immolates itself in emerald fire.

Missions and Heroes
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[ic=Ambush!]As the selkie stepped out of the tunnel, a trio of cackling sludge demons dropped on her from above, their caustic, slimy skin searing her flesh.  With a cry of anger, she drew on her druidic powers and became a cave bear, surprising them and causing them to lose their grip.  As they fell off her coat, she saw three large figures approaching from behind a nearby column.  "We've been made!" she growled at her allies.  "Damn stealth, our targets are here, repeat, targets are here!  Go go go!"  The warlock needed no encouragement; he quickly placed the pech on the group and dove into the clearing; three titans emerged from the gloom to find their demonling servants on fire and being crushed by glowing fists.  Angered, they charged at the exposed goblin and selkie...only to have both vanish from sight while the human sliced one's legs out from under it.

The toppled titan, one of sand, was hardly inconvenienced, but it was delayed long enough for the pech to leap on top of it and send its body flying to the four corners of the cavern with a miniature whirlwind.  The remaining two titans were mauled from behind by the selkie, now visible and visibly enraged, and the other three fae worked together to quickly strike them down.  "That was too easy," the goblin murmured to the selkie after the last titan fell.  "Those were the ones we came to kill?"  The selkie shook her head, now in her natural form.  "No," she replied morosely, "the ones we were sent after didn't have any sand or shadow titans among them."  The human swore and the pech looked distressed; the selkie sighed.  "Come on, people, let's keep moving and finish this."[/ic]
The fae of today are much better prepared than the fae of millennia ago; now, explorers and small groups of soldiers can infiltrate the world below the earth for very short periods of time and escape without being discovered, where only centuries ago the demons would have surprised and killed them.  Nevertheless, the rank-and-file troops do not have anywhere near the expertise needed to see these missions through.  Taking out demon lords underground, extracting fae from the Besieged, laying a beachhead for further invasion...these tasks can only be entrusted to the elite among the fae.

[ooc]Any plot you can run in a basic D&D game can be done fairly well on Ifrean.  The usual lich is raising tons of undead for world domination?  Here, a lilith is making a particular effort to improve its undead and is sending them along with demonlings to test them against the fae.  A secret group of shapechangers is infiltrating society?  Here, a small group of ifrits has learned how to take on the form of some of the fae, and are trying to fit into fae society so they can assassinate the Daoine and learn the fae's plans.  And so on and so forth--this isn't to say that campaigns in Ifrean should use the same old cliche plots, but rather that PCs don't have to play the elite strike force of the fae armies if they don't want to deal with chain of command, missions-of-the-week, and such.

Classes
The following classes exist in the setting but are only available to members of certain races (as given in the race descriptions above), with any changes noted:eldritch glaive, brimstone blast, devil's sight, and darkness free at 5th level)
* Scout (undine; features and base stats as if a gestalt scout//ninja)[/list]

Aside from the classes unique to individual races of fae, there are several base classes to which all have access, with any changes noted:[or subs it for a homebrew nature-y discipline], reflavors Shadow Hand [more illusion, less darkness])
* Bard (has all rogue class features except sneak attack, in addition to its normal features; loses spellcasting)
* Duskblade (has Quick Cast triple the number of times per day)
* Shugenja (can still cast spells from the opposed school, and gains all four elemental domains)
* Priest (new class, essentially a spontaneous-casting cloistered cleric; loses turn undead, gains a domain every 4th level)[/list][/ooc]

Artifacts and Relics
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[ic=Inspiration]As the selkie and pech began to trudge off in annoyance, the human held out a hand.  "Hold on, folks; we might not have to take out those titans alone."  The pech and goblin glanced at each other in confusion; the selkie rolled her eyes.  "What, you happen to have a legion of Oga hiding up your sleeves?"  The human chuckled; "No," he said, "but I did work out a little something with the general ahead of time."  He knelt down and cleared a wide patch on the sandy floor of all debris, then traced a circle a few yards in diameter; that finished, he took out a pouch of seeds and began sprinkling them in the groove.  The others looked on with dawning comprehension, but still a little confused.  "Sean, why are you drawing a fairy ring?  We're not supposed to leave until the titans are dead!" asked the goblin.  The human smiled enigmatically, declining to explain as he finished filling the circle with seeds and pricked his finger to let some blood drip onto the circle as well.  As soon as the drop of blood touched the circle, the circle was transformed from a seed-covered circle in the sand into a rune-inscribed ring of pulsing turquoise flames.  Goblins wielding spears and wands began spilling out of the opening and forming columns near the wall.  A few minutes later, the full twoscore of goblins was in the cave.  The others didn't seem all too impressed.  "Great job; now we'll have to get them to the titans as well," the warlock spat, "and they'll probably let them know we're coming hours in advance."  The human smiled that irritating smile again.  "I figured it would be nicer if we just knocked; I'm sure the titans will let us in."  In the ensuing pause, the pech's whispered I don't think he's cracked.... was the only sound to be heard.  The human walked around behind the circle, putting it between himself and the wall, and motioned for the others to move likewise.  "You remember the Stormhammer of the Moon we retrieved from the mounds a few years ago?"

