Acharistos: Difference between revisions

From Mistipedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
Line 48: Line 48:
==Darklord: King Oubold Lukanos==
==Darklord: King Oubold Lukanos==
The general consensus of "''Who's the Darklord [3]''" is that King Oubold Lukanos is the Darklord of Acharistos. While the king survived his injuries, he is old now, his body too weak for him to wield his sword. Although he frequently wishes for death, he is unaging. His old influence and power are lost, as the nobles believe he has no remaining heirs, and everyone in the kingdom knows that this is his own doing.
The general consensus of "''Who's the Darklord [3]''" is that King Oubold Lukanos is the Darklord of Acharistos. While the king survived his injuries, he is old now, his body too weak for him to wield his sword. Although he frequently wishes for death, he is unaging. His old influence and power are lost, as the nobles believe he has no remaining heirs, and everyone in the kingdom knows that this is his own doing.
Called ''the Failed Man'' and ''Kinslayer'', the king still possesses massive wealth, but his castle is largely ruined. Kaina stripped it of all of its luxuries as she departed, and none of the available craftsfolk is willing to waste time when there are weapons and armour to forge or farms and homes to shore up and improve. Knights and soldiers refuse to work for the king because he is seen as a spent force, just waiting for whoever wins the civil war to remove him and claim the throne. A skeleton staff of frightened - but loyal - servants struggles to keep the palace going; they are the few who did not flee Kaina's wrath or were at least not too frightened to return after she had left.
 
Called ''the Failed Man'' and ''Kinslayer'', the king still possesses massive wealth, but his castle is largely ruined. Kaina stripped it of all of its luxuries as she departed, and none of the available craftsfolk is willing to waste time on restoring the royal palace when there are weapons and armour to forge or farms and homes to shore up and improve. Knights and soldiers refuse to work for the king because he is seen as a spent force, just waiting for whoever wins the civil war to step over his corpse and claim the throne. A skeleton staff of frightened - but loyal - servants struggles to keep the palace going; they are the few who did not flee Kaina's wrath or were at least not too frightened to return after she had left.
 
In truth, the king exerts considerable influence through his wealth. He uses thieves, spies and assassins, spreading rumours and lies, offering bribes, and doing everything he can to keep the nobles at each other's throats and away from his own. He is himself disgusted by the methods he has been forced to resort to, and longs keenly for the days of luxury and power he once enjoyed.
In truth, the king exerts considerable influence through his wealth. He uses thieves, spies and assassins, spreading rumours and lies, offering bribes, and doing everything he can to keep the nobles at each other's throats and away from his own. He is himself disgusted by the methods he has been forced to resort to, and longs keenly for the days of luxury and power he once enjoyed.
The king is aware that Kaina has survived. While he has not seen his granddaughter since Acharistos was drawn into the [[Mists]], the way she lives and her frequent rampages fill his withered heart with a mixture of hatred, remorse, frustration and confusion. Even now, the king cannot understand why Kaina turned out the way she did, even if a repressed part of him acknowledges that he himself is to blame.
The king is aware that Kaina has survived. While he has not seen his granddaughter since Acharistos was drawn into the [[Mists]], the way she lives and her frequent rampages fill his withered heart with a mixture of hatred, remorse, frustration and confusion. Even now, the king cannot understand why Kaina turned out the way she did, even if a repressed part of him acknowledges that he himself is to blame.



Revision as of 13:07, 26 June 2021

Acharistos is a homebrewed Domain in the Demiplane of Dread, first introduced in the thread "Who's the Darklord? [3]" (https://fraternityofshadows.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=10903).

Location

It is currently not known whether Acharistos is connected to any other Domain, nor whether it is connected to other points in the Demiplane by means of a reliable Mistway.

Geography

Few features of the land are known, but it is fairly large. There is sufficient farmland to allow numerous villages to if not thrive, then at least survive, in spite of the armies rampaging throughout the land. A capitol city has been mentioned, but no other cities of note. The Far Forest is located at the far side of the Domain opposite the capitol city and its royal palace, and is home both to the worst monsters in the Domain and to princess Kaina Lukanos.

Magic

While arcane magic is a known quantity in Acharistos, it is not in common use. At the time of Oubold Lukanos' rule, there was only a handful of wizards in the land, all of them men of high esteem and almost entirely self-taught. There is no mention of sorcerers or bards having made any great names for themselves in the land.

Religion

The Church of Ezra traditionally anoints and crowns the High King or High Queen of Acharistos, but the Church of the Lawgiver and the Church of the Wolf God are also known there. There is a tradition for corpses to be wrapped in unrelieved black cloth, and for mourners to wear the same.

