Guardians of the Coast
And it is along these unpredictable waters that the Royal Coast Guard keeps its eternal vigil—an old service with a young spirit, made up of sailors who seem born with saltwater in their blood.Continue Reading
Army, Navy, War College, or historical battles
And it is along these unpredictable waters that the Royal Coast Guard keeps its eternal vigil—an old service with a young spirit, made up of sailors who seem born with saltwater in their blood.Continue Reading
The uneasy calm along the northern frontier was broken late last night when a Marelian band—believed to be a rogue splinter group acting without state sanction—attempted a clandestine reconnaissance near Fort Highwinter, one of the Kingdom’s oldest defensive bastions in Northreach.Continue Reading
The Herringbone Isles dispute has moved from tense posturing to an unmistakable militarisation of the region. Multiple inside sources say that Nordmark has quietly massed troops along its maritime approaches and that the Republic of Marelia is urgently seeking outside suppliers of ordnance while impressing young shipwrights and dockyard hands into service for what officials call an emergency “maritime expansion.”Continue Reading
INVERNESS — While ministers speak in measured rhetoric, the machinery of war is quietly grinding into place. The Royal Ministry of War and Conflict officially declined to comment on reports of military preparations linked to the Herringbone Isles dispute, but multiple inside sources say the Royal Army of Eyehasseen andContinue Reading
The Desert Treaty was meant to usher in a new age of peace. Signed in the spring of 874 between the Kingdom of Eyehasseen and the Desert People, it promised free passage for caravans, safe wells along contested borders, and a mutual reduction of arms. Instead, it collapsed within a season, leaving behind not only bitter conflict but also one of the most infamous betrayals in the Kingdom’s long history.Continue Reading
For twelve days in the year 812, the fate of the Kingdom hinged on a single gate. The northern entrance to Inverness, then a modest stone arch defended by a handful of guards, became the focus of a siege that tested both the strength of the city walls and the resolve of its citizens.Continue Reading
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