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#verda stello
jointhepartypod · 2 years
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Troy Riptide, Gunslinger
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Troy Riptide is a fun-loving, quick-shooting, shaka-throwing son of the Crags. He was raised to be a palace guard, but that’s no way to bring glory to his house. So instead he’s setting out on the high seas to find fame and fortune! His arrows fly high and fast while his bright yellow wings stay rolled up in weatherproof casing on his back. Did someone order a butterfly Gunslinger? ‘Cause Troy’s ready to shoot and party, and his crossbow is already loaded.
Want to play a Witch in your home D&D game? Grab the free PDF we made with Mage Hand Press here. And hear Cammie in action in Join the Party’s ‘The Rising Tide’  campaign! Art by Ren Graham.
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the-gamling-dog · 4 months
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the great thing about listening to D&D podcasts like @jointhepartypod is that occasionally you get to think thoughts like "fuck me, that's a judgy fucking aubergine" in the middle of consolidating text on the crusades of the 14th and 15th centuries.
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mistah-aluminum · 1 year
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Amanda, trying to sell the Patreon during the midroll: Buy My Silence For $8 A Month
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jointhepartypod · 2 years
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Chamomile Cassis, Tea Witch
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Chamomile Cassis, Cammie to their friends, is every superstitious pirate's dream and nightmare. This teaplant has turned her own body into a form of magic, practicing Tea Magic and Tasseography for her crewmates. After they became blighted and were run out of Open Fields, Cammie stumbled into the pirate life entirely by accident. She is tirelessly optimistic, and loves nothing more than to fix a nice cup of tea for anyone in need or spend time concocting new recipes with her seaweed octopus familiar, Nonny.
  Want to play a Witch in your home D&D game? Grab the free PDF we made with Mage Hand Press here. And hear Cammie in action in Join the Party’s ‘The Rising Tide’  campaign! Art by Ren Graham.
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jointhepartypod · 2 years
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Umbi, Alchemist
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The resident old timer on board, Umbi’s years (and years) of experience and knowledge of bomb-making and potioncraft make him an invaluable crew member. Raised amongst the dreamy but unbridled politics of Overstalk, Umbi sought adventure to find real meaning for his life on his terms. The wizened pawpaw fruit seems overripe, but it might be an act he puts on to keep people on their toes (before he blows their toes off).
Want to play a Witch in your home D&D game? Grab the free PDF we made with Mage Hand Press here. And hear Cammie in action in Join the Party’s ‘The Rising Tide’  campaign! Art by Ren Graham.
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jointhepartypod · 2 years
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Welcome to the World of Verda Stello! 🌱 🏴☠️
Campaign 3 of Join the Party is set in the world of Verda Stello, the great green ringed world. This fantastical land is filled with approximately human-sized plant and bug people (give or take some 2 foot tall fruits and giant vines) called the Greenfolk. The main source of life for Verda Stello is the Cascade, a massive waterfall that pours over the whole inner ring of the world.
Over time, the Cascade dried up, leaving all the Greenfolk scrambling for water. But the waterfall revealed the entire center of Verda Stello was a great salt sea, dotted with countless unknown islands, and a prophecy about an Infinite Lake that can save the world and a Salmon that grants your deepest desire.
This kicked off the Tide, a pirate era that has raged for 50 years. People are still searching for the lake and the salmon, and the Tide shows no sign of stopping now.
Find out more about Verda Stello and Campaign 3 here!
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The Hothouse
Country’s Motto: Why Suffer When We Can Strive
Known for their ingenuity and extensive construction, the Hothouse is the technological hub of Verda Stello. Hothousers believe that finding the best way to do something is its own greatest reward (except for letting everyone know that you did it with a plaque or statue or signature). You might recognize Hothouse architecture with the incorporations of big windows or a solarium, amplifying the sun to do extra work for you. The ruler of the Hothouse is The Builder, someone who is recognized as the best and the smartest through a series of public and brutal competitions of mind and might.
The official Hothouse Flag was designed by the first Builder, Appleton the Original. The triangle represents the hothouse, as you might have guessed, but the doubled triangle is a symbol of so many values that Hothousers hold dear.  Appleton was known for his patience and care when erecting and planning the major monuments of the Hothouse capital, so scholars and politicians say the doubled triangle meant, “measure twice, cut once.” But it can be interpreted as broadly as “quality over quantity” or “do it right the first time,” as double-paneling the triangle is stronger than many triangles in a line. What is most intriguing is the intersection of the symbolic hothouse and the sun itself, putting them in concert, or at least as two parts of the whole. The construct is not subservient to the sun. In fact, they are relatively the same, as a sibling or partner encouraging the other to be better than they could have been alone.
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Open Fields
Country’s Motto: Reap What Is Sown
The people of Open Fields feel the deep connection between themselves and the ground, giving themselves strong perseverance and belief. This allows them to stare at the strangeness of existence in the face, such as how they can harvest produce and greens for sustenance even if it looks exactly like them. Open Field families show this devotion by naming themselves after virtues (in a Puritan sort of way) and both fervently praying and farming.
