The Village Mod (
villagemod) wrote in
villagememes2020-11-19 10:10 pm
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Entry tags:
test drive — winter

WINTER TEST DRIVE
Welcome to the test drive and thank you for your interest in The Village. This test drive is not game canon but will allow players the opportunity to experiment with game mechanics, the setting, and the flexibility of choice allowed by this game. The following prompts are examples of typical situations characters might face in the game. At least one thread from the TDM is required as part of the game's application process.
The setting details and locations are still being unveiled in the game, so prospective players are welcome to play with established locations or create their own within the general setting of Mathias.( Recommended listening: ♫ )
INTO THE ENDLESS
Winter has arrived in Mathias. Snow falls steadily, big puffy flakes that pile up quickly in drifts as the wind blows them around town. The trees in the forest are covered in it, the branches bending under the weight and shaking when the piles fall from them to the forest floor. The roofs of buildings become solid white and drifts form in doorways as the wind tries to rush inside anywhere it can.
New arrivals wake in the forest, with its winding paths twisting back on themselves as they branch in either direction. It isn't safe to stray from the path, there is a menacing fog that waits just a few yards inward in any direction, but for now, there is nothing impeding movement along those snow-covered paths that cut through the trees. Continue stumbling in one direction and you'll reach the small town, coming out near the mishmash of quaint houses that nestle beside crumbling ruins that used to be homes. But choose the other and you'll seem to stumble on forever, huddling against the wind until there seems to be a clearing up ahead—
And then nothing. The earth opens up before you in a ravine so deep that the bottom cannot be seen. The other side can be seen, tantalizingly out of reach, and there is the sense that safety is just beyond, if only you could get there. But with that sensation is also the knowledge that if you stay here, you will die. The edge seems unsteady, like getting too close would set it crumbling and send you tumbling into that dark endless nothing that waits below...
BODIES WITHOUT SOULS
Benedict Books is nestled quaintly on the square surrounding Mathias's Town Hall, a thick layer of dirt covering the front windows. Looking through those windows provides a much different view than looking directly into the shop through the doorway — vague shapes and forms of figures seem to be inside, though no details can be determined through the streaks of grime. Flickers that resemble flashlights can be seen passing along the windows from time to time, and on occasion there is even a muffled tapping sound that comes from behind the glass, as if someone is trying to get your attention. The same distorted figures can be seen looking through the windows from the inside outward, but moving from one side or the other reveals... nothing. There is nothing there, and perhaps it is all in your imagination.
A portrait hangs at the front of the store to illustrate the namesake of the little shop... that may, in fact, not be so little. Dust covers everything in sight and detritus litters the wooden floor, as if someone left the door open and allowed half the forest inside.
The books are mostly familiar titles from the 1990s and earlier, but close examination will reveal that key details seem to have been changed. They fill shelves in neat lines along the walls and rows in between, the building almost seeming to stretch on forever until, finally, a small office can be seen tucked away in the back. A glance back toward the front door gives the impression that the room isn't that big, after all. Strange that you previously thought so.
Prying the door open is the only way to get inside the small office; the hinges have rusted and are caked with dirt and grime. Search as you might, there are no interesting bits of information to be found here beyond a few inventory lists on the little desk. There is, however, a green and gold safe in the corner that, no matter how many times one turns the dial, simply clicks and clicks. Scratches around the safe indicate that someone tried to get in at one point, though there's no indication as to whether they succeeded.
THE END APPROACHES
Standing at the center of Mathias, the town hall is a modest two-story building that would be welcoming if not for the faded sign, chipped paint, and deafening silence within its empty halls. It's a typical government building, with a reception desk at the front and rows of identical offices within, the names half faded from each door. But what catches the attention is a large bulletin board on the main wall beside the reception desk, once meant to hold flyers or announcements for the community.
What it holds now is decidedly different. Tacked onto the board are scraps of paper covered in an assortment of handwriting styles — requests for supplies should anyone find them, pieces of information shared in the hopes of someone understanding the strange symbols and mathematical equations, notes about those missing or recently deceased. And over the center of the board, tacked on top of other papers, is a map discolored with age. Mathias Township can be read in the corner, a stretch of forest displayed beneath it, but everything else has been smeared to illegibility with red... ink? Upon close examination, a keen eye will realize that the ink is actually blood, though whether it is human is unknown. And scrawled across that forest, nearly covering the illustration of a clearing and a large house within, are the wordshe is coming
A number of tarnished metal pushpins are scattered around the edges of the board, waiting for future messages to be shared, and a stack of pristine white paper and pile of cheap ballpoint pens rest on one of three chairs beside the board. The chairs are clearly meant for those waiting for meetings and are covered in the same layer of grime as everything else in the building — everything except the pens, paper, and bulletin board.
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Then there’s a long, long pause, while she gives him another dumbfounded stare.
“Wait, what?”
Demon hunters?
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“Which part?”
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A pause.
“Also fuck you because the opposite of bloodless is bloody. The opposite of vulnerable is invulnerable.”
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"Do you know what the opposite of 'pedant' is because you might want to study on that one."
The amusement fades, though, and she fidgets slightly, running a hand through her hair. "They're gone though?"
She's just going to set aside the whole... angel thing. For now.
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She tilts her head back and forth, considering his answer. "I'd lean more toward the doctrinaire association since I was going for the low-key insult thing, but there's an argument to be made for lazy."
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A cutting gesture across her throat, and then she rubs the spot, like the motion somehow actually hurt.
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She studies him for a second. “You’re super not a cop, but you’re something like one, yeah?”
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She gives him a shrewd look. “Forensic psychologist, so you’ve got like, degrees and shit. Working for the NYPD, which means you make shit. Which means you’re totally a trust fund brat, aren’t you.”
She throws up her hands in something vaguely like a shrug. “What do you do for the cops anyway? You’re too educated for them to turn you loose on pickpockets.”
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He wasn’t going to cop to the trust fund bit when he was standing there in ill fitting clothes and beat up shoes.
“I do basically the same thing for the NYPD that I did there, though. I solve weird and sometimes serial murders.”
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When he says what he does, though, she lights up. “You what? My aunt does that with the DGA, but she never lets me see the files. What’s the grossest one you’ve ever had?”
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“The one with the most blood or the one least recognizable as human remains?” he asked. A beat. “Or the sickest psychosis, I suppose, because my last collar with the FBI was a serial killer who pickled his victims’ faces and kept them in a tidy row on a shelf in his abattoir,” he relayed. “But the last time I caught a serial killer, he was crushing vulnerable and indigent people to death in a car crusher for their sins.”
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The last part quiets her. “You caught him, though?”
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Like she can talk about being short, but still.
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She gestures airily, seeming to dismiss the issue of internal bleeding. Then she shrugs. “I mean, yeah. I moved in with my aunt a year ago but I missed a year and a half of high school after my parents booted me so I’m still behind.”
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She frowns and looks down. How the fuck do you explain to a stranger that you’re not ready to do the whole college thing when you’ve barely started having a real life in one place, with people who don’t disappear or drift in and out of your life like cigarette smoke on a street corner?
She’s supposed to want it. College. The life that comes after. All that bullshit. And maybe she’ll do it when Mel leaves home or something, when the few friends she’s made start to graduate themselves.
When she looks up, she’s beaming again. “I’m shit at history even with the lesson on 1852 and I think my chemistry teacher cried the last time I handed in a lab report, and not because it was good. I’m not ready yet.”
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