[center][h2]~Fun Group/1x1 Ideas~ (Very much WIP)[/h2][/center] [color=#808080]1. Cabin in the Woods/Until Dawn inspired RP where a remote lodge / abandoned retreat becomes sealed for whatever reason (the weather? Will have to decide), so there’s no outside contact and no easy way to escape. Something in the area is awake or has been let loose, and characters have to survive the night while also dealing with relationship drama, yada yada. Choices will be used to escalate things. Every character will have: A fear they haven’t voiced (that the creatures or whatever use against them) A secret (not necessarily an evil one, just destabilizing for group dynamics). A player character is one member of the main group that shares history with at least one other member of the group. They also have something to lose emotionally in this situation. If it's a 1x1, then the cast would be split as evenly as possible. [center][u][b] Potential Backstory[/b][/u][/center] [img]https://img.roleplayerguild.com/prod/users/019c3664-79db-739b-bd6f-f00cf6d5bc22.webp[/img] [indent][indent]Long before the lodge’s foundation was laid, before the mountain road was a scar through the wilderness, this land existed in a state of perpetual refusal. It was unremarkable by any common measure, with its lack of dramatic cliffs, strange rock spires, and visible scars upon the earth. So, to a casual eye, it was indistinguishable from the miles of dense forest and uneven ground that surrounded it, another patch of wild left to its own devices for generations. And yet, those who passed through it seldom stayed. The land did not repel visitors with overt menace exactly; it simply made them unwilling guests, eager to move on. The discomfort the land inspired was a subliminal thing, slow and insidious. A traveller might make camp, initially unaware of any problem, attributing their disquiet to the weariness of the journey or the isolation of the deep woods. But as the hours wore on, a formless unease would coalesce, and the urge to leave would grow from a tiny whisper in one’s ear to a silent imperative, becoming undeniable by first light. The environment itself seemed complicit in this expulsion. The wind would move through the high canopy, bending branches in a visible dance, yet the accompanying symphony of rustles and creaks would fall weirdly attenuated, as if swallowed by the thick air. A few, in hindsight, would call the silence almost predatory, a presence not so much in the sounds but in the gaps between them, patient and hungrily attentive. This unease was mirrored and magnified by the wildlife, confirming it was not mere human fancy. Hunters found the area curiously bereft. Game trails skirted its edges like hesitant borders, and tracks of deer or fox would often lead in but not out, terminating in a baffling void as if the animals had simply been excised from the world. Birds avoided roosting; trees that elsewhere teemed with nests stood skeletal and empty, even in the verdant height of spring. There was no obvious cause like a dominant predator or blight upon the flora. It was an ecological anomaly, so to speak, a pocket of absence where the vibrant, biotic chatter of the forest simply fell away. For most travellers, this vague, unexplainable discomfort was enough. They departed without ever truly understanding why, attributing their unease to overactive imagination or primal instinct. But there have always been those who resist the urge to leave—those who dismiss the insistent pressure in their minds and who stubbornly outstay their welcome. It is from these few that darker accounts began to emerge, shared in hushed tones around campfires to this day. These individuals reported phenomena that strained belief. Some heard sounds woven into the wind: a voice, faint but recognizable, calling their name from the trees, or the cadence of footsteps pacing just beyond the firelight, ceasing the moment they were acknowledged. Others spoke of catching sight of upright silhouettes standing between distant trunks—figures that dissolved into shadow when stared at directly. Publicly, these incidents were dismissed as hypnagogic tricks of a fatigued mind or the brain’s desperate attempt to populate a great darkness with recognizable form. But then, there were the disappearances. They were never frequent enough to provoke formal investigation, occurring as isolated tragedies separated by years or decades. A hunter failed to return to his lodge. A trapper’s line lay unchecked, the pelts rotting. A traveller setting out from one settlement was never recorded at the next. In the vast, unforgiving wilderness, such losses were, tragically, part of the ledger. Therefore, they were usually explained by the usual suspects: a misstep leading to injury, a sudden blizzard causing fatal disorientation, or simple exposure to the insensate cold. What troubled the seasoned guides and local historians, however, was the consistent absence of resolution. When search parties were mustered, they frequently discovered scenes that defied the logic of an accident. Campsites were found intact, poised in a state of eerie interruption. A bedroll lay neatly unfurled beside a cold fire pit. A kettle hung over ash, still full. Supplies remained in orderly stacks, as if the owner had merely stepped away for a moment, intending to return. There were rarely signs of struggle as well, and tracks, when found, often led a short distance into the woods before stopping abruptly, as if the walker had simply ascended from the earth. In several chilling instances, personal effects were recovered in places that made no sense: a rifle, clean and unfired, propped against a tree a mile from camp; a wool coat folded neatly on a riverbank rock as temperatures plunged toward freezing. Officially, however, these cases were recorded as unfortunate losses; their files were eventually closed with the understanding that the wilderness is not obligated to return what it claims.[/indent][/indent] [/color]