Your argument that Cython and the We are so absolutely predestined to win that I should consider offering an entirely separate vote for all the other options is rather undermined by the fact that at the time I am writing this, neither Cython nor the We are winning.
True. That was written up shortly before the vote opened and my expectations were off the mark. I still expect disappointment from the We/Cython fans though, but maybe to a lesser degree than when Cython lost the relationship vote.
At this exact moment? Probably nothing. They're only used when absolutely necessarily.
Maybe I misunderstood how they are used when they are used? My understanding was that their only practical use was as the main part of some major enchanted artefact. So my expectation was that they would always be in use in whatever the current Parenarch of that color considered the most worthy, with said artefact being shut down and the Orb removed whenever something they consider more important comes up.
What is their use policy instead?
What traits of the Faniour make them particularly suited to being librarians?
Literacy and longevity? I wouldn't want them on their own, but if we were to go for multiculturalism as a goal in and of itself, then adding reasonable and available Elves would be part of that and the Faniour seem like the most reasonable and available. Though yes, for my purpose the very small handful of Toriour would also suffice.
I feel like framing the argument for Cython/We as "OOC fun vs IC practicality" is kinda an unfair way to frame it. I think most Cython/We voters are genuine in their belief that they think they're good choices.
I disagree that they are and I think if we replaced "Cython" with a random immortal, territorial, entitled and scary Hysh wizard of indeterminate race and The We with a very young immortal telekine/telepath who we recently found together with their twin fending for themselves in the woods then this would be more obvious.
Both of them have pros, but seen coldly and dispassionately said pros are very minor while the cons are considerable. And I don't know about others, but I can't look at it just from that dispassionate vantage point. I've been wanting more Cython screen time since forever and am still in mourning over the fact that we can't rope him in with Divine AV (which he'd be salivating all over). And the We are a nascent civilization that we are in a unique position to set down a path, which is another catnip of mine.
That said, the We are the option I prefer over Cython, because their drawback is pretty much just the same as the Orphans option, except that they look scarier and that they are a single person who is pretty much bound to the Library (or free to abandon it for a random replacement) going into this life project with no idea how they'll feel about it or how it will psychologically affect them a couple of decades down the line.
Assassination Ranking:
Sigmarites find out we read the Liber Mortis
Eshin finds out we wrote Queekish
Tempter gets off his ass about Vlag
A Sylvanian Vampire With A Grudge
Orc Shaman Gets A Vision
Tzeentch trying to prevent Tzeentch from using Mathilde as a pawn in the latest scheme to screw with Tzeentch.
You know I really dislike locals, like not that I would hate reading about it, more than I would read about it and feel... nothing at all. It is expected, hell it is what we sold Belegar on back during the charter: multi-racial library of dwarf, human and halfling all singing kumbaya, it just feels like a wasted chance to make something unique, like the Dragon who would treat lore as part of his hoard or the spiders who would see the first coppy of every book as part of their mind and soul.
This is like the exact reverse of why I like it. We spent a boon to get a thing, I want that thing. Dragon or We both pretty radically alter the library so that we aren't really getting the thing we originally bought.
Both of these things what I actually expected much more people to feel. Which is why I have a hard time swallowing that Locals is an exclusive choice instead of a mainstay part of at least the lower ranks of the staff.
Narratively you cannot throw a stick in a pile of warhammer quests without hitting a multi-racial something. It is just what SV does in Warhammer at the first opportunity. Institutions staffed by sapient spiders are a good bit more unique.
I don't know what happens in other well written Warhammer Quests. This is honestly the only one I follow. All others I have either skimmed or tried to get in on at the start (or near it) and seen die an early death.