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Kingdom of deception kehlis
Kingdom of deception kehlis







kingdom of deception kehlis kingdom of deception kehlis

In a game (yes, fantasy H-game, but still) that quite so heavily advertizes the narrative, the world-building and clearly displays heaps of careful talent through the rest of its art, this uh. I must admit that I haven't played the game, so I could be wrong (hence also my previous question). Since I can't see any orc females on any pictures of the game however, I am going to assume that the authors don't know their classics either, or that they just restricted themselves to a convenient elf'ish/orc'ish/human mish-mash of whatever suited them on the moment, to fit the canvas of their story. It's clear to me which trope the authors of the game tried to follow, and it's not the one you're talking about. Nah, there are two common tropes regarding orcs, one of which supposes that orc females exist (since we get half-orcs and all that). but one way or another, there will be a reckoning. She'll have to make hard choices about what to sacrifice on her path to revenge. Perhaps she didn't understand the monster horde, the truth about the war, or the nature of her own family. Sabia might be their slave now - but she is not going to stay that way.Īs she claws back power for herself and plans her revenge, she starts to realize that there's more to the monsters than she thought. But though these orcs may have bottomless lusts and favor brute violence, they're more than that. Now that the war is over, there are some who believe that she might be better off removed.īetrayed by her own sister and stranded in the deepest, darkest territories that hold the remnants of the orcs, Sabia seems to be taken out of the struggle for power. She's made as many enemies as allies, both in her own family and in the army. Determined and ambitious, she thinks she's on her way to the top. Sabia is the daughter of a noble house and a rising commander in the royal army.









Kingdom of deception kehlis