Unfortunately, there is no definitive account of how the Open Fields’ flag came to be. Many leaders have invoked various legends and parables, usually involving a poor potato farmer, resistance of temptation, and then divine inspiration. One version of the story says the pattern appeared in a bowl of mashed potatoes, when the butter and the mash was swirled together in the bowl. Another version supposes the farmer tried to harvest one of his crop but could not, and only through the collective strength of the entire farmer’s family and friends did they put the largest tuber ever recorded, with the design outlined in the eyes of the potato. The only record of the creation and adoption of the current design comes from the journal of a monk known as Saying-Thank-You-Meaningfully-For-an-Unexpected-Gift-No-Matter-What-It-Is. It seems that Saying’s closest friend at the monastery made woodcuts as a hobby, and created the sun-on-top, shovel-on-bottom image. That night, Saying wrote in their journal, “Saw an interesting image today. Must be the divine.” The colors–especially the deep red, unique in the flags of Verda Stello–and how it became the symbol of the entire country, remains unknown.
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Kingdom of the Crags
Country’s Motto: We Cover All
The Crags is the most Game of Thrones out of all of the countries. They find strength in dealing with adversity and sacrificing comfort for something greater. They explore their land, find the great thing that it does, and work with it (whether obsidian from lava or a fruit that gives you the strength of 10 in a mountain or a glowing mushroom in a crevasse). Over time, many families have formed into houses and territories, which has then led to a revolving door of kings and queens as the houses vie for power. As the Craggish saying goes, “Everyone has their purpose, and the royals are dying.”
The modern version of the Crags flag (say that five times fast) was established over six hundred years ago, at the signing of the Brevi Pax. Short for “brevi pax pugnantibus,” or “short peace between combatants” in middle Folkish, it was supposed to be a document that finally codified the system of governance in the Crags and illustrated all rights for Craggish citizens regardless of ruler. At the time of its signing, it was just Pax Pugnantibus, but the Brevi was added after Queen Opaline V was slain by her three sisters only ten days after the document was signed.
Although the peace did not remain, the rights of citizens stayed, as well as a specific agreed-upon design for the Craggish flag, The purple emphasizes the strength of the ruling families, while the white V and the black background stands in for the hard landscape where the people make their homes. There’s an interesting optical trick too; the sprout is in the dead center, but the crag makes it seem lower; what appears worse to others is exactly where the Crags knows is best.
Many of the sigils of the houses in the Crags use inversions or additions of this flag to bolster their claims for royal legitimacy, but they do not risk changing too much as would alienate themselves from the existence of the state. They are not above the kingdom and the Rocky Seat, as there would be nothing to rule.
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Overstalk
Country’s Motto: Carry Your Roots
The future lives in Overstalk, but it might linger as more of a dream than actually getting it done. Overstalk is the home of the philosophers, a quixotic solarpunkish country. This led to a vibrant merchant culture, so you buy what you need since we’re philosophizing over here. The beating heart of Overstalk is the Stacked City of Skyreach (think the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, but a whole city), where radical but sometimes dangerous ideas flourish and fester.
The historians of Overstalk delight in explaining the symbology of their flag to others, as the metaphor of each color and symbol were, if you will pardon the pun, dyed right into it when the Fourth Congress of the Representatives commissioned local textile artist Cablin Pogostemon to create it. On the left side, the yellow represents the warmth and energy of the sun (but modern philosophers would argue that the top band is ascribed to the mercantile success of the region). The cream is the color of a yellowing page of a book, representing study, while the gray is the smoke of incense, representing spiritualism. As the cream and the gray interest each other and the yellow, you cannot forget the mind for the spirit or vice versa, and they are both integral to day-to-day living (or for modern interpretation, business dealings). The right side is the vertical expansion of Overstalk, as high as the stars themselves. 
This is the only flag in Verda Stello to use green, which some suppose signifies Overstalk’s high view of themselves as compared to the other countries.
Maybe Cablin knew this when they designed the flag, as it came with explicit instructions to never be hung up-and-down, with the stars at the top. It is considered a deep political insult to hang the flag in this way… but it has been accidentally turned during some particularly prickly international visits.
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jointhepartypod · 2 years
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your setting, verda stello. the name seems to be in esperanto yeah? like one letter off, keeps all the -a and -o suffixes and everything
was it intentional when you chose the name to reference the verda stelo? a green star a lot of esperantists use as a symbol. or was that a coincidence?
oh hey, it's eric the dm!
yes, it is from Esperanto. And the green star felt appropriate for a plant-based pirate campaign where you're navigating by the stars.
Esperanto is something I'm just incredibly fascinated by. An optometrist in Poland was like, "hey what if I undid the tower of babel???" Someone tried to fix the world, inspire peace and bridge the wide gaps between folks worldwide! Just cause he cool!
ALSO it's an inside joke with myself because a podcast company was almost named orello, "ear" in esperanto, but it was laughed out of the room.
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jointhepartypod · 2 years
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As we gear up for the first ep of Campaign 3, here is a rough map of Verda Stello! Notes: - The light blue around the Great Salt Sea is where the Cascade used to be. - You CAN fall off the side of the world, so watch out.
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