Avatar of Lugubrious

Status

Recent Statuses

26 days ago
Current Now running: World of Light: The Tale of the Dark Itself
5 mos ago
Forever and ever, amen
8 mos ago
Calling out from Scatman's world
1 like
11 mos ago
Called into action - by threats that seem harmonized
1 yr ago
Tomorrow comes

Bio

Current GM of World of Light. When it comes to writing, there's nothing I love more than imagination, engagement, and commitment. I'm always open to talk, suggestion, criticism, and collaboration. While I try to be as obliging, helpful, and courteous as possible, I have very little sympathy for ghosts, and anyone who'd like to string me along. Straightforwardness is all I ask for.

Looking for more personal details? I'm just some dude from the American south; software development is my job but games, writing, and trying to help others enjoy life are my passions. Been RPing for over a decade, starting waaaay back with humble beginnings on the Spore forum, so I know a thing or two, though I won't pretend to be an expert. If you're down for some fun, let's make something spectacular together.

Most Recent Posts

My thanks to everyone who mentioned the effects of the massive weather explosion in their posts.
@Lugubrious

Yeah I'm ready to proceed.


Already proceeded dawg.

Also, who's hype for Yang obviously beating Mercury in the next episode? Not meeeee.
@Oblivion666@Lugubrious@Caits

Would it be an appropriate time to wake Isla again you think?


Well, even if she wakes up, she's not going much of anywhere. She's locked in the detention tent without her paints and brushes.
You're all in for it now!
Brewing Storm


Given the group’s consensus to not split up just yet, it moved as one into the junction room. The strangulated corpse in the room did wonders to reduce the collective level of ease and rocket tension right up. Though not all of the individuals present had deemed it necessary to comment on the situation yet, the next step seemed clear: choosing a path to take. Of these, the upward stairwell to the Living Quarters and the unmarked downward stairwell seemed least inviting, though the thought of walking through unlit hallway to the Traffic Center could certainly set a few hairs on end, particularly Luke’s. Any chance of peacefully ambling through the Brewing Storm seemed bleaker by the second, especially considering what happened next.

Out of nowhere –or was it everywhere at once?- a long, high-pitched, and disturbingly human giggle echoed through the distillery. It came from the walls, though not the intercom system, and could be heard clearly by every man and woman present. Suddenly the rhythmic tapping in the tubes, pipes, and vents turned into audible scurrying, threatening chatters, and laughs. Any panicked looking would turn up nothing for the moment, but no member of the rescue party could fail to observe that living creatures were moving around them. Without warning the overhead light blinked out, plunging the room into darkness. The next instant, a change in the sounds indicated that their owners now moved in the open. Every instinct, whether human or faunus, would be firing right now; few fears manifested as acutely as being attacked by many unknown creatures in the dark. A second later, a single, distant light appeared, shining from an opened doorway at the end of the Traffic Center hall. In this very thin radiance, flashes of activity could be seen all around the junction chamber. All that could be seen were vague glimpses of stooped, pitch-black backs just smaller than human ones, grossly skinny limbs and taut skin, and barely-visible red eyes that produced no glow of their own. Under this terrifying veil of darkness, the unknown foe attacked.

Defend a Caravan


The already-damaged Deathstalker did not sustain the attacks of both Sarina and Sterling well. With a feeble shriek, it slid down the caravan’s side as it picked up speed, ultimately plopping off onto the arid terrain to be run over by the vehicle port wheels, causing a violent and abrupt bump that no doubt jarred the hunters but failed to dislodge them. Now rolling at a respectable velocity, the caravan easily left the remaining Nightmares in the dust, fading away into the distance in a diminishing cacophony of shrill neighs and whinnies. Though Jorie would be out cold for quite some time, her comrades fared admirably during the initial encounter, with no more than a handful of hurts between them. Beneath them, the tanklike all-terrain supertruck thundered across the cracked red dirt, its speed defying the idea that any Grimm could catch it. Team JESS settled in for the ride.

A good twenty minutes later, the terrain began to visibly change. Barren waste gave with to savannah, a sea of long yellow grass, but a sea in turmoil, for the landscape beneath the grass rose and fell unpredictably. Here, nature had molded the fertile dirt with clay, arranging it into a spectacular collage of bluffs, canyons, outcroppings, and natural arches, all coated with a scalp of that long grass that so beautifully billowed in the wind. One couldn’t be blamed for imagining all the strange and irregular formations as protrusions of some massive skeleton partially buried below. As the caravan vehicle rolled through an incredible, cagelike lattice of stone and clay, woven together with the roots of flat-topped scrubland trees, this place seemed like a fantasy.

