I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
I liked this world when you were first working on it, and I like it now. I can't think of anything that stands out to me as problematic, and I think it will be a strong setting for stories, so I'm satisfied with this.
I'm going to be honest and say that I'm not a fan of the Highlanders. They just bother me, really, from an ascetic standpoint. It takes the whole hodge-podge feel of a conglomerate of separate races, turns it up to eleven, and then sort of doesn't do anything else with it. I love coalitions of differing ideals clashing and merging together to form something greater than the sum of their parts, but the Highlanders... blegh. It's trying too hard, in my opinion.
BUT EVERYTHING ELSE ABOUT THIS PLACE IS AMAZING.
The Riftlands are so-so, but I love everything about the other three. Altrium just SCREAMS story development. There is so much there to explore. The Underworld is the same way. I love the Crater and the Raksashan Empire therein. you worked very hard on the history of this Plane, and it shows. (Which may be something that irks me about the Highlanders, because everything else seems so polished, and the Highlanders just sort of... exist.)
Anyway, the Highlanders aren't enough to get me to vote nay on this, considering how simply inspiring and ripe for story the rest of the plane is. Yea.
Finally finished reading through this, and I'll give it a big thumbs up. In particular, the Altrium and the Underworld immediately had me thinking about new characters.
Also, I'm hoping against hope that the Thirteen Days War is a sly Cuban Missile Crisis reference.
Power trippin' as I click the "yea" button!
_________________
"And remember, I'm pullin' for ya, 'cause we're all in this together." - Red Green
Okay, I'm going to start off with my nit-picking first. I saw numerous typos throughout this, and I'll point out the ones I spotted and jotted down.
Typos
In paragraph 3: "Those that survived the biref but terrible fury of the war."
In the paragraph describing Gliders: "tirning"
In the section of The Underground: "Necrosynth1"
A few paragraphs down in that same section: "deliberatley"
In the section Geography: "Tunnle-town"
In the part about Rooms: "wil lbe"
In the section about Ghosts, a sentence begins with an un-capitalized "this".
In the section Highlands: The highlanders to not abide...
In the section Bloodfruit and Grabbers, you say "junge" when I presume you mean "lunge".
In the Pyris section: "Constand degradation"
In the history of the Crater, at one point you say "Ravana" instead of Ravan, and I'm not sure why.
In the paragraph starting "The great Trades": trages
In the section on the Merchant classes, you say "buy and cell", and shortly afterward you say "onlt".
In the part about "Outsiders", you say "accorded", when I think you mean "afforded", and a little later you say "rarley".
In the part about the Altrium calendar, you say "Sidreal" instead of sidereal, twice I believe.
Also, there seem to be numerous times when you forget the final period of a sentence. I have listed the ones I noticed, because I do that sort of thing:
The paragraph beginning: Nobles Vaults and Abysses "The first and more common..." Riftlands - "The jungle itself..." "The children of the Living flame" Commoners The living flame banner "Servants of the Rakshasas"
Okay, those are my small issues. Now my two big ones. I have to ask, ultimately, what including a "Church of Serra," with no definitive connection to the real MTG lore Church of Serra does for Adrisar. I found that extremely jarring. Now, I have not yet read your stories based on this plane, so if it comes into play, fine. But just going by what's presented here, that's a sort of big deal to me, because I think it's a bad idea if there isn't a connection there.
On a similar note, although this probably arose after you had written this, is the use of "Nyx", because this word now has specific meaning in MTG lore owing to Theros.
These are my two main concerns right now, and I will abstain from voting for a while until I hear your response.
On the plus side, I do like what's going on in this world in general, and I agree it's a plane that has some serious setting potential. There are certain things about it that do not catch my particular attention, but that hardly means they're bad, and the stuff that does catch my attention catches it well. I'm mostly just concerned about the names.
