I figure I should write out another element for the OP and then the App and we can get this ball rolling. But a subject I would like to see closed before I make anything final is if we should incorporate a measured passing of time like in PoW? Personally, since I feel I'm going to add a weather mechanic I feel we could use some sort of measure of time. Not like turns or anything but a fluid way to lay out loosely to compare the progress of the RP's narrative against a relatively realistic pace. In Precipice of War this is the rule that every five pages is a month, allowing someone to dive in if they want and calculate an exact time or even in a way an exact time of day a post is supposed to take place in (roughly 3 to 3.5 posts is a day). Of course the strictness of this varies from individual to individual and the biggest use it's been used for thus far is putting the Precipice Wiki together. If we have weather though then this mechanic of time can assist in producing more appropriate weather events. So, should we have something like this? If so: how many posts or pages should determine a set period of time for the start? Or should we just fly without any measure and I can do whatever I want whenever (which may work a bit since a tighter axial tilt means there'd be less dramatic differences in seasons). ___________ Weather: One of the major fundamental differences in this world versus the old world is the altered states of the weather. Produced seemingly anomalously from the North or South American interiors, or produced from the more extreme effects of the new moon on axial tilt. To accommodate this for the RP I'll be rolling dice through the RPGuild's dice feature and rolling on a few factors: target location, severity, and type (hurricane, fog, thunderstorm, strong winds, etc.). Every player will have an assigned location number designating their ID in the dice-rolls. Likewise, even if you're the primary target that doesn't mean you'll be the only one since this RP is not a global adventure and much more regional.