cavalier973
Hero
I posted it over at Vault of the 13th Age.
The Half-Remembered Realms.
Think of the game Majesty set in the world of T.H. White's Once and Future King.
Synopsis:
Most of what we know about Medieval Europe is wrong--backwards, even. Kings we read about in history books, like King Richard the Lionhearted, King Edward Longshanks, King Richard III; they're all legends and myths.
King Arthur, though, was (and is) real.
In the year AD 1066, Uther Pendragon, Duke of Normandy, led his army across the English Channel and defeated Harold "Vortigern" Godwinson at the Battle of Hastings, and thus became King of England. His reign lasted until his death in AD 1215. In that year, the boy Arthur, ward of Sir Ector of the Forest Sauvage, was revealed to be Uther's son and heir. With the help of his advisor, Merlin the Enchanter, King Arthur seeks to repair the damage wreaked on the land by his father's reign.
The Half-Remembered Realms.
Think of the game Majesty set in the world of T.H. White's Once and Future King.
Synopsis:
Most of what we know about Medieval Europe is wrong--backwards, even. Kings we read about in history books, like King Richard the Lionhearted, King Edward Longshanks, King Richard III; they're all legends and myths.
King Arthur, though, was (and is) real.
In the year AD 1066, Uther Pendragon, Duke of Normandy, led his army across the English Channel and defeated Harold "Vortigern" Godwinson at the Battle of Hastings, and thus became King of England. His reign lasted until his death in AD 1215. In that year, the boy Arthur, ward of Sir Ector of the Forest Sauvage, was revealed to be Uther's son and heir. With the help of his advisor, Merlin the Enchanter, King Arthur seeks to repair the damage wreaked on the land by his father's reign.
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