A land of stone and strife, where the strong endure and the weak are forgotten.

To outsiders, the valley looks barren, cruel, and nearly empty. To those raised among its crags, it is a proving ground with a memory sharper than steel....

He breaks recruits like blades - some bend, some shatter, few survive.

At the war camp, his rank places him close enough to politics to understand their shape and far enough from comfort to despise them. He knows when to hold...

Some lullabies wake what grief buried.

At the center of the disturbance is a grieving mother who has spent years accepting the shape of an answer she was given too gently. The forest offers no...

31 Souls
10 Heirlooms
26 Peoples
11 Cabals
25 Settlements
Cursed Object
  • Silent Vessels
  • Possessive Relics
  • Haunted Utility

Cursed Object

Cursed Objects began as ordinary possessions: useful, treasured, neglected, feared, or loved too intensely for their own good. A ring held through too many betrayals, a mirror watched by too many lonely faces, a book opened during the wrong grief, a knife used with too much rage, or a charm pressed to the heart during a final promise could become the center of a binding. Ritual made some deliberately. Others happened because emotion, spirit, and vessel met at exactly the wrong moment.

Many were not recognized at first. They remained in homes, shops, packs, pockets, shrines, attics, cellars, and locked cabinets while the living blamed themselves for strange dreams, missing hours, sudden tempers, or the feeling that something nearby wanted to be touched. Some were inherited for generations, their curses mistaken for family luck, family shame, or family eccentricity with better furniture.

As time passed, the most persistent objects learned how to be kept. They became beautiful when someone thought of selling them, useful when suspicion grew, comforting when grief made a hand reach out in the dark. A few were destroyed by accident or ritual, but many survived because people find endless clever ways to justify keeping things that make them feel chosen.

Now they remain among the easiest Cursed Ones to overlook and among the hardest to truly escape. They wait in plain sight, silent until noticed, harmless until handled, patient until wanted. Their lack of feet does not make them safe. It only means someone else will do the walking.

It cannot follow you, so it makes you carry it.