I thought I remembered talking about the Serra thing on the Wizards forums but it turns out that the conversation consisted of me remarking that probably Barinellos was gonna light things on fire but that I thought it was clever, and then Barinellos never lit things on fire, and that was that.
Joined: Sep 22, 2013 Posts: 5699 Location: Inside my own head
Identity: Human
Might I suggest additional formatting (bold, etc.) to separate the sections like between the Lands and Devices descriptions? Would you mind if I added the formatting when I move it to the Archives?
Overall, you did another fine job, really. While I kind of dislike how each "layer" is forwardly a single color, I like how you don't solidly keep it that way -- like how Altrium has a streak of red and the Crater isn't the "blue place". Good enough for me to get behind.
There is one thing I have an issue with, though: you specifically outline what races live in some of the layers, but not all of them; it leaves me wondering, for instance, what races live in Altrium.
About Altrium:
The second paragraph of Altrium, The Aerial Kingdom:
Quote:
Whatever the case, the web was destroyed by the violence of the great war. Titanic sundered the cloud-lands apart, and their strands of immeasurable size crashed to earth and sea, no doubt killing millions on their top sides alone.
That second sentence is... a little confusing. Maybe you mean "Titanic forces"?
Typo:
Quote:
township float scarcely higher than those isles too small to be regularly inhabitated but too large to fall
Should be "townships" (plural).
Typo:
Quote:
Overloading an island has never bene observed:
You imply Sunstones are fragile, but you don't say how fragile. Are they prone to shattering but strong against compressive forces, like glass? Are fractured pieces still usable as smaller sources, or are they only viable when complete? Or are these nebulous notions left for other people to fill in?
Nothing against you, but this line:
Quote:
The newer style is ridden standing or kneeling on top of the device, and is controlled with reins (though a clever pilot can direct by simply shifting his or her weight).
Made me immediately think of a Gurren Lagann-style face-off where the badass pilot is staring off his competition through his rad goggles and with his hands across his chest.
About the Underworld
Typo:
Quote:
Necrosynth1
I would also suggest changing this line:
Quote:
Humans, however, find that ingesting the goo causes violent sickness if only a little is consumed (say, if food is not washed properly) and death followed by a form of undeath if large quantities are deliberatley consumed.
to "if only a miniscule amount is consumed".
Typo:
Quote:
human tunnle-towns
Typo:
Quote:
some strategic tunnle crossing
Typo:
Quote:
structures in tunnel areas are careved into the walls
I feel like you missed an opportunity for a great large ecosystem of cave-dwelling creatures (like insects and/or amphibians), but I won't count it against you or the plane, since you were obviously going for a certain aesthetic.
This line:
Quote:
Rooms are somewhat open areas. Usually filled with pillars of stone from ceiling to floor, room areas can be massive, but even with the best light in the world, it's hard to see the full extent of a room due to its density.
I feel should be changed to "the best light available" or "the best light in the Underworld", since just saying "the world" kind of implies "best in the plane", which can obviously be better than what's available underground.
While I'm not going to say the Nyx Conclave needs a name change, I will say that it stands out to me because of the implications of the word Nyx. (And also because I've become attached to one Nyx in particular, as you may have guessed from my avatar.)
About the Highlands
Typo:
Quote:
Eventually, as is the way of the world, some of the letter was reinterpreted, but the spirit remained and perhaps even grew stronger as the Plateaus signaled one another, and build bridges in the realization that they each had a better chance of surviving if they were willing to survive together in lean times rather than totally apart.
Should be "built bridges" (past tense).
Typo:
Quote:
(and often times, some futures known to no humanoids)
Should be "features".
Typo:
Quote:
By in large, they don’t have much, but they’re experts at getting more and getting more out of what they get.
Should be "By and large". The line is also slightly confusing because of the immediate repeat of "getting more"; I would suggest changing it to "finding more and getting more out of what they find".
Typo:
Quote:
most of it is bought or swindled from Altrium the Children of the Living Flame, or the Great Crater,
Comma missing between "Altrium" and "the Children of the Living Flame".
