All posts by Octagon Sun

Vampircille

Vampircille [vam-per-seal] are a diminutive, vampire-like sapient species. They stand out because of a biological link to planes full of energy: rather than drawing energy from their ecosystems, vampircille are able to subsist passively on an infinite energy source.

Vampircilles are generally very smol, being 40-60 inches tall in adulthood and are typically docile in personality. Each arm ends with two dexterous digits tipped by hard claws. They have two protruding fangs, from which they can produce threads.

Vampircille are natural weavers. However, the traditional vampircille lifestyle is technologically simple given their lack of opposable thumbs. As a species, they display incredible resistance to disease, heat, pressure, cold, and radiation. They can also rapidly form an armored cocoon when in danger. They can remain in a cocoon indefinitely, since they generate their own energy.

Thanks to their ability with weaving, they can create things like clothing, simple structures, baskets, and the like, but they must rely on other species for more complex manufacturing. They prefer to live in burrows with complex family structures. While pure vampircille societies lack much engineering, they are quite literate with rich intellectual traditions. They can etch in stone with their claws or, where the resources are available, write with their clawtips dipped in ink.

Many species and civilizations exploit vampircille on account of their “free” energy. While vampircille can sustain themselves indefinitely and live for hundreds of years when left to themselves, they have little to protect themselves against other sapient species. Their small size makes them easy to overpower and their cocoons are easy to destroy with tools. Furthermore, most pure vampircille societies are eventually destroyed by slavers.

Of these parasites, vampires are the most prominent. Vampires enslave and feed off them. Some vampire species are only able to survive by feeding on vampircilles. The association is so strong that vampircille’s name is derived by their relationship to vampires in most languages (including this one). While one might think it’s because they are both fanged, a vampircille and a vampire are almost impossible to confuse. It’s more that most civilizations’ first contact with vampircille is through vampircille enslaved by vampires.

Ultimately, most vampircille are enslaved. Of free vampircille, most must live in communities dominated by other species and rely on the defenses those communities provide. Pure vampircille societies are exceedingly rare. Only one is notable on the interplanar scale: the City Faille.

Biology

Biology in B&W is best understood as a duality between body and spirit. Life is defined by the characteristics of our bodies, our spirits, and the bonds between them. (For more detailed discussion on how life is influenced by the characteristics of the body, spirit, and environment, see Umwelt.)

Spirit

A spirit is the thing that gives life, matter, and intelligence. All matter is infused with some degree of spirit, even dead earth and stone. As spirits become more sophisticated, they confer, first, life and then, later, sapience. If a spirit is sapient, it is considered a person. As a spirit develops, it grows in intelligence and power, gains ability to interface with bodies, and its individuality becomes visible.

All spirit is alive, but a spirit must be developed past a certain point to be able to bring its body to life. Background spirit, the spirit that is omnipresent in matter, is a collective of infant spirits. These spirits are not yet able to evidence their individuality or impress their image on the world, so they appear as a homogeneous energy field spanning the cosmoi. Plants, animals, and intelligent life all have spirits of cognizable intelligence.

Spirits are not created and have neither beginning nor end. Although they may exist, grow, and change with time, every spirit has existed in some form always. Although spirit gives all physical matter its form, spirit itself exists physically. It is not, so to speak, immaterial, but a more primordial form of matter than that which we can perceive.

On a personal level, the spirit is what could be called the original self. Our spirits are our emotional world and our means of accessing each others’ emotional worlds. As humans, we have sapient spirits, which enable advanced communication, contemplation, and abstraction, among other things. The individuality of the spirit stems from the ideas that make up a spirit. Plato believed that ideas had their own existence and they do, in the form of people. Spirits are composed of ideas. These ideas are, eo ipso, true: an untrue idea can appear in a spirit’s composition, but it manifests as a flaw or vacuum, a nothingness, in the spirit. Only true ideas positively manifest as a somethingness, composing a spirit. Like ideas, spirits exist in an infinite number and can grow more sophisticated ex nihilo.

Almost all spirits are a dynamic, radiant hodgepodge of beautiful thoughts and concepts. It is possible for a single spirit to grow from a single idea, but this is rare. A single idea can never be complex enough to form a spirit, so it must necessarily take on additional ideas as it grows. These ideas can be very specific. Consider the following case. There is a spirit that has been positively identified as being born from the idea of democracy as it developed in the minds of people born in la Gran Colombia after 1821 through la Gran Colombia’s dissolution. Named Bogota, she first heard of Earth and la Gran Colombia when this identification occurred, and has still never visited Earth, living several cosmoi away. Bogota exemplifies how an idea can be divorced from the context it corresponds to (la Gran Colombia, Earth), if any physical context exists. Bogota, the spirit, has always existed, before the Earth even formed, before Bolívar ever declared War to the Death. Even if la Gran Colombia never came into being, Bogota would still exist.

