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12 mos ago
Current Quick everyone, PM Mahz with your wishlist for Guild updates and new features. The more the better. In fact, send him a PM about it every day. Make that every hour. Chop chop!
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1 yr ago
Welcome back, Hecate!
5 likes
2 yrs ago
To all the homies in Florida -- stay safe out there. Now is not the time to wrangle an alligator and surf it down the flooded streets. I know, it's hard to resist the urge.
7 likes
2 yrs ago
Calling all ELDEN RING players: roleplayerguild.com/topics/…
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2 yrs ago
I've logged into this site just about every day for the past fourteen years.
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Bio

On the old version of the Guild I was the record holder for 'Most Infraction Points Without Being Permabanned'.

My primary roleplaying genres are fantasy and science fiction. Big fan of The Elder Scrolls, The Lord of the Rings, Warhammer 40,000, Mass Effect, Fallout and others.

Most Recent Posts

The creaking of the Prydwen’s hull and the dull throbbing of its engines as it maintained anchor over the Capital Wasteland were only interspersed by the sound of Laura’s pencils flying across the off-white pages of her sketchbook. Bold lines, drawn with confidence, carved out the countenance of Knight-Captain Reddon while soft shading and gentle touches of the graphite filled in the blanks. Her eyes, wellsprings of crystalline blue, flitted between the drawing and Reddon’s own face and she frowned, pressing the bottom of her pencil against her pursed lips.

He was seated opposite her in the unused nook of the Prydwen that she used as her studio. The Scribes that dwelled and worked in this part of the airship had initially grumbled at her intrusion but quickly changed their tune and tolerated her presence after she’d drawn them each a flattering portrait. Reddon’s face was cast in a stark contrast of light and shadow by the light fixture that hung from the low, rivet-studded ceiling. His makeshift seat was an empty crate that Laura had confiscated when no one was looking, and his empty suit of power armor stood by the entrance into the cranny, as if standing sentry for nosy intruders.

There was something intimate about drawing someone’s portrait, Laura thought, and she hated being disturbed while she was working. As such, she was quietly grateful for the notion that the sight of the Knight-Captain’s suit would scare off the Squires that roamed the lower decks of the Prydwen and did their best to be a pain in everyone’s ass… as adorable as they were.

“Is there something wrong?” Reddon asked, having noticed the frown on Laura’s face. He glanced away from her face when she met his gaze and went back to looking straight ahead like she’d ordered -- it was much easier to draw someone if they weren’t moving, after all.

She smiled and motioned reassuringly with her free hand. “No, everything is alright, you’re doing great. I was just thinking about which technique to apply, that’s all.”

“Oh,” Reddon said. He cleared his throat and shifted on his crate a little. “That’s good.”

The truth was that Laura wasn’t giving Reddon’s portrait her undivided attention. She took a deep breath and straightened up, putting her thoughts about the mission out of her mind. It wasn’t fair to the Knight-Captain. They’d set the date for his sitting weeks ago, after all. That this happened to be the last day before her departure to lands unknown was a coincidence and a consummate professional wouldn’t let that affect their work.

But it was so very hard not to think about the mission…

After an hour had passed, Laura cleared her throat and got up from her own seat -- a real chair, of course -- and gently tore the page from the sketchbook. Paper was hard to come by so as much as Laura would have liked an easel with a large canvas to work with, she had to make due with a supply of sketchbooks that the Brotherhood had liberated from an old factory a few years ago. Her heartbeat quickened as she handed the portrait to the Knight-Captain. That first moment of judgement always made her nervous, no matter how many times she’d gone through it by now, and no matter how sure she was that her work was good. Reddon’s face embodied several of the noble qualities that Laura admired in the Brotherhood of Steel and she’d had to suppress her awe while she worked on immortalizing the Knight-Captain’s strong jaw and heavy brow. She’d been with the Brotherhood for a few years now but that feeling never changed. They were still nothing short of heroes to her.

