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WizardofOwls 
Posted: 03-Sep-2007, 07:02 AM
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Hey everybody!

I've ben a long time fan and player of Dungeons and Dragons. I've been working on a homebrew campaign setting for a while now too. I'd love to invite you all to come look around. Only one condition...If you come, PLEASE let me know wht you think! Ineed feedback to make it better, okay?

The addy is:

http://oramis.wetpaint.com


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WizardofOwls 
Posted: 15-Sep-2007, 07:50 PM
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So has anyone had a chance to look around over there? If so, what did you think?
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WizardofOwls 
Posted: 16-Sep-2007, 04:13 PM
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Hmmmm. unsure.gif

Well, it doesn't look as if I am going to get any useful feedback this way, so I guess I'll try posting some of it here. It is very loosely based on the books The Shattered World and The Burning Realm by Michael Reaves. Let me know what you think, okay?

I'll start with the basic world premise for

Oramis: The Shattered World

In the mist-shrouded ages of times gone by, Oramis was a much different place. Myths and legends tell us that the world was whole and solid then, a sphere of unimaginable proportions. They say that the world would turn its face away from the sun every day so that a great darkness called “night” would fall, dividing time into alternating days and nights. In this darkness, or so the legends run, one could see lights in the sky - small lights called “stars” as well as a greater light the ancients called the “moon”. The followers of Selene say that this is true and that this moon and their Lady are one and the same. But if that is true, who supplies their powers now that the moon is gone?

They also say that great sections of our world were covered in water. Vast “oceans” of water so great that one could not see the other side, and so deep that one could not see the bottom. Ships plied their trades on the surface of these oceans and great monstrous beasts filled their depths.

Then came the Dragon Lords. From whence did they come? What did they want? What was their purpose? No one seems to know for certain save, perhaps, the elves and dragons - and even they do not have the answers... or so they claim. For ages the Dragon Lords ruled, setting up stone circles and monoliths. Only they knew the purpose for them. Their servants, the elves and dragons, provided the labor, while the native peoples of our world - human, dwarf and twyll - could only watch in awe. Great magical powers the Dragon Lords had, and watching them we learned. We learned about building, about power, and ultimately, about magic. Through their servants, the elves, they began to teach our peoples the ways of magic, and our peoples learned well and true. Many of the people began to worship them, turning their backs on the True Gods. In return the Gods, in their jealousy and rage, turned their backs on us.

If only we had known what was coming....

Everything seemed peaceful according to the stories. Yes, the True Priests and the Followers of the Dragon Lords bickered and fought, but everything else, it seemed, was fine. Then one day the True Priests began to cry, “The end is coming! The Tapestry unravels! Turn away from the false ones and return to the True Faith! Bring their blessings back upon us before it is too late!” But few heeded their warnings.

Then He came. He Who Has No Name. The Incomprehensible One. The Destroyer. The Unraveller. The people cried out to the Dragon Lords to save them, but they could not be found. They and their followers, the Mages, had vanished, deserting the peoples in their time of need. The True Priests gathered their strength and stood up to him, but ultimately it was no use. The Unraveller struck. Without the Gods to protect us the world was shattered like a glass ball into ten thousand pieces.

But the True Priests did not give up. They cried out to the Gods, “Save us!” And thankfully the Gods, in their divine mercy, responded. They drove away the Nameless One, and created a sphere to keep the pieces of our world from drifting away.

Only after the world had shattered and the Nameless One defeated did the mages return saying that they had saved the world for us. The Guild (some of whom were diviners) claimed that it had been able to foresee this disaster months before it actually happened and was prepared. They said that - though unable to completely prevent this event now referred to as the Shattering - they were able at least to save the world from total destruction. After determining how the world would be shattered, the Guild - working feverishly - claimed it had devised magical devices called shard-keys and placed one of them on each piece of land which would someday become a shard. These devices maintain each shard's gravity, atmosphere, climate, and stability. If a shard-key were ever to be removed from the shard it was designed to protect, that shard would lose all of these things and would pose a hazard to other shards as it spun out of control. All of these shards were suspended inside a large envelope of air and set to floating within it in random, ever-shifting patterns.

Millions of people died in the ensuing chaos which followed the Shattering. Common people, blaming the cowardice of the mages for the destruction and death, hunted down and slew many wizards. Much knowledge of magic was lost. Modern mages have yet to duplicate many of the marvels that have been accredited to those ancient wizards - including the magic which created shard-keys!

