Render Unto Moloch
A Mage: The Awakening Quest
There are patterns in the grain.
Blinking...
A Mage: The Awakening Quest
There are patterns in the grain.
Blinking...
User | Total |
---|---|
Maugan Ra | 1 |
Article: What do you see?
[ ] A Stage; beyond it, a theatre long since abandoned. Velvet seats stand in long rows, encrusted with webs, dust lies in piles inches thick. Chains of silver and gold hang from your wrists and coil around your neck, and overhead old floodlights halo you in burning light. Your audience is old and emaciated, clad in finery several centuries out of date, and they stare at you with hollow eyes.
[ ] A Court; the walls are decorated with portraits of your parents, smiling down at you. In the jury sit a dozen caricatures, with bloodshot eyes and teeth stained brown from drink. They watch you hungrily, fixated on your every word, while in the judge's box your twin sits and watches your fumbling speech with naked contempt.
[ ] A Museum; you are a guest here, wandering starstruck through halls lined with portraits and plaques. A hall of statues is being renovated while you watch, each stone form replaced by one a tiny bit older, a tiny bit less refined. You can see the originals, you know, held for posterity in the archive, but that means asking the curator for permission, and his skinless face and cloak of grey discomfort you in a way you cannot quite explain.
[ ] A Church; there is a priest and congregation, of course, but they are made of wax and wood. True faith left this place behind years ago, and now only the light remains. It streams down from on high, broken and repainted by windows of stained glass that stretch almost to the ceiling, and under its touch you could almost fool yourself into thinking the withered mannequins are strong and vital once again.
[ ] A Zoo; you walk between exhibits and around the edge of great enclosures, studying and being studied in turn. Here a horde of rats dig a warren in broken stone, there a flight of pigeons wheel back and forth between a hundred wooden aviaries. There are people all around you, cooing and laughing over the antics of those they came to observe, but they cannot see what you can. The horizon has sprouted bars, and from beyond giants with eyes of fire watch you with an inquisitive gaze.
You may vote for two of the above options. Only one can win, and the vote will be counted by line; the twin vote is simply a measure taken in hopes of reducing the need for tactical voting.
You play as James Green, a young man from humble origins who has somehow managed to get himself enrolled at a prestigious University in the City of London, where he studies Law in the hopes of making it his profession.
[ ] A Stage; beyond it, a theatre long since abandoned. Velvet seats stand in long rows, encrusted with webs, dust lies in piles inches thick. Chains of silver and gold hang from your wrists and coil around your neck, and overhead old floodlights halo you in burning light. Your audience is old and emaciated, clad in finery several centuries out of date, and they stare at you with hollow eyes.
[ ] A Court; the walls are decorated with portraits of your parents, smiling down at you. In the jury sit a dozen caricatures, with bloodshot eyes and teeth stained brown from drink. They watch you hungrily, fixated on your every word, while in the judge's box your twin sits and watches your fumbling speech with naked contempt.
[ ] A Museum; you are a guest here, wandering starstruck through halls lined with portraits and plaques. A hall of statues is being renovated while you watch, each stone form replaced by one a tiny bit older, a tiny bit less refined. You can see the originals, you know, held for posterity in the archive, but that means asking the curator for permission, and his skinless face and cloak of grey discomfort you in a way you cannot quite explain.
[ ] A Church; there is a priest and congregation, of course, but they are made of wax and wood. True faith left this place behind years ago, and now only the light remains. It streams down from on high, broken and repainted by windows of stained glass that stretch almost to the ceiling, and under its touch you could almost fool yourself into thinking the withered mannequins are strong and vital once again.
[ ] A Zoo; you walk between exhibits and around the edge of great enclosures, studying and being studied in turn. Here a horde of rats dig a warren in broken stone, there a flight of pigeons wheel back and forth between a hundred wooden aviaries. There are people all around you, cooing and laughing over the antics of those they came to observe, but they cannot see what you can. The horizon has sprouted bars, and from beyond giants with eyes of fire watch you with an inquisitive gaze.
Get exposed to crushing feelings of inadequacy, life-breaking stress, depression and haunting addiction to caffeine, just like a real law student!
The joke is that you you'd still be unsure if they graduated or not.Actually the plot twist is that all of this is mere metaphor for actually being a lawyer
I'm going to spoil the ending of the twist and it's going to be that the character is in an insane asylum because they had a breakdown during finals week
The five Paths, I guess. I can barely remember them, but I think the museum is Moros (Matter and Death) and the Church might be Obrimos (Prime and Forces, I think?) because they're associated with religion. Checking the wiki, we also have Thyrsus (Life and Spirit, which would be the zoo I suppose), Mastigos (Mind and Space), and Acanthus (Fate and Time), but I'm not sure which corresponds to each option.
Sadly, @Maugan Ra and @ManusDomine have not given us the ability to see past the Lie of the legal world as presented by pop culture and allowed us to vote for [ ] A Cubicle made of Literal Paperwork so I guess I'll have to find two of the options that aren't "a court" or "a stage"
Hey, I'm relying 100% on @ManusDomine for the authentic lawyer experience here. I just write the quest, he's the one who wishes he actually had magical powers under he realises they would probably make things even more tedious...
More than being undead, the audience for A Stage is old. Covered in dust and cobwebs, in fashion long past its time. The note about gold and silver also moves it away from being Moros, since their metal is Lead.I am not sure which one is acanthus and which Moros. I suspect Acanthus is the museum (Time) while the stage is moros (Hence the undead audience). But it could be the reverse.
The stone replacement seems like a reference to entropy. The stage references how old things are, but does not describe the watchers as undead. Also, the chains are probably a reference to fate.I am not sure which one is acanthus and which Moros. I suspect Acanthus is the museum (Time) while the stage is moros (Hence the undead audience). But it could be the reverse.
I already have a cubicle of actual endless paperwork, I don't need a quest for that.I think he did that on purpose
Because if one of the votes was "a literal cubicle made of actual endless paperwork" it would be the objectively correct choice