Avatar of LegionPothIX
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    1. LegionPothIX 8 yrs ago

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About me as a player.
When I make a character I consider every aspect of the character—and the context of the universe it's in—from its nature and demeanor, to its ambitions and motivations; and quirks, strengths, and weaknesses. Did I need to say all that? No, not really, but I felt like correctly using 'and' five times in a sentence. The reason I give such consideration to these characters is because I come to RP to for the challenge of being someone other than myself. What I would do in a character's situation does not interest me, and it's not the point. Knowing the character as well as I know myself means I can do what the character would do and really feel the weight of those choices.

About me as an author.
I consider all play-by-post games I play in to be a form of interactive, co-authored stories, where in the characters all play a part; and as a consequence all authors play a part. When I engage in collaborations I try to make my character's goals and motivations as clear as possible to the other authors I'm engaging with, and trust they will respect the game and not meta-game that knowledge (particularly: Using out of character knowledge to make in-character decisions). I've observed that this is the most difficult line for other players to walk and I find myself entering into collabs sparingly with anyone I've witnessed not delivering on a pattern of excellence in this regard.

About me as a person.
I have years of experience in LARP, Table-Top, MUDs & MMOs and more. I've been role-playing longer than the average millennial has been alive, and have played just about every kind of character—in every kind of medium—there is. I've also written a bit of fan-fiction (FiMFiction) and original fiction, as well as served as a serious editor for both. I don't mention my experience to brag. It's just a fact. I'm not being modest either since I don't believe in it. Modesty and Arrogance are two sides of the same coin. Understating one's abilities is just as dishonest as overstating them. Doing either is a sign of insecurity, and a deception perpetrated with the intent to garner respect or sympathy. If I'm starting to sound like a super villain, well, there is a reason why.

Character Sheet Thread.
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If you like Ponies, and my brand of RP, then why not read some of my horse words?

Most Recent Posts

@LegionPothIX, technically the 'Commander, Air Group' (CAG) would outrank everyone on the Vitae short of the Admiral and maybe Colonel Anderson- so I doubt he'd bend or be so accepting of such casual orders. It has always been a point of contention between officers and enlisted. While Calhound has more experience, technically even Hawkins out ranks him. Though young'ns like Hawkins will most likely defer to a veteran enlisted man's authority when push comes to shove.

The CAG would most likely appreciate Calhound's technical expertise and dispatch crew to do as he recommends though.

Also also, the T-22s the strike pilots fly don't have shields... So I dunno if that puts a damper on Calhound's plans, or if the pilots just need to be careful. And damn you! Taking my dogfight away from me lolol


I didn't know what CAG stood for, and I'll make changes accordingly. As for the casual orders, he never actually answered them, but I'll review how you write him and see what I can do. I wanted it to read like Xaith was telling the CAG officer what he wants to do, ad then that officer is translating it into actually useful information for his teams.

As for the dogfight, it wasn't my intent to take it away, I just wanted to change the venue a little from the emptiness of space to something a little more close to home. :) Hell, you could still have your dog-fight, but with the added tension of having to protect a couple more ships. As for the shields, yeah, that does put a damper on the plan.
@LegionPothIX it isn't around.


That's a damn shame. Cool pic tho.
After the response from the bridge, Sergent Calhound reported back a simple "Acknowledged, Captain" in a tone more befitting that of NO4H than a human being. With the comm's closed, he turned to NO4H directly, "Confirm the admiral's countermanding order, and note the time in the Engineering log."

"Orders confirmed, and a log entry has been made at the request of Chief Engineer Calhound." Noah recited, as he returned to normal operating procedures, including whatever else the Admiral had planned. Xaith then stepped back into the main hall, and gave a final order to the computer to reseal the hatch before opening a line of communication to Main Engineering.

"Rorq!" He shouted into his comm device, "Noah is back online. Pull the team from manual operations—pull the whole damn section—and get them started on analyzing every scrap of data we're getting from sensors." In his voice was the urgency that reflected also in the pace of his run, "I want to know everything about that ship. From mass-density, local gravametric distortions, and energy wake, to the chemical composition of debris, and resonance frequency of the hull, right down to the sound it'd make if bounced a goddamn ping-pong ball off of it."

