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Pandora's Fox III
PANDORA'S FOX III

The application Pandora's Fox, last seen buzzing on everyone's relics in October, is back. It's about finding your Familiar bond or perhaps other kinds of bonds. It could be the start to finding your soul mate, a new family member, or other kind of someone special. The point is connection. While it's always available, it's gotten loud again.
As part of its return, the app has been rejiggered with questions old and new, including some specific to each Role! The app will buzz and open itself with a blank profile waiting to be filled out. Star Children can fill it out for themselves—as long as they don't lie. This app will not allow Star Children to lie. Honesty is important in a bond. Star Children who lie may find that answer filled in a little too honestly and unable to be deleted. Anyone who waits too long to fill it in will find it answered for them!
Bonds come in all different shapes and sizes, so find the right person for you!
This is game canon!
Forms for your characters!
Myths:
Legends:
Familiars:

text | un: artismagic
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I would love to have the peace of my childhood again. It has not been allowed.
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I am sorry that you cannot regain it, but I am glad your childhood was peaceful.
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Sometimes betrayal comes from only a mismatch of understandings and expectations, not a dagger in the back. You must think well of him that you are trying to recruit him, despite the differences between you.
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But they didn't manage to kill enough of us for them to be safe, and once they are gone, we can return home and to ourselves again. Others likely feel the same.
I think quite highly of him; we both come from cultures with similar enough beats to understand each other, and not only is he a brilliant mind but also recognizes brilliance in others, a vanishingly rare trait in males of most species. I hope he will understand; ultimately, we both want what is best for our peoples, and have found a way for that.
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She's not sure what the Black Rose want, nor what might end their feud with her mother. She can only hope it takes less. ]
Being able to recognize the skills of others, appreciate them, and help them prosper is an important trait, one that is to be appreciated wherever it's found. One can hope his understanding and loyalties means you may at least be at peace with each other.
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[ She's completely unwilling to forgive. ]
One hopes. Too few people truly understand his leadership style, much to the Empire's fault.
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[ Mel tries to show her family another way, another path, but from what her mother said, someone is coming after them. Ambessa blamed her brother, but Mel is unsure whether it's really his fault. He may have given them an excuse to target him, but Ambessa's done more to anger peoples around the world. It's only natural, as the leader. ]
When loyalty is valued to great extremes over competence, it can lead to terrible ends. No one virtue should so totally predominate others that they lead us astray. Perhaps if more people had experiences like Folkmore—by which I mean, where they meet and interact with a diverse range of peoples without our worlds' natural power structures—they might appreciate those they have difficulty understanding back home. Like your respected leader.
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[ Nightsisters aren't warlike with each other, but they have always viciously defended their territory. Morgan doesn't see it as a problem. ]
He isn't from my galaxy, which helps. But I've found many humans tend to have a view of other species that casts them as lesser than. The Empire falls in line with it, although I do not know if the Emperor actually believes in human superiority or is just content to use it. I suspect he believes those who can touch what he calls the Force to be superior, and it goes from there. The Grand Admiral is the only non-human in the upper ranks of the Empire.
Well. I suppose it matters if you count a cyborg as human if they were before the cybernetics. If not, then one of two.
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[ Her mother isn't a fool, but Mel suspects she underestimated someone to wind up in her current position. She's still a force to be reckoned with but not at the zenith of her power. ]
That unfortunately is true of humans toward many species in my world. Some are in good stead—the yordle are long-lived and wise, for example—but others must work harder for the same respect. In parts of the world. I cannot say it's the same everywhere, and where virtues lie in one regard, they are often lacking in another. I can only try to improve where I am.
Are humans more likely to be able to touch the Force? Can the Grand Admiral touch it? It may be more despicable to go along with prejudice for the sake of power than to believe in it sincerely. Neither is a good quality.