The central trading hub of the world in 2050 and a prime destination for most races to live or do business. Having expanded to nearly 10 times its size in the early 2000’s, New York is now nearly its own country on par with the Vatican (whose monotheistic beliefs continue to praise a God for His creation of the universe). Most megacorporations like Disney, Apple, and Google, now headquarter in New York, each with large tracts of land dedicated to their base of operations usually consisting of barracks for their private military forces, company-specific housing for their employees, and various R&D centers pushing the bounds of ethics, one project at a time. Despite the powers that exist, many CEOs of major corporations continue to be humans, albeit nowadays of the magically gifted and enhanced varieties. Demihumans are generally more popular than regular humans in New York, their visages gracing billboards, posters, and large-screen advertisements in the vaunted Times Square. Starweavers, as common as they are relative to past eras, are still not common enough to be found on every corner. The presence of one has the same effect as the public catching sight of an A-list celebrity. Some revel in the attention while others keep a low profile, but it’s no secret that Starweavers are particularly welcome in the new commerce capital of the world.
》 TIMES SQUARE
The famous tourist attraction of New York no longer hosts the New Year’s ball drop, instead seasonal events are headlined by some of the most popular Starweavers and demihumans in the country from the literally enchanting songstress Starweaver, Mia Sharpe, to the magic-defying acrobatic feats of ‘dreamboat Daeva’ performer, Tarkhan. Times Square has also been the sight of many a protest in recent years over the Japanese treatment of demihumans, with notable talk show personalities and celebrities speaking out against the poor state of sentient rights in other countries, but most egregiously Japan as a country that still holds the patent rights to much of the magitech circulating the world.
》 THE STATUE OF LIBERTY
Well, the torch arm on the statue was accidentally lopped off at the elbow in a fight between a branch of Foci, the most notorious anti-Starweaver faction, and a Starweaver they were targeting, but the government isn’t making a big deal out of it because it was the Starweaver who did it. The arm has since been replaced with a better magitech version superficially modified to look the same as the rest of the statue’s weathered copper. Foci was given the blame for the entire incident anyway and indirect blame for damaging a historical monument, which the borderline-terrorist organization seemed to have taken a dislike to as motifs of the statue’s severed arm against the backdrop of the offending Starweaver’s starmark began propagating around the internet soon afterwards, usually accompanied by inflammatory comments such as “Starweavers can get away with this arm. Wait until they get away with yours.”
》 THE TIPSY TEMPTRESS
A restaurant and bar chain favored by demihumans and Starweavers. Its iconic neon sign of an androgynous merfolk sprawled across a rock and sipping on a cocktail has become a beacon in the night for demihumans looking for a good time. The restaurant features both lounges for the guests and individual rooms for more private outings, looking more elite than its prices would indicate. Under the table deals between demihuman-exclusive gangs usually happen behind closed doors at the Tipsy Temptress, and the backroom features dancers of all races and talents. Owned and managed by an enigmatic Starweaver, the police tend to turn a blind eye to whatever happens in the Tipsy Temptress establishments; things there will either work themselves out or they’ll be forced out of the location’s unspoken protection.
》 MANHATTEN ASTROLOGICAL RESEARCH
An extremely prestigious institution (arguably the world’s best institution of astrology) that welcomes only the most adept of astrologers to its ranks. The ancient craft of astrology has blended easily with modern science, as hereditary astrologians have never denied that stars were also collections of gases in the distant space of the universe. What sets the astrologians of the MAR apart is their unique insight into the way the stars move, die, and are born, the minutiae of which form messages to take heed of and often foretell the awakening or death of Starweavers, who are intrinsically bound to the stars which are, in turn, also bound to them. It’s a bit of trivia knowledge that the name ‘Starweaver’ was modernized from a dead language used by the first astrologians to refer to them as those who ‘write the stars’.