Tohafa

This week is all about the Lord of Mohanshu: Tohafa.  He’s not a nice guy, but he’s not evil like Janesh or Bhay.  He just wants to know how things work, and he’s willing to pull them apart to find out.

You can read the full description here: Tohafa

I also found a discrepancy between the description of Pahara and the one of Bhay.  I made minor alterations to both pages to fix the discrepancy.  🙂

Next week I’ll write an overview of the continent of Bhaskara.  I’m also going to adjust the look of the website – the list of pages is getting unwieldy, and I want it to be easy to navigate.  I may go through several of the WordPress themes, trying to find one that works just right.  🙂  Please excuse the mess as we remodel.

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions – about either the content or the look/navigation of the site – please post them!  I’d love to hear from you.

Have a great weekend everyone, and I’ll see you next week.

~Jean

 

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Mohanshu

This week is the overview of the last “country” on the continent of Bhaskara: Mohanshu.  It’s a diverse place, in both geography and biology.   I hope you enjoy the write up.

You can find it all here: Mohanshu

Enjoy your weekend!

 

 

Creative Commons License This work by Jean Headley is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

The Terror of Mhadhavi

This week’s blog is an overview of the ruler of Mhadhavi.  His name means “terror” and it’s appropriate.  Using D&D alignments, this guy epitomizes chaotic evil.

Read the full article here: Bhay

The photograph this week is one of mine, meant to represent the tangled nature of the Mhadhavi forest.  It tells me that I need to get out and take more pictures. 🙂

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Mhadhavi Forest

This week is about the Mhadhavi forest.  As you can guess, it has lots of trees.  It also has humans and elves working together in harmony because, well, that’s the only they can survive when the Lord of Mhadhavi goes a-hunting.

Read the full blog here: Mhadhavi

The photograph this week is one of mine.  It’s actually a very peaceful spot, but we don’t have white water around here so peaceful it is.

Creative Commons License This work by Jean Headley is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Akshay

The plains and woods of Akshay encompass a rather large section of the Bhaskaran continent.  It’s ruled, lightly, by a dragon named Havadar, which means “breezy” or “airy.”  It’s a wild and open place, perfect for those who prefer freedom to any other thing.

The full page is here: Akshay.

 

Creative Commons License This work by Jean Headley is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Turning Day

A longer blog, still about the holidays.  Devanand celebrates it’s New Year on the autumnal equinox, not on some random day in the middle of winter the way we do.  Rather than making a new page, I updated the Holiday Traditions page that I published last week.

You can read all about the Devanandi new year here: Holiday Traditions.

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Feasting Day

Short blog today.  In honor of the winter holidays, I decided to write a little about Devanandi holiday traditions.  You can read about Feasting Day (the winter solstice) here: Holiday Traditions

Happy Holidays, everyone!

 

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The Children of God’s Joy, pt. 2

 

This week I take a look at the elves and humans of Devanand.   Humans you should already know, but this compares them to their sister races.  The elves may be different from those you’re used to, as they’re not from a land of Faerie, but evolved from the same mammals as humans, dwarves, and gnomes.

Read the full article here: Elves and Humans

Creative Commons License This work by Jean Headley is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Children of God’s Joy

 

Devanand, which means God’s Joy, has five sentient races: dragons, dwarves, gnomes, elves, and humans.

The blog this week gives an overview of dwarves and gnomes, a bare-bones look at their temperaments and social structures.

You can read the full article here: The Children of God’s Joy

Creative Commons License This work by Jean Headley is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Powers and Principalities

 

This week’s blog focuses on Devanand’s deities, clerics, and magical powers.  This is not a list of the gods, but an overview of the powers that exist in the world, and the difference between divine power and magic.

You can read the whole blog here: Powers and Principalities

 

Creative Commons License This work by Jean Headley is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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This week’s featured image is a beautiful photograph by Amanda Lueckenhoff is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.