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The Return Journey ([personal profile] returnjourney) wrote in [community profile] returnjourneymemes2022-02-01 02:13 pm
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TEST DRIVE 002



RETURN JOURNEY: TEST DRIVE 002



Welcome to the Return Journey's test drive meme! We appreciate your interest. Our TDM features a small sample of events your character might encounter in game, which you're free to embellish or improvise with your own ideas as desired. Don't worry if you haven't read everything yet; while we recommend skimming our FAQ for relevant questions, critical information should be contained or linked within the prompts themselves!

TDM threads can be used as samples for applications. Players can mutually keep threads as game canon after being accepted into the game, though threads featuring non-canon squalls or events may need to be adjusted.

We suggest putting your character's name, canon, and potential role (warden or inmate) as the subject. If you're not sure which role you want to choose, feel free to try your hand at both!

If you have any questions about the TDM, please ask here.



1. Welcome Aboard!

Welcome aboard the SFS Peregrine, a ship in the Admiralty's Transformative and Penal Reparation Fleet. It is presently circling the outer perimeter of the Oos Ring Galaxy.

Wardens have been approached personally by the Navarch with a job offer: Come aboard the SFS Peregrine to assist in the redemption of an inmate, and receive a miracle known as a windfall as payment. Even if you don't ask as many questions as you should, every warden will be treated to a short Warden Orientation video explaining their expected duties and conduct.

Inmates have died and been placed aboard the SFS Peregrine as candidates for reformation. You may have come willingly, offered a choice between death or redemption, or you may have been collected against your will. Inmates are also treated to an Inmate Orientation; you'll find you have less privileges than a warden, but more motivation for...latitude. Violence? Chaos? Bribery? Blackmail? Well, no one said the path to redemption was without a few bumps along the way.

Given staff shortages, some wardens may be asked for a favor. Rather than leaving directly for the Peregrine, you've been asked to pick up an inmate from the limbo between death and redemption. During this mission, wardens will have clearance to enter a snapshot of sorts, where the inmate died (so devoid of other living beings). You either have to talk them into willingly coming along...or bring their unconscious, fresh-from-death not-corpse with you in the Avro provided. Better hope they don't wake up on the way!

Inmates, in this case, you'll be presented with the choice of death or redemption from a warden rather than the Navarch. Or possibly not provided with a choice at all, if death has rendered you unconscious. Good luck when you awaken to find yourself in a small ship, with someone you've never met. Try not to cause any trouble.


2. Pairings

Pairings are a critical aspect of the dynamic between warden and inmate. While interactions between wardens and inmates are not restricted to those in pairings, this relationship is a bit more...inescapable. Inmates test the limits of a warden, whether they take a more typical or unusual approach to matters; likewise, wardens learn what makes an inmate tick (and hopefully cooperate). Chances are, your values will clash.

A pairing of any sort is as varied as the individuals involved in them. And today, courtesy of the Navarch's monthly announcement, you and your sorry partner have been paired. Temporary or permanent, with a warden for an inmate or an inmate for a warden, it's your first day together — out of at least a month, so good luck setting some ground rules and figuring out each other's breaking points.


3. Life on the Peregrine

Hey, inmates! Ever gone to summer camp? Had a sibling? If so, you might see where this is going. If not, welcome to your first experience with shared sleeping arrangements!

The dorms are lined with bunks, though maybe they're better described as pods: futuresque capsules stacked two high, with sleek white paneling and cool blue LED lightning. Each bunk can be closed off with a sliding door privacy and boasts a bladeless fan for temperature control. Bedding is adequate. If such modest conditions do not appeal to you: consider not committing crimes against other people.

And just like with siblings or summer camp, you don't get a say in who your bunkmate is. Maybe you'll luck out and get a light sleeper who doesn't toss and turn in the night. Maybe you won't, and you'll end up with someone who will kill you if you snore. Whoever you get is who you're stuck with until further notice!

Wardens get much more hospitable quarters, but they may want to keep an eye out on the inmate dorms. Just in case an inmate does try to kill their bunkmate.


4. Squalls

Occasionally, the ship passes through squalls, the equivalent of cosmic turbulence that can mess with little things like, say...the fabric of reality. These are shipwide effects, though who they hit is variable. Sometimes you might fall victim; other times you might be the one standing by, exasperated, as you deal with those affected.

(In other words, it's up to player discretion. And feel free to make up your own squalls!)



This time around, the squall comes with an interesting side effect: whenever you lie or someone lies to you, you experience an immediate rush of anger — whether you consciously know someone is lying or not. Think of it as a temporary lie detector, but instead of being hooked up to a machine, you might punch someone in the face.


5. The Peregrine

The Peregrine's layout and protocols have been designed with its intended passengers in mind, who are primarily Earth humanoids and inclined towards certain social and cultural practices. If you're wondering why you are on a ship of Earth humanoids despite not being one yourself, please understand that all ships in the Admiralty have a population capacity. At times it may be necessary to assign other species to a ship of this type, based on availability.