I don't really know whether I should facepalm or congratulate you for the Asimov reference.
About the Riftlands
I kind of hate to say it, but I don't like how the first section is called "Welcome to the Jungle". We've already been given three sections that outline [each layer = a color] and the Highlands say the Rifts are filled with jungle. You didn't need to resort to that old cliche to communicate that.
This line:
Quote:
Most natural predators throughout the planes see little purpose in preying on humans: we're small creatures who put up an inordinant amount of fight for the food we provide.
Is rather jarring because A) It's the first incidence of this being more a narration than a written guide (i.e. that the writer is essentially breaking the fourth wall); and B) While I understand this is being read only by humans, Planeswalker's Guides should be written in 3rd-person so as not to break the immersion -- 'walkers come in all races, so why should this guide be written from a human perspective?
Typo:
Quote:
Death can result from exanguination
Should be "exsanguination" (with an "s").
Typo:
Quote:
to act as lures for either preditors
Typo:
Quote:
able to twist, junge, and even cast their end
Typo:
Quote:
Stalkers are a persistance hunter.
Should be "persistence" (with an "e").
Typo:
Quote:
the only one cleared well enough that its walls do not suffer constand degradation from climbing Invader Vines
Contradiction:
Quote:
Thrond and Cliffside: Thrond and Clifftop are the two cities that have regular congress with the rest of the world
Quote:
Maur is somewhat the prototypical Leader: he took the post when young and motivated, and is now a more mature man but still and extremely powerful and fiery speaker.
Ha. Ha. -_-
About the Great Crater
I'm not sure if saying the Rakshasas are "kin" to Nacatl, Leonin, etc. really helps as it's phrased.
Typo:
Quote:
the absolute rulers of the Great Crater, descended from Ravan the Imperial Family are the highest-ranked mortals on the Great Chain of Being.
There should be an additional comma between "Ravan" and "the Imperial Family".
Typo:
Quote:
While the trages are passed on
Should be "trades".
Mutiple typos:
Quote:
Human families that do not produce, but by and cell, the merchants represent the onlt case where an individual can truly determine facts of his own fate
Typo:
Quote:
crafters of art like jewelrs
Typo:
Quote:
Those involved in the production of food and comestables.
Should be "comestible" (with an "i") or the more common "consumable".
If all elves are kept as slaves, why are humans farmers to begin with? Why not have "farmers" be landowners who have their elf slaves grow and harvest their crops? Or was that explained and I missed it?
About the Calendar
Typo:
Quote:
One is a solar calendar of 350 days with no further division that is used for religious purposes by both the Church of Serra (who developed it) and sometimes by the Church of Leyana It starts and ends at the vernal equinox.
Period missing from the end of "Leyana", before "It starts and ends".
Just how do the people of the Underworld keep track of time? Do they have mechanical clocks in every town? Are there magical crystals that pulse with every prime? Is there some widely-known cantrip that people can cast to tell them the time?
Okay, so without hearing a solid reason to use "Serra" and "Nyx," I'm going to have to go Not As Is for me. I like the plane, and you clearly put a lot of thought and work into it, so I sort of hate to vote Nay on it, because it does have a lot of potential. But I don't believe in the concepts of manufactured coincidences. To me, those two proper names have specific meaning in MTG, and should not be used in an MTG context while referring to something else unless there's a good reason. Without seeing the reason, I'm afraid I can't vote Yea on this one. Sorry.
Nyx should absolutely be changed. I put the Serra instance in because we had an established multiplanar sun/light focused goddess and because I felt someone else could use it as a hook.
_________________
"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
All instances of "Nyx" have been replaced with "Ulal" As some people may remember, I have language files from which I draw naming conventions for Altrium, the Underworld, and the Crater, so that was easy
Underworlders have mechanical pendulum clocks -- in fact, most of the societies would (Altrium is advanced enough in artifice to have pocketwatches). Towns would usually have at least one clock, and affluent homes and certain businesses might also have one or more. More fanciful timekeeping devices, reliant upon magic, might also exist but would not be widespread.
