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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.

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Deep Blue Seaside: Mafia Town

Level 14 Ms Fortune (52/140)
@DracoLunaris @Archmage MC @MULTI_MEDIA_MAN @Yankee @Zoey Boey @Double @DisturbedSpec
Word Count: 1976


Oh, great. Just as the evening rush got off to a promising start, with plenty of eager customers for Nadia, Dave, and the other server to attend, she showed up. Even though the catgirl could maintain an upbeat smile in the face of life-or-death situations, when subjected to terror or pain that no ordinary person could withstand, her lip curled at the slightest hint of Juri Han. Her nasty attitude went against everything that Nadia herself believed in; whereas she sought to help the downtrodden, put down the mighty, and make the world a brighter place, Juri mercilessly picked on anyone weaker than herself, leaving misery in her wake. Even though the Mafia here was a laughable shadow compared to the Medicis, Nadia couldn’t forgive her nemesis for joining them, and giving the cabal of otherwise harmless thugs some teeth. Then again, she couldn’t be surprised either. If Juri could be relied on for anything, it was to show up at the worst possible time and cause problems.

Well, tonight the feral wouldn’t give that bully the satisfaction. If she meant to provoke Nadia into making a scene and losing her job, Juri was going to end up disappointed. In the past week, after all, this humble place and its people had really grown on her. Sure, Bancho, Dave, Cobra, and their tech guy Duff might not be that important to her mission in the World of Light, and were admittedly a distraction from her task, but they’d quickly become her friends, and Bancho Sushi now felt like a home away from home. Plus, it was nice to just forget about Consuls and Galeem for a while and live in the now. So even if Nadia would be moving on before long, she’d be damned if she’d give it up. That meant that it was up to the catgirl to kill her rival with kindness. “Coming right up~” she chirped at Juri.

Nadia plopped down two mugs of beer for a couple of customers, said hi to Junior and Rika, then hustled back down the bar toward the cook station where she made for a grating board lined with shark skin. As he continued slicing sashimi Bancho glanced at Nadia, then at the woman toting a Tommy gun, though he seemed more wary of the former than the latter. If he sensed some sort of prior relationship between the two, he kept that to himself, but he did have one pointed question. “What did she order?” he asked.

“Just something spicy, so give her whatever. And those kids want one of everything,” Nadia replied dismissively as she grabbed a gnarled root, which she began to scrape along the board. With each pass, an alarmingly bright green paste began to collect among the coarse scales. She snickered to herself. “I’ll handle the spice.”

Bancho replied with surprising speed, his voice hard and firm. “That is unacceptable. Wasabi is a condiment, not a substitute for a spicy food, and at Bancho Sushi we aim to do right by every customer.”

Groaning, Nadia dropped the wasabi root and held her hands up in defeat. “Ugh, fine. So what do we do?

Behind his dark glasses, Bancho’s sharp eyes perused his stock of ingredients. “I have all the ingredients I need to make Hot Pepper Tuna. Except…” He shook his head. “No tuna.”

“Damn. We might be o-fish-ially up the creek,” Nadia sighed. As soon as Bancho put down a plate, she scooped it up and jogged over to deliver it to the customer, a wink and a smile on her face.

Dave, who’d been listening as he carefully made a three-layer cocktail nearby, turned to look with a thoughtful expression. Having changed out of his wetsuit into navy blue jeans, a red undershirt, a pale blue Hawaiian shirt, and a white trilby hat, he’d taken his place as Bancho Sushi’s primary server, but he hadn’t put today’s Blue Hole expedition completely out of his mind. “We saw some bluefin tuna while diving this afternoon,” he pointed out. “Nearly bulldozed us on the way down. We didn’t have any steel nets though, so we couldn’t catch ‘em.”

Nadia’s eyebrows shot up as she headed back. “Oh yeah! You know…” Her head swiveled toward the boat, then back at Bancho, her gaze questioning.

Her boss sensed her intentions. “Can you do it fast?”

As Nadia clenched her fist, yellow sparks burst from her veins. “Like lightning.”

Dave grinned. “Better get going then. I’ll hold down the fort.”

The catgirl took off running like a track star at the starter pistol, her ears and tail flapping behind her. She leaped onto the boat and scanned the equipment, heart racing. While she and Dave typically used the newer, higher-capacity boxes to store fish, Cobra hadn’t thrown away the old ones, so she grabbed the smallest one and tucked it under her arm, then snagged a harpoon gun. Rather than starting the boat, though, she promptly threw herself overboard. There was no splash; instead, her Mantreads stopped when they hit the water’s surface as the rigging of the shipgirl Massachusetts unfolded from the compact metal case on her back. Resembling parts of a slate-blue battleship, the mechanical limbs acted as stabilizers as they suspended their wearer on the water, allowing her to slide across the waves like a figure skater. “Alright, let’s do this! When I get back, that bitch’s gonna be singing to a different tune-a!”

Quickly picking up speed, Nadia made a beeline back toward the area where she and Dave dove, going over what she knew about tuna in her head. They were big, exceptionally powerful swimmers, and though not dangerous to humans like sharks they were highly effective predators in their own right. All this made them tough for a small operation like hers to catch, but the feral was nothing if not resourceful. If she could destroy enormous boss monsters in nightmarish dream realms, this ought to be easy. Of course, even after reaching the area, it took her a few precious minutes to even sight the fast-moving fish, but finally the catgirl spotted a telltale flash of silver just below the surface.

She dropped her catch box, then pulled her Bait Launcher from her belt and fired a raw steak into the water. Foomp! As it sank below the surface, Nadia readied Dave’s harpoon gun, and sure enough a tuna shot toward her a second later. “Here, fishy fishy…” With a predator’s instinct she waited for the right moment, then fired. The harpoon struck the tuna just as it snapped up the steak, which in turn summoned a burly tiger out of nowhere. Even manifested underwater, the tiger quickly sank its claws into the tuna as it hurtled along, dragging Nadia behind it. “Nyagh!” she yowled, pushing her stabilizers to the limit as she water-skied behind her prey. Beneath the waves her tiger’s assault continued, and as the slashes piled up the tuna began to slow down. By the time her helper timed out, the damage was done, and it wasn’t long before Nadia’s wild ride came to an end.

“...Whoo!” Nadia gasped, hyperventilating. She’d been tired enough from the expedition today, so at this point she really was running on fumes, but she did it. Thanks to her quick thinking she could savor the taste of victory, and soon Bancho’s customers would be savoring this bluefin, Juri included. As the dying fish floated to the surface, Nadia drew one of her Athame daggers from her belt and started slicing before the corpse could dissolve. Normally a tuna like this would be almost impossible to carve, but Athame temporarily crippled the defense and resistance of anything it cut, so Nadia made quick work of the fish and soon filled her catch box with deep rose-red flesh. So intent was the salivating catgirl on her task that she didn’t notice a sickly brown fin plowing through the waves until a monstrosity leaped from the water, its bulbous red eyes flailing at the end of fleshy stalks.