He was, initially, running to Engineering but new orders relayed from the bridge changed his path, and the direction of his orders. "Forward a copy of the information and your own analysis to my quarters."

"Quarters, sir?" Lt. Rorq asked right before the line to Engineering was cut, and Xaith made a new call.

"Engineering to Calhound," Xaith said, using the self-call exploit his call was routed to his quarters. He simply said: "Adjutant online" before replying to the Admiral's orders to fighter control. "In and out, Captain, I read you."




The fighter bay was a massive, and open space. When Xaith arrived the CAG officer met him already briefed on the situation. Both being career men the Commander of the Air Group, and the Sargent First Class wasted little time sizing each other up. After which Xaith got that look. The one he got from Lt. Rorq, and all the other officers see for the first time that an Enlisted man has a position of actual power, without being an officer. "Four minutes is not a lot of time, Sargent." The CAG officer offered as they made haste to fighter control. "If you know something I don't then now would be the time to share."

"Try holding your breath, sir," Xaith offered to one of the highest ranking officers on the ship. "Two minutes is a lifetime, when you're holding your breath, and four is an eternity." he clarified the reference to the relativistic nature of time, as his EEGARD drew up a slew of schematics regarding devices already on hand. His mind raced as he ripped through each one for relevant details, "Ordinance," he ordered both to the CAG officer as well as to his own device. The Commander frowned, and Xaith paused to address the awkwardness of the situation, "We don't have time for politics, sir, and I don't stand on formalities. I'm not here to run your shit, but I—we have a job to do. If you don't like how I consult, then file a complaint with the admiral when we're done and safely still alive."

The Commander of the Air Group, a man of action not prone to hesitation, was quick with his response. "I'll do just that, Sargent. In the mean-time you do not give orders. You provide your expertise, and I give the orders." Xaith acknowledged with a dismissive gesture as to indicate 'yes, sir, whatever you say sir' as to bring the pissing match to a close. Each moment they spent hosing down the deck was a second he was distracted, and was therefore wasted.

"The Grave Robbers and the Barracudas are out there with twenty Serpent missiles and two Trebuchets each," explained the CAG Officer, as using whats already available may be vital to forming any kind of plan, "The Vitae has a number of weapons on-board but not nearly so many mines, or mine-layers to put a grid in place so quickly."

The Chief Engineer's eyes scanned the complete list of ordinance available for launch, from his EEGARD, while scanning what other systems he had access to from the console. "Bring them back," he said to the CAG officer.

"Sargent, we just went over this. You're not authorized to recall them."

Xaith shook his head, "I didn't say to the hanger," he corrected as he swiped through some holograms, "Bring them to the ship." The holographic image displayed his plan as he searched for ordinance to implement with it.

The CAG officer inspected the hologram, as it dawned on him what he was looking at, Xaith called up the shield control subsystems to see what their reaction delay was. "The skill alone required..." to which Calhound interrupted with a shrug, and countered with a dismissive: "I assumed you had the best of the best out there, which is good, because anything less will not work."

"Will it though?" the commander questioned Xaith, "Wouldn't such a maneuver ordinarily requires shields?"

After finding what he was looking for, Xaith shook his head, "No. We'll swap out the the T-47's missile pods with electronic warfare modules to engage while making their runs." he zoomed in on the hologram to show that a non-guided electronic attack would be too weak to affect the ark directly, but would produce a similar polarization effect on the hull. "The problem is, the escorts can't fly too close to that field without being effected."

Putting ECM on an escort fighter was not a plan anyone liked, but with the CAG officer's permission, Xaith put a call out to the Grave Robbers and the Barracuda's wing commanders to explain the situation. "This is Chief Engineer Xaith Calhound consulting for your CAG officer. I need you to do something for me while you're out there..." Xaith paused as he transmitted some flight plans, "I need you escort some T-47s as they skim the hull of this ship with ECM pods. From stem to stern, and aft to bow. They will do so in a manner that creates long, uninterrupted, non-crossing lines of contact."

He turned back to the CAG officer with a list of supplies. "If we pull all the orbital attack ordinance we can from our Reaper Cruiser, and load them into two squads of those fighters, we can do it all in one run. The distributed ordinance will stick to the parts of our polarized hull, and since they're designed to still function in a heavily ionized atmosphere, the electronic countermeasures pods shouldn't have an effect on them."