Fortunately, his face lit up immediately when he looked upon Laura’s rendition of himself. “Wow, I don’t know what to say,” Reddon said and glanced up at her with sincere gratitude in his eyes. “Thank you, Initiate.”

Her tense shoulders sagged with relief and she reciprocated his smile with a wide one of her own. She hadn’t known the man before he approached her with the familiar commission for a portrait; evidence that her fame was spreading throughout more than her own circle within the Brotherhood. “You’re very welcome, Knight-Captain,” she replied and inclined her head, still beaming.

“So what do I owe you?” the man said as he got to his feet as well and reached into his pockets.

“Standard rate is thirty caps,” Laura answered. She hadn’t known Reddon before he’d approached her, but she had made sure to do her research on the man in the weeks between their first meeting and this appointment, and discovered that he was something of a rising star in the Brotherhood’s ranks. “But you were so well-behaved -- as a model, I mean, sir -- that twenty-five caps is all I’d be comfortable accepting. Most of the men… well, you know what they’re like,” she continued, rolled her eyes and laughed. “Nothing short of a miracle if they sit still for more than two minutes.”

Reddon laughed and nodded as he counted out the caps. “That’s very kind of you, Initiate,” and she saw the glint of budding affection in his eyes, much to her satisfaction. One could never have too many friends in the Brotherhood, especially someone with a little ambition.

After Reddon re-entered his suit and stomped away, Laura gathered up her drawing instruments in her arms and made her way back to the Initiates’ quarters, which was little more than a few rows of beds and footlockers over the power armor bay -- loud, crowded and filthy. Laura longed for the day of her Knighthood and the much more private quarters that such a rank would afford.

She ignored the other Initiates that were there, who were stood in a circle and yelling at something with great and unintelligible enthusiasm. It could be anything, from an impromptu wrestling match to an intense round of dice or cards, but she had greater things on her mind. Much to her chagrin Laura discovered that one half of the finest pair of boots that she owned was missing and she was forced to exchange her leisure shoes for her second-best pair of boots, muttering an aimless insult at the imaginary Squire she pictured in her mind as having made off with her boot while smoothing over some severe creases in the leather by the toes of her left foot. Instead of going back into their usual place in the locker, Laura stuffed her pencils and her sketchbook into the rucksack she’d already prepared for the mission.

The mission…

The pace of her heart quickened again. She glanced at the time on her pocket watch and hastened to tie her shoelaces. Thaddeus would already be waiting for her in the mess hall.

Unbeknownst to her, she missed Paladin Moss by a hair’s breadth and stepped into the mess hall to the usual raucous noise of Knights recalling their glory and the excited, animated conversations of Scribes discussing new discoveries. The loud voice of the Knight-Sergeant that she knew as McDowell carried over the din but she wasn’t listening to him, for her brother Thaddues beckoned for her to join him by one of the tables. A bottle of lager already awaited her. She met his grin with a grateful smile and the two siblings clinked their bottles together as soon as she sat down.

“Ad victoriam,” they said together.

“Spill it,” Thaddeus said immediately, wasting no time. His hair was the same shade of black and his eyes were the same hue of sapphirine, but they were evidently not twins; Thaddeus had their father’s gaunt cheeks and deep-set gaze as opposed to Laura’s full and open face. A scar across his mouth had once split his lips in twain and he spoke with a slight lisp. He must have only just finished his shift, Laura realized, for his overalls were still stained with oil and grease.

“I’m leaving tomorrow morning,” Laura responded in kind. Her eyes were brimming with equal parts excitement and nervousness. “Really early. Mission details were sparse. Very sparse. Something’s up, Thad, but I don’t know what. Apparently this came straight from the Elder. You know what that means.”

He took a few seconds to digest what she’d said and leaned back in his chair, eyes wide. “From Maxson himself? Damn, Lau.” Thaddeus whistled appreciatively. She could see the conflicting emotions in his eyes: sadness that she would be leaving, concern that it would likely be something dangerous, but also a generous understanding for what it could mean for Laura’s career. “Where are you going?”

