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3 mos ago
Current Yeah I just logged into my forum dedicated to elaborate games of let's pretend and thought I definitely wanna buy health insurance or whatever that bot is peddling on there
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4 mos ago
You can tell who's still keeping their pictures on discord because the link breaks in like a day
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6 mos ago
I think that’s just called playing dnd
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8 mos ago
Y’all block people? I just flame them back
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1 yr ago
Everybody I see complaining that this site is dead has like 3 IC posts total. My brother in mahz you pulled the trigger
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The only two things I either missed or otherwise didn't see were the technology level of the world, and the racial make up of its inhabitants. Is this a modern fantasy setting, with technologies similar to ours today? Or is this more of a medieval fantasy? And from what I could gather it seems like there are only humans here, right? No elves or dwarves or anything else?


I know the tech level is renaissance sans guns, can’t speak authoritatively on races tho


This more or less, and yeah, just humans.

I might have missed it in the lore writeup but are there any established religions?


There’s local folk superstitions but not really anything on a large scale. Some of the more eccentric mages might worship the “world soul” or some variation of that as the source of all mana but most of them are far too up their own ass for formalized religion. Commoners, especially if they’ve never seen a mage before, might see their local ruling mage as some variety of demigod but it’s illegal for a mage to actively try to solicit worship from their subjects.

Your character could be from a community that leans very heavily into the world soul worship, enough to establish a temple, but there likely wouldn't be any kind of widespread church hierarchy outside that prefecture.
I'm intrigued! I have a past mage character from a RP that didn't really go far. Wonder if I could use her here... Are automatons/golem-magic a thing in this world?


Automatons in the steampunk-y sense are not, but creating animate constructs out of, say, stone or ice is.


“Aged slabs of ancient stone paved the road to Glynwood, a long march that ended atop the hill at a massive archway of solid gold. The Great Gate, they called it. Though we had since left the forest behind, the path was still overgrown in places with moss and shrubbery as a testament to its disuse. No surprise; no one in their right mind would take this route, but, as first year students, we were required to make the trek at least once. In all the time we’d traveled, I had yet to catch even a glimpse of the school; as we summited the hill, it became clear as to why. The ground fell away into a vast basin, a monumental crater that descended sharply into a lake fed by the biggest waterfall I’d ever seen on the far ridge. What initially appeared as stone reliefs chiseled into the cliffs revealed themselves as structures as we grew closer; there stood a veritable city carved into the face of the rock, relics of a civilization long gone. Swells of mana danced faintly on the wind, drawn ever downward toward the island at the center of it all: the Glynwood Institute for Thaumaturgical Studies.”
Diary of an Unnamed Glynwood Student


The Realm breathes a collective sigh of relief.

After six grueling years of civil war, the Magisters’ Republic of Cresvald is again unified. Yet as her citizens exchange their swords for plowshares and the reconstruction begins in earnest, unrest still looms in the shadows. The Provision For Ethical Necromancy, the crux of the treaty between the insurrectionists and the Magisterium, has left many on both sides of the war uneasy, and though the fighting may have ceased, animosity still simmers, waiting for the spark to ignite it once again.

None await this more than the Sons of Anedor, an insidious cult of disenfranchised necromancers and ambitious magi alike who will settle for nothing less than total independence from Magisterium sovereignty. From behind identity-veiling enchantments that obscure even their very auras, these cultists claim to infest every corner of the Realm, engaging in overt violence and subtle politicking alike to actualize their ideals.

Still, life goes on; commoners return to the fields, mages devote their powers once again to more peaceful pursuits, and a certain group of young spellcasters take their first steps into the world of magic in earnest. To them, I offer this:

Welcome to the Glynwood Institute for Thaumaturgical Studies.



Premise

As you can probably guess from the name, this RP centers on the freshman class of the Glynwood Institute for Thaumaturgical Studies (GIFTS, if you will), an academy of spellcraft in a nation freshly released from the throes of civil war. Of course, universities are rarely free of politics even in the best of times, and Glynwood is no different. The politics just become a bit more dangerous when everyone involved can shoot lightning from their hands and political violence by necromancers is becoming increasingly common.

