[RfC] The Lords of The Ring and the Guardians Of The Squared Circle: Pro-Wrestling Dwarves and Orcs!
10-18-2015, 07:57 AM
10-18-2015, 07:57 AM
I've posted this elsewhere, but I figured you lot would be interested in it as well, so here, have a setting for your critiquing pleasure:
The Lords of the Ring and The Guardians of The Squared Circle
Imagine, if you will, an Orc and Dwarf engaging in something that's recognizably pro-wrestling. That's the core conceit of this setting.
We'll assume we're in something like the Blood Bowl setting: ISO Standard Fantasy Setting that's developed into something vaguely resembling the modern world with modern sports.
The basic building blocks of this setting are the Promotions, organizations designed to unify each of the various combat sports in either a region or ruleset.
There are three ends of the business:
On the more secular side, we have the Showmen (who, as mentioned, are mainly interested in Entertaining), and the Duelists (who are mainly interested in Winning). You can usually tell the difference, from the outside, because the Showmen try and prevent people from betting on their contests, as some (but not all, or even many (although this varies from Promotion to Promotion)) of their matches are fixed (some fights are just too dangerous to be held honestly). (This is to have both Kayfabe and Real Fighting side by side, each (sorta) respecting the other, as is the current practice in RL with WWE and MMA.)
Due to certain historical oddities, all three are held under the watchful eye of a Order of Priests known as "The Guardians of the Squared Circle", who fulfill much the same role as Boxing Commissions in MMA and Boxing in Real Life. They also watch over the Showmen, insuring safety protocols are followed, and, depending on the promotion, they do the same "no fixing" protocols for them (the Old Compromise is that, at the end of the year, the Guardians of Squared Circle issues a report, saying how many matches they oversaw in each Promotion, and how many they oversaw with "no fixing" protocols, and discusses what "Not fully sanctioned" Fights were performed under the auspices of the Promotion).
It's not considered a complete dishonor or illegal to hold an unsanctioned match; in particular, some Duelist Promotions in some jurisdictions that allow for such things have occasional Deathmatches, (which are officially "unsanctioned" for safety, but guarded even more closely for Fixing) and some Showman Promotions have gone sufficiently outside their usual ruleset that the Guardians declared the resulting match "not fully sanctioned". Both are an exception to the Old Compromise, and are discussed in the Yearly Report in detail (and as such, even more honest then usual on the Showman side).
Elves probably exist. If so, there are probably several subspecies of them. For our purposes, we have Common (working class), High (the nobility), and Wood (the country bumpkins) Elves. There are probably a lot of Common Elves pretending to be High Elves in the Showman side of things, just because the High Elves probably make such good hate-sinks.
Ogres and/or Trolls come into play on the Showman side at least, because the "Monster Heel" niche exists.
Halflings and Gnomes probably fill the "Midget Wrestler" niche quite nicely.
They take that responsibility seriously. There are quite a few Gods who would cheat on behalf of their Godbrawlers, but for the watchful eyes of the Guardians. And the Guardians realize Mortals take after the Gods in this respect, even if for different reasons.
On the plus side, there's a well known "curse" custom made for all who fight in gladiatorial conditions (among other things): Known as "The Blessed Curse", it prevents the cursed from doing any lasting damage while active[1]. But accidents do happen, even with this layer of protection.
[1] Why, yes, it does sees a lot of use outside the Sporting world, usually for training. There are also other uses of the curse. That's all we're going to say about it, though, for subtly obvious reasons.
And yes, there are combat wizards among all three branches of the Sport. They usually are required to either fight each other, or at a handicap, since most Promotions view Magic (besides the Blessed Curse) as an Outside Weapon.
Other curses, blessings, spells, and so on exist, but, for the purposes of this discussion, are usually used as a handicap. Curse removal is surprisingly cheap, but only if you know what curse was used.
- Female wrestlers: They exist in this setting. Elven ones are particularly popular.- There exists a God named Kayfabe, the God of Fakery. He's one of the major Patron Gods of Showmen, although there are plenty of others.- I need a third point to mention here.
So, a few quick questions: Is anything missing from the above? Is there some area you'd like to see developed?