She threw up her hands. “See, that’s the thing,” she whispered and bit her lip. “I don’t know, the briefing didn’t say. I think I’m not even supposed to talk about this with you. If it hadn’t stressed secrecy so much I’d have asked around with some of the officers that I’m friendly with. But it said to pack plenty of rations and ammunition, so… probably not downtown D.C.”

“Probably not,” Thaddeus agreed and took a large swig of his beer while his mind worked. “You know,” he continued, thinking aloud, “one of the vertibirds never came back. I overheard Kells complaining about that the other day. Been wondering who they’re gonna send to get it back ever since.”

Laura frowned. “What are you suggesting? That this is a rescue mission? When does that ever happen?”

He shrugged. “Never, but isn’t that exactly why they’d be all hush-hush about it?” He rapped the table with his knuckles. “Who’s leading the mission?”

Feeling foolish but rather being safe than sorry, Laura looked around the room to see if the man in question was there, watching her, waiting for her to slip up. He wasn’t. She saw Senior Scribe Owen, who the briefing had mentioned, but he was embroiled in his own conversation. “Paladin Moss,” she answered at length.

Thaddeus raised an eyebrow at that. “Doesn’t that basically confirm that this isn’t an ordinary operation? Moss has Maxson’s favor, I hear.”

“You hear a lot of things,” Laura muttered sardonically.

Her brother sniggered at that. “People forget about the Lancer in the driving seat all the time, Lau. They say all sorts of shit they shouldn’t around us. Don’t underestimate what I might know.”

“Fine, you braggart, let’s say that that’s true,” she replied, humoring him with a half-smile. “What do they want with an Initiate like me, then, if this is so important? You know that I’m not about to turn down an opportunity to prove myself, but--”

“But why isn’t this a team of veterans, right, I know,” Thaddeus interrupted, finishing her sentence for her. “Have you forgotten how we came here? The briefing suggested extended field ops, right? Who better than the girl that trekked from fucking Montana all the way to the Capital Wasteland? You’re not just an Initiate, Lau. You’re good at this and you know it. We both are.”

Laura sighed. “So why aren’t we both on this mission?”

Thaddeus laughed. “Because, for all of our experience and grit, there is still a very real chance I might crash the vertibird against the very first building we encounter.” Before Laura could tease him about it, he held up a silencing finger. “That shit is harder than it looks, alright?”

She chuckled. A moment of silence fell as both Grimshaws nursed their drink.

“Hey,” Thaddeus said softly, and Laura was roused from her reverie to see the sincerity of feeling in her brother’s eyes. “Don’t do anything stupid, okay?”

Laura took his hand into her own and brushed her thumb against his skin. He’d developed so many callouses since they got here. There was precious little left of the younger brother Laura remembered from their days in the Vault. As she so often did, she saw their father in him. Don’t do anything stupid. It had been Deckard’s motto.

“I won’t,” she promised and tucked a loose strand of black hair behind her ear. “I’ll be back before you know it.”

featuring the magnificent @Bright_Ops

“Apologies accepted,” Apollyon said, following Rupert around the room with his eyes. They glowed faintly in the half-gloom of the firelight. His smile widened. “Though you don’t answer to me, I believe, so there’s no need to apologize. Come, sit,” he said and gestured for a chair on the other side of the table. The aristocrat sat up straight and placed his elbows on the table. Rupert looked gruff and common, but there was a touch of pride to him. It looked well-earned, a hard worker’s pride, not the soulless vanity of upperhivelings.

“You help the new crew adjust? How interesting,” he continued and rubbed his clean-shaven chin. “I know very little about the workings of such great ships, I’m afraid. Perhaps you can tell me more? My name is Apollyon Kaicero. It’s a pleasure to make your acquaintance.” He inclined his head gracefully.

