Mod Account for Diatu Magicademy (
magicademymods) wrote in
diatuooc2019-01-16 09:53 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
Test Drive #1

The Airship There
By carriage or coach, spellwagon or ship, perhaps even on the wings of magic, the Sundered heed the call to gather at the Tenzin High Dock of Vulbaria. On this, the appointed day, a great passenger airship sits in the dock, the seals of the six Houses fluttering from flagpoles along her length and her wooden planks atremble as if it is eager to be off. At last, the gangplank descends, and the Hand of Diatu opens her doors to the Sundered so they can take their first step on the path towards protection and salvation.
Inside, you may choose from long comfortable couches, broad circular tables surrounded by straight-backed, cushioned chairs, or viewing seats at the glass front of the ship. Sundered who need special accommodations are quickly provided for, ensuring everyone travels in comfort. Trays drift through the air periodically, offering snacks and drinks to the passengers.
This may be the first chance you've had to truly relax since being swept to this strange world. Certainly it is the first chance you've had to meet your fellow Sundered. As the airship lifts gracefully off from the High Dock, your journey to Diatu begins. Excited? Nervous? Simply angry? Or perhaps searching among the crowd here for a familiar face or some sign of hope?
Rain, Rain...
Welcome to Diatu Magicademy. It's raining.
Seriously raining. One of those downpours that feels like a curtain has dropped on you, that soaks to the bone within a second of stepping into it. Obviously, this won't do, and a civic-minded cluster of Purifeul students has taken it upon themselves to solve this problem. No sooner do you step through the gates then you practically run into a giant and complex runic diagram being drawn out with long staffs by several students, all of them speaking seeming nonsense about derivatives, limits, and equations. Magic! In action right before your eyes!
And yet, just as their mathemagics wind towards the center of the diagram and they all make their final stroke -- one student slashes his line off on a weird tangent, speaking an equation that sounds nothing at all like what his fellows utter. The spell completes... weirdly, as the students look in horror at each other. The temperature abruptly drops seventy degrees, and a cold wind begins to blow.
Welcome to Diatu Magicademy. Please get out of the blizzard before you freeze.
Thaumaturgy 101
After some fifteen minutes of grumbling from Professor Loshakle, followed by half an hour of theory and basics, the grouchy old man finally gets to drawing a magical symbol on the board. "This is straight out of Fundamental Principles of Wizarding," he says, writing Sense Magic next to the symbol. "As is everything you'll learn here. I'll emphasize yet again, you MUST know the name of the spell and the proper gestures. You can't simply wave your wand in any old pattern and say any old words. That isn't how it works," he says, glaring around the class as if daring someone to question him.
But he gives no one the opportunity, instead producing a wand and making the gesture to trace the symbol he'd drawn in midair. "Sense Magic," he intones, and the air and his wand both shimmer.
"Now. You all try." Just like that. What the Professor doesn't mention is that this spell can produce some very interesting results if the symbol is off, or the timing...
Bala-inlota Practice
Bala-inlota is the main interaction the Magicademies have with each other -- the sport of wizards! Two teams take the field, with the goal of heaving a ball through their opponent's hoop. The rules primarily revolve around not inflicting lethal injury, because bala-inlota is a free-for-all at best, where each team relies on both physical and magical might to win the day.
You kind of wish someone had told you this BEFORE you got hauled onto the field so the coach could see if you've got what it takes.
Now half a dozen players are charging down the field at your ragtag group of semi-willing recruits, while another half-dozen are preparing spells that you've been absolutely assured aren't as nasty as the ones deployed in actual play. On your side: the ball, your wits, your physical ability, and maybe three classes's worth of magical education.
On the upside, magic is pretty good at healing.
no subject
Whether she steps up or not won't change what happened, so he can hardly offer reassurance. But it could prevent the same from happening in the future. Making a good impression by awareness of their own magical influence will go far in securing a favorable place for themselves in this school. That is worth his consideration… and patience.
Since she still won't look at him, she'll miss the hint of a smile and nod. His voice, though brisk, at least does not sound disappointed. "Good. We’ll find out together, then." And trusting her to follow, he sets off to locate the staff.
(Does Tenn know where the headmaster or administration is? No. Will he liberally apply his deductive skills and sharp tongue to finding out? Absolutely.)
no subject
She keeps pace behind him, occasionally looking his way, but the air feels thick, and— She knows that's her fault. It's only a little, but he did help relieve the tension of her negativity. And, he had no reason to, but he was rather kind and patient with her. She closes her eyes for a moment and takes another deep breath before skipping ahead to his side.
"Th... Thank you!" she forces out, still trying to be moderately mindful of her manners. "You're so calm about all of this... I can tell that you're upset, too, but you're handling it so well..."
no subject
Tenn pauses when she steps up beside him. She seems awfully preoccupied with his emotional state... perhaps he was too open earlier. He relaxes his shoulders, meeting her gaze if she will.
"I didn't do anything. You chose to come with me." He reminds, as more of an affirmation than a dismissal. He only opened a door; she chose to walk through it. As she’s making a better impression now, it was a good choice. Being proactive usually is, in his experience, even when the first step is hard. "I think it's important to stay calm. We are still getting used to this place, after all. I want the staff to know that we appreciate their efforts towards us." But he’s still going to confront them about their students' conduct.