ThanksLuc "Suplex City's School System Is Thoroughly Mediocre" French
The Lords of the Ring and The Guardians of The Squared Circle
Imagine, if you will, an Orc and Dwarf engaging in something that's recognizably pro-wrestling. That's the core conceit of this setting.
We'll assume we're in something like the Blood Bowl setting: ISO Standard Fantasy Setting that's developed into something vaguely resembling the modern world with modern sports.
The basic building blocks of this setting are the Promotions, organizations designed to unify each of the various combat sports in either a region or ruleset.
There are three ends of the business:
- Duelists, who are straight up MMA-style fighters.
- Showmen, who are more interested in entertaining an audience.
- Godbrawlers, from whom the entire sport descends.
On the more secular side, we have the Showmen (who, as mentioned, are mainly interested in Entertaining), and the Duelists (who are mainly interested in Winning). You can usually tell the difference, from the outside, because the Showmen try and prevent people from betting on their contests, as some (but not all, or even many (although this varies from Promotion to Promotion)) of their matches are fixed (some fights are just too dangerous to be held honestly). (This is to have both Kayfabe and Real Fighting side by side, each (sorta) respecting the other, as is the current practice in RL with WWE and MMA.)
Due to certain historical oddities, all three are held under the watchful eye of a Order of Priests known as "The Guardians of the Squared Circle", who fulfill much the same role as Boxing Commissions in MMA and Boxing in Real Life. They also watch over the Showmen, insuring safety protocols are followed, and, depending on the promotion, they do the same "no fixing" protocols for them (the Old Compromise is that, at the end of the year, the Guardians of Squared Circle issues a report, saying how many matches they oversaw in each Promotion, and how many they oversaw with "no fixing" protocols, and discusses what "Not fully sanctioned" Fights were performed under the auspices of the Promotion).
It's not considered a complete dishonor or illegal to hold an unsanctioned match; in particular, some Duelist Promotions in some jurisdictions that allow for such things have occasional Deathmatches, (which are officially "unsanctioned" for safety, but guarded even more closely for Fixing) and some Showman Promotions have gone sufficiently outside their usual ruleset that the Guardians declared the resulting match "not fully sanctioned". Both are an exception to the Old Compromise, and are discussed in the Yearly Report in detail (and as such, even more honest then usual on the Showman side).
- The Various Non-Orc-and-Human races involved in this sport
Elves probably exist. If so, there are probably several subspecies of them. For our purposes, we have Common (working class), High (the nobility), and Wood (the country bumpkins) Elves. There are probably a lot of Common Elves pretending to be High Elves in the Showman side of things, just because the High Elves probably make such good hate-sinks.
Ogres and/or Trolls come into play on the Showman side at least, because the "Monster Heel" niche exists.
Halflings and Gnomes probably fill the "Midget Wrestler" niche quite nicely.
- Godbrawling and Miracles
- On Gambling
They take that responsibility seriously. There are quite a few Gods who would cheat on behalf of their Godbrawlers, but for the watchful eyes of the Guardians. And the Guardians realize Mortals take after the Gods in this respect, even if for different reasons.
- The Lords of the Ring
- Magic
On the plus side, there's a well known "curse" custom made for all who fight in gladiatorial conditions (among other things): Known as "The Blessed Curse", it prevents the cursed from doing any lasting damage while active[1]. But accidents do happen, even with this layer of protection.
[1] Why, yes, it does sees a lot of use outside the Sporting world, usually for training. There are also other uses of the curse. That's all we're going to say about it, though, for subtly obvious reasons.
And yes, there are combat wizards among all three branches of the Sport. They usually are required to either fight each other, or at a handicap, since most Promotions view Magic (besides the Blessed Curse) as an Outside Weapon.
Other curses, blessings, spells, and so on exist, but, for the purposes of this discussion, are usually used as a handicap. Curse removal is surprisingly cheap, but only if you know what curse was used.
- Some Miscellany
- Female wrestlers: They exist in this setting. Elven ones are particularly popular.- There exists a God named Kayfabe, the God of Fakery. He's one of the major Patron Gods of Showmen, although there are plenty of others.- I need a third point to mention here.
So, a few quick questions: Is anything missing from the above? Is there some area you'd like to see developed?
ThanksLuc "Suplex City's School System Is Thoroughly Mediocre" French