#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers




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@dr4gonwriter asked…
"Astarion is absolutely from Evereska!"
Ooooh, pray tell, what makes you say that? (I'm just digging for lore here, I know nothing of the Realms)
Since you asked…
The absolutely non Baldurian origin of Astarion Ancunìn
(Conveniently footnoted because…I’m me)
I spend an inordinate amount of time tying characters into broader Forgotten Realms canon. Astarion, though, is almost a blank slate. There’s essentially no elven lore tied to Baldur’s Gate itself — canonically it’s the most human-dominated of the Sword Coast cities.¹ No elven quarter, no temple to Corellon, no hereditary moon-elf lines. If an elf lives there, it’s as a traveler, a fugitive, or someone making very questionable life choices.
Even Astarion’s age is up for debate. He tells us he’s been a vampire for “nearly two centuries,” but that only marks his undeath. Given his colouring and temperament, he’s almost certainly Teu-Tel’Quessir, a moon elf.² (Races of Faerûn describes sun elves as reclusive traditionalists, while moon elves are wanderers and adventurers.)³
Moon-elf culture gives us the perfect frame for where he was in life: the period of wanderlust, a kind of elven rumspringa when young elves leave home to see the wider world. Elves of Evermeet describes these youths “singing, dancing, gambling, drinking, flirting outrageously… hoisting their tankards.”⁴ Baldur’s Gate — a city of vice and indulgence — would have looked like paradise to someone in that stage.
That wanderlust usually begins around a century of age.⁵ If Astarion was turned while traveling the Coast, he could have been born around 1290 DR. And since elves are famously vague about time (“a hundred summers ago… or maybe last moonrise”),⁶ his “nearly two hundred years” of vampirism may be nothing more than typical Tel’Quessir imprecision.
As for where he came from: Evereska is the most logical origin. It’s the largest surviving moon-elf enclave on the mainland.⁷ When the Siege of Evereska (1371–72 DR) shattered the valley, many families fled before the mythal was restored.⁸ The obvious refuge was Silverymoon, the “Gem of the North,” whose population at the time was nearly thirty percent elven.⁹ Whether Astarion’s family left during the siege or generations earlier, an Evereskan → Silverymoon → Sword Coast migration fits both geography and temperament.
His refinement, education, and nostalgia for lost beauty all point to that upbringing. Even his name, Ancunín, echoes Evereskan naming conventions listed in Dragon #272 “Evereska: The Hidden Vale.”
Personally, I like to imagine him snared in a tangle of elven politics. Cazador Szarr, whose aesthetic all but screams sun elf (canonically, all the significant elven vampires are sun elves), could have arranged the young moon-elf’s magistrate post — an appealing role for an ambitious adolescent, offering access to the Upper City’s Patriar clubs in exchange for jailing a few troublesome N’Tel’Quessir. Turning him was likely no accident. Once Cazador sealed his pact with Mephistopheles — an archdevil known for preying on the pride of elves¹¹ — a handsome, charming moon-elf thrall would have been perfect bait for gathering mortal souls.
Canon Realms lore is explicit that many non-elves fetishize elven beauty and sexuality; it’s not hard to see how such a creature could be used as bait.¹² It also casts a cruel new light on Astarion’s confession that Cazador “particularly enjoyed his pain.” Among the elder sun-elf lines, there’s a deep disdain for their moon-elf kin — the silver ones, ever too merry, too free, too ready to dance with humans. That ancient arrogance would make Astarion’s suffering not just convenient, but deliciously symbolic: a moon-elf body broken to serve a sun-elf master’s pride.¹³
So no, Astarion was never a Baldurian native. More likely he was an Evereskan by blood, perhaps raised in Silverymoon, who wandered south during his wanderlust and fell prey to the city’s appetites. The “Pale Elf of Baldur’s Gate” was never its son.
Notes
Volo’s Guide to the Sword Coast (2e); Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting (3e), p. 103; Baldur’s Gate: Descent into Avernus (5e).
In-game model, complexion, and linguistic cues match moon-elf description in Races of Faerûn, p. 29.
Ibid.
Elves of Evermeet, Elaine Cunningham (1994), pp. 21–22.
