Difference between revisions of "Rite of the Hundred Deaths"
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A ritual of combat in which the entrant, armed with their chosen weapons, accepts all challengers until he has been slain a hundred times. Challengers may be armed as they please and as they find honorable. The origins of this ritual stem back to Lost Vartissia, the homeland of Kendric Flamehands. The belief of this sunken continent was that every man woman and child was born with a number of lives that they must strive to spend honorably. Those who dedicated themselves to lives of battle would often take the rite when they first sought to prove themselves as warriors or when they sought the peace of death and the end of their lives. | A ritual of combat in which the entrant, armed with their chosen weapons, accepts all challengers until he has been slain a hundred times. Challengers may be armed as they please and as they find honorable. The origins of this ritual stem back to Lost Vartissia, the homeland of Kendric Flamehands. The belief of this sunken continent was that every man woman and child was born with a number of lives that they must strive to spend honorably. Those who dedicated themselves to lives of battle would often take the rite when they first sought to prove themselves as warriors or when they sought the peace of death and the end of their lives. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Trial Participants== | ||
+ | [[Kendric]] | ||
+ | [[Kit Foxwyfe]] |
Latest revision as of 07:57, 15 July 2019
A ritual of combat in which the entrant, armed with their chosen weapons, accepts all challengers until he has been slain a hundred times. Challengers may be armed as they please and as they find honorable. The origins of this ritual stem back to Lost Vartissia, the homeland of Kendric Flamehands. The belief of this sunken continent was that every man woman and child was born with a number of lives that they must strive to spend honorably. Those who dedicated themselves to lives of battle would often take the rite when they first sought to prove themselves as warriors or when they sought the peace of death and the end of their lives.