History

Acharistos is a nation with a legacy of kings and queens, who have ruled the nation with a hard hand, adhering to a philosophy of "the law of the jungle". In this philosophy, the ruling monarch is the apex predator in the political jungle; strong, fearless and manipulative, the ruling monarch must make the decisions necessary to:

  • A) Remain in supreme power;
  • B) Maintain order and prosperity in the kingdom;
  • C) Ensure continuity of rule, so that strong rulers are succeeded by strong heirs.

Traditionally, the ruling king or queen is anointed and crowned by the Church of Ezra, suggesting that Ezra is the nation's divine patron. (The possibility exists, of course, that this is a figment of false history, and some other deity was once the patron of the royal line and the nation.

Currently, Acharistos is in a state of anarchy and civil war, as the noble families are actively trying to exterminate each other and in so doing achieve political and military supremacy, allowing them to succeed the throne. The common people huddle fearfully in villages and towns, around which they have built walls. Nobles who claim command over specific villages frequently tax them, not in the form of money, but in food, finished goods, and strong villagers to serve as replacement troops. The walls serve not only to protect the people from brigands and monsters, but also from the troops of rival nobles.

While the rightful King, Oubold Lukanos, is still alive, he is commonly denounced as the Failed Man and Kinslayer by his people, and his line is thought to be extinct with the death of his grandchildren. King Oubold firmly adhered to the law of the jungle, and made sure to not only sire a great many potential heirs, but to test them and forge them until he could winnow out the most promising candidate. His favoured tactic was to launch sly attacks against one child and to leave clues that another was responsible, thus pitting his sons and daughters against each other. One of the royal princes, fifth born to the king's fifth concubine, proved to possess a kind and diplomatic nature and tried to forge bonds and alliances with his siblings. Seeing this as weakness, King Oubold punished his fifth son repeatedly, until the young man fled the royal court rather than continue to be subject to his father's rule. While the king saw his runaway son only as a disappointment and a failure, his other children were of a different opinion. To the king's confusion, his other children were inspired by their runaway brother and rejected the notion of succeeding the throne en masse. Each tried to forge lives of their own, which would take them away from the palace and their demanding father. While the king seemed to allow them their freedom, withdrawing his tests and tutelage... this lasted only until his children had themselves become parents.

On a holy night of the faith of Ezra, King Oubold had all his grandchildren abducted from their homes - even the fifth-born daughter and sole surviving child of the fifth son who was first to flee him - and brought to his castle. He intended to teach, test and winnow this new generation to create his heir, having concluded that he had simply started too late with his own children. In order to ensure that his children would not interfere with his plans, he had them all murdered. The king repeated his program of having his offspring taught, trained and tested, in an effort to toughen them, educate them, and find the optimal scion to become his heir. The fifth-born child of his fifth son by his fifth concubine, Princess Kaina Lukanos, was one of the children so tested; she was poisoned and nearly died. Upon recovering, she proved intelligent enough to see through the clues her grandfather had left, which had been meant to drive her into conflict with one of her cousins. While her keenness of mind pleased the king, he was nonplussed by Kaina's reaction; the young child drove her maids from her presence, as she (correctly) suspected them of having slipped her the poison; she rejected the lavish luxuries of the palace by stripping her chambers bare of all finery; she rejected her own noble status by divesting herself of jewels and fine clothes, wearing only unrelieved black; she showed nothing but distrust for her relatives, refusing to attend family gatherings and lessons unless forced to, eating and drinking only what she could steal or scrounge for herself. Kaina spent as much time in her own company as she could, studying in the palace's great library.

King Oubold felt the first inklings of guilt and doubt when he saw how fiercely unhappy his grandchild was, but tried to make amends by offering the girl gifts - which she venomously rejected. When even maids experienced in dealing with 'difficult' children fled the princess's presence and refused to return, one of them whispered a warning to the king that princess Kaina had driven the maids away using arcane magic; Kaina had, through her solitary studies, become a self-taught Wizard. Initially, King Oubold was elated, and considered his granddaughter might make a fine Wizard-Queen. When he tried to talk to Kaina about this, however, he discovered that all she wanted was to return home to her parents. She had come to completely reject the royal court and all its fineries, considering both the king and his nobles to be enemies intent on turning her and her cousins against each other and killing them off. Kaina's comments caused the king to discover some of his nobles had, indeed, been meddling in his educational program for his grandchildren. The net result was that King Oubold felt compelled to have several of his most cunning nobles executed -- as well as the children they had been influencing.

