bathymetric: (R3 Mods)
Unknown Seas Mods / NPCs ([personal profile] bathymetric) wrote in [community profile] unknownseas2022-06-12 09:33 pm
Entry tags:

Week 1

Good morning, New Rapture. A new day is dawning.

There may not be much light to differentiate the days here, but the lights of the part of the city you're in change enough by the clock that you can almost believe there's a sun somewhere. It looks like Mayor Fontaine has no intention of going back on his deal, and for the time being? You're all stuck here. But there's plenty to do, and... maybe not plenty to see, but there's enough. There's something, at any rate.

Especially if you're willing to look beyond the surface.

And if you spend enough time around others, you might find something neat!

No matter what, it's time to start getting to know your fellow captives. You might be here a while.




MONDAY | TUESDAY | WEDNESDAY | THURSDAY
FRIDAY | SATURDAY


[ ooc: Welcome to the first week of Unknown Seas Round 3! We're very excited to have you. Please make sure to mark any investigation toplevels accordingly, and you can reach either Mayor Fontaine or Eleanor for conversations! ]
visiblepattern: (025.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-14 11:41 pm (UTC)(link)
[Huh.]

I know some people don't believe in their power, but dragons have always been an accepted part of our world and our history.

What created your world, then...?
inaclearing: ([ arbor vitae ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-14 11:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Uh - you know, space rocks and stuff...collided, and merged together to form a planet. Ha, I'm not a scientist.

[Other people would have other answers, but Forrest didn't ask them!]
visiblepattern: (007.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-14 11:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Space rocks...

[Huh.]

I suppose that's as good an explanation as any. Especially if you have no dragons.
inaclearing: (Default)

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-15 12:04 am (UTC)(link)
We had dinosaurs! Giant lizards that lived millions of years ago. You can go to museums and see their fossilized bones.
visiblepattern: (012.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-15 12:06 am (UTC)(link)
[His eyes go a bit wide at that, actually, good god- ]

Doesn't it seem somewhat cursed at all? To keep the bones of ancient beings on display?
inaclearing: ([ american plum ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-15 12:49 am (UTC)(link)
No? It's educational.
visiblepattern: (025.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-15 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
Educational in what way...?
inaclearing: ([ arbor vitae ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-15 01:31 am (UTC)(link)
You can learn about them, even though they're gone! And the history of the planet itself - when you know what came before, you can see how everything came to be the way it is.
visiblepattern: (Default)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-15 01:33 am (UTC)(link)
Perhaps so, but... It just seems to me as though grave sites should be left undisturbed, natural or otherwise.
inaclearing: ([ black walnut ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-15 01:48 am (UTC)(link)
...I can understand that. But these were only animals.
visiblepattern: (020.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-15 01:57 am (UTC)(link)
...Is digging up animals not seen as a strange pastime in your world?
inaclearing: (Default)

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-15 02:13 am (UTC)(link)
Not when they're fossils. By that point, the bones are basically petrified.
visiblepattern: (020.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-15 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
How can you know whether they were "only animals" or not?
inaclearing: ([ hackberry ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-15 11:29 pm (UTC)(link)
...that's an interesting question. There's probably an answer about skull sizes or something like that.

[But the question feels a little more philosophical, and anyway Brett's not a science guy.]

People find traces of ancient civilizations, too. Houses, tools, pots. There's even record of species that were similar to humans who died out before us. I read once that they found the skeleton of a Neanderthal who'd suffered a spinal injury. It would've left them paralyzed, unable to contribute to the group, but they could tell from the bones that the others had treated their injuries and taken care of them for years afterwards. When they died, they got buried with flowers. Some people think that's the first sign of civilization - not tools, or weapons, but caring for each other like that.

[Brett's quiet a moment.]

...I can see how maybe that's something that should've been left in peace.
visiblepattern: (Default)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-15 11:39 pm (UTC)(link)
...Perhaps so. It is interesting, however, when you put it like that. Learning how ancient people lived, and how they interacted with one another.

[...]

The dragons are...they're gods to us. The First Ones left behind evidence of their interactions with our ancestors, and their history with us is well-recorded and passed down. If there's no evidence of your ancient creatures having any sort of civilized interactions or society, then I suppose it's fair to consider them animals, as there's no proof that they were otherwise.

I'm sorry for questioning so much. There's just something strange to me, about the idea that one could, in theory, dig up the bodies of the gods and keep them in such a way. Grave sites should still be left undisturbed, but if I had to choose, doing something that I would find strange to my body seems less...sacrilegious, I suppose? I didn't mean to be so unrelenting, however.
inaclearing: ([ spinosa ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-16 12:27 am (UTC)(link)
Hey, it's fine. That's how we're gonna learn about each others' worlds and customs, right?

[Granted, Brett got in way over his head about paleontology immediately because this is really not his area of expertise. But it was interesting to hear such an unusual perspective on it!]

It's interesting to me that you have...just real gods, with evidence and everything. We have a lot of different religions, but there's no real proof to any of them. Humans, where I'm from, have pretty much always been the only people around.
visiblepattern: (007.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-16 01:39 am (UTC)(link)
I'm told that my grandfather prays to a different god than I do. I don't really know anything about my grandfather, though - I've never met him. So perhaps he can tell me about it one day.

[Anyway.]

We have other people, though, not just humans - though they can look like humans, the kitsunes and the wolfskins can change into animals. The dragons can choose to take human forms as well.

[Which, thankfully, probably explains the dragon ancestry.]
inaclearing: ([ arbor vitae ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-16 02:01 am (UTC)(link)
[oh thank god]

Oh, we have legends about those, too! Kitsune and werewolves - that's what we call them. That's interesting, that we have even that much in common. It almost makes me wonder if they're real after all and just hiding.

[Not all that seriously...but then, an awful lot of what he knew about the world has been overturned in the last few days. What does he know? Maybe Bigfoot's real too!]
visiblepattern: (005.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-16 02:15 am (UTC)(link)
That is interesting... Though I can tell you for sure, ours are certainly real. I've met some of them.
inaclearing: ([ spinosa ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-16 03:27 am (UTC)(link)
That's so cool! I mean - I've met people who aren't human now, but a lot of folks dream about being able to do things like that.
visiblepattern: (009.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-16 11:18 pm (UTC)(link)
It does seem fun, in some ways, to be able to change into something else; I don't know if I'd want to, maybe just once or twice...

I know we have more of the wolfskin in Nohr; the kitsunes live in Hoshido, originally. I just met them very recently - they have legends among themselves that humans can't be trusted, so apparently I'm really fortunate to know them.
inaclearing: ([ green alder ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-17 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
That's too bad. I guess it does make sense that there would be conflicts, though. We have enough of those just among ourselves.
visiblepattern: (012.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-17 05:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Apparently there were problems in the past with people hunting the kitsunes for their fur. Which is...honestly a dreadful concept, now that I've actually said it out loud.
inaclearing: ([ arkansas soft pine ])

[personal profile] inaclearing 2022-06-17 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Holy - yeah, wow, that's really awful.

[Essentially like wearing human skin???]

Did it get outlawed?
visiblepattern: (025.)

[personal profile] visiblepattern 2022-06-17 05:46 pm (UTC)(link)
I sincerely hope so.

[Good lord.]

Unfortunately, I'm not familiar with Hoshidan law...