Difference between revisions of "Conquerors of the Planes"

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The party returned to Electerian territory to rendezvous with [[Ardam Elmine]], who had apparently brought an artifact recovered ''on Gaera'' that could be one of the legendary weapons. It was the hilt of a sword that had no apparent blade. In a popular Electerian card game tournament, the party won another artifact, a medallion whose effects weren't currently totally clear. They were given to [[Sen]] for safekeeping, as he was the only one who used a sword, and was probably the best qualified to protect them anyway.
 
The party returned to Electerian territory to rendezvous with [[Ardam Elmine]], who had apparently brought an artifact recovered ''on Gaera'' that could be one of the legendary weapons. It was the hilt of a sword that had no apparent blade. In a popular Electerian card game tournament, the party won another artifact, a medallion whose effects weren't currently totally clear. They were given to [[Sen]] for safekeeping, as he was the only one who used a sword, and was probably the best qualified to protect them anyway.
  
[[Yavvil Ocht]] also finds a way to use that damned key! Apparently there's a huge circle of stones out in the nowhereland, and [[Yavvil Ocht|Yavvil]] inadvertently used it to call the hordes of Desiron, the ancient god of chaos and destruction. Whoops. Among the hordes were millions of small partly-mechanical goblins and what could only be termed the ''"cybertarrasque."''
+
[[Yavvil Ocht]] also finds a way to use that damned key! Apparently there's a huge circle of stones out in the nowhereland, and [[Yavvil Ocht|Yavvil]] inadvertently used it to call the hordes of Desiron, the ancient god of chaos and destruction. Whoops. Among the hordes were millions of small partly-mechanical goblins and what could only be termed the ''"cybertarrasque."'' The sword given to the party flared forth with a blade of light, enabling [[Sen]] to wipe out the goblin army with chilling speed. Immediately afterward he was attacked by the Tarrasque, which ''missed'' and gave the party an opportunity to run the heck away. [[Yavvil Ocht|Yavvil]] disappeared.
  
Now, there are ''all'' kinds of legends and myths about this mess. Apparently it's been predicted or foreshadowed on every side of the resource war.
+
Now, there are ''all'' kinds of legends and myths about this mess. Apparently it's been predicted or foreshadowed on every side of the resource war. Locating [[Yavvil Ocht|Yavvil]] once more, he mentioned what he calls “the Great Purge,” an altairian legend where terrible creatures would exterminate all life except that loyal to Altair.  
  
In progress. -[[User:Kai|Kai]] 21:23, 23 December 2006 (PST)
+
The Shakari had some information as well. The Shakari had apparently heard of Desiron, and they spoke of a dark servant that wanders the plane claiming souls for his evil master—- the entropic reaper. The Shakari fear him as an embodiment of chaos, a twisted perversion of the real death, which is orderly and painless.
 +
 
 +
The entropic reaper supposedly knows all of Desiron's secrets, but is unwilling to reveal them under normal circumstances. It fears nothing, including its own death, as it will ultimately be reborn. However, the reaper does have one weakness (and one fear): purification. It is possible to use holy magic to destroy the creature permanently, also dealing a serious blow to Desiron in the process.
 +
The Shakari have a crystal that can be used to trap the reaper, but no one has dared to attack it in an attempt to capture it for purification. Thanks to the party's widespread reputation as neutral parties who only wish to stop the conflict, the Shakari gave them this crystal.
 +
 
 +
In progress. -[[User:Kai|Kai]] 21:29, 23 December 2006 (PST)

Revision as of 22:29, 23 December 2006

Conquerers of the Planes



Gamemaster: Archmage

Relevant Characters

Rhiannon
Tassi Wells
Holden
Edwyrd
Sen
Ode Sparrowmoon

NPCs

Jack Hawthorne
Hakaril Silvar
Ardam Elmine
Melchoir
Yavvil Ocht
Mikhail Une

Logs

Forum-side recruitment
Cthulobster
Ode and Tassi after the revolution
Regulan Spa CIRP

Summary

Hakaril Silvar summoned several adventurers to his office in the castle by means of flyers or, in Tassi Wells' case, by personal request. The problem was relatively minor: some seriously-displaced monsters cropping up in farm country some distance away.

The origin of the displacement was a portal in the frozen northern areas of Igala. The portal seemed to be sucking astral energy from Gaera to... well, someplace else. Upon closer investigation, the portal led to a facility on the plane of Regulus.

The natives had someone there who could speak a variety of Elvish, and so the party was able to discover to some extent what was going on. The plane suffered from shortages of astral energy due to the activities of a race of azure-skinned elves called Electerians. The Electerians consumed astral energy by breathing, and their technology ran on it, expended it beyond replenishing.

In order to fight a war against a race of religious fanatics known only as the Altarians, the Electerians had to seek out other sources of astral energy. They also had an enemy on their other flank: The Shakari. A race of near-human Druids living in the dwindling wilderness, the Shakari hated the Electerians for wasting the mana resources of their plane. They also hated the Altarians for being imperialist fanatical madmen.

So the Electerians looked for new resources. Because the only living things they found on Gaera were large giant-eating frost worms roaming the tundra, they assumed it was an uninhabited plane and, as a result, fair game for harvesting.

The party had a choice between starting a war over Gaera's astral plane, or finding the Electerians another solution so that they could quit leeching mana of their own volition. To that end, the party investigated the Altarians to see what the other party to the conflict could be like. In the meantime, the Electerians sent a delegation to Gaera to engage in negotiations with Hakaril Silvar. The key point in the negotiations is that the Electerians are not interested in engaging in full-scale war with the Gaerans; if anything, the electerian position is that they are being victimized by destructive Shakari terrorists and Altairian fascists.