Bodies & Souls

A soul is the union of body and spirit. Spirits prefer to have a body. Without spirits, there is no matter, but without a body beyond the spirit, they can only influence the material world in trivial ways. Spirits are all made from a single substance, while bodies are not. Pure spirits are split into a few classifications: roaming spirits, sedentary spirits, and primal wills. Contrast with how many species exist. Both spirits and souls vary individually, but spirits’ differences are almost purely individual, while bodies differ individually and as classes.

If a spirit is joined with a body through the process of birth, the resulting soul is considered Natural Life. Birth is a special capacity of spirits that allows for a special union of soul and body. A spirit can only use this special capacity once. Birth is only possible with bodies that can interface with spirits and have no spirit inhabiting it. After birth, the spirit’s bodies prior to birth are suppressed, but not lost. These memories are gradually recovered after death. A spirit is not destroyed with the destruction of body, whether the former soul was natural life or otherwise. Spirits, after death, feel a primordial urge to migrate. This urge leads most spirits beyond the known cosmoi and, exploiting unknown mechanisms, travel to realms unknown.

The capacity of natural life to be born and die is essential for spirits. Spirits exist uncreated and live in and beyond the known cosmoi. As pure spirits, they have little ability to physically influence the world. Spirits return to this condition after death, but the process of becoming a soul matures the spirit. This maturation includes any growth the spirit underwent in terms of its character during life, but it does not end there. The matured spirit is also physically more advanced and gains little-understood abilities tied to the postmortem migration. Living beings have proven incapable of understanding these abilities and mature spirits incapable or uninterested in explaining them.

The typical development of a spirit is summarized as follows: Immature → Intelligent → Natural Life → Mature → Migration.

Those spirits that reject the urge to migrate and come to possess bodies are known as undead. There are a number of undead species. Since birth is unavailable to undead spirits, the bodies must be built to completion beforehand. By becoming undead, these spirits also lose the special abilities possessed by mature spirits (these abilities are regained when the undead return to death). This category also includes spirits whose migration is interrupted for whatever reason. As an example of this latter case, Clockwork Zombies do not choose to return to life. Their spirits are captured by a mechanical body designed to host spirits.

In contrast to natural life, constructs are bodies with a spirit that has never been born. Construct species differ from undead species because they use parts of the birth mechanism to gain a body. The process does not constitute birth and living as a construct usually does not produce the same physical maturation effects on the spirit. Consequently, this process is often caused deficient birth. Death of a construct’s body or the spirit abandoning the body also does not have the same effect as death does on spirits in natural life. Some natural life species began as construct species that evolved to support birth: golems and patchwork tsukumogami.

A body without a spirit reverts to dead matter, passively maintained by some spirit besides the former possessor. How a body gains a spirit of its own depends on the species, but a spirit cannot possess a body and form a soul unless the body can, to some degree, influence itself and give the spirit some freedom to influence the material world in a meaningful way. This is the difference between spirits that reside in unliving objects and souls; the unliving objects don’t work for soul formation because the spirit cannot make any meaningful choice that influences the physical world as a rock or river.

Not all souls fit a 1 body to 1 spirit (1:1) ratio. While n:1 and 1:n ratios are the most common, there exist species and individuals with m:n ratios. These unconventional arrangements require both a body with appropriate characteristics and a spirit with a compatible disposition.

Examples: Mons typically have 2 bodies and 1 spirit, but which 2 bodies the mon controls isn’t fixed (2:1). A mon spirit can shift possession from inhabiting one compatible body to inhabit another (their bodies being specially configured to transfer the spirit in such a fashion). Echidna has an arbitrary number of bodies that correspond to her single spirit (1:n). Tsukumogami often have multiple spirits in a single body (n:1). Blighted persons share their body in part with Blight, a primal will (1:2). While some spirits may be content to inhabit a single plant lifeform (1:1), more sophisticated plant spirits may have an entire forest as their body (1:large n).

When dealing with natural life, spirit and body matches are never that far off the mark. The existence of a soul implies that the body and spirit are highly compatible (this statement should be interpreted at a high level of abstraction). The diversity of physical bodies reflects this fact: some spirits are compatible with only one species of physical body. Furthermore, a spirit may not be able to inhabit all bodies of a compatible species, requiring an even closer match. The body and spirit must be able to physically and emotionally interface. Disease, disorder, and trauma may impact the quality of interface, but they do not erase original compatibility. Constructs and undead do not have the same guarantee, but since their spirits usually choose their bodies, the matches are decent.

