Mel's Musings:
For one reason or another, the life force of supernatural entities is usually associated with a small token that represents or symbolises them in some way. For the three goblins I just ran into, the effigies are quite close to being "literal" - that is, they look like their effigies. A fully literal effigy would be a tiny sculpture of the creature, but in this case they're just crude sculptures.
The symbolic component here is the way the effigies are made. Because these are weak urban goblins, they're made of mainly human-generated rubbish. If they were wild goblins, it'd be natural debris like bones, gravel, and twigs. If they were stronger, the effigies might become either more literal, as less crude sculptures, or they might become more symbolic - the effigies of powerful goblins often take the form of weapons. A powerful goblin gang leader might become a nail-studded baseball bat, or a wild goblin king a vicious serrated scimitar.
Here, obviously, the effigies are broken, because I killed the goblins. If I'd taken the effigies by binding them, the tennis ball wouldn't be broken, the twig wouldn't be snapped, and the cork wouldn't be cracked. A magician could retrieve the goblins from the effigies if they were so inclined, but I don't have any magical talent (or inclination to it), although I am pretty involved in the supernatural in other ways, I suppose.
There's no way to create an effigy
and a supernatural being out of whole cloth. You can make an effigy easily, but without a source of spiritual energy it's just a collection of stuff. Apparently it's possible to transpose the soul of a human into an effigy, but that's... frowned upon. Either the body dies and you have a trapped soul, or the body doesn't die and you end up with a zombie and a trapped soul. Sometimes magicians snap and transpose their own souls into an effigy in pursuit of immortality. This process invariably kills the body, but the soul usually retains control, and that's how you end up with liches.
The Council takes a rather dim view of soul transposition.
Anyway, even a broken effigy has traces of the spirit on it. The Council has magicians that can match those up to the recorded incidents, which is how they verify my success and pay me. I feel kinda bad for the poor sucker whose job it is to sit behind a desk sorting through piles of actual garbage going "yep, that was Ears the goblin, alright".
Some spirits the Council will pay a small premium if I can deliver the effigy undamaged. In the case of the goblins, they'd pay me a sweet, sweet zero kodi bonus, but for the poltergeist or werewolf they might tip me 5-10%. It's supposed to discourage me from trying to sell them on the black market instead. Personally, my attachment to my kneecaps keeps me on the straight and narrow anyway, but it takes all kinds I suppose.
I think that's everything I know about effigies, really. Other than boring laundry lists of the types I've found, which one day I'll probably compile into a spreadsheet and try and find correlations or something. I wonder if the Council is into big data...
| The World According to Mel |
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Pangaea in stereographic projection. Note that due to the nature of a stereographic projection, this landmass is roughly the size of Eurasia and North America combined.Compare to Earth.Since this planet only has two continents, each near a pole, stereographic projections are pretty common. The discovery of Antipangaea in the 1600s was a bit embarrassing, seeing as Pangaea isn't really the only continent and all.
For long, complicated, historical reasons, the Central Pangaean conventions get used for most things. That's why North Pangaea is called that... even though it's south of the north pole. It's easier than calling it West-est Pangaea. Or East-est Pangaea? South Pangaea 2? Yeah, you get the idea. Scientific maps and such use different names, but politically the north pole is considered to be in Central Pangaea.
Also, this map might not be right! I study ancient literature and comparative theology. I think most things are roughly in the right place. I know SPPU is landlocked somewhere south-east of the South Pangaean Sea, and I know Chéngshì (my and my dad's hometown) is on the coast in the northern part of West Pangaea.
I don't generally worry about much other than general directions and areas, though. My interest is generally things like "North Peninsulan Mysticism" or whatever, anyway.
Don't ask about Antipangaea. I know it's oddly symmetrical to Pangaea, but that's about it.
There, data dump. The section on geography will probably only ever be tangentially relevant, feel free to ignore it, but the section on effigies is probably going to be fairly core mechanically.