For centuries mundanes - those who don't practice magic - persecuted those who do, blaming them for the catastrophe that was the Shattering, despite the fact that they were instrumental in saving the world from total destruction - or so they claim. However times and people change. As society began to rebound, people became more and more dependent on those who use magic for trade. There is now a grudging acceptance of mages in most places. However there are a few shards - even today - that still stubbornly cling to the old beliefs, that remain suspicious of those who use magic and continue to support the witch hunters who help to "rid the world of those dangerous people."

RASAMA (the Royal Academy for the Study and Advancement of the Mystic Arts - also known as the Mages' Guild) was originally conceived as a means of controlling and monitoring mages in light of the general public's distrust of them. All mages were required to register with the Guild, and those who did not were shunned and hunted down by witch hunters - betrayed to them by their own brother mages. Today the registration of mages with the Guild continues, despite the general shift in attitudes and the changing views of most people. In many places a mage will not be hired for work unless he is a registered Guild member, and since the Guild still brands those who practice forbidden schools as rogue mages, often those who are not registered will be viewed with even greater suspicion.

Undaunted by the prejudice and persecution they have been the victims of in the past, however, mages have continued to be of great service to man - their greatest accomplishment being the creation of windriggers, flying ships which provide transportation from shard to shard.
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Cookie Mans Wife 
Posted: 23-Jan-2008, 01:48 PM
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I play D&D and this sounds awesome. Just reading it makes me want to play!!! biggrin.gif I've not read the books that this is based on but it seems that you have a great idea. I wish I could be more helpful...
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krioni98 
Posted: 27-May-2009, 11:30 AM
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I use to play DnD a lot back in the day. I read some of your stuff and it is really good. I haven't checked out the books that oyu are basing it on, but from what you got here it sounds like you have a made a very nice world for your campaign.
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marthien 
Posted: 27-May-2009, 05:55 PM
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here send me a link to where i can come check it out. i love D&D, ive played for years...
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WizardofOwls 
Posted: 27-May-2009, 06:32 PM
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QUOTE (marthien @ 27-May-2009, 07:55 PM)
here send me a link to where i can come check it out. i love D&D, ive played for years...

Here is a link for you:

http://oramis.wetpaint.com

Let me know what you think, okay?
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Taliesin 
Posted: 27-May-2009, 07:48 PM
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I'm a GM for Hackmaster, which is a rules system that (in its past incarnation) was based on 1st and 2nd Edition AD&D rules.

I read the portion of your setting that you posted here, and it's definitely intriguing.

Some questions I would have as a player in your campaign:

1. Is the 10,000 shards a hard rule, or is the number closer to "We Have No Idea"? smile.gif

2. Are the climates of the various shards the same, or would we find as much variance in climate as we would on earth?

3. Regarding the windriggers...considering that the people on all the shards are so mistrustful of magic, is it likely any one of them would even get on a windrigger?

4. Are the windriggers on a sort of schedule? How many of these windriggers are there, and who controls them?

5. Are the shards all under a single government, or is each shard self-governed?

6. Do the shards ever collide? Each one having its own gravity would indicate some form of motion. However, without an axis, a day/night cycle would be sort of impossible, not to mention seasons.

I like the beginning premise, to be sure. I don't know that I'll have time to check out the rest of the setting, but I'd say you've done well as a start.


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englishmix 
Posted: 28-May-2009, 10:57 PM
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Ah, I used to play D&D in another life - years ago in the High School and College years, and it was fascinating. I too was a GM for two games.

Methinks your scope is pretty good. It will certainly bring the players in toward your quest. Now don't get me wrong, for I wouldn't play if it were not a serious attempt of fantasy, but I always liked to throw in the unexpected at very rare moments - in a Monty Python kind of way. For instance, the sudden appearance of a gay Harpie who has a keen knack for assaulting windrigger crews with its enchanting reditions of Boy George songs...

And its has to come out of no where, so one certainly wouldn't want that in the introduction to the quest...

Okay, maybe Taliesin has better feedback.
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RJBUBBAMACK 
Posted: 19-Aug-2017, 10:49 AM
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Hey,
I have played Dungeons and Dragons for the past couple years and I love it. I have a close group of friends that introduced me to it and I still play it with them. It seems the link you gave to your homebrew is no longer active. I would be willing to peruse it over. I play 5th edition so I don't know if the rules are the same, but my friends have been begging me to make a story and I could use some inspiration.
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