
World of Arboria is a mythic fantasy setting defined by ancient powers, fractured kingdoms, and the lingering influence of Sporestone—a rare, reality-shaping substance that blurs the line between magic, faith, and intent. Gods are real but distant, civilizations rise and decay in cycles of hubris and renewal, and history itself is layered
World of Arboria is a mythic fantasy setting defined by ancient powers, fractured kingdoms, and the lingering influence of Sporestone—a rare, reality-shaping substance that blurs the line between magic, faith, and intent. Gods are real but distant, civilizations rise and decay in cycles of hubris and renewal, and history itself is layered with forgotten truths waiting to resurface. Arboria is a world where magic is not merely wielded but believed into being, where mortal choices echo across generations, and where the struggle between preservation and transformation shapes the fate of peoples, nations, and the world itself.

Earth 2289 is a future dystopian world where corporate power eclipses nations, technology mediates nearly every human interaction, and freedom exists only in the margins. Automation, surveillance, cybernetics, and neural systems promise efficiency and progress while quietly eroding autonomy and identity. Beneath the megacities and data st
Earth 2289 is a future dystopian world where corporate power eclipses nations, technology mediates nearly every human interaction, and freedom exists only in the margins. Automation, surveillance, cybernetics, and neural systems promise efficiency and progress while quietly eroding autonomy and identity. Beneath the megacities and data streams, remnants of older, half-forgotten forces still stir—proof that the world’s past was never fully erased, only buried under layers of code and concrete. In Earth 2289, survival depends on navigating Heat, Trace, and Exposure as much as bullets or credits, and every choice leaves a mark—on the system, on the streets, and on who you ultimately become.

No single interpretation has held.
What remains appears intentional, but not explanatory.
Patterns suggest coordination. Records suggest omission.
Whatever Convergence refers to, it is not a destination.
It is not an origin.
It is simply where alignment occurred—and where certainty failed.
COMING 2027
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