The selkie rolled her eyes yet again and asked condescendingly, "And how were you proposing to use it, given that it can only affect things you can see, without barriers in the way?  Line of effect is one of the fundamental rules of magic!  It's far too large and heavy to fit through the ring!"  The human laughed and gestured grandiosely at the ring and proclaimed, "I know secrets of the stormhammer and rings that you can only dream of!  (Mostly because I've spent some time in the archives.)  And thus, I give you...line of effect!"  The next few moments were filled with the absolute silence of sudden comprehension and admiration, before a large beam of lightning leaped out of the ring--a large beam of lightning in the same sense that a sequoia is a large twig--and a half-mile stretch of solid rock was vaporized in an instant.  In the following silence (this time one of awe) the human muttered "Wish it could do that more often than once a month.  Still, we were establishing a permanent base here anyway..." He turned to the dumbstruck goblin troops and gestured forward.  "We've already knocked; it would be rude not to come in," he said in a mock-disapproving tone, then placed his palm against the stone behind him and gave an exaggerated bow.  "Allow me to hold the door, madam," he said to the selkie.  "After you."  Seeing a titan stick its head out into the ersatz tunnel, the selkie's hesitance disappeared, and with a shout she lead the other forty-three fae in a charge.[/ic]
As innovative as modern fae may be, there are still many mysteries of magic beyond their ken, whether because none now alive have the sheer magical talent or power to create them or because many of the artifacts of the past rely on magics the fae forsook when making their pact with the air and water spirits.  Relics of the ancient Aos Si are scattered across the face of the world; many were destroyed in the first days after the demonic invasion when those studying the artifacts were caught off guard and killed, leaving them in the hands of the demons who promptly destroyed them, but many items of power yet survive.  These artifacts are gradually discovered in ones and twos, and the fae leaders put this steady trickle of powerful magic to work for them, studying as best they can in the hopes that one day they will gain enough new-found knowledge to best the demons once and for all.

The Stormhammer of the Moon
This Large +6 sonic-blast lightning-blast warhammer is the creation of an ancient Aos Si of the winter courts whose power drew from the moon; when wielded by her, the stormhammer could obliterate entire armies, sending bolt after bolt of lighting into their ranks and flattening them with clap after clap of thunder.  However, without her power (or that of another Aos Si) the stormhammer cannot draw freely on the moon's power to constantly power it, instead only drawing enough power at the height of a full moon, and only enough for one use at that.  When the artifact is charged, the wielder may cause one of three effects to occur, originating from the warhammer:destruction spell (CL 25, DC 36).
* He can invoke a clap of thunder that permanently deafens all enemies within 1 mile (no save), knocks them prone (Reflex negates, DC 36), and moves them back out of the area as if using the Explosive Spell feat.
* He can surround an area of up to 5 square miles with a barrier of unbelievably strong winds; any creature or object attempting to cross the barrier must make a DC 36 Reflex save, with success meaning it passes through, taking only 10d6 sonic and bludgeoning damage, and failure meaning it is ripped to shreds and utterly destroyed.  The barrier lasts until the next full moon or until another such barrier is created, whichever comes first.[/list]
The stormhammer weighs upwards of 10,000 pounds as is forged of pure adamantine, so it is impractical to move; it is currently in the care of General Gnath of Odheas City, and he much prefers to use it as a deterrent to the demons rather than using it directly. He has in the past used it on behalf of some fae who have done him a massive favor, though, but only uses it if the full moon occurs in the next couple of days (so as to not be without its power too long).

The Mantle of the Everlasting Forest
The appearance of this tiny amulet, carved in the shape of a simple oak leaf, belies its great power.  When donned, the amulet transforms itself into the flowing cape of brilliant green leaves from whence comes its name.  It possesses four powers:quickened awaken, extended barkskin, enlarged tree stride, and widened entangle as supernatural abilities at will, CL 30.
* Third, with a minute of concentration the bearer can plant the mantle in the ground (in its oak leaf amulet state) and cause it to grow into a Colossal treant, advanced to maximum HD; the treant can remain for up to 3 days before it turns back into the mantle, and the ability may be used once per week.  If the treant is killed before being dismissed, it shatters into difficult terrain and the amulet teleports to the last creature to have worn it in its mantle form.
* Finally, the bearer can conjure a wall of thorns of ten times the normal area; the wall is immune to fire, heals any destroyed 5-foot sections after 1 minute, and deals an additional 5d6 divine damage to any undead who touch the wall.  The wall seems to flow from the mantle when it is growing, and the mantle is merged with it until the wearer retrieves it (which dispels the wall).[/list]
This artifact is currently being used to provide a barrier around one city in the Besieged after they were dealt a crushing defeat and were almost overrun, so is not being used offensively at the moment, but it is hoped that the city can restore its defenses to full effectiveness within the next year in order to free up the amulet to create its massive treants on the front lines.