Rupert… didn’t seem so sure of himself as to take a seat, despite the bowl of stew in his hands. However, after a moment he found himself accepting the invitation as he respectfully answered “Rupert O’Donald. It’s not so much helping the new crew adjust as it is… well, keeping everything in order. The nation crews are prone to fighting over those new personnel who are considered the creme of the crop… and since the new guys don’t know what the rules or boundaries are there are going to be a number of minor incidents for a long time.”

Getting settled into his seat but before he started on his meal, he politely asked “I’m guessing you’re one of the new hires that the captain is bringing on. If you don’t mind me asking, what duties are you being tasked with?”

“Nation crews,” Apollyon repeated back to him, tasting the words in his own tongue. It only made sense, given that the ships were crewed by tens of thousands of people, but it had never occurred to him that they would form something akin to nations to organize themselves. He’d simply never given it any thought. “That’s fascinating. You must be an important man.”

Apollyon leaned back and draped an arm over the back of the empty chair next to him. In doing so, his coat fell open and the laspistol and its power cells that were holstered there became visible. “Security,” he said, his voice a slow drawl, as if the answer bored him. “I suppose our lord and master considers me a cut above the common rabble, considering he invited me here.” Apollyon gestured at Rupert with his glass of amasec, gently sloshing the amber-colored liquid. “Just like yourself, Rupert.” His smile tightened into a smirk and he tapped his index finger against the rim of the glass; it chimed like a bell. “To us, important men.”

While the compliment about him being an important man was taken with a humble smile, when Apollyon mentioned his profession Rupert almost choked on a chunk of meat. Thumping his chest a little to clear his pipes, he took a second to calm himself down before he answered what had shaken him. “That… is going to be somewhat problematic.”

“You see… long ago in the ship’s history, the last head of security launched a coup that rocked the ship down to its foundations. While he failed, the nature of the fighting that took place between security and the rest of the crew causes the crew to view the position in a… very negative light, even to this day. Honestly, it was after the mess that the first of the nations was formed and the Janitor Union took over most of the duties that were normally tasked to the now gone security... “ Pausing for a second in thought, an idea quickly came to him.

“Tell you what. I’ve already got most of the internal stuff of the ship taken care of as far as security goes… but I can be the first to admit that my ability to keep our captain safe outside of it is… somewhat lacking? I’m happy to give you status reports on anything that you need to tell the Captain about if you’re content to let the Janitors take care of internal matters.”

Apollyon listened with rapt interest and had to resist the urge to laugh at the end of Rupert’s tale -- there had obviously been a misunderstanding in communication. “My dear Master O’Donald, my apologies. I never meant to imply that I would be in a position of authority over the crew of the ship. I was trying to be… polite about my profession, but I see that I should speak plainly.”

He put the glass of amasec down and made sure that his face was free of any visible tracers of humor. “I’m a killer. It is indeed the captain’s security, and his alone, that concerns me. If it is the… Janitors, you say? The Janitors’ job to maintain security aboard the ship, then by all means, as you were. My job is to keep the captain alive and to… well,” he explained with a shrug and a languid grin, “kill who or what he commands me to kill. I hope that clears up our little misunderstanding.”

It was rather clear that Apollyon’s answer had a calming effect on Rupert, since he leaned back into his chair as a relaxed breath escaped him. “Oh good. I’m glad we got that sorted out here and now before any misunderstandings happened. I’m already going to have enough trouble with that when it comes to the bloody tech priests.”

That drew a raised eyebrow and a chuckle from Apollyon. “The Mechanicus, eh? My father would complain about them at length as well. What are they doing now? Insisting on blessing the whole ship before anyone is allowed to step aboard?”

A sigh escaped Rupert as he shook his head. “It’s another one of the duties that the Janitors took over. Maintenance and the like. Didn’t have a whole lot of tech priests left after the failed coup and by the time the ship got more it had become one of our standard duties. Historically, almost every time we get new Mechanicus staff, it becomes a struggle over sovereignty… people have died in the past because of something that should have been repaired and sorted out sooner was left to get worse because the bloody cog boys refused to let anyone else who knows what to do actually do the job.”