"How does that make a mine-field?" The CAG officer asked as he motioned to his next two top squad leaders to prep for launch.

"It doesn't," Xaith admitted, "Not in the traditional sense, but the force of our acceleration to Pre-Jump will distribute the materials like a mine-field. Until then they'll be completely masked by our mass, and our hull polarization. When we go to make our jump, they'll dislodge and we'll cycle the shield's frequency which will repel and active the ordinance." Xaith made sideways jazz-hands to symbolize the ripple in the electromagnetic spectrum. "They'll be armed, and think they're falling through an atmosphere, and won't explode until either they hit something, or their internal timers tell them too."

Xaith clarified as he pointed to the shield modulation metrics, and programmed a response into the space-to-ground bombs. "Additionally, they'll aid in scattering our wake, making it difficult—if not impossible—to track us from our initial position. It's the best we can do with the three minutes we have remaining. It also leaves our ship-to-ship ordinance free for our fighters discretionary application to the incoming hostiles."

"Lt. Hawkins," the CAG officer shouted into the line that had been open since Xaith initially called the squad, "Make it happen."
<Snipped quote by RedLeather>
I don't think he has, but I believe the OP mentions the possibility for later, and that people are welcome to submit in anticipation of that. Do you really think all our characters are gonna survive this?


At the time I applied it was not open, but there were exceptions considered for a number of positions. I remember @sep talking about the slew of people that applied the first time, but didn't apply this time; and that he thought more people from the first game would be back this time. At any time if you're unsure of a thread is open, you can check the main board which shows it's status.



Our present status no longer closed. As @RedLeather mentions, it was changed to apply (which I assume is what happens when it's open).






@Sep please tell me what this beautiful bastard is so I know how to RP being around it.
@Ashevelendar At the moment I've become quite busy for the next few days, I'll review and re-submit at a later time.
@LegionPothIX@Mae Has already taken 'nature' and I've taken 'wind/storms'.


Damn, I worked so hard on that and don't have any other ideas. What is @mae's take on nature-based race, and how does it differ from my Perennials? Is at least the race still viable? I could change the goddess to poisons/plants and such and still keep the same race.
Oooh~ This seems a very interesting game indeed. I should very much like to try it. Here is my application. Building a civilization took freakish longer than I expected it to.








The races. Both species gain their vaguely human form the corpses strewn about the plant's surface. One of her early creations, Gaia copied the template of another dominant species elsewhere in the universe to prove a point. Humans are inherently self-destructive. It was a lesson that cost her a considerable amount of her power as they wiped out far more life on the planet than anticipated with thermonuclear warfare.

As is the nature of Nature, their cycle ended with winter, and a new cycle began. This one to be dominated by the plants of the surface, and the fungi that grew in caves. In the thousands of years since humanity infested her heavenly body, many generations of plants and fungi adapted to consume the ambiant radiation, and then eventually starved to death, paving the way for new species--species not unlike those that predated humanity--to grow in their place.

I've built my plant to play host to twin-evolutionary races, of equal and opposing development and alignment, which each are generating their own structures and societies. It's my expectation that they'll kill each other off before too long, and in doing so, shift the alignment of their god (based on the alignment of the surviving species).
I'd like to apply to this game, and have a few questions about when and how the mechanics actually come into play. I'm very familiar with both the game mechanics, and the setting, of both pathfinder and classic D&D (AD&D and 3.0-3.5e) Do I just create a character like I would for any other table, with some emphasis on the character's backstory and personality, or ... ??? How should I go about applying to this game?

P.S. I'd like to play a charisma caster with heals, like an Oracle or Bard since "tank" is probably taken by the paladin.
I just realized that my (only) IC post contradicts literally everyone else - people are not required to be in their quarters. That enough of an excuse for me to justify (to myself) making another post!~


Apparently, you have future sight, and just jumped the gun you silly medium you.
Damn, if I knew my asking for clarification would cause argument I wouldn't have said anything. I trust the GMs' judgement, that's all I'll say.


The word argument has its root of argue, which has the etymology of making things clear.

arguo [Latin]: to show, make clear, attempt to show/censure, reprove.

If nothing else I think additional clarity has been as a consequence of your intervention--that the power in question is as clearly stated as it's going to get, and I feel no ill-will in that regard.
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