The Altarians were a race of, at least superficially, Celestials. They had wings at least. What was odd was that they had a number of wings that seemingly related to their status. White wings and hair were slightly superior to black wings and hair, and the more wings an Altarian had, the closer they were to God. In essence, "Two Wings Good, Four Wings Better." The number of wings an Altarian has are allegedly correlated to its actions in a past life. Merit gained one wings and therefore status in one's next life. Misdeeds meant demotion.

The party's informant was a blackwinged Altarian named Mikhail Une. He expressed sadness that they were even further from Altaire than he was, and was the only Altarian who would even acknowledge them. The Altarians allegedly had a duty from their god to take custody of the plane, taking it under their control. It was why they were created.

He mentions that there is some talk of very powerful artifacts that could be used to turn the tide of the war, ancient relics buried out of reach of the common man. However, he also notes that most of these artifacts would not be associated with Altair, and as a result, that their use would be considered heretical.

There was supposedly a tomb to the northwest that belonged to an Electerian warrior so respected on the battlefield for his strength and courage that even his enemies were unable to slander him. Supposedly, he fought in the pseudo-mythological “Last War of the Tyrants” that took place over a thousand years prior. It had been a battle between Vishmarl, a god of valour, and Desiron, the god of chaos. Makhail-Une heard some altairian soldiers discussing a possible investigation of the tomb, suggesting that the artifacts could be there.

When the party arrived at the tomb of the legendary warrior, they found that it had been disturbed. Worse still, they lost a party member to the hazards of the tomb. Edwyrd was killed in battle, and when Tassi attempted later to resurrect him, her goddess forbade it. Armed with the knowledge that these artifacts existed and may well be in the hands of one of the parties to this conflict, the party returned to the Altarian capital.

The party also sought out the Shakari. From them they learned that the plane's plant life was capable of replenishing the mana spent by the Electerians, but their rampant industrialization was destroying this resource and, rather than changing their behavior, the Electerians were apparently expanding to other planes to squander their resources as well. The Shakari were not pleased with anyone at this point.

They discussed using polymorphing magic to infiltrate Altarian society and learn more. Meanwhile, back in Altarian territory over breakfast, they overheard a discussion of the rumors of “rebellion among the chosen.” Supposedly, an “unauthorized” altairian settlement was slowly growing in the north. Upon locating and visiting this settlement, they were welcomed with the same indifference they met in the city. However, they were met there by Mikhail.

According to this charismatic new leader, Altair has abandoned his children and has turned a blind eye to their devotion. No longer is he interested in protecting and guiding his people. This has attracted mostly the lower members of society, a large number of whom are willing to die for their new leader without further justification. The leader in question is Yavvil Ocht, a powerful being who is apparently a cleric of Altair; he also claims that there are other sources aside from Altair from which power can be drawn and that these sources are less interested in enforcing petty classist structure and more willing to reward devotion. Enter the "prolealtarian revolution."

According to Makhail-Une, Yavvil-Ocht's current mission for him and other altairians is to trek just a bit further north to the Algol Mountains, where Yavvil has seen visions that a great weapon is being stored. As an act of good faith, they offered to retrieve the artifact. Jack trusted Yavvil and wanted to assist, and the others saw it as an opportunity to learn more about this group. At the very least, helping the rebels would eliminate an enemy for the Electerians, and potentially end the war spurring the theft of Gaera's mana.

From the mountains the party recovered some sort of key that had apparently been saturated with the powers of darkness. Good omen, right? Unable to do anything with it themselves, but unwilling to trust Yavvil completely with the artifact of horrifying evil, the party kept a close eye on things as they turned it over.

The party returned to Electerian territory to rendezvous with Ardam Elmine, who had apparently brought an artifact recovered on Gaera that could be one of the legendary weapons. It was the hilt of a sword that had no apparent blade. In a popular Electerian card game tournament, the party won another artifact, a medallion whose effects weren't currently totally clear. They were given to Sen for safekeeping, as he was the only one who used a sword, and was probably the best qualified to protect them anyway.

Yavvil Ocht also finds a way to use that damned key! Apparently there's a huge circle of stones out in the nowhereland, and Yavvil inadvertently used it to call the hordes of Desiron, the ancient god of chaos and destruction. Whoops. Among the hordes were millions of small partly-mechanical goblins and what could only be termed the "cybertarrasque." The sword given to the party flared forth with a blade of light, enabling Sen to wipe out the goblin army with chilling speed. Immediately afterward he was attacked by the Tarrasque, which missed and gave the party an opportunity to run the heck away. Yavvil disappeared.

Now, there are all kinds of legends and myths about this mess. Apparently it's been predicted or foreshadowed on every side of the resource war. Locating Yavvil once more, he mentioned what he calls “the Great Purge,” an altairian legend where terrible creatures would exterminate all life except that loyal to Altair.

The Shakari had some information as well. The Shakari had apparently heard of Desiron, and they spoke of a dark servant that wanders the plane claiming souls for his evil master—- the entropic reaper. The Shakari fear him as an embodiment of chaos, a twisted perversion of the real death, which is orderly and painless.

The entropic reaper supposedly knows all of Desiron's secrets, but is unwilling to reveal them under normal circumstances. It fears nothing, including its own death, as it will ultimately be reborn. However, the reaper does have one weakness (and one fear): purification. It is possible to use holy magic to destroy the creature permanently, also dealing a serious blow to Desiron in the process. The Shakari have a crystal that can be used to trap the reaper, but no one has dared to attack it in an attempt to capture it for purification. Thanks to the party's widespread reputation as neutral parties who only wish to stop the conflict, the Shakari gave them this crystal.

In progress. -Kai 21:29, 23 December 2006 (PST)