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Architectrix

From Mizahar Lore

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Image:Scroll2.png "At first they are just like their makers. But as time and space separate them from their Masters and Mistresses, they change. Some grow delightfully happy while others fall into a seething pit of loathsomeness. One never knows with Architectrix what four-walled child will be born of the magics of Suva.”
- Van Nakiki from the Book of New Souls
Architectrix
World magic
Full nameArchitectrix
AvailabilityRare
Learned fromVery few users
Key conceptGranting Life to Physical Structures.
UsesHabitats and Dwellings
RisksSetting a sentient building of dubious temperament loose in the world.


Architectrix (ancient tongue: Arivas) is a discipline of world magic that breaths a piece of a mage’s life force and the life force of another Architectrix into a physical structure and gives that structure full and unquestionable life. Once ‘infected’ the structure begins to slowly assume sentience and develop a personality of its own. The higher the level of mage the faster this effect happens and the more control the mage has over the structure’s personality so long as the mage keeps working with the structure.

Contents

History

A great many details have been lost because of the Valterrian, but some basic information is still known passed via word of mouth from Architechtrix mage to Architectrix mage about the origins and development of Architectrix. Well before the Valterrian in the heart of the Suvan Empire, Vivian Roscanali, a champion of Kihala, developed this magic bridging the gap between divine magic and world magic to do so. The first Architectrix was said to be Vivian’s stronghold Cyprus Manor located somewhere in the modern day Kalean West Coast on the edge of a massive Swampland that is still exists today in the form of The Gyvaka Swamp. Vivian breathed the essence of life into this structure after spending her whole life on creating its process. From Cyprus Manor all other Architectrix’s have been born, and can trace their linage backwards to Cyprus Manor. The Manor has been lost since the Valterrian so no one knows if it is still alive or not. Due to its nature, there is a distinct and high possibility that Cyphrus Manor did survive the Valterrian and has been in hiding ever since.

Initiation

Architectrix's Often Love Water.

Though Initiation into Architectrix is incredibly rare, it still happens. The rarity of this world magic depends on a would-be mage coming across an actively sentient Architectrix structure which will accept the mage and perform the initiation. Initiations are wholly dependent on Architectrix structures and cannot be performed by other mages unless other mages have pieces of Architectrix structures. Typically a sentient structure will remove a piece of itself, such as a splinter, and insert it beneath the mages’ skin where it will rest undisturbed by the mage's natural abilities to fester the foreign substance out like a mage would do with other more normal splinters. Once a splinter or another such piece of the structure is safely within the mage’s body and does not kill the mage, the newly inducted mage will slowly develop the full capacity to understand an Architectrix building and communicate with it. Mages can be initiated by other mages, but again they need splinters or pieces of a fully sentient Architectrix to have the initiation be successful. Initiation is dangerous and sometimes the splinter will reject the mage resulting in death.

Architectrix In Practice

Architectrix is incredibly simple in nature. In fact, its design operates more like an infection than anything else. Once a mage has been initiated into Architectrix they can successfully locate and communicate with existing Architectrix structures. To create more Architectrix structures, the mage simply needs to safely and without harming the existing structure, remove a piece of its form and successfully implant it into another structure. Pieces might include bricks or a single board of lumber. A window pane would work. Even a single shingle or roof tile could be transported and successfully installed in a new structure to infuse it with sentience. The level of the mage determines how fast the building acquires this ‘life’ and gains its sentience. However, one critical element is that all Architectrix structures must give of themselves freely and cannot be ‘stolen’ from in order to transfer this life. If a piece such as a roof tile or brick is taken without the structure’s permission then the piece will not transmit the infection and create a new Architectrix.

Architectrix’s Results

These Buildings Often Are Quirky In Appearence.

The most important thing to consider about Architectrix is that these structures have sentience and thus develop a mind of their own. Their experiences are shaped by the people and living things that dwell within them. Initially, their personalities start out mimicking the mages that crafted them. However, very very soon afterward they can deviate drastically. Houses that are sentient, once they reach full ‘maturity’ (which again depends on the level of the mage) have the ability to add and subtract rooms. They can change their own layouts. They can hide things from their owners, rearrange furniture and decidedly throw people out whom they dislike and do not want to dwell within their boundaries. Structures infected with Architectrix can go on killing sprees and use their own structures to rid themselves of their residents.