I won’t patronize you with a list of rules, just don’t be difficult. For the sake of pacing, I’d like to keep to more or less a weekly posting schedule, though I’m obviously not going to stop anyone from posting more often.

There’s a decent bit of lore, most of which is at least passingly relevant, but the magic system and worldbuilding are kinda loose by design, so feel free to join the Discord if you want to run a concept by me or hit me up with any other questions you may have.



Deepest Lore













Chad grew practically giddy as his strike connected and smoothly transitioned into a follow-up attack, even as the mage coalesced his final, desperate spell. Unfortunately, he was off by mere milliseconds; the drawn electricity from the room exploded before the vampire could deliver his coup de grace, and he was sent staggering backward in barely-contained spasms. The vampire flailed an uncoordinated arm forward in hopes he'd connect with something, but caught only air - the inquisitor had fled.

It wasn't a surprise, in retrospect. Mages were such fragile things, and his best efforts would only damn him to a death by a thousand cuts at this rate, even if he avoided every decisive blow Chad threw at him. But it was annoying, and the Astorio had received his fill of annoyances for the day. The speech was simply the icing on the pie - or whatever mortals put icing on - did he honestly expect a mage of all things to be an ideal hostage? Quentin Santorini was as irrelevant as they came, even in this ragtag band of nobodies, and Chad had already written him off the moment he found himself trapped outside anyway. Daughter Dearest's death would earn the vampire an earful, the prisoner was quite literally the entire reason they came, and he found Casper marginally useful, but the little purple boy? Eh.

"Kill the little bastard, see if I care. I don't even know his name," Chadwick called nonchalantly, "But I know a cornered rat when I see one and you only have until his body hits the ground to run away from me."

Ah, that must've been it. The inquisitor was stalling for his reinforcements so he could make a run for it while they chopped down his underlings. He hoped Dionne's brat didn't have a martyr complex in her, because this idiot really had no leverage. If they weren't already outnumbered - or at least they would be as soon as the elevator opened - he'd have speared through the both of them like he should've done with the other prisoner.

"You have until I lose my patience to rescue the other mage," Chad grumbled under his breath, mostly to Caspian since Donovan likely cared as much as he did and the other mages probably lacked the hearing necessary to make out his words at a distance anyway. In the meantime, he counted his paces. Each stride was mentally measured to account for where his feet would have to contact with the floor once he decided to cross the room and rip out the inquisitor's throat. After all, corpses fell quite fast and Chadwick had given himself a deadline; it wouldn't do to step on a metal strip and lose precious seconds should the inquisitor bring his magic to bear again.





The barest hint of a morbid smile graced Quinn's lips as his plan worked to perfection and the woman found herself inadvertently demoted in the inquisitor's graces from lackey to victim. He didn't dwell on the implications of her death, just that he'd succeeded. Measured breaths. One step at a time. Light work.

Caspian's request was likewise simple. It hardly seemed the time to be floating around with all the electricity arcing about, especially given how hesitantly he'd reacted to Quinn's earlier weight-lessening spell, but he'd have to trust that the other mage wouldn't immediately dive into a lightning bolt. The boy gave an upward flick of his fingers and rejected the planet's claim on Caspian completely. He'd intended to keep an eye on the blond to catch him should he immediately blunder into harm's way, but a ding from behind him demanded his attention more promptly.

His cue came sooner than he would've liked, but he expected it nevertheless, as the elevator began its descent. If Quinn couldn't lift the entire car - definitely the simplest solution but not one he wanted to gamble on, especially if he had to hold Caspian up while doing so - he'd have to strike as soon as the doors opened to catch them by surprise. A position on the ceiling would afford him both an ideal line of sight and an additional safeguard against the elevator's occupants spotting him too early, but before he could launch himself up to his perch, the sizzle of the room behind him died down and was replaced with a pressure on his neck and the hiss of a readied spell in his ear.

