Chapter 0 - Session 3

The Shape of the Company

The video can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NbBGRr0pZR8

<- Previous | Next ->

Events and Actions

This session was the final character creation and preparation meeting before play began in earnest, and the GM confirmed early on that all six player characters begin the campaign at the age of fourteen. The GM opened by asking each player to give a "big picture" account of their character, going around the table, after which a number of characters received deeper background treatment. Ross was absent; the GM summarised Knick Nab's concept on his behalf. Donovan was present for the first portion of the session but left early.

Donovan described Noddy as a Mixed Man — Common stock mixed with High, leaving him tall at six feet nine inches but extremely lean. Despite his height, Noddy has cultivated a manner of making himself invisible: he slouches, makes no eye contact, takes up as little space as possible, and is simply not noticed. He grew up in the rubble of Cliff Town after its collapse, surviving entirely through luck and guile, with no knowledge of his parents and no resources beyond what he could scavenge or steal from the detritus that falls from above. His aspiration is the Mystic path, though he does not yet know what that means; the GM was explicit that it should be understood for now through the lens of chance and survival — Noddy's uncanny, near-impossible luck at staying alive is itself the seed of his coming power, and by his own reckoning he is the luckiest man he knows. His Boon is a familiar spirit that currently inhabits a seagull — an entity that can communicate with him across the barrier between its animal vessel and himself, watch over him while he sleeps, and potentially grow in capacity over time.

Allen described Werner De Rendal as a nobleman's son from the far north, at the very threshold of the frozen wastes where only the sea provides any wealth. The De Rendal family was once enormously prosperous from whaling — supplying oil, ivory, and blubber — but the decline began generations ago and accelerated when the Great Change disrupted all the old sea patterns. Werner's grandfather, a renowned sailing expert whose knowledge of harsh northern waters was unmatched, was commissioned by the king to lead an expedition westward before the Great Change — an impossible voyage by all ordinary reckoning. He left, the Great Change followed not long after, and neither he nor confirmation of his fate ever returned. Werner's father Kasimir kept to the whaling trade long past the point of viability and has left the family broke and indebted. Werner has been sent south with letters, papers, and the last of his father's favours to seek a commission in the Navy. His fighting skills will center on harpoon, cutlass, and eventually heavy ship's cannon — a natural continuation of the family's whaling trade, since some of the earliest naval cannon were adapted from harpoon guns, leaving the De Rendals an unusual grounding in naval ordnance even as their fortunes declined. His Boon is the De Rendal name itself — a ducal-level title, still recognised and still capable of opening the right doors, even if the wealth behind it has long since evaporated.

Alain gave the full picture of Infurious Montesigna, known as Riu: the third son of Baron Justinius Mona III, a distinguished family of horse breeders from the Plains. Being a third son, Riu carries no obligations to the family trade and has been free to follow his own passionate curiosity, which runs entirely toward books, lore, languages, and the faint edges of what might be magic. He has recently acquired a small pet squid — Squidly III, the third because the first two suffocated before he resolved the ventilation problem — which he keeps in a purpose-built bottle with an ingenious lid that prevents escape while allowing free gas exchange. His interest in the squid is practical as much as affectionate: he has read that the finest magical inks use squid ink as a base. He is bound for the Capitol to access its libraries. Though he had presented Dabbler as his intended profession in the previous session, he revised his plans during this session, moving away from Essence-based semi-spell use and toward the Lay Healer path instead. He has no practical experience of magic in either direction yet. He arrived at the Capitol recently, having journeyed from the coast where he acquired his squid, and finds the city far more chaotic and militarised than he expected — the whole Capitol is plainly on a war footing.

Pat described Cosimo Cellini Scivio as a young man who grew up in the Capitol working in construction, specialising in the intricate rope work used to build domes, keep walls plumb, and operate cranes — a rigger. He worked extensively on churches for the Divinity of Two and is genuinely devout, having served as an altar boy and witnessed things in the back rooms of religious services that are not written in any book. He aspires to become an Illusionist, though what that means in practice is not yet clear to anyone. He has a weakness for gambling, which led to a serious incident: he incurred a debt to a member of the clergy, who came to the construction site to collect. A very heavy stone fell from Cosimo's crane and killed the man. Whether this was deliberate remains ambiguous even to Cosimo himself. He has been on the run since, wracked with guilt but unable to confess to the same institution that might condemn him. His Boon will be spectacular, but Pat has declined to describe it publicly — it will manifest through roleplay at the appropriate moment.