Fairy Rings
The system of the fairy rings is an oddity among the artifacts, in that modern fae can actually create and use the rings just as the Aos Si did; they simply don't understand how it works.  With a minute of effort, a fae can create a circle in earth or stone of any size up to 10 yards in diameter, fill it with water or seeds or another natural substance--being careful not to break the circle, of course--and seal it with a drop of blood (which deals 1 Con damage as the ring draws power from the creator).  At that point any creature can enter the ring and use it to travel to any other ring in existence...but there are some catches.  First, a creature can't simply travel to any ring it chooses; there are around 120 rings at any give time, with fae creating them and demons breaking them at about the same rate, and since all of the rings occupy the same metaphysical space the creature has an equal chance of stepping out of any one of them.  The DM rolls 1d% to determine the destination and then a creature wishing to use the rings makes a Concentration check, the creature being able to adjust the result of the d% roll by 1/3 of his check result to try to link to the desired destination--the creature does not know whether the desired destination is outside within the bounds of adjustment; if it is, the ring is linked there, and if it isn't it is linked to the d% result.  Traveling to another ring at random is of course possible, though unusual.  The two rings stay linked for as long as the creature concentrates (forming a "singly-linked" ring if it alone concentrates and a "doubly-linked" pair of rings if a creature at the other ring does the same), so he can try to hold it open for others to use, but he takes 1d6 damage each round he concentrates as the rings draw on his life force to use as an anchor.  Line of sight may be drawn from one ring to another if it is singly-stabilized (but only from the stabilized to the unstabilized ring, not the reverse) and line of effect may be drawn in both directions through a doubly-linked pair of rings.

Second, the rings don't exactly travel through normal space, instead traveling through a mind-warping void that can easily cause weak-willed creatures to lose sight of their destination and perish.  Any creature traveling through the rings must make a DC 15 Will save if traveling through an unstable ring (DC 10 if through a singly-linked ring or DC 5 if through a doubly-linked one) or lose control and be lost to the void forever; if a creature's base Will save modifier is greater than the DC, it doesn't need to roll, as his mind is strong enough to not lose its sense of self on a critical failure.  This danger makes use of the rings an escape of last resort for most exploration parties (because even if you have an ally stabilizing the ring at your destination, until you are very high level with a base Will save modifier of +11 you either risk annihilation 5% of the time or need to leave someone behind to stabilize the ring for the rest); normal troops are of sufficiently low level that even a doubly-stable pair of rings might still cause them to critically fail of the time, so grunts are never sent through a singly- or un-linked ring and only sent through a doubly-linked pair when absolutely necessary.

Movers and Shakers
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[ic=Pomp and Circumstance]Sean, Ian, Croi, and Bris stood upon a dais while General Gnath, a sylph of no small renown, spoke grandly about their accomplishments.  Not only had they killed the three titans they came to kill and the three who ambushed them, they managed to kill five ifrits and seventy-eight demonlings of ash, silt, and magma.  It was a near thing, and Croi had been killed in battle and needed to be resurrected, but they had surprised the ifrits before they could communicate to their armies and thereby guaranteed that the fae would be able to establish a foothold in those caverns and remain undiscovered for at least a month and a half.

As Gnath left the podium and a much-less-accomplished fae prattled--er, declaimed--about the glory of their accomplishments, their heroic mettle, et cetera et cetera et cetera, Bris looked to the back of the room and found another set of selkie eyes meeting her own.  She gasped slightly--that was Laoch Aosta, a survivor from the original demon attacks and a heroine in her own right--and suddenly noticed more famous faces in the crows.  Geal "the Rockslayer" Faobhar, human warrior-mage who had struck down the world's most powerful titan singlehandedly; Thios Sliabh, dwarf rune magus and inventor of the skyship and its aerial bombardment tactics; Cuir Gabhar, savior of the city of Three Rivers Pass...the thought that these living legends were all here watching her receive her accolades made her think that maybe, just maybe, things were looking up.[/ic]

There are many living legends among the fae--"living legends" being a somewhat redundant term when most of them will see more than eight centuries--that inspire new generations of heroes to chip away at the demons' monolithic evil and drive them back into the earth.  The vast majority of the fae soldiers (i.e. fauns) are fairly inexperienced (i.e. level 1 or 2) but if they manage to survive a few demonling attacks, they tend to rise in power and experience quickly due to the constant conflict.  Some of the more well-known are briefly detailed here.