Somehow, he wasn't dead. That was good. The inquisitor's rambling went mostly unprocessed, as a million other things bounced around in Quinn's brain overtop of the words. It would be simple to kill the inquisitor from this position, but doing so without also dying in the process was far less feasible, if not impossible. A suicide for the greater good was certainly romantic, but Quinn felt it should be left as just that - an act of fictional romance.

Apparently he'd been left alive strategically, as the inquisitor's closing remarks reached his ear. Hostage trade. But he wasn't a good hostage. They'd used him as they needed to levitate the prisoner out and they could dispose of him with his purpose fulfilled. He was new, forgettable- wait, no, they'd staged this rescue over unimportant prisoners, surely they wouldn't throw him to the adders so quickly.

"Kill the little bastard, see if I care."

Astorio. Right.

He was going to die.

Well, two could play at that game; Quinn had no loyalty to the rebellion either. He drew his spell back from Caspian immediately, lest he goad the man into thinking he'd attempted some kind of escape. It was already all he could do not to squirm in place; thankfully the overwhelming amount of tension in his frame kept all his muscles locked firmly in place. The man was obviously waiting for him to try and fling himself or his captor away, and as fast as he could be, he didn't think he could outrun a lightning bolt.

"So if I pull her over here, I get to walk?" He finally asked coldly. The man's word meant nothing, but he could at least indulge the game enough to buy time for a more thought out escape.




The vampire gritted his teeth as his sword arm spasmed under the current, fingers too tense to drop the blade and ego too prideful to allow himself to be disarmed besides. Nevertheless, Chad took a step back defensively. Not the worst outcome; he'd scored a hit, even if minor, and the shock was negligible, all things considered. It wasn't like he had a heart in danger of stopping, in any case. Of course, the inquisitor surely knew that and would definitely raise the voltage of his next attack accordingly.

Despite the inquisitor's momentary lapse in judgement, it seemed he was quite prepared for a fight, as the room became an extension of his magic in the most textbook Alderman tactic that Chadwick had ever been given the displeasure of witnessing firsthand. They'd walked right into a trap. He should've taken the killing blow when it had been presented to him; the prisoner was functionally dead and his act of restraint was for naught. The exits were blocked, so it wasn't like they could lure Hasgud out of his element or even run away like cowards, and he wasn't likely to drop the barriers for his reinforcements either. They'd likely just take magical pot shots at the rebels from behind the barriers after they finished off the purple kid.

The vampire watched his footwork carefully, ever wary of stepping on anything metallic. The crackle of superheated air tipped him off just enough to evade any stray arcs from the room, but it demanded quite a bit of concentration and didn't leave much room for offense. Ugh, he needed mage support, how tiresome. He wasn't certain whether Dionne's daughter dearest had the aptitude to curve her spells around a rampaging vampire or if he'd be risking a burn every time he advanced, but Casper was a transmuter, if he recalled correctly. That'd have to do.

A sudden surge of lightning forced the vampire to shift out of its path as a blur. This fight was definitely going to burn a lot of blood. Where was the cannon fodder when he needed them?

He held his commentary until after the thunderous crack that accompanied the bolt had passed, then flicked his eyes briefly to the blond with his sword still at the ready. "Casper, disrupt his circuit where you can, we need room to maneuver." Poor idiot would definitely get himself fried if he went in swinging right now. As would Chad, probably, but someone had to be the vanguard around here.

The vampire stepped forward assertively at last, not even bothering to put up a guard with his sword - it wouldn't do a thing to the lightning regardless - though he kept his steps cautious and measure despite this seeming recklessness. Rather than keep to elegant swordplay, his approach more resembled a boxer hounding his opponent with jabs, throwing repeated thrusts with his weapon at the man's vitals, only daring to follow up with a more decisive swing once he'd made contact and found a proper opening for a combo. Accuracy was the utmost importance at this stage; a glancing blow would only open him up to another zap. At the very least, he'd keep the inquisitor's concentration on himself and not allow him free reign to manage the room against them.




They're laughing. He bore his soul to Victor and they're laughing.

