goro "enjoys a good breaking and entering" akechi (
twostringsonebow) wrote in
retrospec2018-07-02 02:30 pm
Entry tags:
cyoa: akechi edition
Hello, Recolle.
Let's play a game.
Don't worry -- it's a very fun one, and most of the work is on my part, but I think it'd be a good time sink... and you may even learn a little more about yourself in doing so. You may quit at any point of time and gain rewards from it (those are to be decided, mostly depending on how far you get in your story), though seeing it through to a satisfying end would be the most fruitful for your time.
Now.
Please pick a genre and one of the following colors: Red, Blue, Green.
1. Fantasy
2. Dystopian
3. Romance
Your story's waiting to begin. ♪
Let's play a game.
Don't worry -- it's a very fun one, and most of the work is on my part, but I think it'd be a good time sink... and you may even learn a little more about yourself in doing so. You may quit at any point of time and gain rewards from it (those are to be decided, mostly depending on how far you get in your story), though seeing it through to a satisfying end would be the most fruitful for your time.
Now.
Please pick a genre and one of the following colors: Red, Blue, Green.
1. Fantasy
2. Dystopian
3. Romance
Your story's waiting to begin. ♪

no subject
There's a young woman with a wicker basket full of vibrant flowers, the most colorful thing you've seen since coming to this town. Her chestnut hair is tucked mostly beneath her white bonnet, the rest of her garb just as drab and neutral. While her expression is initially open and searching, when she sees the two of you she draws her basket closer to herself and seems wary.
She does speak, despite that: "Would you care for a blossom? The gods have blessed them."
There doesn't seem to be anything unique about the flowers besides the vibrancy of their colors.
no subject
"They are indeed very pleasing at the eyes," began to speak the bard before adding with a light wink, "Just as the one offering them to us. It'd be a shame to separate them."
The monk finding the bard's words to be a good beginning, she'll add,
"As my companion said, I agree. We're on a journey to unite and strengthen bonds, not separate them."
They will not buy the flowers, but will tactfully ask for information about the area -- about the activity and likelihood of finding others paying their respects as they are.