The setting
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Some humans are touched by the power of the magical realms and develop [[lineage]]. There are six lineages in the Empire setting - [[briar]], [[cambion]], [[changeling]], [[draughir]], [[merrow]], and [[naga]]. Each has physical ''trappings'' that mark them out as different to unlineaged humans and their personalities are influenced by the magical realm they are associated with. Lineaged people are found throughout the world, and while they are still fundamentally human different nations have different attitudes to different lineages. | Some humans are touched by the power of the magical realms and develop [[lineage]]. There are six lineages in the Empire setting - [[briar]], [[cambion]], [[changeling]], [[draughir]], [[merrow]], and [[naga]]. Each has physical ''trappings'' that mark them out as different to unlineaged humans and their personalities are influenced by the magical realm they are associated with. Lineaged people are found throughout the world, and while they are still fundamentally human different nations have different attitudes to different lineages. | ||
==Magic== | ==Magic== |
Revision as of 13:35, 29 October 2020
Overview
This page is part of our introduction to Empire, explaining more about the game. It is intended for people who are new to live roleplaying as well as experienced live roleplayers who have never done Empire before to give you a broad-strokes look at the Empire world and some of the universal concepts that underpin the setting.
A closed world
Empire takes place in a closed world. This means that it has its own setting, laid out on the wiki. Players take roles within that world, and don't have the ability to introduce significant new elements. Players can't create0 new nations, new lineages, or eternals for example. This allows everyone to have a shared understanding and expectation of what the world contains, supporting immersion, and making the game world feel more real to everyone involved.
This also means that while you have a lot of freedom to determine who your character is, you can't play anything at all. There's no room for playing Robin Hood or a character from another setting, you can't create a new territory to be from, you can't make up a history that is at odds with the established events of the game world. Expand on what this means and why we don't let you make stuff up
Nations
There are ten nations in the Empire, and every player character is an Imperial citizen who belongs to one of them. Which nation your character belongs to is the single most important decision about you character. While you can play a character who started somewhere else, the focus of the game is on the Empire and the events that take place there. Your nationality is a core element of your character; at Anvil everyone camps together with other members of their nation for example, fights alongside their nation during battles, and even has rules implications such as determining which covens they can support if they are ritual magicians.
Each of the nations is developed on the Empire wiki, with a brief detailing their culture, their history, and their attitudes. Each nation has the same pieces of core reading that you should be familiar with for the nation you choose - the overview, culture and customs, the people, and the look and feel. Each nation has a number of other pages that detail things like the nations magical attitudes and history. These are optional reading, but having at least skimmed them will improve your enjoyment of the game.
Every Imperial nation has one or more egregores, members of crew who support the players of that nation in a variety of ways. In-game, the egregores also help to ensure each nation maintains it's own unique cultural identity.
The Empire
The nations that make up the Empire are culturally distinct but politically and legally unified. It is run by five key "houses" of politics - the Imperial Senate, the Imperial Synod, the Imperial Military Council, the Imperial Conclave, and the Imperial Bourse. Each of these houses has distinct powers that allow player characters to shape Imperial policy and direct the Empire.
While there is a larger world beyond Imperial borders, the game focuses on events that take place within the Empire. We don't model the external factions in detail - they exist to create interesting interactions among the players within the Empire. This doesn't mean the Empire is the most important place in the world in-character, but it is the heart of the game out of character.
As such, we don't detail foreign nations or barbarian forces in the same level of detail as the Imperial nations, and events outside the Empire are important only to the degree that they effect Imperial citizens.
You can read more about the Empire itself here.
The People
Unlike many fantasy games, the Empire setting contains only a few sapient species. The majority of Imperial citizens are humans, although the Imperial Orcs nation allows for orc player characters. There are a handful of other sapient species in the game but they are very rarely encountered by Imperial citizens.
Some humans are touched by the power of the magical realms and develop lineage. There are six lineages in the Empire setting - briar, cambion, changeling, draughir, merrow, and naga. Each has physical trappings that mark them out as different to unlineaged humans and their personalities are influenced by the magical realm they are associated with. Lineaged people are found throughout the world, and while they are still fundamentally human different nations have different attitudes to different lineages.
Magic
THIS BIT IS TOO LONG! While we say that Empire is a low fantasy world, this doesn't mean that it is not also a magical setting. Magic is a fact of life in the setting, and in theory anyone can learn to use it. There are two ways of directly wielding magical power - spellcasting and ritual magic.
Spellcasting allows magicians to perform a small number of spells that can perform a handful of specific magical effects such as healing wounds or hurling an opponent away with amgical force.
Ritual magic allows groups of magicians called covens to wield the magic of the realms to create powerful magical effects drawn from six magical lores. Ritual magic is potent but there are several limitations on what it can achieve - for example no amount of magic can raise the dead.
In addition to the more obvious uses of magic, there are several other ways that magical force can impact the game. Magic items crafted by artisans and allow even the most mundane individual to access limited magical abilities. The five magical herbs allow physicks to achieve remarkable healing effects, and let apothecaries brew valuable potions.
Finally, the world itself is steeped in magic. hearth magic is a kind of roleplaying magic that sometimes grants additional weight or significance to otherwise mundane activities.
Cosmology
The Empire is part of the mortal or mundane world, but there are other worlds. The six magical realms - Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter, Day, and Night - are magical planes that are separted from but innately tied to the natural world. Magical power can be drawn from the realms, and while mortals can't visit them and survive they are inhabited by supernatural creatures called eternals who are fascinated by the material world.
Religion
Faith is a powerful motivation in the Empire setting, but it differs greatly from religions in many other roleplaying games. There are no gods for example, and no divine authority that will tell players how to act or answer their questions. The powers wielded by priests are significantly more subtle than those commonly available to religious characters in other settings, focused around the creation of roleplaying effects and dealing with spiritual matters rather than providing healing or smiting opponents.
Reincarnation
Almost all human religions recognise the idea that human souls reincarnate. Most of the known religions believe that after they die humans go to a spiritual realm for a time and then are reborn in the world. The exact details of these beliefs vary widely.
Many religions
The Empire has a formal religion - the Way - that is based around the pursuit of the seven Virtues. This religion is know and followed by people all over the world, but it is only one of several competing religions. It's illegal for people to preach other faiths in the Empire.
As with other elements, the religions of the Empire world are specific to the setting. Player character priests are likely to wield secular power as members of the Imperial Synod, and there is a strong theme of religious conflict with the priests of foreign religions.
The World
Not a medieval world
The broad strokes of the Empire setting are built around the aesthetics of the 12th and 13th century but that is not to say that the people who live there have the same attitudes as medevil people.
Rules
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