“The hell!?” At the sight of a toothy man opened wide, Nadia staggered backward across the water, terrified. The next second the Gazing Shark’s jaws snapped shut, and when it hit the water, the catgirl’s headless body sagged down to the ocean’s surface.

Then her head landed on her neck again, still one hundred percent alive, and Nadia sprang to her feet. She whirled around to see where her attacker landed, a nasty smile on her face. “Thought you’d get a piece of me, huh? Well, I don’t go down easy!” After drawing her other knife, the catgirl trained her rigging cannons on the mutant shark and opened fire with a barrage of blood bullets. “Let’s get chummy!” Once she triggered the gleaming monster, it turned back toward her to continue the fight. She braced herself as it ripped through the water, then dodged away as it lunged from below. Unfortunately, her fear got the better of her and her foe caught her arm in its jaws. “Me-owch!” Thinking quickly, Nadia forced her captured arm to drive one dagger into the shark’s head. Then, when it reached the apex of its leap, Nadia used Charge to launch herself through it as a streak of lightning. It floundered, sparking, as she reformed and slid across the water. She turned and launched muscle fibers from her stump, reconnecting to the arm in the shark’s mouth in order to yank the creature toward her. “That’s the thing about you sharks,” she hissed through a gritted smile. With a mighty heavy, she brought her rigging’s hull-blade around. “You always ‘chews’ poorly!”

With a squelching impact the hull blade nearly chopped the weakened shark in two, forcing it to relinquish its grip. Nadia reattached her bloody, bitten arm, wincing as she flexed it, then stowed her daggers. She’d lost Dave’s harpoon gun in the panic, but the catch box was still floating there. She seized it, then turned to flee the scene, skating back toward Bancho Sushi as fast as her rigging could carry her. Horrifying as it had been, that wasn’t the first mutant fish she’d seen. Cobra called them ‘aberrations’, claiming to have seen more and more of them lately. Many were aggressive, and none could be made into edible sushi. Nadia risked one last look over her shoulder, but saw no sign of the freakish Gazing Shark. Instead she spotted what looked like a cargo ship in the distance, slowly approaching in roughly the same direction. Thinking nothing of it, the catgirl turned her attention back to the restaurant.

A minute later, Nadia plopped down and cracked open the catch box, presenting its content for Bancho to assess. “Well? Doesn’t get much fresher than that!” She pressed an artifact, a pale blue ripened heart, to her chest to kickstart her regeneration.

Bancho grunted in approval. “It’ll be ready in thirty seconds.”

“I’ll get the music!” Dave declared.

After a moment, the low-key, twanging tune typical to Bancho Sushi gave way to a rap song that just so happened to have a lot of Korean lyrics. Nadia sauntered up and deposited a tantalizing dish of expertly prepared and habanero-treated bluefin tuna chutoro with sesame seeds and salty sea grapes. “Here you go dear customer~” Nadia told her in a painfully sweet voice. Even if she hated Juri, and the jerk probably wouldn’t even pay for this delicacy, she couldn’t help but be proud of her quick acquisition. Even if the smell of fish blood clung to her. “Don’t choke on it now~”

Meanwhile, down at the harbor not so far away, something peculiar seemed to be going down. Anyone with an eye for criminal activity who happened to be lingering -or biking- around might notice activities a little too clandestine and careful to be attributed to the average Mafia bumbler. Men supposedly belonging to the Yokohama Trading Company were working overtime to unload crates of shark fins from a barge to a small storehouse. A handful of buyers for local merchants had entered there, but in addition to purchased goods they left with bags that could only be full of pons, betrayed by their distinctive bulkiness. Nothing seemed criminal, but it did seem weird.



As Midna, Edelgard, and Pit conversed, a large silhouette cut through the sunset rays and cast a shadow over them. The beat of heavy, feathery wings reached them, followed by a throaty shriek. Many angels in the area joined them as they looked toward the disturbance, but rather than a cause for concern they found a source of ample reassurance: a majestic griffin with striking red feathers and golden armor. The angelic beast known as Ortho had fought alongside all of them once or twice, and though fiercely proud he boasted agility to match his ferocity. When he landed near the assembled angels, the Seekers spotted a familiar face riding him. “Heya!” She was Celia, one of Palutena’s attendants. With flowing white clothes, long straight blonde hair, and futuristic armor on both her long legs and fluffy white wings, the lovely spymaster seemed out of place out in the open. One could only assume she had business with the Seekers in particular.

“Ms. Edelgard!” After waving to the human, Celia stood up from Ortho’s saddle and fluttered down. “Lady Palutena wanted me to give you something. Though the loyalty you’ve earned from your unit is inspiring, we figured they’ve probably had enough of carrying you around.” Celia giggled, thinking of the last time she saw the fearless but flightless Edelgard being ferried between islands by two Feathershields. “So…here!” Grinning, she patted Ortho on his feathery neck. “He’s more of a red griffin than a black eagle, but I hope he’ll suffice!”

Just then, Palutena’s voice rang out telepathically, entering the minds of her various captains and lieutenants. “Hear me, soldiers of light. It’s time to commence the assault. Before night falls, let us expunge this foul corruption from our fair homeland. Go!”

Right away, Nathaniel’s baritone voice resounded across the staging ground. “We have our orders, let’s move, move, move! C’mon, we’re burning daylight!” For many of the angels present, that was no mere expression. Skills like Diurnal Guard, Row Resistance, Hastened Heal, and Photon Arrow all enjoyed extra effects as long as the sun still shined, and Nathaniel knew it. “Get those sorry wings in gear!”

Weapons at the ready, the heavenly host took flight. They spread out into platoons to make their approach, spread out enough to lessen the risk of AoE attacks and assault the Ivory Citadel from a dozen angles. In front of them, the old keep loomed large, sludgy black corruption visibly weeping from the cracks in its white facade. It looked especially bad atop the ramparts, where it formed into rows of vicious long spikes like those used to ward off pigeons, and the biggest deposits sat atop the Ivory Citadel’s two towers.

It didn’t take long for the opposition to respond. Out from the structure swarmed false angels like hornets from a kicked nest, two kinds called Catchet and Compassion that always worked in tandem, the smaller and more fragile Compassions running interference for the larger, more dangerous Catchets. With feathers like blades of gold they could inflict grievous wounds by hurling themselves around like arrows and drills. Along with them came their ranged brethren Dear and Decorations which behaved similarly but preferred to fire energy blasts by peeling back their marble flesh to expose their inner organs. As if that wasn’t enough, the strange Enraptures took to the balconies and battlements, their staves at the ready to launch magical attacks. Unfortunately for them, Feathershields came well-equipped to handle magic. Their Row Resistance and Mystic Shield skills could boost allies’ magic resistance, while Reflect Magic could return the Enraptures’ attacks to sender.

