Difference between revisions of "Postfurry MUCK/Roleplay Guide"
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− | {{DISPLAYTITLE:Roleplay Guide}} First things first: You don't have to read this, to be on Postfurry MUCK. If you just want to wander the place, see the sights, chat and play, please go for it without feeling like you need to know the Deep Lore. But if you're getting into complicated plots, want to contribute to the setting, or simply are interested in the Deep Lore, this is the place to go | + | {{DISPLAYTITLE:Roleplay Guide}} |
+ | First things first: You don't have to read this, to be on Postfurry MUCK. If you just want to wander the place, see the sights, chat and play, please go for it without feeling like you need to know the Deep Lore. But if you're getting into complicated plots, want to contribute to the setting, or simply are interested in the Deep Lore, this is the place to go | ||
== Setting elements == | == Setting elements == | ||
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Complicating the question of the origin of this effect are the cases in which it breaks down. There are [[Charmwarp|some]] [[Strangewarp|locations]] where peril is on the table, and individuals who seem to find ways around the restriction (though when either of those are discovered, most folks tend to avoid them, for obvious reasons). Still, the apparent existence of the Consent Effect is responsible for much of the cultural vibe of the Puzzlebox, "wars" are fought not with force, but with aesthetics. | Complicating the question of the origin of this effect are the cases in which it breaks down. There are [[Charmwarp|some]] [[Strangewarp|locations]] where peril is on the table, and individuals who seem to find ways around the restriction (though when either of those are discovered, most folks tend to avoid them, for obvious reasons). Still, the apparent existence of the Consent Effect is responsible for much of the cultural vibe of the Puzzlebox, "wars" are fought not with force, but with aesthetics. | ||
− | ''OOC Note'': The Consent Effect is meant as both an in-character way to handle powergamers, and an setting detail to encourage forms of conflict that are more creative than basic combat. Finding places where the Consent Effect does not apply can be a fun source of roleplay potential, but it does not mean that the [https://postfurry.net/conduct/ out-of-character rules about consent] are set aside in those places. | + | '''OOC Note''': The Consent Effect is meant as both an in-character way to handle powergamers, and an setting detail to encourage forms of conflict that are more creative than basic combat. Finding places where the Consent Effect does not apply can be a fun source of roleplay potential, but it does not mean that the [https://postfurry.net/conduct/ out-of-character rules about consent] are set aside in those places. |
Revision as of 23:21, 17 August 2024
First things first: You don't have to read this, to be on Postfurry MUCK. If you just want to wander the place, see the sights, chat and play, please go for it without feeling like you need to know the Deep Lore. But if you're getting into complicated plots, want to contribute to the setting, or simply are interested in the Deep Lore, this is the place to go
Contents
Setting elements
The world of Postfurry MUCK doesn't work like our day-to-day reality; it doesn't even particularly work lik the average fantasy or sci-fi world. Postfurry MUCK is a place where hypertechnology has become magical, and reality is bent around aesthetics. One of the most straightforward ways of thinking about it is that the rules of the world are the rules of the MUCK: People have a lot of control over their own appearance, substance, and even what else in the world can affect them, and the world itself is literally endlessly mutable if someone is willing to put in the effort to build and change it. For the purposes of roleplay though, it helps to outline some mechanisms, complications, and limits to these rules, so people in-character will sometimes talk about the physical systems that are behind these capabilities
The Magic Mirror Network
The Puzzlebox is unthinkably huge, spanning lightyears of normal space and making frequent dips into spaces that are far stranger. It would be very difficult to get around by normal means. To travel long distances, most folks rely on the shimmering liquid metal portals of the Magic Mirror system. These are actually a network of picotech that can communicate instantly across the vast distances of the Puzzlebox, and convey entities and objects from one place to another just as quickly by enveloping them, converting them into quantum information, and then reconstructing them wherever they want to go.
Has this ever gone wrong? Probably! It's a big universe. But it's such a fundamental part of life that most folks don't think twice about stepping into a pool of mercury to visit a friend.
The Instantiation Interface
The Magic Mirror can reconstruct people, so it's a simple matter for it to construct other things as well. It's easy to find kiosks, terminals, or personal devices that allow beings to construct their own objects out of nothing, using the Mirror's hypertech. There's no cost, no energy budget, the only real limitation is finding the right template for something that already exists, or being able to imagine something new in enough detail that the system can successfully bring it into being.
The practical upshot of this is that no one need go hungry, or lack for shelter, but invention and art are still alive and well. It still takes all the same understanding and mental effort to create a novel device or stirring work, but creators will never lack for parts or materials.
The Backup System
The Magic Mirror doesn't just reconstruct bodies as part of transit, the capability also allows inhabitants of the Puzzlebox to be free of the spectre of mortality. Anyone can register their desires with the mirror system of how often they want their body and mind to be backed up, and under what circumstances they want it to be restored. Most people are set up to be backed up every time they use the mirror system, and restored when they experience fatal injury, but other options are possible, from streaming connections all the way down to dedicated single-lifers.
The Consent Effect
By far the most esoteric part of the Puzzlebox's infrastructure, no one is entirely sure if the Consent Effect even exists as a specific system. Instead, the term came about as a way of describing a frequently-observed phenomenon: When one being tries to affect another in a way that the target does not want to happen, the action tends to fail. This goes even beyond the backup system's preservation of bodily form and function: fire a gun at someone, and it may misfire, ricochet harmlessly, or the other person may be much better than expected at dodging. It seems that the rules of reality themselves seem to encourage collaboration of actions rather than direct coercion.
Complicating the question of the origin of this effect are the cases in which it breaks down. There are some locations where peril is on the table, and individuals who seem to find ways around the restriction (though when either of those are discovered, most folks tend to avoid them, for obvious reasons). Still, the apparent existence of the Consent Effect is responsible for much of the cultural vibe of the Puzzlebox, "wars" are fought not with force, but with aesthetics.
OOC Note: The Consent Effect is meant as both an in-character way to handle powergamers, and an setting detail to encourage forms of conflict that are more creative than basic combat. Finding places where the Consent Effect does not apply can be a fun source of roleplay potential, but it does not mean that the out-of-character rules about consent are set aside in those places.