Editing Pavilion of Secrets
From The Wandering Inn Wiki
More actions
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
| Latest revision | Your text | ||
| Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
Upon entering a door in the Pavilion, the owner will be faced by a copy of themselves, which is the personification of the Pavilion of Secrets. It acts as a voice for the Skill's intelligence, to interact with its owner akin to an interface, but also as a "harsh mirror." In Erin's case, while the Pavilion has her memories and intimately knows her habits and personality, it doesn't necessarily know her feelings or motivations unless she explicitly talked about them while in Innworld. | Upon entering a door in the Pavilion, the owner will be faced by a copy of themselves, which is the personification of the Pavilion of Secrets. It acts as a voice for the Skill's intelligence, to interact with its owner akin to an interface, but also as a "harsh mirror." In Erin's case, while the Pavilion has her memories and intimately knows her habits and personality, it doesn't necessarily know her feelings or motivations unless she explicitly talked about them while in Innworld. | ||
The owner is able to summon anyone, including the dead.<ref>{{VERef|10.10 E (Pt. 2)}}</ref> Doing so will create a copy of the individual, who will have awareness of the real person and what they are doing and feeling, immediately know how the Pavilion works, and intuitively know what they will remember. Conversely, the actual individual will be ignorant of the copy's existence until the owner dismisses the copy. The summoned individuals do not have to talk when summoned. They also has some power over the Pavilion in terms of aesthetics, being able to change the appearance of their surroundings or even themselves, as long as it constitutes as truthful or in the context of revealing a secret. While individuals whose names the owner knows can be summoned repeatedly for free, summoning an unknown person requires a payment of a secret to the Pavilion. However, the owner can summon someone who is the best fit for a listed criteria.<ref name=":12">{{VERef|10.18 E | The owner is able to summon anyone, including the dead.<ref>{{VERef|10.10 E (Pt. 2)}}</ref> Doing so will create a copy of the individual, who will have awareness of the real person and what they are doing and feeling, immediately know how the Pavilion works, and intuitively know what they will remember. Conversely, the actual individual will be ignorant of the copy's existence until the owner dismisses the copy. The summoned individuals do not have to talk when summoned. They also has some power over the Pavilion in terms of aesthetics, being able to change the appearance of their surroundings or even themselves, as long as it constitutes as truthful or in the context of revealing a secret. While individuals whose names the owner knows can be summoned repeatedly for free, summoning an unknown person requires a payment of a secret to the Pavilion. However, the owner can summon someone who is the best fit for a listed criteria.<ref name=":12">{{VERef|10.18 E}}</ref> | ||
Copies of the previous owners also exist within their respective Pavilions, with knowledge of the current owner. Anything true or real that's said or shown within the Garden will be remembered by both parties, trading secrets. There are degrees of truths, as lesser truths and secrets will be remembered as daydreams rather than vividly. There is some wiggle room with the barter system of secrets, with the Pavilion being willing to summon on "credit." | Copies of the previous owners also exist within their respective Pavilions, with knowledge of the current owner. Anything true or real that's said or shown within the Garden will be remembered by both parties, trading secrets. There are degrees of truths, as lesser truths and secrets will be remembered as daydreams rather than vividly. There is some wiggle room with the barter system of secrets, with the Pavilion being willing to summon on "credit." | ||