General Gnath
General Saighdiuir Gnath is a sylph just reaching his first century (duskblade 9) who distinguished himself early on for his masterful grasp of strategy and tactics and several decisive victories over the demons.  He has commanded several groups of explorers and commandos at all times since he reached adulthood at 7 years of age, and he is very highly regarded among most of the older strike teams for his firm hand and brilliant decisions in combat.

Laoch Aosta
Laoch is a rather laid-back veteran of many battles (selkie druid 8/priest of Boreas 3) who still leads the occasional raid even as she begins to enter her twilight years.  Her knowledge of liliths is unmatched outside of scholars of the demons, as she has personally slain 4 singlehandedly, and she is often tapped to deal with undead assaults.

Geal "the Rockslayer" Faobhar
Geal is a brave and somewhat foolhardy goblin (sorcerer 4/swordsage 1/jade phoenix mage 6) who earned the title of Rockslayer after a day-long combat against the fearsome titan Kokalaovos (16 HD half-fiend elder earth elemental) that was part pitched battle and part hide-and-find match.  He's mostly retired now, and deals with logistics in the Dominions Adrift.

Thios Sliabh
This old, curmudgeonly dwarf (wu jen 3/geometer 5/loremaster 1) has never seen combat but is one of the finest "armchair generals" in the Hundredfold Dominion.  He was the first to conceive of turning the remnants of the centaur fleets into airships and devised the standard airship tactics which are still taught today without a single alteration five centuries after their invention.

Cuir Gabhar
One of the few satyrs to rise above mediocrity, Cuir (dragon shaman 2/warrior 13) received little notice from his superiors in the army until he managed to hold off a horde of sixscore chalk and limestone demonlings by himself to allow the residents of the city near the Three Rivers Pass copper mine (one of two mines on land still functional at that time; neither remains today) to send for help--he formed the fairy ring to let the reinforcements arrive by drawing it of chalk from the demonling whose skull he crushed with his bare hands.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: BiOHaZaRD on August 06, 2009, 05:07:15 PM
Spectacular opener. I'm going to try and give this a thorough read through to get more to reply about soon.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: SilvercatMoonpaw on August 06, 2009, 06:25:02 PM
I've only really read the opener (some time ago, I just skimmed it this time) and a few chosen entries in the races/monsters section.  I'm drawn more toward the mentions of various demons, how they're composed of earthen elements: I don't think we get enough of that in fantasy.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 06, 2009, 07:09:28 PM
Quote from: SilvercatMoonpawI've only really read the opener (some time ago, I just skimmed it this time) and a few chosen entries in the races/monsters section.
I'm drawn more toward the mentions of various demons, how they're composed of earthen elements: I don't think we get enough of that in fantasy.[/quote]

That was one of my motivations, yes; I figured, "Hell is always 'down there' in real-world religions, why not have them show up not by coming through a portal or whatever but just by digging their way out?"
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 07, 2009, 01:06:25 PM
The new numbers are much more realistic. :)
The story about the mission is very well done.
Thank you again for the explanation about the demonlings

The fairy rings are annoyingly useful... but the "lost to the void" effect might be a bit too powerful.

I almost feel bad to ask this, considering how rapidly you delivered on the last request, but 1 more request: the topic of the fortnight is "Festivals"... what sort of somber festivals do the fey now celebrate- and can they celebrate?
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 07, 2009, 09:35:59 PM
Quote from: Light DragonThe story about the mission is very well done.
Thank you again for the explanation about the demonlings
The fairy rings are annoyingly useful... but the "lost to the void" effect might be a bit too powerful.[/quote]will[/i]), it provides an opportunity for sneaky missions without having to get through a bazillion demons, and otherwise facilitates the plot.  I don't really think long-range teleportation is really that powerful as long as it's point-to-point rather than arbitrary--one does not simply pop into Ifrean, someone has to get there first to make a ring, and since the rings can be destroyed simply by screwing up the circle, it's an unpredictable system (read: if the DM doesn't want you somewhere, the circle was broken. ;))

You know, I was just thinking about how the fairy rings are like Stargates (point-to-point, can be sealed off) and noticed the mission party is eerily similar to SG-1: The nominally-in-charge human soldier who's too smart(-mouthed) for his own good, the small, somewhat timid but smart support character, the angry/driven female with something to prove, and a token member of the enemy who's switched sides and uses their power against them...all lead by a general back in HQ to whom they send a message to open the gate/ring on the other end.  Apparently my subconscious is telling me I need to watch more Stargate.

QuoteI almost feel bad to ask this, considering how rapidly you delivered on the last request, but 1 more request: the topic of the fortnight is "Festivals"... what sort of somber festivals do the fey now celebrate- and can they celebrate?
somehow[/i] bring myself to write more fluff...

