Difference between revisions of "Confederates of the Crescent Moon/Infobox"

From City of Hope MUSH
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Ferdinand
imported>Ferdinand
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''''Anyone who joins the Confederacy, or participates in its activities is protected by a powerful Geas/Curse (think the Curse of Caine in terms of strength and permanence) that cannot be circumvented without staff intervention.'''''
 
'''''Anyone who joins the Confederacy, or participates in its activities is protected by a powerful Geas/Curse (think the Curse of Caine in terms of strength and permanence) that cannot be circumvented without staff intervention.'''''
 
   
 
   
 
 
  
 
This Geas/Curse prevents them from revealing, deliberately or accidentally, any information they learned from/about fellow members to non-members. Furthermore, no use of telepathy or torture can extract this information without staff intervention.
 
This Geas/Curse prevents them from revealing, deliberately or accidentally, any information they learned from/about fellow members to non-members. Furthermore, no use of telepathy or torture can extract this information without staff intervention.

Revision as of 09:21, 12 October 2012

Anyone who joins the Confederacy, or participates in its activities is protected by a powerful Geas/Curse (think the Curse of Caine in terms of strength and permanence) that cannot be circumvented without staff intervention.


This Geas/Curse prevents them from revealing, deliberately or accidentally, any information they learned from/about fellow members to non-members. Furthermore, no use of telepathy or torture can extract this information without staff intervention.


This is to prevent Lore Bleed, etc, which may get members in trouble with their respective sphere/faction heads if it were to happen. What happens in the CotCM stays WITHIN the CotCM. If this isn't something you feel that you can "scout's honor" uphold, then the CotCM is probably not the place for you.


The CotCM are condemned to toil in obscurity, except for blurry bits of their activities that end up leaking into the collective unconscious and are published in a satirical comic book entitled "Sojourns of the Strange" put out by an independent comic book company that has dismally low readership and is largely relegated to ashcan editions sold at small town comic book conventions, etc.