The other boy at least felt the need to clarify that he wasn't laughing at Danny, but presumably at what he said, and he supposed it was probably incoherent enough to be funny. He'd just have to take Victor at his word and hope Imogen was barely suppressing a giggle for the same reason. His mouth floundered open a few times as he mustered a defense, but the duo - and Maive - had already vacated the island before he had a chance to get his thoughts in order. Probably for the best, lest he say something to further embarrass himself. The adrenaline dump he felt coming on certainly wasn't doing his brain any good anyway.

Daniel followed close behind, tentatively deciding escape was more pressing than defending his reputation. He dipped a foot experimentally into the spring and, as it never seemed to touch the sand at the bottom, continued until his entire body had slipped past the veil between worlds. No weird vision or dream of flying accompanied the return trip, and instead he found himself seated on a toilet in a cramped little stall with a suspicious lack of dicks drawn all over it.

The spring really did lead to the toilets. Gross.

A relieved sigh escaped his mouth and, although his body urged him to stay seated and rest, the remaining higher reasoning centers of his brain convinced him that being found asleep on the shitter in the morning probably wouldn't be a good look for him. Unfortunately, said higher reasoning centers seemed to be working on a slight delay, as when Danny exited the stall and found himself staring at Imogen, it took him far too long to notice anything amiss. No urinals. Girl standing there.

"Oh fuck- Is this the girl's room?" He didn't wait for an answer, and instead dipped his head and power walked out the door. At least it wasn't occupied, Imogen aside.




Verity was the last thing on Daniel's mind right now. Was she strange? Yes, extremely, but they had bigger things to worry about and gossip was hardly productive to survival. Unless Kharon or that wind thing could fly them off to England again, they were still up shit creek without a paddle. At least, until Victor's voice rung out from nearby, eliciting a startled flinch from the resident persona wielder.

He definitely was not there a second ago, but the words that left his mouth gave Danny enough information to fill in the blanks. The water was a portal, then. It made sense; the dockhouse led to the beach, it would follow that the spring led somewhere else too. Though it raised the question of why a second floor bathroom. Was he supposed to climb out of the toilet or something? Victor dropped a multicolored wad over a rock, which Daniel surmised must've been their clothes. The guy was absolutely mad if he jumped back into the haunted water just to deliver a couple shirts, but Danny was immensely grateful all the same. He could've hugged him!

But he was shirtless. And that's gay.

Tempting as it was to rush right in the spring, his French savior requested an explanation and Danny figured he was better qualified than anyone else to give it, even with how little he understood of the situation himself.

"Were you here for the tornado monster?" he asked as he made his way over to the rock and rifled through the pile of fabric for his shirt. "There was a... storm that was, like, alive - I think it came out of Maive - but the frog killed it, or made it go away, or something. Anyway, then my persona - that's the monsters on our side, I think - came out, and I really wanted to kill the frog, and Khar- my persona just made it rot away really fast, and then it just dissolved into water. And then my persona disappeared, but I think I can still feel it. Sort of. I- I dunno how to explain it." As he rambled, it fully occurred to him that nothing he said made any sense, but neither did anything else on this island, and if Victor could wrap his head around a spring connected to a toilet without any headscratching, he could surely settle for something as nebulous as a protector manifesting out of the aether.

"As for everyone else..." Now fully clothed, he took the opportunity to look around again at last. Huh, this place cleared out fast. "I didn't even see them leave." There definitely hadn't been another frog, and the island, leveled as it was by the rampage of monster and personae alike, didn't exactly have many places for most of their group to be hiding.

That meant they all figured out the spring before him and didn't even say anything!

Unless they all left him behind to die after he saved their asses, he had to assume the answer was so obvious that no one assumed he'd miss it. Which meant he probably looked like an unobservant idiot for not noticing. In fairness, he was, but he wasn't about to go down without an excuse.

"I promise I'm not stupid or anything! There was just a lot going on and I left my glasses in my dorm and honestly I'm still trying to wrap my head around the part where I killed a demon frog with my mind," Danny explained sheepishly. "Sorry. Thanks for bringing our stuff, a lot of people wouldn't have come back in after that, I think. I guess everyone else must've stumbled into the spring too."