Left now with only a handful of potential heirs, the king finally selected his grandson Rozen as his heir. However, Rozen was the youngest remaining scion of the line and would need help. King Oubold offered Kaina a deal, based on a lie; that if she would study and act the role of a proper princess and help Rozen ascend the throne, he would release her to go home to her parents. While he still felt unaccustomed pangs of guilt, the king did not tell his granddaughter that her parents were already dead, their bodies buried in a shallow grave near their shack in the Far Forest. Although Kaina accepted the bargain, consenting to wear the dresses and eat the foods she was entitled to by rank, her quarters once again fit for royalty, the king soon came to regret his bargain. Kaina kept to the letter of the deal, but had no regard for its spirit. When the Wizard mentor the king found for Kaina suggested they should flee to another nation where she could ascend to the rank of Archmage, Kaina killed him in a sorcerous duel that blasted a significant part of the royal palace. When a cousin tried to make her dependent on a narcotic substance, so as to gain power over Rozen, Kaina murdered him in the castle courtyard, "causing him to scream his way to death". Rather than a trusted guardian and subordinate, prince Rozen came to see his Wizard cousin as a boogeyman and a threat constantly looming over his head. The other remaining cousins regarded her with knee-knocking dread.

When King Oubold came to realize that Kaina held zero empathy or regard for any member of her family outside of her parents, and that she would never truly be part of his vision for the future, he resolved to have her assassinated. He sent the one maid who had come to hold - and continued to hold - a motherly affection for his granddaughter, with the same poison he had used once before. The exact sequence of events is currently unknown, but Kaina was informed that her parents were dead. She proceeded to kill the maid who had been sent to poison her, then launched a destructive rampage throughout the royal palace. In her rage, she killed her last remaining cousins and most of the palace staff, before being confronted by King Oubold. Accusing her grandfather of the murder of her beloved parents, Kaina proceeded to blast the king with a spell at the same time that he stabbed her with a sword.

This, it can be agreed, was the seminal event upon which Acharistos became part of the Demiplane of Dread: with Oubold Lukanos finally crossing the line between causing the deaths of his descendants indirectly, to directly assaulting one whose life he had twisted so.

Darklord: King Oubold Lukanos

The general consensus of "Who's the Darklord [3]" is that King Oubold Lukanos is the Darklord of Acharistos. While the king survived his injuries, he is old now, his body too weak for him to wield his sword. Although he frequently wishes for death, he is unaging. His old influence and power are lost, as the nobles believe he has no remaining heirs, and everyone in the kingdom knows that this is his own doing.

Called the Failed Man and Kinslayer, the king still possesses massive wealth, but his castle is largely ruined. Kaina stripped it of all of its luxuries as she departed, and none of the available craftsfolk is willing to waste time on restoring the royal palace when there are weapons and armour to forge or farms and homes to shore up and improve. Knights and soldiers refuse to work for the king because he is seen as a spent force, just waiting for whoever wins the civil war to step over his corpse and claim the throne. A skeleton staff of frightened - but loyal - servants struggles to keep the palace going; they are the few who did not flee Kaina's wrath or were at least not too frightened to return after she had left.

In truth, the king exerts considerable influence through his wealth. He uses thieves, spies and assassins, spreading rumours and lies, offering bribes, and doing everything he can to keep the nobles at each other's throats and away from his own. He is himself disgusted by the methods he has been forced to resort to, and longs keenly for the days of luxury and power he once enjoyed.

The king is aware that Kaina has survived. While he has not seen his granddaughter since Acharistos was drawn into the Mists, the way she lives and her frequent rampages fill his withered heart with a mixture of hatred, remorse, frustration and confusion. Even now, the king cannot understand why Kaina turned out the way she did, even if a repressed part of him acknowledges that he himself is to blame.

Princess Kaina Lukanos

Although injured by her grandfather's sword, Kaina also survived. She scoured the royal palace of all the finery her grandfather prized so, then returned to the humble shack where she was born: in the Far Forest. The princess, sole surviving member of the Lukanos royal line who is theoretically capable of having children and continuing the family, lives in bitter solitude. She does what work is needed to stay alive and moderately comfortable, studies her books of arcane lore, and grieves over what mementos of her parents remain to her. While Kaina has no desire to return to the capitol city (the very thought makes her skin crawl) and is unaware of her grandfather's survival, she holds a potential for monstrous violence. Every time people have wandered into Kaina's territory, regardless whether their intentions were benign, neutral or malicious, the Wizard has erupted in a terrible fury that scoured the area a mile around the Far Forest of all intelligent life. The repeated slaughter has made the whole Far Forest into a Rank 2 Sinkhole of Evil with a taint of Wrath. Evil creatures lurk on the fringe of the forest, attracted to Kaina's madness and grief, but too wise to disturb her. Instead, they frequently attack the closest towns and villages, adding to the commoners' misery.

Diplomacy

There is mention of allied nations in Acharistos' (false) history, but it is currently not known whether there are other Domains with which is can have any kind of relationship at all.

Local Horrors

Werewolves exist in Acharistos, as evidenced by local acknowledgment of the Wolf God. The border regions of the Far Forest are frequently haunted by Wrathspawn-type Sinspawn (https://pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/sinspawn), which rise from the unholy alchemy of Kaina's magical might, madness and anger.