Descent Into Pandemonium: Difference between revisions
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
=== | This presentation of what turned into ''Descent Into Pandemonium'' explains, up front in this introduction, some things that became only clear as the design went on. This makes the megadungeon a bit easier to understand, particularly the glossary. For the most part, however, the sections after the introduction remain mostly as they were originally written, so you can sort of see the evolution of the idea. There are a couple of places where an idea from later in the process necessitated changing a prior location slightly, but this was avoided most of the time. | ||
=== Premise === | |||
The #dungeon23 pitch suggested making the dungeon have a level a month, but this one is done a level a week. The rough plan was a decent ever downwards, with order giving way to chaos the deeper you go. By the time you get to the bottom, you're accessing planes of chaos. | |||
Given that, it seemed right to start with a temple devoted to order at the top, abandoned for two millennia. As it turns out, this time frame obliterates a lot of what you might normally see in a dungeon. Some research discovered that, over 2000 years in an underground, slightly damp environment with breathable air… | |||
* …stalactites average about 20cm of growth. | |||
* …all wood, cloth, leather, and organic materials decompose to dust and dirt | |||
* …bones will have decomposed to dust | |||
* …teeth will have fully or mostly decomposed; a few might remain intact | |||
* …most metals (e.g. copper, iron, silver) corrode to dust | |||
* …brass and some other metals may or may not have survived, based on their immediate environment | |||
* …glass, stone, gold, platinum, and bronze remain mostly to fully unchanged | |||
* …some crystals (e.g. quartz) remain intact and some (e.g. salt) do not, depending on their chemical makeup | |||
This last fact led to the early idea that this temple to order was specifically attracted to crystals as expressions of order spontaneously created in nature, making crystals a theme through much of the megadungeon. | |||
=== Sources === | |||
=== Rough History === | |||
* The “Kiooliciti” (kiːuˈlɪsɪtiː) refers to a religious movement/culture centered around worship of order and law, particularly in how it manifested in crystals. Though advanced, the Kiooliciti have been forgotten, the Kioolicit language extinct. | |||
* Two thousand years ago, a Kioolicit temple flourished here, on the slope of a temperate mountain forest, part of a magically advanced, but now extinct, civilization. | |||
* Though some activity took place above ground, the bulk of the temple descends, in levels, into the rock. | |||
* Geomantic forces concentrated a potent source of order into a huge geode deep in the rock, with the temple built here to protect and access. | |||
* The Kiooliciti forged a powerful artifact, The Axiom, to harness and use this source of order, ultimately constructing most of their society around it. | |||
* While the priests spread Kioolicit teaching and culture to extend their influence, the culture’s mages became obsessed with using portals to capitalize on that influence, and built a tesseract connecting their labs across the globe. | |||
* Three chaotic gods bristled at the existence of The Axiom, and became briefly obsessed with the idea of corrupting its power to stabilize a permanent path between the plane of Pandemonium and the center of Kioolicit society. | |||
* The machinations of these gods arranged an unlikely alliance of extraplanar chaotic forces, which breached the temple’s tesseract and moved up to attack the temple. | |||
* Kioolicit defenders managed to stall the invaders before they reached the surface. | |||
* The short stalemate was broken by necromantic plague, turning many of the temple defenders into an undead horde. | |||
* Remaining defenders managed to confine the horde to the lower levels of the temple, then gathered what they could and abandoned the temple entirely, burying the surface entrances, and severing portal connections. | |||
* In time, the invaders shattered The Axiom and absconded with its heart. | |||
* The invaders, having accomplished their actual goal, never breached through to the surface as the Kiooliciti feared and, over two centuries, the garrison guarding the surface faded to nothing, along with what was left of the Kioolicit culture. | |||
* Within the temple’s somewhat humid conditions, two millennia have taken their toll on what was left behind. | |||
* Over that time, most of the potent wards and spells used to seal the temple have also faded. | |||
=== Glossary === | |||
== The Temple Beneath == | == The Temple Beneath == | ||
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* Icosahedral (blue): 5.17. Keys: 5.3, 5.10, 5.27 | * Icosahedral (blue): 5.17. Keys: 5.3, 5.10, 5.27 | ||
=== Appendix B: Tesseract Connections === | === Appendix B: Shards of the Axiom === | ||
Since reassembling the Axiom forms an overriding goal of this megadungeon, here is a list all the locations that mention containing shards of the shattered artifact: | |||
=== Appendix C: Tesseract Connections === | |||
When the Kiooliciti built their tesseract, they labelled the ''edges'' of its graph not the ''nodes''. (After all, it is the edges that are the hard things to create and monitor.) Each edge (a connection between rooms of the tesseract) has been given an alchemical symbol. Most are two way (↔), some are one way (→), and some are broken (—). The edges are: | When the Kiooliciti built their tesseract, they labelled the ''edges'' of its graph not the ''nodes''. (After all, it is the edges that are the hard things to create and monitor.) Each edge (a connection between rooms of the tesseract) has been given an alchemical symbol. Most are two way (↔), some are one way (→), and some are broken (—). The edges are: |
Revision as of 06:57, 24 December 2023
Introduction
This presentation of what turned into Descent Into Pandemonium explains, up front in this introduction, some things that became only clear as the design went on. This makes the megadungeon a bit easier to understand, particularly the glossary. For the most part, however, the sections after the introduction remain mostly as they were originally written, so you can sort of see the evolution of the idea. There are a couple of places where an idea from later in the process necessitated changing a prior location slightly, but this was avoided most of the time.