By way of note, the term soul may be interpreted in some cases as the union of any group of things that has become universally and deeply integrated into each other, such that they can be described as a single object, but the biological interpretation is the default.

While individual souls are usually understood in isolation, it is important to understand that communities constitute a soul of sorts. Pulling from a previous example, Bogota is dependent on all the ideas around her for her identity: the ideas that birthed la Gran Colombia, the ideas that have come from her own, the ideas that she has lived alongside. The ideas that build my spirit themselves depend on the ideas of other spirits. My ideas, and thereby my spirit, grow as I learn about the ideas and truths of others. In turn, if I teach others truth, my life bleeds into theirs. All life flows in and out of each other. Even the spirits of the dead are influenced by the growth or decay of the ideas they left among the living. To live is to search for true ideas. It’s a collective endeavor and, for every mind lost from the collective or injured by falsehood, we are all the worse off.

List of a Few Sapient Species

See the Sapient Species Tag for all articles about specific species. The animal species tag is available for unintelligent specimens.

Natural Life: life resulting from a spirit being born into a body. Has no memory of life prior to birth. The spirit typically disappears at death.

  • Adamin
  • Axolotl
  • Blizoop
  • Elemental
  • Gibs
  • GKG
  • Golem
  • Human
  • Inclusions
  • Leviathan (abbreviated as Levy)
  • Mons
  • Patchwork Tsukumogami
  • Squiffle
  • Template
  • Vampircille
  • Vampire

Constructs: a body inhabited by a spirit that has never been born into a body. Memory is normal. The spirit typically does not disappear at death.

  • Anima, or Wild Spirits
  • Teruterubozu
  • Tsukumogami
  • Possessor (also a modifier)

Undead: a body inhabited by a spirit that has been born into a body. Undead retain their memories from life.

  • Abhartach
  • Clockwork Zombie
  • Nosferatu
  • Soucouyant
  • Teruterubozu

Species Modifiers: Species that do not have their own form, but the form of other races.

  • Blighted Person
  • Umcoeur

See also

Historical period comparisons in FETH 

I’ve seen a number of people refer to FETH as a medieval game, but it’s probably most similar to a mid-Renaissance experience. It’s definitely not medieval: the role of literacy, existence of learning institutions, prevalence of chivalric tales, the appearance of durable religious schisms/reformers/separatists, and somewhat mature sciences (esp. medicine, math, crests) are all Renaissance, esp. Renaissance features.

The late Renaissance/Enlightenment don’t fit on a philosophical level: no pseudoreligious scientism, no concepts of human rights/social contract, insufficiently developed literature (novels, broader literacy), and exclusively aristocratic forms of government.

Early Renaissance doesn’t fit since it is a period of knowledge rediscovery, translation of ancient and foreign texts, and restoration of philosophies and sciences. Nothing in the history of Fodlan even suggests an Early Renaissance period would be required, since what history we have doesn’t mention a period of knowledge loss and the disorganization of civilization (that is, a medieval period). If anything, the longevity of the Empire makes such a period unlikely.

There might be good comparisons to the Islamic Golden Age, since that predates the Renaissance and shares a lot of qualities, but I don’t really know that much about it. And for that matter, my background is in Spanish-American and mathematical history, so it’s not like I’m entirely sure my recollection of Renaissance history is correct.

Thanks for coming to my TED Talk. Any thoughts?

Added: One thing missing is firearms, but early firearms wouldn’t have been able to compete with magic, so it’s quite plausible that the technology would never be developed.

[Originally posted on Aug. 19, 2019 for r/fireemblem]

La madre del hombre de barro (2017)

Cuando los ojos de barro primero se abrieron, su escultora joven, María, se encontraba anhelosamente atenta a esa cara extraña donde los ojos se ubicaban. De color obsidiana, la cabeza se había formado como una esfera cruda, con los ojos pintados de blanco en contraste. El cuerpo, sentado delante de María, había parecido una colina chica dentro de la bodega abandonada. Ahora, que cobró el semblante de vida, la silueta no tiraba más a una colina; ahora la semejanza humana e inexacta sobresalía. El barro que lo componía tenía los colores morado, rojizo y gris mezclados por partes. El movimiento que emocionó a María duró un solo momento. Los ojos la quedaron viendo, abiertos por ninguna fuerza externa. Lo demás del cuerpo seguía como lo había hecho desde que María le había dado forma: inmóvil, inútil, impotente.