Jessamine would not have long to sightsee, however. Their ride descended a gradual incline, into a canyon, about half again as wide as the vehicle on both sides, and headed for a gargantuan arch that stretched above the canyon exit like a monolith. Pitting the surfaces of the left and right walls like Swiss cheese were dark, ominous holes, and when the vehicle came roughly two-thirds through the canyon a distinct scraping noise could be heard all around. Without warning, black shapes burst from the holes ahead, stretching across the entire canyon like a wall of scaly ropes. Red eyes glimmered in the tunnels; this canyon, evidently, was home for an entire colony of unnervingly intelligent King Taijitus. Now the exit was blocked by five different lengths of snake, each at least a meter thick. Other Taijitus poked from holes, threatening to attack the hunters when the caravan slowed down. Out of nowhere, the situation seemed dire indeed.

On top of the arch beneath which the vehicle had been on course to roll, there stood a purple-haired wilderness enthusiast wearing a periwinkle sweater large enough to function as both shirt and skirt. The dust tattoos around her wrists shone with power as she surveyed the troubling scene below. Though Lilac knew these people not, there were people in danger, and she could not stand by and allow the Grimm to hurt them.
Heck yeah! Event concluded, badass mage style!
Owen Whately – Frenzy Camp

@caits@oblivion666@raijinslayer


Like a marble statue, Owen sat utterly still and attentive, taking in every smidgen of what Ike had to say. Lines of worry and sorrow creased his face when the more painful parts of his story arose, but otherwise he gave no signs of life save for a quiet wisp of breath and the promise of consideration. At one point, though, he gave a low whistle in disbelief. When the tale came to an end, Owen clasped his hands together and told him, ”You're wrong. It wasn't fer nothin'. When used by creative but cruel people, magic can be doggone awful. Ya went through a pro-foundly disturbin' experience, Ike, but it didn't break ya. Takin' revenge don't mean you're weak. It means you're strong. All the power in the world don't mean anythin' if it ain't used responsibly. So don't sit among friends and tell us you survived that hell fer nothin'. Yer power is nuts, it took all of us to take you in, and we didn't even beat ya in the end.”

He stood up, sauntered ever, and knelt in from of Ike. His face bore utmost seriousness. ”What the girl did to ya, really stinks, but it didn't turn ya into some kinda monster. You still know what's right and what ain't, so you're better than her. Yer scar is big, but we can heal it. You're our comrade, and that means we're here for you. Ya can use yer new power to fight alongside us, make a difference in this world.” Owen clapped a hand on Ike's shoulder, then returned to his seat to hear Argus out. The demon basically reiterated some of the things mentioned by Owen, though with less tact. ”Looks like Argus thinks similar. But you, Argus, need to live out yer own words to make 'em mean somethin'. I saw yer face when you were fightin'. Everyone needs help now and again, buddy. If ya got yer own problems, I reckon they'd be better out in the open. It's easier to punish a stranger than a comrade.”

Thinking the exchange to be over, Owen prepared to leave. He did not expect Gabriel to begin talking, and at the kid's first words the southerner froze. Instantly, a fire raged inside him, like someone flipped a switch. As Gabe babbled on, hurling insults and idiotic insights, Owen fought to restrain himself, but at last he could bear it no longer. Owen stood bolt upright, his magic working instantly, and a ring of magic circles flared to life surrounding Gabriel's chest, back, and shoulders. A rapier blade extended from each one, lengthening until they were mere centimeters from his body. Any movement, be it to the side, upward, or down, would draw blood. Owen bellowed, ”No, boy, you're the one that oughta shut yer trap, you dense, brainless, heartless son of a bitch! Life sucks, does it? D'you even realize what's happened here!? These men have suffered! Beaten down by the black side of magic 'til they almost lost their humanity! D'you care even one lick 'bout tragedy? When ya see a slave, d'you say, 'life sucks, get over it'? What about a cripple? Abuse victim? Kidnapped child? Orphan? Widow? Ya tryin' to trivialize trauma? We sat down like a family to talk 'bout our problems and emotions and sort 'em out like adults, and you come along tellin' us it's pointless! Ya've picked some girl's side over yer own guildmates! Tell us then, asshole! If fightin's stupid, and empathy's stupid, what should we do!?” Fuming and trembling in rare anger, Owen could no longer speak. His magic circles flickered and faded, their bladed disappearing into nonexistence.

Jane, however, took up the slack. When Gabriel's words passed her ears, she'd started laughing—not because it was funny, but at his astounding ignorance. Now, however, she'd regained her composure enough to say, “Man, ye dug yerself into a hole this time. Weren't ye payin' attention, lad? Ike asked fer a paintin', Isla trapped him, Indigo arrived, she found him, she cursed Isla and took the paintin'. No revenge at all! Plus, you don't know much about revenge. Revenge can be about brin'in' justice t' evildoers. Only idiots use it t' make themselves feel better." She held out hands toward Argus and Ike hoping to restrain them. ”Buckos, don't get upset at this lubber. He's just a deluded little kid playin' at complicated ideas. He'll get what's comin' t' him when t' General returns. After hearin' this, I wouldn't be surprised if Sanders kicks him out. We don't have any use for clueless sprogs.” All eyes were on Gabriel, waiting to see if he'd back down and preserve some shred of dignity, prove himself an idiot by desperately trying to defend himself, or prove himself a hypocrite by getting mad and attacking. Not many people now suspected that he, having now show his true colors, would be allowed to remain in a guild that valued teamwork and bonds.