The topic was clearly a sore one for him, but he recovered enough to ask “So how do you and the captain know each other? I doubt he would trust his personal safety to some random mook.” before he went back to sampling the stew.

Rupert wasn’t looking at him when Apollyon stiffened at the suggestion that he was some ‘random mook’ if he didn’t know the captain personally. “I don’t know him,” he responded levelly and tilted his head as he watched the High Janitor eat, like a raptor observing a mouse wandering through the grass far below. He took a deep breath and smiled again. “My reputation must precede me. Truthfully, I don’t know exactly what purpose the captain has for my skills. I can only guess that it must be something more intimate than making the rounds on the ship,” Apollyon said and rapped his fingers on the tabletop. His brow twitched. “Otherwise I wouldn’t be here. Don’t you think?”

Looking up at the slight change in tone from his companion, Rupert took a moment to look over his former conversation and quickly review it for any blunders he may have made… and found it fairly question. “Forgive me, I didn't mean to offend. From what my predecessor told me about the former captain, his personal bodyguard was from a vassal family who had a long and proud history of serving the Livingstone family. I had assumed that if the current captain invited you personally it was a similar arrangement and I’ve made an ass of myself because of it.”

“Still, at least I can trust that you’ve been hired for your merit and skill rather than just because of who you are related to.” The fact of which seemed to increase the standing of Apollyon in the Head Janitors own eyes a bit. “For what it’s worth, I’m sure you’ll serve the Livingstone family well… if for no other reason then a deadstone pays no wages.” A dark, morbid joke, but an attempt at humor nonetheless.

It took a second for Apollyon to realize that Rupert had made a joke and he was pleasantly surprised -- the man had seemed like too much of a stoic, honorable sort until then. He laughed and raised the glass in appreciation. “Quite so, my friend, quite so,” Apollyon said and sniggered. “It is indeed in my best interests to ensure the captain’s safety, though I have to admit that it’s not the wages that concern me terribly,” he continued and finished the last of the amasec. He put the glass down and leaned forwards again, interlacing his fingers beneath his chin.

“You see, I find this prospect of traveling by a Rogue Trader’s side to the far-flung corners of the galaxy greatly exciting. I suspect that you and I come from very different social climates, as it were,” the aristocrat said, and for the first time during their conversation, an authentic sense of passion crept into his voice. “Well, I am bored of mine. Adventure, glory and danger, my dear Rupert, that is what I am after. Something to make me feel…”

The words hung in the air for a second as Apollyon inhaled sharply through his nose. “Alive.”

Rupert shrugged a little at the rather passionate speech the man was giving. “I don’t know so much about glory or adventure… to me, this is just a way of life. Between you and me…” He actually learned for a little and lowered his voice, as if sharing a major secret “...This is the first time I’ve ever left the Pride in my whole life. It is… honestly going to be a little humbling when we go to board the ship and I’ll be able to see the whole world I grew up and lived in for all of my life from an outside perspective…”

Apollyon was astonished. To live and die a whole life aboard a vessel… he could not imagine a more perfect microcosm that captured the meaningless lives of the riff-raff. No, not meaningless, he reminded himself as he looked at Rupert. Without him, and men like him, the voyage they were about to embark on would not be possible. He nodded slowly to himself, as if weighing the newfound appreciation he had for Rupert… and then it was gone. Short-lived, like all of Apollyon’s feelings.

“I shall be sure to be respectfully silent for the occasion,” Apollyon said in his most reassuring tone before flashing Rupert a winning smile and nodding towards the tray of food and drink -- he was seated closer to it than the aristocrat. “Say, be a good man and hand me that bottle of amasec, would you?”