As soon as I finish up the "important people" portion from your last request, I was actually planning to go into timekeeping and history/traditions, so covering the festivals won't require any extra effort.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 08, 2009, 11:47:38 AM
Quote from: Pair o' Dice LostEssentially, the void does two things: One, it makes using the rings risky, since there's always the chance of a crit fail, and two, it ensures that PCs are really the only ones who'll use them.  It provides a nice little "get out of jail free" card when things go south (and they will), it provides an opportunity for sneaky missions without having to get through a bazillion demons, and otherwise facilitates the plot.
I don't really think long-range teleportation is really that powerful as long as it's point-to-point rather than arbitrary--one does not simply pop into Ifrean, someone has to get there first to make a ring, and since the rings can be destroyed simply by screwing up the circle, it's an unpredictable system (read: if the DM doesn't want you somewhere, the circle was broken. ;))[/quote] Oh, i agree with that- that's why I said they were "annoyingly useful" they only sort of worked.


Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 08, 2009, 01:22:06 PM
Quote from: Light DragonIt just seemed to be a little too likely to fail- and instant character death is often a problem to resolve at a gaming table- it's not fun for the players and it seems arbitrary. Even if the players assumed the risk. It's a tricky situation.
teleport[/i] if you have a goblin sorcerer in the party, so the two coincide.  By 16th level or so, a singly-linked ring is safe, and you could have greater teleport by this point.  Essentially, it lets any PC teleport at will to certain points at the same time they could teleport anywhere with limited uses.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 08, 2009, 10:16:26 PM
I've posted the rune magic writeup here (http://thecbg.org/e107_plugins/forum/forum_viewtopic.php?71339.0#post_71353); take a look.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 10, 2009, 10:59:55 AM
History of the World, Part 1
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[ic]"It has been noted by many distinguished scholars that the study of history is one of the few advantages we Daoine possess that the demons cannot possibly match.  We have lifespans of several millennia, with elves such as myself having no upper bound on our lifespans, and are thereby able to use the sum total of our knowledge at all times; the demons are remade on the order of months or years, and have no perspective on the past.  This is why we send our armies to kill the older demon lords--every time we kill a single one of them we set their strategies back by years, whereas all but the youngest of elves remembers every conflict stretching back to the Day of Seclusion when the Aos Si bid their final farewell."

--Muin Caislean, elf scholar, aged 78,432 years[/ic]
The following is a timeline of major events in Ifrean history; times are measured from the Day of Seclusion and are rounded off to two significant figures.  Significant years or time periods are referred to as "Days" if centuries in length, "Summers" if millennia in length, and "Aeons" otherwise.
-100,000: Day of the Elf Elves are formed by the Aos Si.
-98,000: Day of the Pixie Pixies are formed by the Aos Si.
-92,000: Day of the Dwarf Dwarves are formed by the Aos Si.
-85,000: Day of the Gnome Gnomes are formed by the Aos Si.
-79,000: Day of the Selkie Selkies are formed by the Aos Si.
-74,000: Day of the Centaur Centaurs are formed by the Aos Si.
-71,000: Day of Revelations The greater spirits (who would later become the Aon Ag Dulra) reveal themselves to the Daoine and the Aos Si; whether they first gained sentience around this time or had simply been hiding is unknown.
-62,000 to -60,000: Summer of the Scale Several reptilian Daoine are formed by the Aos Si, including kobolds and drakes.
-42,000 to -21,000: Aeon of Fulfillment The rest of the Daoine are formed by the Aos Si.
-11,000: Day of Ascension The Aos Si retreat from the underground to join their children on the surface.
-8,000 to -800: Summer of Solitude The Aos Si retreat from active involvement with the Daoine, keeping mostly to themselves.
0: Day of Seclusion The Aos Si travel to the Otherworld and begin sealing it for reasons unknown.
119: Day of Omens The Daoine detect the first signs of demonic incursion.
122: Day of Desolation The demons emerge from the core.
141: Day of Sorrow The surface finally becomes too dangerous to inhabit; the Daoine retreat to the Dominions.
150: Day of Deliverance The Daoine make an alliance with the spirits to protect their Dominions from invasion.
153: Day of Renewal The Daoine share the secrets of creation with the spirits, and the Oga are formed.
155: Day of Loss The Aos Si finish sealing the Otherworld; Ifrean is now completely cut off from the Aos Si and all other dimensions.
1038+: Aeon of Conflict Present day.

Timekeeping
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[ic]Thirty days hath Eanair,
And Feabra through Deireadh Fomhair;
Twenty Samhain, Mi Na Nollag,
And the days of Criochnaigh.

Weeks are fivefold, years are four,
Moons are sixfold, decades more.
Births to harvest, seven moons;
Then to springtime, return soon.