Indigo Afina – Arena Entrance

@hatakekuro


Sheer power poured from Indigo in a viciously destructive funnel of thunder-infused, sopping-wet, gale-force winds. If the sorceress hadn't been subconsciously limiting herself to minimize collateral damage on nearby structures, no living entity could have maintained its footing against the mighty, continuous blast. To Nolan's credit, he did not attempt to withstand the Gathering Gale by force of will or pride, instead concentrating his power into a total defense after a single attempt at shutting Indigo down with Balmung, which she ignored completely, knowing no projectile could hit her. The Librarian watched intently as a featureless black dot formed in the middle of the cyclone, assembling slowly thanks to the constant and implacable winds but assembling nonetheless. After realizing that her spell wouldn't dislodge this ashen shell from the ground where it clung like a sable limpet, Indigo cut off the spell, and reluctantly the storm subsided. With its last breath it crumbled the dome, and the moment Indigo saw that Nolan wasn't inside her mind went on overdrive to figure out the trick. Raw atmospheric power surrounded her still, enveloping her in an aura of rushing air, but it would do her no good if her racing mind couldn't discern where Nolan went.

Underground? Not a threat. In the air? Impossible. Ash fake? If so, he must be nearby... A voice from behind and above her caused her eyes to widen, and she turned just in time to cry, her voice distorted by the torrent of wind surrounding her, knowing that everything hinged on this moment, ”Whitesky Eye!” From every direction, the air suddenly lurched in her direction. Toward Indigo roared a pitch-black torrent of destruction, but directly in front of her materialized a hyper-compacted atmospheric singularity, an orb swirling with clouds, water, and electricity, as if the entire sky were imprisoned within a marble. It washed the landscape with teals, whites, and grays, and in the second it took to fully form Indigo shielded her face with both arms, and prayed.

Then the Ash God's Grand Cry ruptured the Whitesky Eye, and before everything went to hell there was a moment of complete stillness.

A massive explosion of wind, rain, lightning, cloud, and ash, nearly the size of the arena itself (and certainly spilling over into it to ruffle skirts, soak shirts, and zap into comical shapes the hair of the people within) rocked the city of Crocus. At the point of impact between the two ludicrously powerful spells, the ground itself was bleached white and scorched black, and the side of the arena was permanently scarred with an intricate black and white pattern. Any objects not nailed down near the point of impact had been subjected to unfathomable repulsive force from the breached Eye, and had been sent flying. Overhead, a rainstorm raged, though the rain blew nearly horizontally thanks to the winds. Indigo regained consciousness in midair, about halfway across the city. She winced to see the damage done to the atmosphere, though aside from ripped curtains and torn shingles the city's buildings were largely unharmed. Summoning some of her reproachably low magic power, Indigo descended to streetlevel, and realized by looking in the window of a nearby store how much of a catastrophe she looked. For starters, hair lay in utter disarray, like a many-armed yellow octopus having a seizure. Her clothes, meanwhile, had been reduced to embarrassingly scanty scraps, little more than a frayed one-piece. She sighed, resigned to the fact that she'd need to find a new yellow lacrima somewhere in the city before returning. Rushing air surrounded her, lifting her skyward, and she resumed her search.

Twelve minutes later, Indigo -still looking very disorderly- arrived in Sheldon's box. She held up the false book, all eight lacrimas in its compartment. ”Here they are,” she wheezed, very much out of air.
-Like life I has also been inspired by anime to make a perp to dazzle you allll-


What?
I'd be super hyped to make some monster-themed enemies for us to fight at some point.

I might post again tomorrow morning. We seem to be moving rather slowly for a fresh RP. It's kinda why I wanted to jump into action rather than crawl through logistics. Ginger, how much freedom do we have as players to create the circumstances we encounter? Would you like to give us some OOC information about the cult so that we can make our own encounters, or when our teams split up to look for clues will you antagonize for each group separately?
I'm quite indifferent I'm just giving pragmatic advice. If you're not feeling it then leave my feelings won't be hurt.

Lingering might help on the other hand it could be a waste of time as force yourself to feel fun with something that isn't fun anymore.

Anyway who's still alive?


If you're indifferent to people leaving your RP as a GM, I admire you. With my RPs, I tend to view every person that leaves as a personal failure on my part. Anyway, I'm not forcing myself into anything, I'm just watching. If an opportunity for genuine fun arises, I will leap in.
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