Hacía varias horas que ella había terminado de construir este hombre de barro, pero ella había llegado a creer que quedaba más labor que hacer cuando no había visto evidencia de vida. Por lo tanto, este cambio difícil de notar bastó para que María saliera de su reposo. Ella sabía que en su presencia una vida nueva había empezado, una vida artificial, hecha a mano, conforme a las leyes de la naturaleza, pero no a las leyes del nacimiento. Si hubiese algún observador presente, no podría notar la emoción de María, quien se consideraba muy seria y tranquila para su edad de 17 años. No obstante, la mente de ella dio lugar a una celebración potente. Había dado fin a la obra que los padres de ella habían empezado, el estudio que ellos habían dejado por razones desconocidas. Ella solo tenía 13 años cuando descubrió las notas abandonadas por sus padres en cuanto al proyecto y, en aquel entonces, ignoraba todos los principios de la vida y de la escultura. Los había estudiado como un juego, para divertirse, pero durante el último año y medio ella se había comprometido a completar los diseños de sus padres dentro de su laboratorio concreto y pequeño. Ellos habían estado cerca de hacerlo también, pero como jamás le habían hablado de que antes eran científicos a ella (ahora dirigían una iglesia pequeña), María no se atrevía a preguntarles por qué no habían proseguido con la obra.

La celebración silenciosa duró unos minutos, pero en lugar de terminar, logró salir de la mente por la boca. María declaró, en voz no muy alta, al cuarto, sabiendo que de ninguna manera el hombre nuevo la podría entender, que el nombre de la criatura sería Aleph, la letra hebrea que en las leyendas judías diferenciaba a los golems vivos y muertos, hombres también de barro, vivificados por las fuerzas del misticismo y de la religión. Comenzó a revisar y a recitar las notas extensas que documentaban el estudio, el descubrimiento y el desarrollo del principio de vida que María había seguido en crear a Aleph. ¡Qué tanto quería ella explicarle la maravilla de su creación, lo maravilloso que era él, un ente único! Andaba por un lado al otro mientras vocalizaba su soliloquio y repasaba la historia que había conducido al día de nacimiento. Tan conmovida se sentía que iba desorganizando el laboratorio pequeño cuyo orden siempre había sido constante.

–¿No podrás hablar por mucho tiempo, mi Aleph? –María dijo– Tendré mucho que enseñarte. Te voy a ayudar. Te va a gustar. Ya verás.

Alisó su vestido sencillo y sin color y buscó unas hojas para anotar sus planes para la educación de Aleph. Con toda la sutileza del rayo, un pensamiento apareció entre el gozo que María había experimentado hasta entonces. Poseída por un temor fatal, María se volvió a Aleph y le miró los ojos y dio voz a la pregunta cruel.

–Sigues vivo, ¿verdad? ¿De verdad has abierto los ojos? ¿No me he engañado, no los abrí yo en algún momento olvidado? Si tienes vida y cualquier grado de entendimiento, te ruego que me lo evidencies.

Aleph no replicó de ninguna manera. Con pánico, con el principio de lágrimas, María corrió y se paró delante del hombre paralizado. Los ojos de barro se fijaban en la misma parte de la pared de siempre mientras los brazos descansaban sobre las mesas al lado y las piernas seguían apretadas y dobladas. Pasó un tiempo indefinido así, en el cual María tuvo que luchar para conservar la compostura. Se dedicó a restaurar la limpieza que acababa de deshacer y su mente se fijó enteramente en sí. Se preguntaba qué se debía hacer ahora, para que la vida de Aleph sobreviviera con más vitalidad que una flor aplastada. Su laboratorio era aislado, estaba rodeado por un campo lleno de flores y polvo, por lo que muchas flores se habían aplastado bajo las botas de María.

–No he pensado en flores por varios meses. –María murmuró, sorprendida por la rareza de sus reflexiones que poco a poco iban saliendo de la melancolía. Estaba pensando de esta manera cuando se detuvo para ver a Aleph cara a cara.

Su meditación fue interrumpida por sonidos graves y ruidosos, como el rugido colectivo de maquinaria distante. María, atónita, vio lo que ningún otro ser humano jamás había presenciado. Aleph, lenta y fuertemente, agarró los bordes de las mesas. Sus miembros se hicieron más firmes y poco a poco una distancia apareció entre el cuerpo de barro y la tierra que le contribuyó la sustancia. La cabeza, que momentos antes había estado a la altura de María, golpeó al techo. Sin poder levantarse por completo, Aleph volvió la vista para abajo, para María, y de nuevo quedó inmóvil y el cuarto, en silencio.