They could not, however, defend against gigantic harpoons of pitch-black corruption, hurled through the air with such dizzying speed that the first angel hit didn’t even get the chance to scream.

“Ballista!” Nathaniel roared, pointing his greatsword at the two towers. “The corruption has copied our siege engines! Get to cover, inside the citadel!”

“Those ballistae are our highest-priority targets!” Palutena ordered. “If you have the speed and power, hit them hard and fast!”

One angel spread her wings. “Going!” Uriel decreed, streaking through the air in a ray of light. A black bolt whizzed past her, but it was not fast enough, and the Hellguard’s leader descended on the ballista with all the speed she could muster. She was just one angel, however, and both siege engines were guarded. If someone of similar speed and power could target the other ballista and the corrupted angels that defended it, the skies would be reasonably safe once more.

As it was, however, the angels made a beeline for the windows and balconies of the Ivory Citadel, quickly overcoming the first layer of monsters and breaching the structure. Once inside, their mission was clear: destroy the corrupt cores that throbbed like beating hearts throughout the citadel, pumping infectious tar through its veins to the extremities. Of course, an absurd number of enemies stood between them and that goal. In addition to standard corrupted angels, the vicious and sneaky sycophants wielded enough intelligence to try and ambush their foes, while ayfids cast corruption like magic. The golems that once defended this fortress had long since fallen to the plague as well, their stony exteriors now shielding writhing cords and sinews of loathsome black. Worse still, many of the enemies in here would have the last laugh even once slain, giving rise to vengeful spirits that would pounce on their attackers, skeletal jaws gnashing, for one last attempt to even the score. Affinities could also be found in squads, not much threat by themselves, but they were never too far from one of the Citadel’s two minibosses. One was a hulking, axe-wielding, baby-faced marble goliath known as Beloved, while the other featured a face in its chest and a single, bladed tentacle arm: Belief.

When it came to facing Palutena’s enemies, however, the angels packed appreciable strength. Those under Uriel and Nathaniel fought with both martial prowess and advanced weapons, especially the Storm Wardens, but even the rank-and-file had their tricks. Featherbows could loose Delaying Shots to slow foes down, Saint’s Shot to deplete their stamina, and Photon Arrow to cripple the physical defense of two enemies at once. Better yet, they could unleash Shining Light to blind foes just prior to their attacks, guaranteeing a miss. With support like that, Featherswords could boost their speed and agility with Accelerate, then act as evasive tanks to wear foes down with debilitating attacks and cash their buffs out with Discharge followed by a Honed Slash, turning those blows into evasion-nullifying finishers. If the Featherstaffs couldn’t purge afflictions or heal their allies up fast enough, which they generally could, the Feathershields could slough off their afflictions onto their attackers with Mirror Weakness.

Still, within moments the assault turned into a chaotic and dangerous battle. It was up to Palutena’s elites to take charge and lead the assault into the Ivory Citadel’s heart.

Forbidden Kingdom: Meridi-at-Han

Level 8 Goldlewis (81/80)
@Yankee @Archmage MC @Drifting Pollen @MULTI_MEDIA_MAN
Word Count: 1763


About two-third of the way through his meal, Goldlewis found his contemplative solitude interrupted as a smartly-dressed man helped himself to a seat at his table. This was Roland, one of the comrades he dropped with last week, and as far as Goldlewis could remember he hadn’t seen the other man since they parted ways beneath the gaze of the main gate’s divine eye, at the top of Meridi-at-han’s interminable staircase. Like him, Roland was a former government employee, but instead of a cabinet member his new acquaintance had been a Turk, tasked with all sorts of unscrupulous work well out of the public eye. Furthermore, Roland continued to serve under the corrupt Shinra administration, while Goldlewis took his leave once Vernon left office. Of course, that went for Zenkichi and Benedict too, and to be fair none of them stuck around once awakened to the truth of their reality. Still, the two weren’t exactly friendly. The only time it had ever been just the two of them was back at the Pelican Inn in Everdream Valley, but just like today he kept himself at a distance, not saying much. Roland was just…there. Even without that mask he was oddly forgettable, even here in Meridi-at-han where his plain salaryman outfit stood out a lot more than in Midgar. Perhaps he didn’t mind living life as a ghost, but that sure wasn’t the veteran’s style. Larger than life and honest to a fault, Goldlewis would always stand as a beacon of strength, his powerful presence as unrelenting as the sun. But if Roland didn’t mind lingering in his shadow, Goldlewis wouldn’t either. There was plenty of room.

“It’s good,” he replied after a moment, the simplicity of his response belying the complexity of the tajine’s flavor profile. Goldlewis had never been the most adventurous when it came to food, but staying in Meridi-at-han for almost a week had given him a thorough appreciation of the spice of life, both literally and metaphorically. At Roland’s mention of the Grimm Troupe, the veteran cast his eyes back toward the impromptu carnival nearing completion in the plaza down below. Was Roland serious about being creeped out by those masks? Goldlewis had a hard time believing that. “I reckon it’s for the best,” he declared. “They’re all bugs, from what I hear, but if normal bugs were that big they’d be real nasty. So maybe we oughta count our blessin’s that they’re coverin’ ‘emselves up.” After such a rich and spicy stew, a close-up of insectoid mouthparts would definitely churn his stomach. The prospect of super-sized creepy crawlies was just one of the reasons why he didn’t plan to attend the Grimm Troupe’s act, but he’d be lying if he said that he wasn’t curious.

Roland wasn’t the only person that Goldlewis managed to attract. Not long after the fixer arrived with his curry, a far more distinctive individual sauntered over, her light footsteps accented by the musical jangle of expensive baubles. Unlike Roland, Primrose didn’t take the veteran by surprise; she was somewhat who made every effort to be seen and remembered, her undeniable allure expertly utilized to plant irresistible seeds in the minds of her many admirers that could be nurtured and bear fruit when needed. Several times Goldlewis had seen her performing while out and about, but as talented a dancer as Primrose was, he never stopped to watch her craft for more than a second. Part of him didn’t want to be taken in by her enchantments, but for the most part he just didn’t want to give her any unwelcome attention. She had more than enough to deal with without having to worry about an old fart like him. But despite their differences, the two were comrades-in-arms, united in a shared purpose, so Goldlewis offered a cordial nod to both Primrose and her friend as they approached. “Howdy. I most certainly did not,” he told the dancer, jokingly using a hand to shield his bowl from her. “If you’re hungry, y’all better get your own grub.”