--A pech children's poem to teach the turning of the year[/ic]
The surface of Ifrean may be hell on earth, but the Dominions are far enough removed from the corruption to retain the world's old seasonal patterns upon which their calendar is based.  The year is split into 13 moons, the first of which (Eanair) begins at the end of winter.  The first 10 moons of the year possess 30 days, the next two 20 days, and the last 40 days; there are 4 "bridge days" between seasons added to this total, for a total year length of 384 days on the dot.  The reason for the uneven distribution of moons is simple: Ifrean, thanks to the spirits inhabiting it, spends over half the year in what would be on other worlds spring and summer--150 days of each--and spends less than half in autumn and winter--40 days of each.  Each spring or summer moon is divided into 6 weeks of 5 days each, and the latter 3 moons have in total 6 weeks of 14 days each; the bridge days serve to keep the calendar regular so the year does not progress and throw off the calendar, but the day of the week a given date falls on will progress.  The spring and summer moons are known as the crest of the year, and the autumn and winter (including the bridge days on either end) are known as the trough.

Daily Life
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[ic=Old Routine]After an eventful mission, Sean Fhunduir returned to the Dominion Adrift of Mullach and received control of his brigade of satyrs from his second in command.  He always hated commanding even this many fae--he longed to be out exploring and killing demons, not managing logistics--but duty is duty, after all, and he had given his word to the general that he would command for at least the crest moons of each year for the next decade.  Thus, his first act when returning was to give everyone a four-day leave, effective immediately.  While the satyrs cheered, his aide pulled him aside and whispered, "Lieutenant, today is the day of rest here in Mullach, so having satyrs running around with nothing to do would be a bad idea.  Your timing is probably off after spending so much time in Odheas."

Sean sighed.  "Right, right, I keep forgetting they're two days ahead.  Soldiers!"  The satyrs looked depressed at the sound of his voice; that was an I've changed my mind tone if they'd ever heard one.  "I was mistaken about the timing, so no furlough today; everything is closed.  However," he interjected into the chorus of groans, "Everyone who doesn't bother me before leave tomorrow gets three drinks on me."  The cheers were even louder this time.  "Are you sure you know what you're doing, sir?  Offering satyrs free drinks?"  Sean smiled and waved off his aide's concerns.  "I picked up seventeen flawless sapphires and amethysts I don't need from the gem demon I killed last moon.  A few drinks are a small price for the chance to head out and catch up with friends I haven't seen since Winterheart."[/ic]
Since each Dominion is for the most part autonomous, rarely coming together with other Dominions for fear of presenting too tempting a target to the demons, each keeps its own weekly schedule; travelers between Dominions often have to adjust their schedules to compensate for days of rest and days of commerce, and they often find other small quirks of their schedule as well.  Each week generally consists of one day of rest (where the fae spend time with their families), three days of commerce (where shops and taverns and such are the busiest) and one day of study (where the fae focus on self-improvement or learning) during the crest of the year; in the trough of the year, the last three months and the bridge days are split fairly evenly among days of rest, commerce, and study, plus at least one day of service per week (where the fae train with the militia, volunteer their magic for public works, and so on).  These days don't fall in any particular order during the week, but all cities have these ratios--the fae are very tradition-bound, and are loath to change familiar patterns of living due to their long lives.

Observances
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[ic=All Spirits' Day]The little elven children came up to Croi's door and asked the goblin for treats.  Each was disguised as a little demonling, one of fire and three of shadow, with illusion magic helping complete the image.  "Oh dear me," the goblin exclaimed with mock fright, "the demons have caught up to me at last!"  The children laughed at this and made threatening gestures, but the goblin was ready: "Begone with you, foul demons!  I destroy your powers!"  With a wave of his hand, the illusions surrounding the children disappeared.  Confused and upset, the children stared at him; he glared back, then smiled evilly.  "See?  I have them now!" he said, holding out his hands and creating images of flame and shadow demons chasing illusionary fae.  The children brightened at once, and clapped and cheered as the little fae beat the tiny demons off Croi's hands, where they fell to the ground with a shriek and disappeared.

Laughing along with the children, Croi restored their illusions, handed them some candied sunshine, and sent them on their way.  As they disappeared behind a bend, his smile slowly shrank.  The purpose of All Spirits' Eve was to accustom the children to the demons and show them that they could overcome their fear; after all, the best way to overcome fear is to make light of that which is feared.  However, the tradition dated back to before it was discovered that the demons actually existed, and teaching children not to fear exactly what they should fear always struck him as wrong.  A ghost of a smile returned to his lips as he saw his own daughter returning with a sack stuffed to the top, and as always he put aside those thoughts until next year.  Why take away one of the few occasions for children to enjoy themselves?  They had to grow up too fast these days anyway, so they might as well enjoy it while they could.[/ic]
There are few reasons for the fae to celebrate in modern times, but the Daoine are nothing if not creatures of tradition, and the Oga don't see any cause to get rid of old feasts and holy days.  Observances fall into one of two categories: light-hearted traditions kept from before the war, and more solemn occasions to commemorate momentous events after the start of the war.  Every Dominion has its own observances from after their founding, but in general those observed by the majority of the fae are described below:

All Spirit's Day
Fae children are dressed in costumes and illusions of demons and go around their cities trying to scare their neighbors, receiving small treats of food or small toys in return.  [Essentially, this is a somewhat twisted version of Halloween.]