Races of Faerûn, p. 29; Player’s Handbook (3e), Table 6-4 “Age Categories.”
Common elven trope in FR fiction; e.g., Evermeet: Island of Elves (1998), p. 54.
Lost Empires of Faerûn, p. 69.
Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting (3e), p. 118; Return of the Archwizards trilogy (Troy Denning, 2001–2003).
Silver Marches (3e), p. 40.
Dragon Magazine #272 (2000) “Evereska: The Hidden Vale.”
Fiendish Codex II: Tyrants of the Nine Hells (2006), p. 152.
Races of Faerûn, p. 31 (“non-elves fascinated by elven allure”).
Elves of Evermeet, p. 23 (describing sun-elf disdain for the carefree silver elves).
✨️Karim Summary ✨️
"On the orbit of the world of Elysium hover 3 satellites from before the 8,000 years of written history, from before the Polükarpeum event. Iikon, Zenit, and Shakermaker were, I think, the names. And there’s a character called the Man Behind the Black Sun. I can’t say anything more about this stuff but what Robert had in mind is quite mind blowing and I genuinely believe we will get to do it one day, so no more spoilers!" – Argo Tuulik
Fun fact: after chapter eight Schäfer started wearing Rampage's fangs on her earrings.
This is one of the greatest things ever. Walk around every single version of the U.S.S. Enterprise in photorealistic 3D in your browser, from the Roddenberry Archive. On a phone you just see wraparound 3D pics. On a PC or laptop you get the full 3D interactive experience. They NEED to make this VR compatible, it'll be beyond words.
There are more Enterprises here than Tumblr will allow me photos of, and more will likely be added.
Here's the TOS Enterprise, which appears in several incarnations ("The Cage", "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and TOS proper as well as TAS with the second turbolift!), has the correct original graphics and is perfect.
This is the bridge from the unmade Star Trek: Phase II series (whose pilot episode "In Thy Image" was rewritten to become Star Trek: The Motion Picture), with it's legendary big comfy command sofa seat and tactical display bubble!
The Motion Picture, such an accurate recreation that there's even a very faint flicker on the rear-projection animated screens as seen in the movie.
Enterprise NX-01, looking exactly as it did in "Broken Bow"
Recognise this? It's the briefing room of Discovery season 2's version of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701. Although at the front of the saucer on the "real" ship, here it's off the second bridge door which may well be where the set was IRL.
I wasn't expecting modern Trek to be represented equally as the originals in this project, but it is. This is the Enterprise from Strange New Worlds, with Pike's Ready Room located just off the bridge.
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier. My favourite version of the classic bridge, as a kid I drew all these control panels and stuck them on my bedroom walls. And now I can look around and look at them all close-up! They've even replicated the noticable TVs stuffed into the panels for the more complex animated screens.
The Enterprise-C bridge from "Yesterday's Enterprise". This one has always fascinated me, being a low-budget TV set (formerly the Enterprise-D battle bridge, originally built from the rain-damaged TMP set's back wall and redressed endlessly though TNG) representing TNG's immediate predecessor. In the episode they mostly shoot the back wall and imply the consoles make a huge circle, but here you can see the set's real dimensions and the weirdness of the classic movie helm/nav console in front of the TNG con/ops panels. I love it.
You know how much I love the Kelvin movies, so seeing this was amazing. For some reason the consoles don't have their screens lit (hopefully this'll be fixed soon), but you can see the saucer under the window and it's shiny and amazing.
The last thing I expected was the U.S.S. Titan-A/Enterprise-G bridge, but it's here. And the lights are on.
Other bridges available to explore which I'm out of pictures to show: The Enterprise-D (of course), Enterprise XCV-330 (the ringship, based on concept art for the unmade non-Trek series "Starship"), the Planet of the Titans U.S.S. Enterprise (again, based on concept art for a cool multi-levelled set) and the "launch" U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 (based on the very first piece of TOS bridge set concept art), the Enterprise-E, the Enterprise-F (seen on viewscreen for all of 2 minutes in Picard) and the U.S.S. Voyager NCC-74656!
Take a bow lads, you've done good. Now just add VR support!
That link again.
Chijin Dustner for my Deltarune Yellow