He beckoned for the two to take a seat, though for a moment he furrowed his brows at Kayna. While this reunion hadn’t been planned, he hadn’t placed himself in such a prominent position for nothing. In terms of gathering intelligence for the Seekers, Goldlewis felt as though he’d hit a dead end. He couldn’t turn up anything concrete beyond secondhand reports and hearsay while holed up here, so he’d been hoping to meet up with the others to see if they’d fared any better. Regardless, if the well had run dry here, they would need to move on. Plus, he couldn’t help but wonder how Gadd and the other techies were doing with their little science project aboard the Avenger. With Kayna here, however, the Seekers couldn’t speak plainly. Anyone still addled by Galeem’s light could be a pawn of the Consuls. Until she left, this would be nothing more than an ordinary meal.

Even as the ladies settled down for dinner, nobody could ignore the elephant in the room. Goldlewis sipped his beer as he watched the circus tent taking shape, its conical form and deep red coloration a far cry from the red-and-white striped drum he would’ve expected. Most striking of all was the main entrance, a massive mask like those of the troupe members with upturned eyes and a mouth that shone with scarlet lantern-light from within. Long-necked bugs resembling giant giraffe weevils lounged out front to bar the way in, their eyeless masks swiveling to stare at anyone who got too close before the appointed time, while a bulky fellow kept the onlookers entertained with the chords of an accordion made from the remains of a log-sized grub. Off to one side, a fortune-teller’s booth had been erected where one could meet a strange eccentric with a half-mask and a lower half little more than a massive, fleshy trunk. Known as Divine, this creature seemed to have quite the nose for tastes and scents, providing fortunes and fragrances if enticed with gifts.

The Witch saw all this and more as she wove out from the gathering throng of intrigued citizens and into the cluster of stalls, tents, and carts that surrounded the Grimm Troupe’s big top. The performers were busy, scuttling or floating here and there as they pounded stakes, knotted ropes, and planted braziers. As long as she shied away from the torch flames, she could remain relatively undetected. Small holes in the main tent permitted a peek inside, but she found only bugs busily setting up the galleries for the troupe’s imminent audience. Toward the back of the venue, though, she discovered something odd even for a circus of bugs. It was a metal wagon shrouded completely in silky black cloth, including the weevil steed that now rested nearby and a couple of spindly attendants. Even from a safe distance, though, the Witch could see a flicker of red light through the veil, and sense something foul and unnatural, burning and acrid–not just magic, but a curse. If she drew just a little closer toward a gap in the cloth, she could see a hint of a strange artifact inside, a vessel of wrought iron and stained glass that glowed with crimson flames that seemed to smolder like red eyes in the darkness of a nightmare.

Just then, a flock of bugbats burst up from their hiding place beneath the eaves of the big top nearby, buzzing noisily as they scattered. One of them fluttered toward the Witch, then past her to alight on a black claw protruding from the fibrous raiment of Troupe Master Grimm. His scarlet gaze stared at the little thing for a moment, then shifted pointedly to the Witch, a silent and scathing indictment.

”Good evening, madam.” His voice was a raspy whisper, sharp as a blade sliding over bone, formed not by a human voice but by an attempted recreation. ”You must be lost. Please, allow me to show you to a seat. The show is about to begin.” He bowed his head politely as he extended his clawed hand to the right, indicating the way back toward the big top’s entrance.

Not even a minute later, the floodgates were opened, and after paying a paltry sum of zenny each, men, women, children, and demihumans of all kinds poured inside. The seats filled up in no time flat, full of excited Meridi-at-han citizens wowed by the dark, eerie atmosphere. As anticipation continued to build, the lanterns suddenly went out, only for the scarlet torches of masked, ghostlike Grimmkin performers to light up a darkness filled with fluttering bugbats. As Brumm’s accordion-playing rose to a crescendo, and Divine’s voice filled the air, the insects of the Grimm Troupe began their fire dance, turning the confines of the circus tent into an awesome frenzy of pitch-black dark and dazzling blood-red light.

"Shadows dream of endless fire,
Flames devour and embers swoop,
One will light the Nightmare Lantern,
Call and serve in Grimm's dread Troupe!"


From his seat at the tavern, Goldlewis could watch the light of unnatural flames playing against the tent’s cloth, the twisted shadows forming and reforming in a wild tango. The sight only served to awe and fascinate more bystanders, encouraging them to pay the toll and duck into the tent to see the spectacle for themselves. He shook his head. “Whoo-wie. I woulda settled for seein’ bugs jugglin’, but that’s one helluva lightshow even from here.” All the same he kept himself on high alert. If it was all just a trick of the light he needn’t be concerned, but the sight of such magic reminded him of the frightful whispers exchanged beneath the breath of otherwise boisterous gossips whenever the topic of the Grimm Troupe came up. There were plenty of city guards all around, but they seemed overwhelmed. If these strange performers really were up to something, it would be up to the Seekers to step in.

With his eyes on the scene down below, Goldlewis didn’t notice the sudden ripple in the leftover broth of his stew, gone as soon as it came.
<Snipped quote by Lugubrious>

WoooOO! Excellent to hear, and yes I would! Just one more questioni...

What exactly is Mafia-Town, in terms of area, pictures- anything for reference? Is it from an established setting like Kingdom Hearts? Are all the chefs Italian and have cool Mafia names? Remember, guys like Vinny make the best pizzas. :)


The first half or so of the Mafia Town section of my opening post describes the setting, with pictures and such included. Its core is the Mafia Town from a Hat in Time, but as with everything in the World of Light it incorporates countless elements of various games put together. Unfortunately the Mafia of Cooks is actually terrible at cooking, so there's a lot of variety in terms of restaurants throughout the town, like Bancho Sushi, which is where Ms Fortune's been working. And Zoey's post with Juri adds some more context on what's been happening with the Mafia itself lately as well. Happy reading!
<Snipped quote by Lugubrious>

Excellent clarification! I've updated the CS accordingly and await your verdict!


Looks great! Venom Snake is approved, and you're good to post his sheet in the characters tab and get started in Mafia Town. If you want any further details about that setting feel free to ask. The next update is on Sunday night but it doesn't involve a drastic state change, so no rush. Would you like an invite to the Discord?
<Snipped quote by Lugubrious>

Gotcha! So what does that look like, in terms of formatting? I updated the inventory to reflect the appropriate changes, but I can't say I've any idea on how to distribute points across skills, or.. skills across points, or levels. Abilities are a whole 'nother alien entirely. Other than that I think I didn't miss anything.


Sorry for not explaining it well! Each Ability or Skill on your sheet counts as one of the five allocations new sheets start with, and you can divide those allocations however you want. So for instance, with my Grimm sheet on the first page I used three on Abilities (Teleport, Firebats, and Hangtime), and two on Skills (Close Combatant, The Night Was Long). You can put all five into Skills if you want and just leave the Abilities section blank.
@Lugubrious Heya choom! Absolutely no problem at all- I knew that there would probably be some oversights in regards to this CS, and I'm more than capable of making revisions and adjustments as needed.

