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Phantasmal Rift Mods ([personal profile] phantasmods) wrote in [community profile] phantasmemes2018-01-19 12:29 pm
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TEST DRIVE 001

Hello, and welcome to the first test drive for Phantasmal Rift!

Test drive threads are assumed to be game canon for accepted characters unless otherwise noted, so don't feel like you'll have to introduce yourself a second time to everyone you meet! As an added bonus, participation in the test drive comes with the chance to earn up to two items of loot for your trouble! Characters who are accepted can earn one item for having a top level, and one for tagging out to someone else's top level! Your SWEET LOOT will be included with your acceptance notice.

(In the future, characters who are in-game can also earn themselves an extra item of loot for tagging in to top levels on the test drive, to be distributed with the rest of their loot upon dungeon completion.)

This first test drive is based in the Fissure nearest to the Station, and comes with three potential options, all with a distinctly watery bent -

OPTION 1: MAROONED

Hey, uh... What's that maroon film distorting your vision? And how did you get on this beach, anyway?
So long as the sun is shining, there doesn't seem to be a problem out here on the beach, aside from the strange maroon tint to everything. But when clouds pass over, the tint grows darker, and darker, and the water grows redder, and redder...

That... can't be blood, can it?

Characters who remain beneath the patchy cloud cover will find themselves filled with increasing anxiety that the ocean is made of blood, until either the cloud passes or they check the water for themselves. The bad news is, that while it isn't actually an ocean of blood, contact with the red water will drain characters of energy very rapidly, causing sudden fits of exhaustion as though they were suffering from anemia. By itself, this isn't particularly dangerous...

...Except that the return of the sun doesn't mean the return of that lost energy, and if you've waded out too far, the shifting sand and pull of the waves underfoot can easily pull you down and under.

OPTION 2: LANDSHARK

You really hope that isn't a shark fin moving through the sand. That's just not possible, right?

(Yes, yes it is.)

Landsharks are amphibious, predatory creatures just as at home in the sand as below the waves, and always hungry. They track their prey via disturbances in the sand or water, but fortunately, you can track them the same way - they're large enough to be easily visible in the relatively clear waters near the beach, and their bulk causes a patch of shifting sand above them as they roam for more terrestrial prey.

As a result, they're most dangerous near the waterline, where the shifting sand is hard to see due to the motion of the waves (though they can, of course, pop up further up the beach). Fortunately, they're not large enough to swallow a person whole. Unfortunately, they're still between nine and twelve feet long depending on the individual and easily large enough to take a good chunk out of you.

Like any other shark, they're vulnerable to being sliced open with something sharp, kicked in the gills, or punched in the snout to establish dominance. On the magical end, they have a particular weakness to electricity.

On the bright side, if you're hungry enough, the landsharks are very edible once cooked (or, you know, if you like sushi). For some reason, the meat tastes faintly of chocolate...?

Drops: Meat, shark teeth, candygrams.

OPTION 3: JUST IN TIDE

A bit further down from the beach, the water comes up to the base of the rocky cliffs, leaving numerous nooks and crannies to climb over and explore. In fact, they're practically begging for it.

What might you find? Well, there's the usual beach refuse, for a start - sand, seaweed, shells and fragments of shells, and big barnacles and mussels tucked into the cracks. However, other debris finds its way into the cracks, ocean-going refuse from a thousand worlds... There's also a number of pointy blue-green crystals that tingle to the touch and remain wet no matter how characters attempt to dry them.

And finally, there's a bunch of bottle crabs - overlarge hermit crabs that look more at home in half-broken beer bottles or soda cans at their size than they do in shells (though they'll live in anything that seems protective enough - the largest seem prone to making their homes in rusty helmets). The crabs are not aggressive unless you harass them first, but they can give a nasty pinch if provoked.

...Did you lose track of time out there among the rocks, or did time lose track of you?

Either way, you're now stuck out as the tide comes in. If you can swim, good for you! You probably won't have too much of a problem, at least once you're far enough from the rocks that you aren't at risk of getting thrown against them and having some important swimming limb broken...