As a warden, you have full run of the ship map. Inmates...less so, but that's nothing a little creativity can't fix, right? Just remember, if a warden catches an inmate somewhere that inmate shouldn't be, it falls on the warden to handle the matter. And if the warden turns a blind eye...well, let's hope neither of you get caught. While it won't result in anything as extreme as a demotion, wardens can expect to get a stern dressing down; inmates, meanwhile, will be reprimanded by the warden who found them.


6. Networking

Now that you've powered on your CommLink for the first time and sat through the short tutorial and appropriate orientation, you're ready to explore the wonders of messaging. Video, audio, or text, the world is your oyster and you surely have opinions on it.

There is no anonymous option and IDs must be some variation of your name. (IC, characters will have to try their luck and see what the communicator will or won't accept when they register; OOC, it's up to players to decide what name to use if the character has multiple names or aliases.)

Wardens have access to a group network filter, something that inmates lack, and can track inmates throughout the ship with their CommLink. Inmates, best avoid getting your device confiscated or monitored.


7. Wildcard

If it's in our game pages, you can use it as a prompt! The sky's the limit.


kaijuice: (pic#15423681)

you take that *back*

[personal profile] kaijuice 2022-02-05 06:55 am (UTC)(link)
Beep.

Reflex finds an edge, a sliver-sharp shard of hull picked delicate as a man at cards. Fresh little teeth sink his skin; blood wetting the tip of his thumb as he readies, eye-level, to slash —

The boy gawks forward, white as a skeleton, and thought finally catches up, throws an iron grip around the coiling arc of his shoulder.

(Not yet.)

Aluminum clatters from his hand to the floor, rejoins its mechanical corpse. A single robot smashes its guts for display. The third whirrs far and out of sight.

"Ah," Silco's breath rattles — he's a liar, not an actor; there's no purpose in pretending. "You startled me."
grindset: (15390265)

nyuk nyuk

[personal profile] grindset 2022-02-05 08:05 am (UTC)(link)
What follows seems primed to become recognition of the sort Silco is no doubt accustomed to receiving—a stunned pause, concern and suspicion flickering, attention drawn directly to his afflicted eye—but that particular shard of awareness fails to gleam, and instead of recoiling his witness steps to the corner. To, not quite beyond. He's got nerve; he isn't stupid.

To that effect, he finishes his assessment before he answers. It's quick—a few glances here and there, a flick down to the ruined bot and up again. Beneath the ledge of his reflexive frown, his eyes are keen as that discarded sharp and twice as bright.

"What are you doing?"

Breaking shit, obviously, but he's interested in the less evident.
kaijuice: (pic#15423683)

[personal profile] kaijuice 2022-02-05 08:36 am (UTC)(link)
His head tips — reflex, again, to scour sight and memory. A spark of something, faint,

Gone again. To be chased later, from flinted dark.

"Slitting its belly," Look, it sounds less ominous if half your economy is fish. He stoops to draw knuckles across the tableau. Thin blots of red smear through the dusty pile. "It's swallowed something of mine."

A glance back up,

"Will you help me look?"
grindset: (15390190)

[personal profile] grindset 2022-02-06 12:24 am (UTC)(link)
There is something persistent in the way he stares, adjacent to that absent gleam, unable to leave it unanswered. Sorting through filaments of data too variable to form anything more substantial than a feeling, miserably vague. It hangs there, not quite a question, as he watches the man crouch to smear those ashy leavings.

Dust caked on a little blood, the finest particulate grey, like the wrenching of a lever: the floor of his stomach lurches away into nothing, dragging him with it and leaving his body to continue its empty processes mechanically.

Even without such a cruel association, given the context, this is not the most enticing request.

"I won't stop you," he offers. Then, because it's the only suitable thing his brain supplies, "What did you lose?"
kaijuice: (pic#15423691)

[personal profile] kaijuice 2022-02-06 09:21 am (UTC)(link)
That'll do, pig. Silco's chin dips.

"A bracelet," There's no such thing. "Woven string."

He fishes up a knot of hair, rolled to loose bezoar by the brushes' spin. There's no telling whose biomatter matches which gun, precisely — best to bundle it all together.

"What were you doing with the creature?"

The robot, still clutched to his chest.
Edited 2022-02-06 09:22 (UTC)
grindset: (15390233)

[personal profile] grindset 2022-02-06 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
A bracelet, so he picks up the hairball? No one is that bad at weaving.

"They're constructs. Not creatures." An important distinction. Just as important: a handhold for scraping his composure back together. The robot, still clutched, still quiet, might be soothed were it a creature. "This is a peculiar time to ascribe life to a thing."

Being up to your wrists in its guts and all.

(He seems not to be carrying any gun, himself.)