1
Dispatch → Account → Drama
Ruunfabrikta (Rune Fabrication)
Ruunfabrikta
- .
Ruunfabrikta (Common : Rune Fabrication) is the dominant magic school in Eleutheria and the Socialist Republic of Seibalath. It is known as the only safe form of magic-casting as the effects of the Rapturing had polluted the Eleutherian peninsula excessively, causing all other forms of magic to go awry when going through an unregulated medium.
Origin
Ruunfabrikta is one of the many magics created within the time of the Ardentian Empire, the Polis of Tallasang, famed for its runic constructs, came to be known as the beacon of the Ruunfabrikta art. It rivaled other native Eleutherian magic schools, such as Sakthuuna (blood-magic, innate magic, or sorcery) of Sirsensal, Vitraiika (Rift Magic) of Mel-Theiza, and the Divine Magic of religious cults, derived from those of the Erelim.
Application
Ruunfabrikta is used in constructing machines and creating instruments that utilize magic. As for now, it is the safest form of magic immune to foreign elements.
Attributes
Instrumental
- Ruunfabrikta is highly dependent on the quality of the instrument it is contained within, rather than a caster's magic affinity. It solely operates with the intake of distilled mana. Though basic forms of Ruunfabrikta can be set up by people, most modern constructs will require ruunfabrikats with both the proper education, and instruments, similar to scientific technologies.
These same attributes render it nearly-immune to outside tampering (from anti-magic, dead-zones, magic pollution, etc.) as the magic itself is entirely self-contained, though any forms of inputs (magic-sensing runes, visual sensing, etc) will still be affected. Spells that affect a wide area, that are casted through Ruunfabrikta, may still be tampered, encouraging most Seibalathian fabricators to either limit it to a short focused range, or to use "spell-bullets", disposable magic spell containers that can be shot from a distance. Increasing magic complexity may levy exorbitant costs and efforts to produce such things though.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.