Where ash buries gardens and graves keep company.

Nothing green survives here. Long-dead trees stand like charcoal bones along the roads, and graveyards spread through the city in crowded rows of cracked...

Ugly armor for beautiful survival odds.

This is not armor made for ceremony or clean banners. It belongs to muddy roads, desperate watches, cramped skirmishes, and the kind of close fighting...

The cradle fell. The truth did not.

When an omen stirs beneath the leaves, the old wound opens differently. What once felt like loss begins to feel arranged. Records fail to answer simple...

11 Factions
23 Tales
24 Settlements
26 Bloodlines
30 Inhabitants
Greenwell Nobility
  • Beloved Rural Nobility
  • Natural Stewards
  • People-First Leadership

Greenwell Nobility

House Greenwell is an ancient noble lineage deeply associated with stewardship, diplomacy, agriculture, and harmony between civilization and the natural world. Unlike many aristocratic houses who isolate themselves behind layers of ceremony and status, the Greenwells are widely respected for remaining accessible to common folk, often walking among farmers, craftsmen, hunters, and villagers as equals rather than distant rulers.

Centered in the fertile lands surrounding Stonebrook, House Greenwell maintains influence through trust, fairness, and long-standing community loyalty rather than fear or political coercion. Their estates are known less for lavish excess and more for natural beauty, open courtyards, thriving farmland, preserved woodland, and communal gathering spaces. Greenwell nobles are frequently seen participating directly in festivals, harvests, local disputes, and seasonal traditions alongside the people they govern.

Though often perceived as gentle or overly idealistic by rival houses, the Greenwells possess quiet political intelligence and enduring resilience. They value stability, sustainable growth, honest diplomacy, and practical leadership over displays of wealth or dominance. Their reputation for fairness has made them trusted mediators in disputes between nobles, merchants, and rural communities alike.

House Greenwell believes nobility is not measured by distance from the people, but by responsibility toward them.

Briarbrook

Briarbrook moves with the gentle confidence of a place that has nothing to prove before noon. Cobbled lanes curve beneath old trees, stone ovens breathe warm bread into the air, and the slow river murmurs past gardens, footbridges, and shaded tavern doors. The town is bright without being loud, comfortable without being dull, and full of the sort of neighborly attention that can spot a secret from three streets away.

Its charm lies in how easily rank seems to loosen here. Fine sleeves brush against work aprons in the market, noble laughter spills beside common gossip, and tavern tables have a way of making titles feel temporarily negotiable. Tradition still matters, but it wears softer boots than in sterner places, allowing pride, mistakes, flirtation, and second chances to mingle beneath the same low rafters.

In Briarbrook the quiet places often reveal the loudest truths. It is where bruised ambition can become discipline, where ridiculous schemes can hide real stakes, and where comfort makes it harder to pretend pain is noble. Beneath the bread-sweet air and easy smiles, the town keeps its whispers close — not cruelly, just carefully.


Briarbrook
  • Quiet Comforts
  • Noble Ease
  • Pixie Mischief
Not every noble hides behind stone walls or silvered gates.