In truth, Logan Woods is a placeholder-alike on John Doe, since Naked Snake is also referred to as John, or John Doe in Metal Gear Solid 3. Venom Snake is, essentially, the Player's own avatar at the start of the game (as the multiplayer component uses this avatar when prompted to create them after the opening sequence).

EDIT: Encountering a slight snag with trying to work the Sneaking Suit as an ability since it's quite literally the clothes on his back. Help would be much appreciated!


No problem, I know it's weird making gear into abilities to begin with since they're physical objects. If you want you could just ditch the ability altogether and go all 5 points on skills, then have the equipment in his inventory.


Posted, and SUPER STOKED! Also I'm gonna work for Instacart today, so I'll be back in 4-6 hours or so to address any changes or inconsistencies that y'all find- I think I filled this out well but things are liable to slip through, heh. Anyhow, I shall return! Can't wait to explore this world with everyone.


I commend you for all the effort and meticulous detail you pit in. In fact, I didn't actually know his name was Logan. Overall the sheet is very good, but there is one thing we should discuss. As is, Snake here comes fully-kitted, bordering on overloaded. For one, new sheets are supposed to have just five powers/skills total, while this seven, as well as a leftover ability placeholder. Plus, isn't the prosthetic arm just equipment? Comparing the descriptions, the sneaking suit would be more of an ability.

On the subject from equipment, he has a rifle, a sniper rifle, two handguns, and two support devices. Considering that everyone starts in a weakened state, maybe we could cut that down to just the pistols and one support device to go with the knife, sneaking suit, arm, and the cigars? The more high-power equipment could be manifested with level-ups later for the sake of progression.
@DisturbedSpec Hello and welcome. We sure are, and I'd be happy to have you!
mk 2, updated inventory,in the now, powers, skills and weaknesses



Approved!
oh look, pulled out of that game series you love when I include it



That's pretty neat! I would probably guess without looking the game up that it's an RTS based on how his kit's set up. I have three notes:
-Would you mind turning the image in the backstory section into an hyperlink image?
-Could we be more specific about the 'place' that can be designated an armory? Does this mean a chest? A room? A whole building, of any size? A city? And so on
-This one's tricky. For any ability, its limitations should be included in the power. IE if the Arbiter has energy shields, the fact that they can be depleted and will let him take damage until they recharge should be in the energy shield description and not at weakness. The fuel cell weakness for his units and casting point weakness for his tome spells should be included in their descriptions, something like 'Casting this spell subtracts from his total combat casting points, which is currently 2' could be added to all the tome spells. Of course, this means he'd need two more weaknesses.
Cold Open

Very early Monday morning


Until a few minutes ago, the night sky above Edinburgh MagicaPolis had been overcast, shrouded in thick, moody clouds as tumultuous as the arctic sea that enclosed the city of eternal winter. Fresh snowfall filtered down from the heavens, and the black waves lapped thirstily at the city’s seawalls. Neither heavy sky nor relentless sea could hope to swallow the floating metropolis, however, so long as the sorcery of its citizens endured. The pleasant light of fire magic shined from Edinburgh’s windows, keeping countless homes cozy despite the polar climate outside, and arcane streetlights ensured that no pedestrians need wander in darkness. Of course, tonight the shadowed avenues also glimmered with the pale blue fire of ghostflame, stronger than ever before. For the past week or so the setting sun had preceded the return of the living dead, skeletons who wandered the city streets in their dozens and hundreds, often causing panic and mayhem. With the parting of the clouds, pale light shone down from the ravaged moon onto the well-worn cobbles and frosty shingles of an Edinburgh MagicaPolis alight with warm orange and spine-chilling blue.

It was a beautiful sight, especially from the apex of the tower that crowned the immense hat of the staggeringly huge pumpkin that formed Edinburgh’s centermost and most iconic feature. From way up here, civilians were totally invisible, the magitech vehicles that glided slowly across the city’s streets canals might as well be ants, and the buildings minuscule tiles in a vast, snow-dusted mosaic. One could see well past the limits of Edinburgh itself, across the inky waters and to the fathomless glaciers to the north, or to the Frozen Highlands to the southeast, where the mountain called Dragonspine towered over the landscape. The winds howled, and it was bitterly cold, but this pinnacle offered a breathtaking view nonetheless.

Unfortunately, its charms were lost on the woman who arrived in a burst of swirling purple particles, gasping at the frigid high-altitude air as she clutched the wound in her stomach. Though her futuristic gray bodysuit boasted an impressive set of cherry-red armor on top of it, it didn’t protect her completely, and her black velvet cape had done little to defend against a swordblade delivered from behind. Such pain at this height was dizzying, but with a groan the masked woman steadied herself, then reached her other hand up toward her head. For a moment she fumbled at the switch before resorting to ripping her helmet clean off, allowing an enormous quantity of knee-length blonde hair to tumble down as the winter winds bit at a mature face filled with unquenchable rage.

“I’ll kill you,” she hissed through her teeth. “All of you! Every time. Every time you rear your ugly heads, I’ll kill you, over, and over, and over again. My children…my beautiful pets…how dare you…how dare you!”

Her scream quickly faded into the blustering winds. After a moment she turned with a huff, walking away from the tower’s edge. Before her, suspended within the tower’s open-lattice wrought iron, hung an enormous metal gauge one-third full of purple fire. She stopped in front of it, staring into the blaze, then held out our hands. “I’ll keep coming as long as it takes,” she hissed as glowing red particles began to filter out from the huge device into her body. “I’ll drain the Flame Clock dry if need be. You’ll never win, and you’ll not get away…”

Suddenly, a sphere of spectral energy slammed into her, eliciting a yelp of pain and surprise as the woman slid away. “What!?”

When she looked up, she spotted three figures emerging from their hiding places behind the metal pillars. One was a monster hunter, formerly a fresh-faced recruit now outfitted with all kinds of arms and armor, as well as an uncharacteristically serious expression. After him stomped an enormous detective with a bell-shaped body beneath a beige trench coat, a bronze contraption shaped like the neck of a saxophone protruding from his back. Finally, a short superhero with a black mask and red outfit walked beside them, his hands already balled into fists. After a moment, the perpetrator of the attack floated down in front of the Flame Clock from above: a sleek, almost alien creature with a long purple tail.

