Study the diplomatic overtures of cities past
From Fallen London Wiki (Staging)
Spoiler warning! This page contains details about Fallen London Actions. |
From: Partial Historiography
London has not been alone of the fallen cities in seeking the wisdom of the Presbyterate.
Challenge information
Narrow, 10 (50% base)
- 6 and below - almost impossible (10%)
- 7 - high-risk (20%)
- 8 - high-risk (30%)
- 9 - tough (40%)
- 10 - very chancy (50%)
- 11 - chancy (60%)
- 12 - modest (70%)
- 13 - very modest (80%)
- 14 - low-risk (90%)
- 15 and above - straightforward (100%)
Success
Not always lost
Description summary:
The description varies based on your level of .
Lead: Historiography | Description |
---|---|
601 | A Third City ambassador […] entreated the Banded Prince […] brought with him a jaguar[…] Unfortunately, the Prince mistook the […] positions of owner and pet. The last record of the ambassador is of him being taken […] to Arbor over the roads of thirty nations. |
602 | The Fourth City sent a Roser, a Motherling and a Copper to Apis Meet, intending to cut all three off[…] Confronted with the realities of Arbor, Vesture and Skite, they instead became firm friends and abandoned their mother nation to seek the Hidden City[…] |
603 | […] a fragment of a tablet that records the journey of a priest-king of the First deep into the Presbyter's territory. […] he tried to storm Nidah alone, and only an intervention from the zee[…] prevented his annihilation. The College[…] anathemised all records. |
[Find the rest of the story at https://www.fallenlondon.com]
- You've gained 35 x Librarian's Progress
- You've gained 1 x Lead: Partial Historiography
Failure
History's hatreds
[…]The College of Mortality had no opinion on the First, a deep distaste for the Second, a strong desire not to be anywhere involved in the Third, and a singular hatred for the Fourth. […] opinions on the Fifth are not yet recorded, and[…]must[…] be unspeakable.
[Find the rest of the story at https://www.fallenlondon.com]
- You've lost 6 x Librarian's Progress