Difference between revisions of "Autarkis"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Arec |
imported>Arec |
||
Line 48: | Line 48: | ||
| | | | ||
* There are no laws that govern the destruction of vampires outside your own sect. After forsaking allegiance to either the Camarilla or Sabbat there are few that an autarkis vampire can turn to if they find themselves threatened. Accepting the protection of the Prince or conceding the authority of the Sabbat will undermine your status as autarkis, after all, you gave all that up to become independent. There's a certain amount of freedom that comes with being Autarkis, but it is usually a short-lived freedom. | * There are no laws that govern the destruction of vampires outside your own sect. After forsaking allegiance to either the Camarilla or Sabbat there are few that an autarkis vampire can turn to if they find themselves threatened. Accepting the protection of the Prince or conceding the authority of the Sabbat will undermine your status as autarkis, after all, you gave all that up to become independent. There's a certain amount of freedom that comes with being Autarkis, but it is usually a short-lived freedom. | ||
− | Being an autarkis does not always spell certain death. Those that survive long enough to reestablish themselves without the protection of a sect must strike the balance between serving, and resisting the political forces that swirl around them. This balancing act is the Danse Périlleux, a dance of death on a razor's edge where a wrong step, or even staying still too long can spell your destruction. | + | * Being an autarkis does not always spell certain death. Those that survive long enough to reestablish themselves without the protection of a sect must strike the balance between serving, and resisting the political forces that swirl around them. This balancing act is the Danse Périlleux, a dance of death on a razor's edge where a wrong step, or even staying still too long can spell your destruction. |
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 22:10, 9 April 2014
“The successful revolutionary is a statesman, the unsuccessful one a criminal.” | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|