<CONSUL!> a voice roared, formed not of a voice but of pure psychic energy, and thrust like a lance directly into the woman’s mind. <In vengeance for the people of Alcamoth, and all the Pokemon you’ve treated like playthings, we’ve come to put you down.>

The Consul’s lip curled as she looked between her four enemies, still panting and disheveled. Then she straightened up, composing herself. “Oh. I see. You sent your little friends to my home to bait me out, then set up shop here to try and finish me off once I flew the coop.” She smirked darkly. “Clever. Though it’s a shame your friends died thinking their sacrifices would make a difference. Because I’m afraid your run ends here.” She stretched out her hands as her core began to glow, purple energy gathering deep within her. “You see, my power, Import, gives me complete and total access to the marvelous realm known as Ultra Space, in all its sublime glory. It was enough to take care of your friends as-is, but since you’ve gone to all this trouble, I think you deserve…”

Her power surged, consuming and transforming her body. When the swirling purple energies converged, they left behind a twelve-foot biotech monstrosity with purplish-red armor over fused black flesh, cyan energy flowing through its cable arteries like blood. In her belly whirled a true Moebius core, an engine emblazoned with the lemniscate symbol of infinity. When she spoke, her voice bore demonic distortion. “...the full treatment. The power of Ultra Space, distilled and perfected by Moebius.” Around the Consul’s Moebius form, space itself began to rip and tear, dark light and alien appendages breaking through.

<Struggle all you want,> Mewtwo declared as his teammates readied themselves for battle. <What you do with the gift of life determines who you are.> He held up his hand, pure psychic energy gleaming between his fingers. <And you…are dead.>

Deep Blue Seaside: Mafia Town

@Yankee @Zoey Boey @Double
Monday evening



Click for music


Located off the World of Light’s southeastern shore, at perhaps the southernmost part of the region known as the Deep Blue Seaside, a certain island town offered a climate of tropical warmth and humidity, with palm trees and white sandy beaches. It stood out as the largest and most developed by far of the islands that together formed an atoll surrounding the ecological marvel known as the Blue Hole, a deep basin whose contents transformed with every high tide, its terrain and wildlife inexplicably swapped. One day its shallows might be home to colorful colors, and the next a kelp forest, while the lower reaches accessible through pits and tunnels in the underwater landscape could be polar, volcanic, or even prehistoric. A source of near-unlimited livelihood, the Blue Hole was a natural -or perhaps supernatural- treasure coveted by all and jealousy guarded by the denizens of Mafia Town.

Unlike its precious Blue Hole, though, Mafia Town was mostly man-made, paved over and built up into a densely-packed, multi-level maritime fortress of orange mosaic tiles, stone bricks of milk-white or chocolate-brown, and roofs of dazzling silver or shingles as azure blue as the sea itself. Each layer of buildings became the ‘ground’ for the one above, creating a winding upward path from the docks and shipyards past bustling markets up through narrow lanes between tall apartment buildings with hanging laundry lines and flower boxes on their windowsills. Toward the top things evened out and opened up a bit more, offering rooftop greenbelts among fountain plazas, poolhouses, and clock towers. Even that wasn’t the limit, though. At the very top and middle of Mafia Town there existed a seemingly unlimited source of freshwater, not just feeding the high-speed aqueducts and cascades and that washed down through the town’s channels to the sea, but a spiraling geyser that somehow held up a massive plate like a support pillar. The Mafia Headquarters on top of it couldn’t be seen from down here, but like an umbrella it cast a great round shadow over Mafia Town that traveled throughout the day, offering its many residents -including the plentiful but mostly harmless (not to mention identical) Mafia goons- a little reprieve from the beating sun.

Most remarkable, perhaps, were the smells. Thanks to the Blue Hole and its dominance over regional trade, Mafia Town boasted an abundance of eateries, and with the evening well underway all the restaurants were in full swing. It wasn’t just the briney tang of seafood on the wind, either. The aromas of fresh baked crust from Possum Pizzeria, savory sauces from Seaside Spaghetti, and so forth all filtered their way through the streets on the breeze, tantalizing the citizens’ taste buds as they wrapped up work for the day.

Of course, not everything was one hundred percent food-oriented. Even down by the water there were seaside plazas alongside all the wharves, where one could find things like a lovely flower shop or a art display. Beyond the town itself, hot air balloons and sailboats lent both sky and sea a wealth of color, while the assertive billboards and hand-painted graffiti of the Mafia made sure that few public walls lacked decoration.

Down on the water, the fishing boats were making their way back to port one by one. The Mafia was very selective about who could harvest from the Blue Hole, and many of these vessels worked for them, but among the handful of Mafia-approved enterprises that didn’t there was a distinctive boat with a purple hull that had yet to get moving. On its deck, a well-tanned man with a shock of white hair, scars, sunglasses, and a red Hawaiian shirt with bananas paced back and forth, his manner impatient but not necessarily troubled. He glanced at the water every so often, expecting something any minute, and before too long his vigilance was rewarded with the sight of familiar shapes swimming upward. Both were navy blue, and one much larger than the other, so Cobra didn’t need to think twice. By the time the pair breached the surface at the back of the boat, he was already ready and waiting to receive the waterproof yellow crates the divers thrust into his hands. “Took you long enough!” he greeted them, flashing the two a smile until he tried to heft the precious cargo in his arms. “Whoa, this is heavy!” He settled for dragging it onto the boat. “Stuffed to the brim again? You two don’t know when to quit!”

“I do: an hour ago!” The first diver, Dave, gasped as he climbed up from the water, hauling himself out like a seal on an ice floe. He was a rotund man with a brown goatee, and though typically cheerful he looked red in the face right now, exhausted and practically panting from his efforts. After collapsing onto the boat’s deck, his chest heaving up and down, Dave just lay there while Cobra retrieved the other box. “But she keeps swimming off the minute she sees anything interesting,” he complained, his tone affectionate. “I swear, she’s gonna be the death of me.”

After climbing aboard, the second diver immediately unzipped her wetsuit and let it hang around her waist, revealing a mint-green swimsuit underneath, tall cat ears, and a head of calico-colored hair in a fluffy bob cut that she shook to air out. Ms Fortune’s electric-blue eyes were full of mischief as she grinned down at Dave, her hands on her hips. “Well, good thing I’ve got you around to bail me out when I get in trouble. Where you see danger, I seafood! Plus, you’re great at finding the extra oxygen down there, so it’s all ‘tanks’ to you!” When Dave just rolled his eyes, the catgirl known only to her closest friends as Nadia turned to the other man, pleased with herself for her puns and not out of them yet. “Whaddya think, Cobra? Our e-fish-iency is off the charts!”

After finishing his inspection, Cobra stood up from her crate with a huge grin. “Good haul, Fortune. Chances are we break our profit records again tonight.” As Dave sighed in exasperation, his contributions downplayed like always, Cobra he headed over to the ship’s helm and began to spool it up. “Let’s find out.”