Conversely, Architectrix structures can anticipate the arrival of say visitors and create spontaneously a new guest room or an entirely new wing, basement, or floor. Architectrix structures can throw tantrums and turn themselves from eighty room mansions to one-room shacks just to spite their owners as well. Most Architectrix structures are in harmony with their owners, often searching long and hard to find that perfect fit. Castles that evil mages inhabit tend to have evil streaks themselves. And the cottage that the crofter family lives in might see to it that a pie cooling on a window seal will not be disturbed until the family is ready to eat it.

Architectrix structures come in all shapes and sizes, though by and large, most are homes, shops, or an occasional wall or bridge. Ancient structures tend to be castles or keeps. Castle Xy, set in the Cyphrus plains, is also said to be a very malevolent structure, though it doesn’t seem to mind the Zith that has made it their home. Along with Cyprus Manor, Ironrock was reported to be another such structure.

Architectrix’s Limitations & Hazards

The size of an Architectrix depends always on the size of the land assigned to it. So if a structure was built on 60 acres, potentially the structure could grow that large. Conversely, a structure built in a small city housing parcel can only grow as large as that parcel. Buildings can expand upwards and downwards at will. Nothing within a structure will be lost or destroyed during the structure’s endeavors to transform itself. Structures can and will rearrange their furnishings and create new or destroy old furnishings. They can hide things within their depths and create secret rooms to house secrets within. Architectrix buildings can and will act like people, shaking on their foundations when enraged and throwing their windows open when too hot.

No new material needs to be added to the Architectrix structure for it to seemingly edit its design and create or destroy rooms. This self-editing seems to take a great deal of effort on the part of the structure so the frequency this occurs is rare. A well-settled Architectrix home might anticipate the coming of visitors (especially if its been home to Konti and some of their fortune-telling or divining has worn off – or its overheard gossip by servants or its owners) and form a room overnight adding a guest bedroom to house the guests expected. No new building material would be needed for this effort, though the house might not be able to shift its shape for a while or do any more building until its djed supply is renewed and it has ‘rested’. Such remodels might be seasons apart or even years, but they do happen.

Structures infused with Architectrix magic can fall prey to the same catastrophes that affect other buildings and structures. They can be ‘killed’ by fire if their parts are flammable. They can be buried in snow, mud, and sand during natural disasters. Their walls can be knocked down and the rubble scattered to the point where the building ‘dies’. The longer the structure has existed, however, the harder it is to control or destroy.

Structures which have been infected by Architectrix end up taking on a life of their own. They develop personalities different than the mages who created them as time passes. Often these structures outlive the mages who breathed life into them. They can be disobedient and have their own ideas that deviate from the will and wishes of the mage that created them. And like other sentient creatures, Architectrix buildings suffer mental disorders and have been found to be enraged, smothering, and sometimes simply insane. Such buildings generally form the baseline to the haunted house mythos as ghosts are incredibly drawn to sentient structures and seem to have no barrier in communicating with them even in the absence of being initiated into Architectrix..

To stave off boredom, Architectrix structures often take up hobbies. They’ll collect residents at times (sometimes not letting them go), branch off into landscape design and work on their own ‘grounds’. Some will take up painting and produce internal and external murals that are anywhere from appalling to stunning. Some will even experiment with form, being all glass one season and all stone the next. Only well-settled buildings that have come to firm understandings with their denizens are considered ‘stable’ and somewhat unchanging. The rest are wildly different, from their mages and definitely from each other.

One important thing to note is that surrounding these sentient buildings tend to be an aura of 'didn't notice that'. Meaning, people living right next door or walking by said buildings every day will tend not to notice the changes unless they are mages themselves. If an Architectrix Building takes on an all glass structure one season and switches to wood the next, people will just naturally assume it was always glass the first season and then always wood the second season.

Architectrix Communication

In terms of speech, only well developed Architetrix's can actually communicate with their mages in anything other than emotions. An Arch mage will always have an emotional link with its structures, but speech takes time. Then, once the building has developed speech, it can only speak with another person who is also inducted into Architectrix. Random people will not hear and understand its voice. For this reason, Architectrix Mages often set up a system that allows a structure to answer simple questions as asked from other individuals. These systems might be chimes the building can gently shake to ring for yes or no. Buildings that are particularly clever can sometimes manipulate instruments - espeically wind and percussion - that allow them a means of communication too.