Premise
The #dungeon23 pitch suggested making the dungeon have a level a month, but this one is done a level a week. The rough plan was a decent ever downwards, with order giving way to chaos the deeper you go. By the time you get to the bottom, you're accessing planes of chaos.
Given that, it seemed right to start with a temple devoted to order at the top, abandoned for two millennia. As it turns out, this time frame obliterates a lot of what you might normally see in a dungeon. Some research discovered that, over 2000 years in an underground, slightly damp environment with breathable air…
- …stalactites average about 20cm of growth.
- …all wood, cloth, leather, and organic materials decompose to dust and dirt
- …bones will have decomposed to dust
- …teeth will have fully or mostly decomposed; a few might remain intact
- …most metals (e.g. copper, iron, silver) corrode to dust
- …brass and some other metals may or may not have survived, based on their immediate environment
- …glass, stone, gold, platinum, and bronze remain mostly to fully unchanged
- …some crystals (e.g. quartz) remain intact and some (e.g. salt) do not, depending on their chemical makeup
This last fact led to the early idea that this temple to order was specifically attracted to crystals as expressions of order spontaneously created in nature, making crystals a theme through much of the megadungeon.
Sources
Rough History
- The “Kiooliciti” (kiːuˈlɪsɪtiː) refers to a religious movement/culture centered around worship of order and law, particularly in how it manifested in crystals. Though advanced, the Kiooliciti have been forgotten, the Kioolicit language extinct.
- Two thousand years ago, a Kioolicit temple flourished here, on the slope of a temperate mountain forest, part of a magically advanced, but now extinct, civilization.
- Though some activity took place above ground, the bulk of the temple descends, in levels, into the rock.
- Geomantic forces concentrated a potent source of order into a huge geode deep in the rock, with the temple built here to protect and access.
- The Kiooliciti forged a powerful artifact, The Axiom, to harness and use this source of order, ultimately constructing most of their society around it.
- While the priests spread Kioolicit teaching and culture to extend their influence, the culture’s mages became obsessed with using portals to capitalize on that influence, and built a tesseract connecting their labs across the globe.
- Three chaotic gods bristled at the existence of The Axiom, and became briefly obsessed with the idea of corrupting its power to stabilize a permanent path between the plane of Pandemonium and the center of Kioolicit society.
- The machinations of these gods arranged an unlikely alliance of extraplanar chaotic forces, which breached the temple’s tesseract and moved up to attack the temple.
- Kioolicit defenders managed to stall the invaders before they reached the surface.
- The short stalemate was broken by necromantic plague, turning many of the temple defenders into an undead horde.
- Remaining defenders managed to confine the horde to the lower levels of the temple, then gathered what they could and abandoned the temple entirely, burying the surface entrances, and severing portal connections.
- In time, the invaders shattered The Axiom and absconded with its heart.
- The invaders, having accomplished their actual goal, never breached through to the surface as the Kiooliciti feared and, over two centuries, the garrison guarding the surface faded to nothing, along with what was left of the Kioolicit culture.
- Within the temple’s somewhat humid conditions, two millennia have taken their toll on what was left behind.
- Over that time, most of the potent wards and spells used to seal the temple have also faded.
Glossary
The Temple Beneath
A. The Surface
Half-way up a forested mountain, an ancient trail leads to ruins.
1.1 Stone-Capped Well
- Rune-covered
- Repellent
1.2 Feet of the Colossus
- All that remains of a massive granite statue, created by magic.
- Overgrown, no paths remaining.