The smile that Rupert offered back wasn’t a winner, but it was a solid second place… maybe a bronze depending on who was running. “Thank you.” He muttered back before turning towards the table with its many, many offerings of bottles to pick from. “Which bottle is the amasec?” He asked, slightly confused by the wide selection.
On the fifth chime of the clock the door to the chamber opened and a man stepped inside with a languid confidence at odds with the reality of his situation; he was a stranger stepping into a strange room about to meet a bunch of strange people he'd never met before. You wouldn't think so by looking at him, however. His back was straight, his hands were clasped casually behind his back and an easy smile played around his face as he cast his bionic gaze across the room, micro-devices clicking and whirring behind hiss artificial irises.

The room was empty. He was the first to arrive.

"Naturally," Apollyon Kaicero said quietly to himself and closed the door behind him as he put the keycard back into the pocket of his armored coat. The importance of punctuality and making a good impression had been drilled into him throughout his entire life, but the aristocrat had learned quickly that that wasn't the case for the degenerates he usually found himself working with. Many of them considered 'anything within the hour' to be close enough. He snorted at the thought, shook his head and set off on a stroll about the room.

It had to be said that he was pleasantly surprised at the tasteful upholstery of the space. It reminded Apollyon a little of home. "Ah!" he exclaimed softly at the sight of a table with food and, more importantly, drink, and he immediately poured himself a glass of amasec. These kinds of meetings were infinitely more enjoyable with a little buzz, Apollyon had decided early on in his budding career as a mercenary. He wondered where the Rogue Trader was and chided himself as he realized that the man must be waiting for the others to arrive before making a grand entrance. He'd do the same thing in his position, after all.

He had left the death-arc in his room -- it was impolite to bring such significant firepower to a friendly meeting, after all -- and therefore looked like little more than a highborn traveler taking a moment to enjoy the best that the station had to offer. His coat and clothes were dark, yet stylish, and his close-cropped blond hair almost seemed to glow in the warm firelight that emanated from the hearth. Apollyon swept his coat aside and made himself comfortable on one of the chairs by the table, crossed one leg over the other and sipped away at his amasec while looking around at the pictures of glory and honor that dominated the room, chuckling softly at their self-aggrandizing nature.

"Imperials," he whispered and shook his head.
Before the Night Lord could speak, the doors to the audience chamber swung open and something even larger than either Astartes entered with heavy footfalls.

It was another Ogryn, though it was immediately obvious at first glance that this one followed a different god entirely. There was no putrid and bloated belly, no noxious clouds of gas or the reek of decay. This one smelled of blood and steel and the light glinted dangerously on the tips of his proud horns.

"BLOOD! SKULLS!" Gharl yelled, for Gharl was his name, and he punched the air with his ripper gun. It made for a poor greeting but it was all he knew. His vast and muscular form was clad in monstrously thick carapace armor and he was armed with the aforementioned Ogryn-proof weapon, but otherwise the creature appeared to have no other belongings.

His gaze swept around the room, flickering from the important-looking Astartes to the equally important-looking man and woman on the couch, and he scratched his head. "Boss?" Gharl asked, but he was distracted by the other Ogryn in the room almost immediately -- and, more importantly, by its fleshy, disgusting, odious pet.

"Cute," Gharl decided.
Is there a deadline for character submissions and/or an ETA for the start of the RP?


Excellent. I'll post sometime later today.
Updated my sheet (last time, I promise) with a new & better portrait. Neutral lighting, more detail, all that jazz.

EDIT: I lied and edited the picture again, this time to make it look like an early 50s color photograph, like the kind of technology the Brotherhood might have to take pictures for their staff files with.
@Hank & @Andreyich: Thanks for submitting your characters. I will be giving feedback, praise, and condemnation via PM. The intention is to allow you to share as much or as little as you'd like should I ask questions (which I always do).


Very good. I did some brainstorming with @Stormflyx (huehuehue) and I'll be adding some quirks and expanding the history and personality a bit more to flesh things out. Just for flavor, mind, but thought I'd give you a heads up. Sheet might be longer when you get back to look at it.

EDIT: All done, sheet should be good to go now.
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