Relocationg Architectrix structures

Architectrix awareness can be moved from one structure or location to another. It takes an expert or master level Archi mage to get the job done. The mage must have a strong bond with the Architectrix itself and then convince it to condense its awareness into one item it holds within its awareness - a cornerstone, a brick, a roof tile, or even something like a flawless gemstone and hold itself inert within it until the mage infects its awareness in a new location. This is much like the creation of a seed, though the Architectrix retains its awareness and personality unlike a new seed given to a mage to transform a new building. This is far easier for an Architectrix mage to do if the mage itself was the person that breathed life into the structure originally. Very old Architectrix buildings may not be able to be moved due to the sheer size of their awareness. It would take a Master Architectrix to actually move a strange awareness they themselves did not birth and replant it elsewhere if it could be convinced at all. They would most likely only have a 30-50% chance of success depending on a DS or higher's determination.

It is important to understand that condensing one’s awareness down into something so small when one has been something far larger is a hard thing to ask and the structure may need coaxing or hand-holding.

Once moved into a portable item, the structural awareness then can be used as a seed to plant both the magic and the awareness into a new structure. The new structure should be infused with the essence of the same creature the Architectrix was before it was moved. The awareness will have felt as if it had been asleep. Moving Arch structures is a delicate and hazardous prospect. It means that the structure must WANT to move and that it must TRUST its mage to move it and wake it back up once it has been reseeded. This process should not be rushed. It must be handled with the delicacy of any parent coaxing a cranky child to sleep.

Sometimes, for unknown reasons, this awareness can come back significantly altered or in more extreme cases, cannot be revived at all.

Architectrix And Archi Mages

There is very little an Architectrix mages needs to do once they infect a structure with Architectrix. The structure will grow on its own and gain sentience. However, there is a lot an Architectrix mage CAN do if they choose too. Depending on their levels they can speed up the growth of sentience. They can communicate with these buildings and find out their needs and issues. Architectrix buildings need repairs just like other buildings so one can become vastly unhappy if one’s roof is leaking and a current resident family refuses to fix it for example. These mages often become ‘caretakers’ of these structures, healing their wounds and hearing their problems. A well schooled Architectrix mage can often back an Architectrix Structure off from the brink of insanity or drive one straight too it. The more interaction an Architectrix mage has with its structure the more it can help shape or bend the will of the structure.

Architectrix & Other Magics

Architectrix is not Animation. This ancient discipline is not remotely related. Once a structure is created and infused with life, that structure takes on a mind of its own and while it can be communicated with by an Architectrix mage, there’s no guarantee the building will listen to said mage or do as its told. One cannot design an Architectrix structure for a specific purpose nor can one control said structure. One can only attempt to guide it and feed it energy, which is what a Architectrix mage’s true purpose is.

Shielding has been successfully used with Architectrix structures. However, as with all living things, there is a distinct possibility that the building itself can learn the art of shielding from observation which can be very good or bad depending on the personality of the structure. And since djed is in all things, this can result in interesting consequences. Other structures, throughout time, have reportedly learned other magics – both common practice and lost disciplines – and have even in the past invented their own hybrid forms of arcana.

Architectrix buildings tend to draw mages and other sentience too them. They feel emotions like other creatures and can be lonely as well. However, this might not manifest in ways mages can foresee. An Architectrix structure might invite a widow and her thirty cats to move into its shelter and decide it likes the cats better than the widow. Depending on its personality the widow might find herself permanently locked out or dead by the Architectrix’s means while the cats are coddled and pampered in the aftermath.

There are some magics, mainly divine, that when infused with an Architectrix Structure can be truly frightening. Akarni, the gnosis of Zintila and Webbing come to mind. Infusing a skyglass structure with Architectrix is a dangerous thing because skyglass has unique and highly indestructible qualities to it rendering the structure extremely dangerous if it grows unstable or haunted. Giving a building that’s fully sentient access to the web gives it access to knowledge, and knowledge is power in Mizahar. An Architectrix with Reimancy, for example, can light its own candles and hearths if it has fire as an element.

Architectrix & Gnosis

Architectrix buildings can bear gnosis marks and use gnosis just like normal people and objects can. They must earn them as per the gnosis mark requirements PCs have to follow. For an actively roleplayed Architectrix Building to acquire a first Gnosis Mark, they must be involved in a moderated thread featuring their Architectrix Mage. They must have ten threads thereafter showing their devotion to their chosen God to earn a second mark. This application must be processed through the Help Desk as per a normal gnosis approval.

Architectrix & Ghosts

Ghosts are particularly drawn to Architectrix buildings. They seem to have very little difficulty communicating with the buildings and might be some of the sources of the very oldest original haunted house mythos. While Ghosts can't actually 'talk' to Architectrix structures - unless they were Arch mages in life - they have very little difficulty making their needs known. Architectrix structures tend to have very little problem interpreting those needs and fulfilling them since they tend to enjoy ghosts being around.