- Scattered haphazardly on all sides of the left foot are balls of hair and bones (like owl pellets), about volleyball size, as well as larger solitary bones, skulls, and antlers.
- Ancient and weathered
Map
Week title
Week description
rooms
Map
Week title
Week description
rooms
Map
Week title
Week description
rooms
Map
Appendices
Appendix A: The Arch Keys
The early Kiooliciti experiments with portals led to the five "polyhedral" portals. The location of these are summarized here, in addition to the location of the keys that allow their use:
- Tetrahedral (yellow): 3.26, tesseract entrance. Keys: 2.2, 4.7, 4.8
- Cubic (orange): 1.28, smashed. Keys (shattered): 2.14, 4.26
- Octahedral (purple): 3.11, near geode. Keys: 1.13, 2.14, 4.7
- Dodecahedral (green): 4.16. Keys: 2.11, 4.4, 4.14
- Icosahedral (blue): 5.17. Keys: 5.3, 5.10, 5.27
Appendix B: Shards of the Axiom
Since reassembling the Axiom forms an overriding goal of this megadungeon, here is a list all the locations that mention containing shards of the shattered artifact:
Appendix C: Tesseract Connections
When the Kiooliciti built their tesseract, they labelled the edges of its graph not the nodes. (After all, it is the edges that are the hard things to create and monitor.) Each edge (a connection between rooms of the tesseract) has been given an alchemical symbol. Most are two way (↔), some are one way (→), and some are broken (—). The edges are:
- 🜁 air 3.26 → random destination.
- 🜂 fire 1.21 — 3.26
- 🜃 earth 3.26 ↔ 4.15
- 🜄 water 3.26 ↔ 5.1
- 🜉 aqua vitæ 4.15 ↔ 6.2
- 🜌 vinegar 4.15 ↔ 5.1
- 🜍 sulphur 4.29 ↔ 5.11
- 🜎 philosophers sulfur
- 🜏 black sulfur 5.7 ↔ 5.17
- 🜑 mercury sublimate 5.10 ↔ 5.17
- 🜔 salt 5.6 ↔ 5.7
- 🜕 nitre 5.11 ↔ 5.21
- 🜖 vitriol 5.3 ↔ 5.7
- 🜨 verdigris 5.21 ↔ 5.30
- 🜶 alkali 5.17 ↔ 5.31
- 🜳 regulus 5.4 ↔ 5.5
- 🜬 sublimate of antimony 5.4 ↔ 5.8
- 🜢 sublimate of copper 5.5 ↔ 5.8
- 🝁 quicklime 5.15 ↔ 6.3
- 🝅 alum 5.15 ↔ 6.3
- 🜩 tin 5.2 ↔ 5.8
- 🜚 gold 5.16 ↔ 5.19
- 🜛 silver 5.20 ↔ 6.1
- 🜠 copper 5.29 ↔ 6.2
- 🜪 lead 5.2 ↔ 5.14
- 🜜 iron 5.8 ↔ 5.31
- 🜫 antimony 5.20 ↔ 6.1
- 🜾 bismuth 5.16 ↔ 6.4
- 🜺 arsenic 5.8 ↔ 5.13
- 🜼 realgar 5.30 ↔ 6.4
- 🜸 marcasite 5.20 ↔ 6.4
- 🜿 tartar 5.10 ↔ 5.16
- 🝃 borax 5.31 ↔ 6.1
- 🜘 rock salt 5.2 ↔ 5.11
- 🝉 gum 5.9 ↔ 5.13
- 🝊 wax 5.2 ↔ 5.20
- 🝕 urine 5.2 ↔ 5.29
- 🝖 horse dung
- 🝞 sublimation 5.2 ↔ 5.22
- 🝟 precipitate 5.10 ↔ 5.24
- 🝠 distill 5.15 ↔ 5.23
- 🝢 dissolve 5.8 ↔ 5.25
- 🝣 purify 5.2 ↔ 5.27
- 🝤 putrefaction 5.17 ↔ 5.26
- 🝩 crucible 5.9 ↔ 5.28
- 🝪 alembic 5.25 ↔ 7.3
- 🝭 retort 5.23 ↔ 7.31
- 🝑 trident 5.24 ↔ 6.5
- 🝎 caput mortuum 5.20 ↔ 5.27
- ⍚ “evaporate” 5.26 ↔ 6.1
- ⍝ “encase” 5.27 ↔ 5.31
- ⍢ “grind” 5.27 ↔ 6.2
- ⌱ “extract” 5.28 ↔ 6.3