The GM described Knick Nab in Ross's absence as a young man of one-eighth Elven heritage, taken from the Northern Highlands at a young age and brought to the Capitol to work as a pickpocket for a minor underworld figure who runs a gang of young thieves. He is sharp, flamboyant by nature, and has visions of leadership. His Boon is an ability to perceive what people truly want at their core — not what they say they want, but the real and sometimes unspoken desire beneath the surface — which he intends to use for leadership rather than manipulation.

Scala laid out Manuel de Barret's story — known as Mani — in further detail. As the third child of a merchant family — his elder brother handsome and capable, his sister brilliant and sought-after — Mani was sent to the Ropolos School, a prestigious boarding school in the Capitol that has recently opened its doors to the merchant class, partly for financial reasons and partly because wartime creates demand for capable people regardless of birth. The school's fencing master refused to teach anyone who was not noble, which Mani found infuriating. He found an alternative teacher in the school groundskeeper, a former Marine who taught him blade work and brawling as it is actually practised aboard ships. He has a small dueling scar as a result of a fight he picked with someone he should not have. His Boon is a talisman — an old coin worn around the neck — that will make him substantially resistant to magic. He does not have it yet; it will come to him during the campaign.

The session ended with Scala presenting the substantial collection of hand-painted 3D-printed miniatures he had produced for the game: naval marines, sailors, ruffians, Islander types, civilians, and bartenders, each group in distinct colours. Individual miniatures had been prepared for each PC: Werner in a naval coat, Cosimo in a brown leather jacket, Mani with a feather in his hat, and Noddy without shoes, carrying a length of rope. The GM confirmed that actual play would begin in the next session.

NPCs & Creatures

None encountered.

Locations

None visited.

Conflicts

None.

Learnings and Discussions

Cliff Town: The Capitol has a third district beyond High Town and Low Town — or rather, had one. Cliff Town clung to the cliff face itself, below the Hill and the House, home to those who had nothing and no place to belong. A landslide, of uncertain cause, destroyed the entire area not long ago. The rubble remains: navigable but ruinous, with the sewers of the affluent districts above now exposed and draining through it. Guards patrol the old entrances, preventing both entry and departure. No explanation for this has been publicly given. Noddy lives in the ruins.

The Great Change and the De Rendal Expedition: Werner's grandfather was specifically sought out by the king for a westward expedition before the Great Change, because of his unmatched knowledge of harsh northern sailing conditions. He departed, and the Great Change followed within roughly a year. No one has seen him since, and no official account has ever clarified what happened. The Great Change also disrupted the whaling routes the De Rendal family depended upon, changing sea patterns, pushing ice flows into previously clear channels, and scattering the whale populations whose locations had been accumulated over generations of family knowledge.

Gunpowder Technology: The world is fully in the gunpowder age. Flintlocks are the standard for those who can afford them; matchlocks exist but are becoming outdated. Rifling has not yet arrived. Naval combat at range is conducted with cannon and musket; once ships are alongside, cutlass and pistol dominate. On land, the North's cavalry remains the decisive factor, which is why the South has forced the conflict to sea where horses are useless.

North–South War and Resources: The current war between North and South is primarily naval, driven by competition for resources and territory in the newly accessible West. The North's traditional cavalry advantage counts for nothing at sea, which is why the South pushed the conflict there. The mountain passes between North and South are closed in wartime; legitimate trade ceases, which pushes families like Mani's into smuggling. When the passes are controlled, their owners extract significant revenue from trade; in wartime, that income disappears entirely.

Boons: Each player confirmed or clarified their character's Boon in this session. Noddy has a transferable familiar spirit, currently housed in a seagull. Werner's Boon is the weight of the De Rendal name — a ducal-level title that still commands access even without wealth behind it. Knick Nab's Boon is the ability to perceive what people truly want. Mani's Boon is a magical talisman conferring resistance to magic, which he has yet to acquire. Cosimo's Boon will be revealed through play.

Devoutness and the Divinity of Two: The characters vary in their actual belief. Cosimo is genuinely devout, having served in the church from a young age. Alain/Riu's family, as Plains nobility, observes the Divinity's requirements as a matter of course. Werner understands that without the Church's blessing, his family cannot afford children anyway. Mani views the Divinity as infallible — it is simply the frame in which he was raised. Noddy has had no formal religious exposure at all. The North's devotion is enforced as much as felt: the Divinity of Two commands the loyalty of the King's Army and Navy, and the Censures — feared enforcers likened to inquisitorial assassins — hunt down those who deny its primacy. Other faiths are not tolerated in the North, and past rebellions against the Church's authority have never lasted; enforcement is markedly looser in the South.

Items Gained

None.

Items Lost

None.