_________________
"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
Overall, you did another fine job, really. While I kind of dislike how each "layer" is forwardly a single color, I like how you don't solidly keep it that way -- like how Altrium has a streak of red and the Crater isn't the "blue place". Good enough for me to get behind.
There is one thing I have an issue with, though: you specifically outline what races live in some of the layers, but not all of them; it leaves me wondering, for instance, what races live in Altrium.
While I'll need to go through fixing typos and addressing specific concerns, I'd like to address these two issues
The initial concept of the layers (before I even got the layer motif) was taking a different angle on the allied colored pairs than was typical: Altrium is primarily blue/white, but focuses on the elemental aspects (Light and Air) rather than the mental ones (particularly avoiding the legalism of the Azorius). The Underworld is blue/black: Water, darkness, and death without addressing deceit. The highlands are the most transparent: they're a non(majorly) violent red/black: Freedom and self-determination are their primary goods. The Children are Red/Green fascists (Red militarism and green "Parts of a greater whole" statism), and the crater is green/white (Natural order and manmade order combine into a social "food chain")
It used to be explicit, but on some copy paste the mana symbols were lost. Should I restore them?
As to the races... yeah, this totally slipped my mind that I hadn't said anything about the races of Altrium other than that they don't contain many fliers. Nor the Children, for that matter. Altrium is Human with only trace other (potentially Vedalken), the Children are primarily human with seconday populations of other races that have been culturally (but not biologically, as in the highlands) absorbed: Elves, Goblins, and Ogres spring to mind.
_________________
"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
Might I suggest additional formatting (bold, etc.) to separate the sections like between the Lands and Devices descriptions? Would you mind if I added the formatting when I move it to the Archives?
My formatting with this was really inconsistent, and got burned by the board transition... as did my illustration of Anatomy of a Solid Cloud, now that I think about it. Feel free to bold/underline/italic as you see fit.
The second paragraph of Altrium, The Aerial Kingdom:
Quote:
Whatever the case, the web was destroyed by the violence of the great war. Titanic sundered the cloud-lands apart, and their strands of immeasurable size crashed to earth and sea, no doubt killing millions on their top sides alone.
That second sentence is... a little confusing. Maybe you mean "Titanic forces"?
Typo:
Quote:
township float scarcely higher than those isles too small to be regularly inhabitated but too large to fall
Should be "townships" (plural).
Typo:
Quote:
Overloading an island has never bene observed:
Correct in each case. (And now corrected in the main thread)
You imply Sunstones are fragile, but you don't say how fragile. Are they prone to shattering but strong against compressive forces, like glass? Are fractured pieces still usable as smaller sources, or are they only viable when complete? Or are these nebulous notions left for other people to fill in?
If I did, I certainly didn't mean to: they have about the durability of rock crystal. -- they lose charge in the dark, but don't physically break too easily. If you tell me what line gave this impression, I can look over the wording and say "past self, what were you thinking?"
The newer style is ridden standing or kneeling on top of the device, and is controlled with reins (though a clever pilot can direct by simply shifting his or her weight).
Made me immediately think of a Gurren Lagann-style face-off where the badass pilot is staring off his competition through his rad goggles and with his hands across his chest.
Not familiar with Gurren Lagann, but the newer gliders are a bit of a nod to Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind.
"Anatomy of a Solid Cloud" image is now attached and back in its proper place.
A copy-paste artifact, that went to an "I'll have to change this if Wizards decides to use it for phyrexian mycosynth" footnote. Naturally, they didn't but gave "Nyx" a solid meaning.
Humans, however, find that ingesting the goo causes violent sickness if only a little is consumed (say, if food is not washed properly) and death followed by a form of undeath if large quantities are deliberatley consumed.
to "if only a miniscule amount is consumed".
