lore

  • Folklore of Faerie

    Folklore of Faerie

    To round out the zine here is some of the current worldbuilding for Faerie, including how the courts work, the twin queens of the Fey and how the fey have taken to the Feengrenze

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  • Knights of the Fey Courts

    The Knights of Faerie are a common sight in the Feengrenze as they go about their errands and quests for their leige, which means that they can prove potent complications, enemies and rivals with their inflexable ways and oathbound quests.

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  • The Great Game: Power Dynamics in Feengrenze’s Successor States

    A game needs players; otherwise, nothing happens. The Great Game features a diverse cast of players drawn from various lost civilizations of Earth, as well as a few wholly new creations. So step inside and learn how each one is floundering in its unique way.

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  • Beyond the stability of the successor states and enclaves lay the weirdlands where reality oozes like thin slime, the landscape crackles with weird magic and ruins dot the landscape like the discarded toys of a giant toddler. There is wealth to be had here, if you can survive the strange

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  • Celebrating Ostara: Traditions and Rituals in the Feengrenze

    The wheel of the year turns and as the first signs of spring arrive it is time for Ostara the old fey pagan spring equinox festival.

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  • Imbolc: The Old Fey Paganism Fire Festival

    Happy Imbolc, wayfarers! If you thought Groundhog Day was purely an American holiday or a recently contrived celebration, think again. Imbolc, also known as Oimelc, Lady Day, and, to Christians, Candlemas or St. Brigid’s Day, dates back to at least pre-Christian times in Britian. Like Groundhog Day, it is a celebration of the first stirrings

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  • The Drollish Cap is an evil artifact of pure anarchy. It seeks to destroy all semblance of society and usher in a world where everybody constantly acts on their worse impulses. Lydia von Falkencrest aka the Grand Absurdist is an example of what prolonged exposure to the cap can do to a person.

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