A few minutes later, he brought the boat to a stop at the trio’s destination: a floating restaurant docked at one one Mafia Town’s smaller wharves. Though essentially a glorified raft kept afloat with the help of tires, Bancho Sushi was solidly built and barely rocked beneath her feet. It also looked nice, with a clean traditional wooden style supplemented by elegant cherry blossoms. While Cobra moored the boat, Dave and Nadia worked together to haul the boxes over to the holding tank, where they dumped the live-caught sealife while putting the carvings from larger creatures on ice. Then Nadia made a beeline for the opposite end of the long counter to stroke the black-and-white cat that always lounged there. After a full week of feeding and petting the kitty, she and Nadia were basically best friends, even if Chucho didn’t approve. As one might expect, the interior of Bancho Sushi had no customers right now, but that was about to change.

Already the sushi chef, a serious-looking man with black spectacles and a light blue kimono, was getting prepped, and the two other employees were running around setting things up. Bancho could tell just from today’s haul -and the hungry customers beginning to gather outside- that tonight was going to be a busy night. “You’re late,” he stated matter-of-factly.

“Whoa, don’t have a tempura tantrum,” Nadia joked, holding her hands up as in surrender. “So what’s on the menu tonight, boss?”

“Hmm.” Bancho peered deep into the holding tank, identifying its contents and what could be made of them in an instant. “Quite a variety. In addition to sushi and sashimi, I can make Fried Onion Cuttlefish, the Tropical Fish platter, Wrasse Curry, Deep Fish Tempura, and Trevally Kombu Ochazuke,” he assessed before looking at the ice box. “Is that…Megamouth Shark?”

Nadia nodded, grinning. “Mm-hmm! Now that was a fun fight. Poor Dave was just about pissing himself, though.” Imagining the menu, the catgirl sighed. “Man, I never thought I’d like sushi, but the stuff you make is something else. If swimming wasn’t such good exercise, I’d be as big as Dave by now.” She shrugged and turned to go. “Well, guess I’ll get outta your hair be-fur the customers show up.”

“Wait a moment.” At Bancho’s voice, Nadia turned on a dime. Her eyebrows shot up when she spotted the knotted blue headband in his hands. “You wanted to try working up front, didn’t you? Tonight’s your chance.”

He barely got the chance to finish before the catgirl snatched it out of his hands and started tying it around her head. “Hell yeah! Just you wait, Bancho. I’ll make you proud!”

The chef cracked the faintest of smiles. “Just don’t drop anything.” He then narrowed his eyes at her attire–or lack thereof. “And get changed, would you? I know you’re feral for tips, but I’m not letting anyone serve sushi in a swimsuit.”

“Yeah, yeah, I know.” Nadia was already dashing away when she slid to a sudden stop, her head turned one hundred and eighty degrees. “Wait, was that a pun!? From YOU!?” By then he’d already turned his back, though, so the catgirl couldn’t do much but run off, snickering to herself.

After another minute she was back, dressed in her usual fur-lined jacket, shorts, and unbuttoned shirt. With Bancho Sushi about to open, Nadia took a deep breath to steel herself, and looked out across the water. Since she and the others arrived here last week, life had been good, but she hadn’t done a great job collecting information. Only fleeting rumors reached her ears about red-clad Consuls, or entities powerful enough to be considered Guardians. Plus, it seemed like the Mafia had been getting bolder ever since she arrived. Nadia rubbed the bruise on her chin. She bet they had Juri to thank. They’d met -and, of course, fought- several times already, and while Nadia generally got the better of her rival, Juri sure hadn’t made it easy. Hopefully the overgrown delinquent wouldn’t show up today, but it was shaping up to be one hell of a night either way.

Nadia took a deep breath, then put on her best smile. At a nod from Bancho, she jogged over to throw open the front door. “Welcome to Bancho Sushi!” she sang, giving the crowd an eyeful as she bowed with a playful expression. “Where we always let the good times ‘roll’!”

Sandswept Sky: Skyworld

@DracoLunaris @Archmage MC @Yankee @Double @MULTI_MEDIA_MAN
Monday evening


Click for music


Floating high above the Sandswept Sky’s eastern coast, the airborne realm of Skyworld took the form of a gargantuan array of interconnected sky islands, sprawled out both horizontally and vertically, their mountainous landmasses of pale stone contrasted against the rich yellows and oranges of lush, perennially autumnal foliage. A number of the islands featured a more natural appearance, with pools of pristine water, golden grasses, and placid herbivores interspersed among their untouched deciduous sentinels. Most, however, featured at least some semblance of deliberate masonry, and many of the largest islands featured architectural achievements of astonishing size and grandeur. Holy spires, breathtaking cathedrals, and lovely temples could be found all over, surrounded by elaborate monuments and serving as the centerpieces of angelic colonies of a uniform Greco-Roman style. Over everything towered several minor erdtrees, the most massive of which could be found on the centermost and largest sky island of all, Eden, surrounded by concentric rings of idyllic waterfall terraces.

The outlying forested islands, where the high-altitude winds sang through birches decked out in fall colors and past all manner of intricately-carved monuments, offered plenty of diversion for a wandering eye. Their inhabitants included curious egg-shaped paissa, mischievous gaelicats, two-faced remlits, eerie seraphaces, and moody bansheep, all going about their business in beauteous harmony beneath a slow sprinkle of falling golden leaves.

As divine as it all looked, especially that immense tree with its luminous boughs, this was no perfect paradise. Its many fortified bastions, ramparts, and winged soldiers spoke of plentiful turmoil, and nowhere seemed more active than the acropolis stronghold of Palutena’s Temple, sheltered beneath the wings of the goddess of light herself. The reason for this militance could be found just by looking around, for not all of the archipelago’s islands were autumnal parks or angelic townships. In sharp contrast, some of them -on the far side opposite Eden and Palutena’s Temple- were stained pitch-black and sickly yellow-green, infested and overgrown by some form of inky, oozy corruption with a tendency to form crystalline deposits and eye-like growths. So vile and virulent were these organic structures that one could scarcely imagine what might lurk deep within the throbbing hearts of those infected zones. From afar it could be hard to make out the details, but even at a distance this corruption inspired a strong aversion in anything healthy and/or holy.

Such was the danger posed by this pitch-black contagion that its presence redefined Palutena’s forces, demanding a drastic overhaul of the army to combat the plague’s monstrosities. Every thoroughly-drilled, well-armed squad featured at least one formidable Feathershield, each possessed of brawn as grand as his sterling silver armor and a towering greatshield polished to a mirror sheen. In their company one could find a selection of gallant Featherswords, keen Featherbows, and slight Featherstaffs, all wearing either helmets or silvery masks, while cherubim filled out the ranks. Rarer but more impressive still were the elites, the Storm Wardens with wings of light and heavy cannons, as well as the Champions so heavily armed and armored that they might as well have been holy mechs. Captains like the stern, unflappable Fodoquia and the honorable but formidable Nathaniel commanded entire battalions of winged soldiers, and oversaw the operation of holy siege weapons like ballistae at tactical positions around the quarantine zones. Of course, nobody was busier than Palutena’s direct subordinates, the dutiful, fearless Uriel and the energetic, dependable Pit, even if the young angel wasn’t quite as his goddess remembered him.