On second thought, maybe it's better to stay here and wait it out, whether you can swim or not. Hope you're ready for a couple hours stuck on a rock with some weird-looking, too-big hermit crabs and...

Who is this other person, anyway?
dubiouslychthonic: (you did not just say that)

[personal profile] dubiouslychthonic 2018-02-06 12:49 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not familiar with - ah - "waterstones," I think.

[She sounds just a little skeptical, which might be a little hypocritical on her part because it's not like the Alternian language doesn't have its share of vaguely clumsy portmanteaus.

The bug creature doesn't seem to bother her much, although she keeps her booted feet clear of it as much as she can. She's more interested in Nathaniel himself; yet another of those weird earth-toned hornless aliens she keeps running into.]
stormkingofshepherds: (And breathed my last of clean sweet air)

[personal profile] stormkingofshepherds 2018-02-06 03:12 am (UTC)(link)
I suppose you're unfamiliar with Pokemon, as well? [He thought she might have known about them from her lack of reaction to Belle.] Some water-associated Pokemon use the energy from those stones to evolve, after all.
dubiouslychthonic: (you did not just say that)

[personal profile] dubiouslychthonic 2018-02-06 04:08 am (UTC)(link)
[She frowns, thoughtfully, her brow furrowing behind tinted glasses.] These "waterstones" must put off a tremendous amount of radiation, then, if they're triggering large-scale heritable mutations.
stormkingofshepherds: (When all my strength is given up)

[personal profile] stormkingofshepherds 2018-02-06 06:32 am (UTC)(link)
[That gets her a bit of a "what" look.] Large-scale? Generally they only work for one Pokemon at once. Although the scientists I know have said something about radiation, it generally requires actual contact to activate one.
dubiouslychthonic: (The Office camera stare)

[personal profile] dubiouslychthonic 2018-02-06 06:40 am (UTC)(link)
...I suspect you are using "evolve" in a different sense than I am used to.

[Biotechnology and genetic engineering are fairly commonplace in Alternian science, but this kind of sounds... like not that.]
stormkingofshepherds: (When I have lived the span of hours)

[personal profile] stormkingofshepherds 2018-02-06 06:44 am (UTC)(link)
Hm. [He supposes that's to be expected.] Most Pokemon naturally evolve at certain stages of their lives, becoming larger and stronger. Belle used to be around the size of one of those crabs herself. [He gestures at where one bottle crab is now climbing on her back.] Some need a more specific catalyst, like an evolution stone.
dubiouslychthonic: (Smile)

[personal profile] dubiouslychthonic 2018-02-06 06:59 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, yes! Metamorphosis. That makes much more sense. [A little odd to call it evolution... but from what she's been given to understand from previous conversations on the beach, humans are mammalian. Probably complete metamorphosis seems extraordinary to a species that doesn't undergo it?

She looks again at the pokemon; it seems docile enough, with how tolerant it is of the crabs, but Jetshard is still not going to get her hands anywhere near those pinchers.]
You intentionally trigger the process? Are they working animals?
stormkingofshepherds: (When I have lived the span of hours)

[personal profile] stormkingofshepherds 2018-02-06 08:54 am (UTC)(link)
Some of them are. Most Pokemon are battlers, though-even wild ones are often eager for a fight. Pokemon training's...pretty much the main industry back home. Even kids go on their own journeys with their Pokemon at times. [His voice makes it clear he's not very fond of that last bit of his own world.]
dubiouslychthonic: (go on)

[personal profile] dubiouslychthonic 2018-02-08 12:40 am (UTC)(link)
[Honestly, she's not entirely sure why "guard animal against aggressive wild fauna" or "sport fighting animal" wouldn't be considered kinds of working animals, but if that's a distinction he wants to draw, well, aliens can be eccentric she supposes.]

We've got a few fighting sports that might be similar, but nothing particular widespread. Animal husbandry doesn't come... naturally, to most of my kind.
stormkingofshepherds: (When I have lived the span of hours)

[personal profile] stormkingofshepherds 2018-02-08 10:33 am (UTC)(link)
[Alright, that's fair.]

Really? [He sounds surprised.] I guess that makes sense...it's just odd to think about. [He couldn't imagine his life without Pokemon at all.]