About the naming convention, what is it exactly that puts you off of it? Names often follow function or are descriptive of the area around them. For instance, I know of a town nearby that is called Portage, because it used to be used in that manner a long time ago.
Also nearby is the town of Vulcan (No lie!).
So im not quite sure what even the point of Morocco being named makes. To me I used that name because it sounds sort of exotic and also conjures images of the area I want to capture. Go to Comment
Telportia in my setting is the last bastion of hope in a zombie apocalypse, the main quest is that the water is running out so a party must leave and find a new source of water. (Its a bit more complex but you get the idea.) Go to Comment
Well im not quite sure what you mean by the names being off, Constantinople was named after a man and before that it was Byzantium, home of the byzantine empire.
Not very original names in and of themselves. NAmes can follow function, perhaps Telportia is a nickname given by the wizards who discovered the phenomena.
I guess my point is that im not quite sure what you mean by the name ruining immersion. Perhaps you could expand? Go to Comment
Well, If you think that would be best. I wrote it in more of a general fashion as I was just contributing the place rather then my exact campaign setting.
Would you think it would be better to be written in the specific setting I use it in? Go to Comment
That is a good question, perhaps during the wartime the locations of the exits were secret. A simple show of "we can enter your city whenever we want" probably went a long way.
As I said above telportia was never finished before the war was ended.
Though in its current time perid of telportia is sorta like a hub for travel, so shutting down exits wouldnt be great. Go to Comment
Plots (Mystical) (Encounter)
I love it!
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