Typo:
Quote:
human tunnle-towns
Typo:
Quote:
some strategic tunnle crossing
Typo:
Quote:
structures in tunnel areas are careved into the walls
Wow, I couldn't type when I did that writeup. Fixed (along with at least one other typo in the same paragraph)
Rooms are somewhat open areas. Usually filled with pillars of stone from ceiling to floor, room areas can be massive, but even with the best light in the world, it's hard to see the full extent of a room due to its density.
I feel should be changed to "the best light available" or "the best light in the Underworld", since just saying "the world" kind of implies "best in the plane", which can obviously be better than what's available underground.
Eventually, as is the way of the world, some of the letter was reinterpreted, but the spirit remained and perhaps even grew stronger as the Plateaus signaled one another, and build bridges in the realization that they each had a better chance of surviving if they were willing to survive together in lean times rather than totally apart.
Should be "built bridges" (past tense).
Typo:
Quote:
(and often times, some futures known to no humanoids)
Should be "features".
Typo:
Quote:
By in large, they don’t have much, but they’re experts at getting more and getting more out of what they get.
Should be "By and large". The line is also slightly confusing because of the immediate repeat of "getting more"; I would suggest changing it to "finding more and getting more out of what they find".
Typo:
Quote:
most of it is bought or swindled from Altrium the Children of the Living Flame, or the Great Crater,
Comma missing between "Altrium" and "the Children of the Living Flame".
I don't really know whether I should facepalm or congratulate you for the Asimov reference.
About the Riftlands
I kind of hate to say it, but I don't like how the first section is called "Welcome to the Jungle". We've already been given three sections that outline [each layer = a color] and the Highlands say the Rifts are filled with jungle. You didn't need to resort to that old cliche to communicate that.
This line:
Quote:
Most natural predators throughout the planes see little purpose in preying on humans: we're small creatures who put up an inordinant amount of fight for the food we provide.
Is rather jarring because A) It's the first incidence of this being more a narration than a written guide (i.e. that the writer is essentially breaking the fourth wall); and B) While I understand this is being read only by humans, Planeswalker's Guides should be written in 3rd-person so as not to break the immersion -- 'walkers come in all races, so why should this guide be written from a human perspective?
Typo:
Quote:
Death can result from exanguination
Should be "exsanguination" (with an "s").
Typo:
Quote:
to act as lures for either preditors
Typo:
Quote:
able to twist, junge, and even cast their end
Typo:
Quote:
Stalkers are a persistance hunter.
Should be "persistence" (with an "e").
Typo:
Quote:
the only one cleared well enough that its walls do not suffer constand degradation from climbing Invader Vines
Contradiction:
Quote:
Thrond and Cliffside: Thrond and Clifftop are the two cities that have regular congress with the rest of the world
Quote:
Maur is somewhat the prototypical Leader: he took the post when young and motivated, and is now a more mature man but still and extremely powerful and fiery speaker.
Ha. Ha. -_-
About the Great Crater
I'm not sure if saying the Rakshasas are "kin" to Nacatl, Leonin, etc. really helps as it's phrased.
Typo:
Quote:
the absolute rulers of the Great Crater, descended from Ravan the Imperial Family are the highest-ranked mortals on the Great Chain of Being.
There should be an additional comma between "Ravan" and "the Imperial Family".
Typo:
Quote:
While the trages are passed on
Should be "trades".
Mutiple typos:
Quote:
Human families that do not produce, but by and cell, the merchants represent the onlt case where an individual can truly determine facts of his own fate
Typo:
Quote:
crafters of art like jewelrs
Typo:
Quote:
Those involved in the production of food and comestables.
Should be "comestible" (with an "i") or the more common "consumable".
If all elves are kept as slaves, why are humans farmers to begin with? Why not have "farmers" be landowners who have their elf slaves grow and harvest their crops? Or was that explained and I missed it?