Dawn of the Year
On the morning of the first day of the year, fae young and old travel to small shrines (erected specially for the occasion) to hear the "words" the Aon Ag Dulra "speak" (again, anything involving the spirits requires a liberal use of quotation marks).  Most leave small portions of food or other gifts at the shrines for those less fortunate (those whose relatives were slain in the last year, those who were recently rescued from the Besieged, etc.) to begin the year on a positive note.

Day of Investiture
At the end of Eanair, first month of the year, new members of the fae armies take their oaths; all taverns, hostels, and other public establishments are open around-the-sundial to welcome well-wishers, as this is one of the few times that civilians will brave the dangers of the demonic assaults to visit relatives and friends in other Dominions.

Feast of Ayailla
On the forty-seventh day of the year, the Daoine gather to remember and honor Ayailla the Fair, the Aos Si who lived most closely with the elves and other early Daoine in millennia past and who served as a liaison of sorts between them and the Aos Si.  Every few years on this date, the seal on the Otherworld weakens enough to allow the Aos Si to send messages, thoughts, and encouragement across the barrier to strengthen their childrens' resolve and reassure them that the Aos Si are trying hard to find a solution to end the war; visions are frequent on this date, and often the Daoine are able to speak with those loved ones who passed the veil before they could be resurrected, but many don't bother with this observance any more, feeling that they've been abandoned and that their creators are telling white lies to keep morale up.

Induction Day
The Daoine believe that children should be named and formally accepted into fae society only during the spring months, when the fae's power (and the Aon Ag Dulra's protection) is strongest, so any children born before the first day of spring the preceding year are named, inducted, and celebrated on the first of spring.

Week of Service
During the second week of summer, civilian Oga over the age of 24 are expected to take a trip to other Dominions and go see the world; it's more of a cautionary, sobering experience to really introduce new adults to the harsh reality of the world than a carefree exploration.

Harvest Days.
Autumn and winter are the seasons when the Aon Ag Dulra are weakest, so demons are occasionally able to mount direct assaults on the Dominions this time of year.  As the end of summer approaches, magically-gifted fae help their communities, for no pay or recompense, to do any work that must be completed before winter, whether harvesting crops or building shelters; under the influence of so much magic from so many powerful fae, the tiny fields in each Dominion can often produce enough food to feed its inhabitants for the rest of the year and enough timber to erect dozens of buildings.

Day of the Remembrance
On this date a few centuries ago, the fourth day of winter, the last Daoine to personally remember the Aos Si fell in battle.  Since then, the fae have taken to honoring those who have given exceptional service to the fae on this date, and teaching about the history of the fae--though the fae naturally live centuries to millennia, they know all too well that history can easily be lost if the most learned ones are killed before their time.

Feast of the Winter Sun
The Daoine, who normally eat less and are morose during the winter months as horde after horde of demons batter themselves against the Dominions' defenses, partake of plenty and attend revels to remind themselves that the Aos Si and Aon Ag Dulra are always with them despite the cold and darkness and fear.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 14, 2009, 10:12:58 PM
Finished the last post with the addition of a bunch of festivals to fit the fortnightly theme.

I'm somewhat at a loss as to what to describe next (same thing happened to my last setting, where it's straightforward enough as to not need tons of background and explanation), so if anyone has a burning need to see something, let me know.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 21, 2009, 01:35:02 PM
Well, no one's posted in a while and several people said they'd comment on this (you know who you are, yes, that means you), so here's one last post for feedback.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 21, 2009, 03:43:42 PM
Sorry, I was traveling these past few days.

-On Festivals...
 All Spirits Eve  sounds particularly macabre considering their travails against the demons. I assume it is mostly celebrated in the clouds and that any young people who happen to be on the actual islands below (in the cut-off lands, for example) don't have time for that sort of frivolity since hte demons are far too close.

This festival makes sense from a fae point of view (twisted logic) but why not have the children dress like historical fae creatures-- as it looks- the demon (children) are extracting protection money from the adults. Could it instead be the adults dress up like demons and the children pretend to be crusaders assaulting demonic dwellings and demanding treats or to destroy the demons?

I like the Week of Service and the DAy of Investiture. Both holidays are particularly suited for the world. Might I suggest increasing the week to two weeks? A week seems to be too short (considering travel time, etc.)