With the prisoner handled, Quinn had leave to tend to more important matters, namely the knife flying right at him. Just like practice. Probably. He stepped back and gripped one of the open doors, slamming it shut in front of him to intercept the knife. The breeze that flowed around his makeshift barrier gave him a decent idea of the guard's affinity, which unfortunately meant he couldn't toss her around the room at his leisure as he would've wanted.

Before he could put any alternative ideas into play, the room came alive with the inquisitor's magic. The lavender-haired mage had barely a second of warning to wrest his hands from the metal door as all his hair spontaneously stood on end. Lightning arced across the doorway, effectively locking Quinn out; he could open the doors without touching them, but it wouldn't do any good if he couldn't cross their threshold anyway. Not that relocating himself back inside the room would do him much good, the place had become a veritable death trap and the odds of managing to levitate the other prisoner out without him falling into a stray coruscation were slim to none. A shame too, the inquisitor had apparently chosen a new obsession, willing as he was to trade his prisoners for Lyra. Quinn wasn't quite sure if the other prisoner was even worth the effort to save after that brain-dead comment, the lapse in the inquisitor's interest would've been his best opportunity to try regardless.

Despite his recognition of Lyra, the inquisitor hadn't neglected the rest of his attackers, and he promptly took aim at the others with massive surges of- oh, that one was coming at him!

"Oppolik," Quinn squeaked, and a disk of energy sprung up in the bolt's path. The barrier instantly became a spider web of cracks upon impact with the lightning, shattering as easily as a dinner plate struck with a hammer. Still, it hindered the incoming attack just enough to buy a few precious instants for evasion. The mage leaned to the side at an impossible angle to allow the lightning bolt to pass overhead. It took a moment for the oppressive heat of the charged air above to fade before gravity tilted back to normal and he pushed off the ground to right his stance again.

Unwilling to risk the inquisitor's full attentions with reinforcements likely on their way and himself as their first obstacle, Quinn instead shifted his target to the remaining guard. After his rescue of the blue-haired mage, she'd definitely be waiting for any gravity shifts he could conjure, and anyone deft enough to dodge knives like that wouldn't have any issues with a terebrien either. Instead, he took a more subtle approach as he peered beyond the electric wall that barred his entry; the mage thrusted a hand forward and tilted his wrist as if turning a doorknob. Gravity warped around the other guard's head to trick her vestibular sense into believing gravity had shifted back toward the wall behind her while a separate gravity well tugged her along a completely different vector and right into an electrified strip. With luck, she'd overcompensate in the wrong direction and end up launching herself right into danger instead.




How this group of incompetent fools thought they were cut out for mercenary work was beyond him. Half of them barely seemed to know how the wield the weapons they carried, and ended up promptly disarmed anyway. It was telling that the most useful contributors were a timid farmhand and a teenager. At least Esvelee and Cerric got thrashed around a bit up on their literal and figurative high horse, though the blue-skinned man seemed to find it entertaining more than anything. Jackass.

He did have a point, though; the necromancer wasn't their concern unless he continued to threaten the wagon. Loath as Ceolfric was to leave their attacker without a few new holes in his gut, they didn't have time to scour the woods for the little coward. He'd probably be doing that on his own too, if their sorry performance against a few dogs was any indication.

The bandit flicked his blade harshly at the ground to shake off the coat of congealed blood and questionable ichor, but didn't sheathe it quite yet. People that sent minions to die in their stead didn't often have a death wish, but their assailant could end up overconfident now that he'd wounded an inattentive noblewoman. Granted, that was contingent upon Ceolfric still being around to pick up their slack, so he paused rather than follow Cerric to give them a chance to recover.

"Liadon's right, we're not here to kill some corpse-fucker. Stick with the wagon and keep an eye out," Ceolfric announced gruffly. If their attacker wanted to raise more pets, he'd have to tip off Kyreth in the process, so they'd have ample warning if he wished to continue his assault. Otherwise, he wasn't getting paid to deal with the bastard and he wasn't going to babysit anyone that disagreed either. He barely liked their odds against entirely mundane threats, now that he'd seen the group in action.


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