About the Calendar
Typo:
Quote:
One is a solar calendar of 350 days with no further division that is used for religious purposes by both the Church of Serra (who developed it) and sometimes by the Church of Leyana It starts and ends at the vernal equinox.
Period missing from the end of "Leyana", before "It starts and ends".
Just how do the people of the Underworld keep track of time? Do they have mechanical clocks in every town? Are there magical crystals that pulse with every prime? Is there some widely-known cantrip that people can cast to tell them the time?
_________________
"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
As this work has been accepted by a majority of the votes cast, I have moved the original thread into the Archives. The thread still retains the same url, so the link works, but now it is located only within the M:EM Archive board.
It used to be explicit, but on some copy paste the mana symbols were lost. Should I restore them?
I rather enjoy seeing the world without explicit color symbols tied to each entry. I mean, you don't have to try hard to connect them to the color combinations you say (though I still say Altrium seems to have a streak of red), and the only thing it really effects is what types of magic we may see come from each place. If you think it's that important, you can add them in, but I don't see any harm in leaving the mana symbols out.
Quote:
As to the races... yeah, this totally slipped my mind that I hadn't said anything about the races of Altrium other than that they don't contain many fliers. Nor the Children, for that matter. Altrium is Human with only trace other (potentially Vedalken), the Children are primarily human with seconday populations of other races that have been culturally (but not biologically, as in the highlands) absorbed: Elves, Goblins, and Ogres spring to mind.
The main issue I actually have with it is because you mention quite a number of races when describing the mixture of species in the Highlands. Several races -merfolk and ogres stand out to me in particular- aren't mentioned elsewhere and it doesn't feel as natural as, say, homarids being confined to just the Underworld does. I did get the feeling that Altrium was exclusively inhabited by humans, but that wasn't mentioned either.
You imply Sunstones are fragile, but you don't say how fragile. Are they prone to shattering but strong against compressive forces, like glass? Are fractured pieces still usable as smaller sources, or are they only viable when complete? Or are these nebulous notions left for other people to fill in?
If I did, I certainly didn't mean to: they have about the durability of rock crystal. -- they lose charge in the dark, but don't physically break too easily. If you tell me what line gave this impression, I can look over the wording and say "past self, what were you thinking?"
Here you say: "Before the Thirteen Days War, the people made vastly superior sunstones (or perhaps proper powerstones), relics that never give out no matter how long they’re kept in the dark. Since the secret of their creation has been lost, intact Ancient Sunstones are some of the most valuable items in modern Altrium"
{which is actually missing a period at the end, but:} You specifically say intact Ancient Sunstones, which implies broken rather than lost. Since Ancient Sunstones were obviously more durable, that also implies that modern Sunstones are even more fragile.
You imply Sunstones are fragile, but you don't say how fragile. Are they prone to shattering but strong against compressive forces, like glass? Are fractured pieces still usable as smaller sources, or are they only viable when complete? Or are these nebulous notions left for other people to fill in?
If I did, I certainly didn't mean to: they have about the durability of rock crystal. -- they lose charge in the dark, but don't physically break too easily. If you tell me what line gave this impression, I can look over the wording and say "past self, what were you thinking?"
Here you say: "Before the Thirteen Days War, the people made vastly superior sunstones (or perhaps proper powerstones), relics that never give out no matter how long they’re kept in the dark. Since the secret of their creation has been lost, intact Ancient Sunstones are some of the most valuable items in modern Altrium"
{which is actually missing a period at the end, but:} You specifically say intact Ancient Sunstones, which implies broken rather than lost. Since Ancient Sunstones were obviously more durable, that also implies that modern Sunstones are even more fragile.
Ooooooooh. yeah, I'll be changing that "intact" to "surviving", since the reason they'd be broken would be time, apocalypse, and rare accidents. It's been millennia after all.
_________________
"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
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