The Feast of Aiyalla is a good personal addition.

===
I do not usually read timelines, but your timeline here was nice, short, and to the point. It was useful for better understanding your world.

===
I also liked the addition of the movers and shakers.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 21, 2009, 03:52:02 PM
Elsewhere you noted a Celtic inspiration. I just wanted to note that at least with the demons I get a sort of vibe similar to that of Buddhist hell. Was that purposeful or coincidence (I figure the latter).

For more inspiration, you might want to look into the strangeness and weirdness that is the Buddhist hellish afterlife.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 21, 2009, 09:58:22 PM
Quote from: ==
I do not usually read timelines, but your timeline here was nice, short, and to the point. It was useful for better understanding your world.

===
I also liked the addition of the movers and shakers.[/quote
Elsewhere you noted a Celtic inspiration. I just wanted to note that at least with the demons I get a sort of vibe similar to that of Buddhist hell. Was that purposeful or coincidence (I figure the latter).
The Celtic theme was mainly meant to be for the "good guys;" I figured having a different mythological basis for each side in the conflict would highlight their differences and conflict.  I wasn't aiming for the demons to draw from the Buddhist hell as a whole, but that was one of the religions/cultures I cherry-picked for inspiration,
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 22, 2009, 04:36:32 AM
1. Thanks for the explanation regarding "halloween"

2. I am sort of baffled that I seem to be the only person reading your setting (or at least commenting). I really believe that this setting is one of the best here on the CBG.

3. Ah, so what other religions/cultures did you draw on for the demons?

4. I am still trying to brainstorm on what could be necessary to see. You seem to have covered the big points. You have done major figures, countries, weapons, magical items, monsters (unless there are other animals flora/faunae other than the demons), you've done the characters, the classes (and given a nifty chart (!)), you've done culture and festivals, we had a look into the psychology of the characters, you did magic, you covered adventures. This has been a nifty "beer-and-pretzels" drop in, hit hard, and get out setting creation-- very instructive to those of us who are more verbose.

a. There is always, the topic of the fortnight: Organizations. Are there any organizations in the world?

b. There is also- famous sites? You mentioned the islands and some cities, but what I am thinking of are natural sites? I suppose they have mostly been destroyed- but are there any decaying volcanic citadels that used to be extremely holy to the Fae? If so, it might be an interesting adventure seed to go back and try to resanctify or reclaim one of those places? Such as the place where the Aos Sei first escaped the world from (if they emerged from one particular area in the ocean).
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 24, 2009, 05:48:22 PM
Quote from: Light Dragon2. I am sort of baffled that I seem to be the only person reading your setting (or at least commenting). I really believe that this setting is one of the best here on the CBG.
3. Ah, so what other religions/cultures did you draw on for the demons?[/quote]4. I am still trying to brainstorm on what could be necessary to see. You seem to have covered the big points. You have done major figures, countries, weapons, magical items, monsters (unless there are other animals flora/faunae other than the demons), you've done the characters, the classes (and given a nifty chart (!)), you've done culture and festivals, we had a look into the psychology of the characters, you did magic, you covered adventures.[/quote]This has been a nifty "beer-and-pretzels" drop in, hit hard, and get out setting creation-- very instructive to those of us who are more verbose.[/quote]a. There is always, the topic of the fortnight: Organizations. Are there any organizations in the world?

b. There is also- famous sites? You mentioned the islands and some cities, but what I am thinking of are natural sites? I suppose they have mostly been destroyed- but are there any decaying volcanic citadels that used to be extremely holy to the Fae? If so, it might be an interesting adventure seed to go back and try to resanctify or reclaim one of those places? Such as the place where the Aos Sei first escaped the world from (if they emerged from one particular area in the ocean).
[/quote]
Hmm...organizations and holy sites.  That's a good idea, and would provide plenty of hooks.  I'll think about that and put something up later this week; I'm heading off to college tomorrow and probably won't have internet access until Friday.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on August 24, 2009, 06:16:10 PM
Good luck at college. If I may be so bold as to inquire, what is your major?

>>the earthen demons from the book I mentioned earlier, the tactics and mindless fury of the Zerg from Starcraft ("Demonling rush!"), and so on.

Haha.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: Pair o' Dice Lost on August 26, 2009, 09:52:18 PM
Quote from: Light DragonGood luck at college. If I may be so bold as to inquire, what is your major?
You may; I'm doing a dual Computer Science/Cognitive Science with a minor in Philosophy.
Title: Death from the Depths
Post by: LD on April 22, 2011, 12:35:11 AM
Bumping this thread in case anyone missed it when it first came out. I very much enjoyed the work Pair o'Dice Lost did here--he put a lot of love into the setting and didn't get too much feedback at the time.