Tonight, as the colors of sunset began to stretch across the boundless sky, tensions were especially high among the cohorts and contractors of Palutena’s Army. Since the arrival of a handful of capable warriors last week, the goddess of light had spurred her forces forward in an aggressive initiative to push back and cleanse the corruption, and they’d managed to gain a lot of ground. Now, only a handful of the sky islands remained in the plague’s ink-black grip. Unfortunately, the corruption was reacting like a cornered beast, stoked into a frenzy by the threat of extirpation. New kinds of horrors had been rising from the depths of the murky more, each more powerful and twisted than the last. Most worrisome of all were the corrupted angels, some former soldiers fallen to the evil taint, and some that had never once been something holy–just fleshy abominations hidden within bodies of gleaming gold and pure-white marble, each one capable of triggering a new outbreak if its deception went unnoticed. Given the threat posed by these new false angels, the decision came down from Palutena to push forward in an all-out offensive to eliminate the corruption and its horrors once and for all.

With a fully manned defensive perimeter already established around the infested islands, the main assault force now congregated at a checkpoint, that being the foot of the majestic Crystal Spire just beyond the Coliseum. Ahead of this point of no return floated the ominous Ivory Citadel, first of the infected islands, but any bridges connecting it to more wholesome landmasses had long since been destroyed.

Forbidden Kingdom: Meridi-at-Han

@Yankee @Archmage MC @Drifting Pollen
Monday evening


Click for music


In the northern reaches of the World of Light mainland, further still than the Forbidden Kingdom that lay between the frigid winterlands or Midgar’s wartorn valley, lay a wild and untamed borderland of jungles and giants that only ended where the mind-numbing Transmission began, giving way to the bleak dereliction of the pale city’s hinterlands. There, beyond the Forbidden Kingdom’s fields of rolling gold and temperate forests sprawled the arid Tyrannian Plateau, home to mammoth monsters of prehistoric origin, and untamed tropical forests richly sustained by the faintest aftershocks of the monsoons that pounded the Garbage Wastes.

Of course, even in a wilderness such as this, bastions of civilization still stood, and none stood taller than the acropolis city of Meridi-at-han. Equal parts fortified citadel and flourishing city-state, it towered above the land of jungles and rivers atop its central mesa, connected to a handful of outlying spires by bridges of astonishing scale. The city’s colorful buildings dared to rise even higher, stacked atop one another like a child’s building blocks, and over it all reigned the grand pink parapets of the Palace of the Sun, from which the Satrap and his Sun-Court ruled. After being denied access to the elevators and instead climbing up the interminable staircase from the port at the river’s edge, newcomers could pass beneath the hot and piercing gaze of the all-seeing eye that adorned the city’s main gate, and step into a fragrant haze of sweet incense and acrid smoke. Within lay dense, noisy, and colorful market streets, alive with the shouts of merchants and lively melodies accented by the patter of dancers’ feet that, like the silken tapestries that hung overhead, swayed to the rhythm of the winds.

After losing track of time in the city’s bustling heart, a visitor could climb higher to the balconies and hanging gardens of the upper district, where they could be enchanted by the movement of countless kites that schooled and darted like so many fish, and the flight of pink flamigos over the sparkling waters.

As with most nights, a certain man could be found in an open-air tavern overlooking Meridi-at-han’s mercantile center, leisurely seated at a corner table and watching the steady procession of cityfolk through the marketplace below. Standing at six foot eight and weighing almost five hundred pounds, with hairy forearms thicker than many folks’ midsections, he was a giant of a man with a strongman’s physique despite the age evident in his creased features and graying blonde beard. He wore somewhat militaristic formal attire with a rustic flair, such as metal skulls and horseshoes in place of typical accessories, and the contents of the huge coffin that laid by his feet was a topic of much debate among the regulars here, although few dared to disturb him. Even if the locals didn’t feel inclined to talk to him, though, Goldlewis Dickinson was happy just to listen–that was why he was here, after all.

Over the course of his stay in Meridi-at-han, Goldlewis had kept his ear to the ground in order to try and ferret out certain details of the surrounding region, and he’d managed to learn a great deal. For one, no living soul could head too far north without succumbing to the eerie Transmission that emanated from the City Without a Name, which struck him as the perfect defense mechanism for hiding something -or someone- of vital importance. Meanwhile, rumors suggested that the Guardian of the Frozen Highlands to the west roamed his region freely, fearless thanks to what seemed to be complete invincibility. As for the Forbidden Kingdom to the south, all signs pointed to Esaka, the Tiered City, where it was said that talented martial artists gathered to do battle in spectacular tournaments.

Of course, in addition to all those tasty nuggets of information, Goldlewis took the chance to savor local cuisine. For dinner today he’d ordered a gilded tajine, a simmer stew of spiced meat flower petals, and herbs hidden beneath the hat-like lid of a peculiar pot. It went well with a strong beer, so it was shaping up to be a nice evening.

That said, the army veteran kept a wary eye on one part of the scene down below. With the sun beginning to set over the Tyrannian Plateau, an infamous band had seemingly emerged from the shadows to begin setting up shop in an open plaza, sending excited whispers flying amongst the populace, and for good reason. Even in the relatively short time Goldlewis had been staying here, he’d heard plenty of rumor about a traveling caravan of masked but clearly inhuman performers who arrived in various towns and villages when night fell, speaking strange tongues and strumming strange instruments as a circus tent took shape amidst their mysterious wagons. Some looked forward to the arrival of the Grimm Troupe as an invitation to a night of enchanted revelry, while others warned of it as an omen of imminent calamity, citing the darkness left in the wake of the itinerants’ departure. Already a handful of spear-wielding guards in intricate blue outfits could be seen not-so-subtly hanging around the area, watching the enigmatic insects as they worked, but without any wrong committed so far they could not take action. At one point a guard captain had approached and demanded to speak to the troupe’s master, giving Goldlewis a very brief view of the grass-cloaked, scarlet-eyed Grimm himself, though he was much too far away to hear anything. With plenty of eager bystanders nearby, the guard captain couldn’t reach a conclusion, and Grimm vanished again as suddenly as he came. At this point it looked inevitable that the Troupe would get to perform, though what that might entail Goldlewis hadn’t the slightest idea.

He looked away, drinking deep from his glass. If it wasn’t going to be a nice evening, at least it would be an interesting one.
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