Timeline For Growth Of Architectrix Structures

There is no firm timeline. There cannot be. The growth rate of a newly formed Architectrix - or even one newly awakened from a long slumber - varies greatly depending on the time and effort its Arch mage puts into the structure. If active theading is going on where an Arch Mage PC or NPC is ACTIVELY interacting with the building (ie feeding it djed, communicating emotionally with it, playing with it, etc) and those threads are frequent, then an Arch structure will grow rapidly.

If there is little to no interaction, then a structure will not. Assumed interaction does not count. There must be actual threads or instances in thread after thread where an Arch Mage is being a caretaker and councilor to buildings are the only type that counts. A structure will not, for example, develop speech automatically over the course of a season or two unless those threads are present. A building will not show preference, personality, etc without those interactive posts.

To get benefit from an Architectrix Structure, one must put work into the said structure. Architectrix is not an 'embue it and forget it' type situation. These personalities are sentient and will only grow more sentient as time goes by and they are interacted with. Non-Arch mages interacting with said structures as PCs will have some benefit, but not in any way near the benefit an Arch mage that can fully communicate with a structure will have. Mcuh like children that aren't played with or socialized will not be social, Architectrix buildings are similar. They must be taught by example. They will not, for example, understand how to read unless a mage actively teaches them to read. Thus, arranging magnetized alphabet letters on a metal surface will not work as a form of outsider communication unless the building has the skill to read and write. It's just that simple.

This is a lost discipline. Please don't forget that. Assumed interaction means NOTHING. Everything must be done in thread through thread work.

Additional Notes

So besides creating new structures, what is the point of an Architectrix mage? The answer is simple. Mages act as councilors to these structures, guide them, and can often feed them their own djed to speed along their sentience and remodels. Mages often act as caretakers and nursemaids, living on the grounds or in the structures themselves. It is rare to find an Architectrix mage which only knows Architectrix. Instead, this discipline is often an offshoot of other magical studies and practices those artforms within the boundaries of these structures potentially creating a very dangerous situation.


Skill progression

Novice (1-25)
The novice is initiated into Architectrix and can communicate with existing Architectrix structures. He or she is able to recognize these buildings from even great distances and can attempt to talk buildings into giving up pieces of themselves to create ‘seeds’ for new Architectrix buildings. Once a given piece of a current Architectrix building is acquired, the Architectrix mage can then ‘seed’ a new building and create a new Architectrix structure.
Competent (26-50)
At the competent level an Architectrix mage can then start feeding djed into a building to increase its strength, growth and the rate of which it gains sentience. This feeding can cut in half the time it takes a building to reach full self awareness. Architectrix mages at this level can have basic communication with Architectrix buildings in full sentences. At this level, a mage may be able to talk an Architectrix Building into offering a piece of itself to form a new structure.
Expert (51-75)
Communication at this adept level is fairly straightforward so the mage and building itself may communicate in clear dialog that resembles the way two normal people could speak to each other. Mages have no difficulty getting pieces of the building to create new Architectrix structures. Mages can feed djed into the buildings and reduce the sentience time by one-quarter of the time. Time depending, of course, on the size of the structure they are trying to infect with Architectrix. The bigger the building the slower the infection. Small buildings infect fairly rapidly.
Master (76-100)
A master is able to understand the needs of an Architectrix building and can often cure problems and sooth mental disorders said structures have developed. They can also conversely cause buildings worry and fear bringing on ‘disorders’ and speeding up issues. Full Architectrix Masters can seed a building, regardless of what size, and bring it into full sentience the same day by simply infusing the building with their djed as they awaken it.


Reimancy-related Threads

Initiation
heightFamily LeggaciesKelski's Induction
heightSticks and StonesDessarian is Inducted by Kelski.
Architectrix Use
heightBecoming More Immersed I-IVThe Midnight Gem's Induction to Reimancy.


Part of a series of articles on Magic
Concepts Magic · Magic list · Djed · Personal magic · Gnosis · World magic · Djedline · Arcanology
Personal magic Auristics · Familiary · Flux · Hypnotism · Leeching · Morphing · Projection · Reimancy · Voiding · Shielding · Vorilescence
Gnosis Gnosis · Gnosis list· Gnosis Marks · Religion
World magic Alchemy · Animation · Glyphing · Magecraft · Malediction · Summoning · Spiritism · Webbing
Magic in Society Magic institutions · Magic factions · Famous wizards
Lost Disciplines Architectrix · Dominion · Pathfinding · Static · Sensing · Florabundance · Linkage
Other Antimagic · Paramagic · Wizard psychology