Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Populate The Remnant War - Sularen's Folly [ ME Populate of Selnesh ]



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E S T A B L I S H
Tag: Fiore Fiore
The docks of Fort Hardhome moved without pause, a constant churn of heat, steel, and sound that never quite resolved into rhythm. Engines roared as ships descended in staggered intervals, their exhaust bending the air into wavering distortions while cargo clamps snapped and released in sharp, mechanical cadence. Orders carried across the platforms—short, efficient, but fractured—absorbed into the machinery before they could ever become cohesion.

It functioned.

But it did not flow.

At the edge of the platform, Mira stood in stillness that did not belong to the space around her, cloak drawn over one shoulder, its worn edge shifting faintly in the wake of passing ships. She did not watch the vessels themselves, nor the crews that moved with practiced efficiency—her attention settled instead on the space between moments, where timing faltered and intention broke just enough to be felt.

A freighter descended too early, forcing another into delay, and she watched the imbalance ripple outward as crews adjusted, corrected, compensated. The disruption was minor, fleeting, but it repeated in different forms across the docks, never quite resolving, never quite aligning. It was not failure.

It was absence.

The Force pressed quietly against her awareness, threading through every movement and hesitation without effort. She felt the strain beneath discipline, the impatience beneath order, the subtle friction of a place still becoming something it had not yet decided to be. The structure rose, the machines turned, but there was no center—no will guiding it beyond necessity.

It reacted.

It did not command.

Another ship cut through atmosphere at a flawed angle, its descent just slightly too aggressive, its landing heavier than it should have been. The impact carried through the platform beneath her boots, a dull reverberation that lingered for half a second too long, and once again the crews adapted around it, correcting what should never have needed correction at all.

Mira's gaze lingered—not on the mistake, but on the pattern.

Always adjusting.

Never dictating.

Beside her, Fiore's presence existed without intrusion, steady and familiar in a way nothing else here was. Mira did not turn, but the awareness of her settled into the quiet tension beneath her composure, grounding without disrupting. Months had passed since her awakening, and still the world felt… misaligned, as though time itself had shifted just beyond her reach.

Thirty years gone.

Everything changed.

Nothing forgiven.

Her fingers flexed once, controlled, the faint echo of something deeper beneath her skin reminding her of what had not left with her recovery. The Vong poison lingered—not as weakness, but as something coiled and patient, a presence she carried rather than fought.

Her thoughts drifted—not away, but through.

Dathomir rose in her mind with a clarity that surpassed the docks before her, not as memory, but as intent. The Sanctuary was not being rebuilt as it had been. It would not return as something vulnerable, or hidden, or waiting to be broken again. Stone would rise with purpose. Defenses would layer with precision. It would stand as something undeniable—something that did not yield, did not fracture, did not fall silent when challenged.

A place that endured.

The docks beneath her felt temporary in comparison—necessary, but incomplete, lacking the permanence that true strength required.

Her attention returned fully to the present as another ship began its descent.

This time, she moved.

A single step forward—measured, deliberate.

The shift was subtle, but it carried through the space around her like a quiet pressure, something unspoken that settled into those moving below. Nothing stopped, nothing broke—but movements tightened, timing sharpened, hesitation thinned.

The incoming ship adjusted.

Slightly.

Enough.

Its descent steadied, its landing clean, and for the first time since her arrival, the rhythm held without disruption as cargo teams moved in sync rather than reaction.

Better.

Still not enough.

Mira's gaze swept the docks once more, not searching, not questioning—measuring. Every flaw, every inefficiency, every absence laid itself bare before her, not as problems, but as inevitabilities waiting to be corrected.

This place would become something stronger.

But not like this.

Her attention shifted briefly to Fiore—a single glance, quiet, deliberate—before returning forward.

No words passed between them.

None were needed.

Then she stepped forward again, no longer content to observe the shape of what was forming.

But to begin defining it.

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The moment Jaikell launched, Korda didn't hesitate.
The cargo ramp had barely sealed behind him before it dropped again into vacuum, the corvette skimming dangerously close to the flagship's armored spine.


"Jump now!"
Korda laughed inside his helmet.

He stepped off the edge.
No dramatic pause. No countdown.
Just gravity and vacuum.

The Eye of Lianna's hull rushed up beneath him, durasteel plates streaking past in cold gray bands. He fired a short burst from his thrusters, angling himself toward Jaikell's landing vector.
Mag-boots activated mid-descent.
He hit the hull hard.

The impact shuddered up his spine, but the magnets locked with a metallic crack. One hand shot down, palm clamp engaging for additional anchor as the flagship's surface screamed beneath them at combat speed.

Through the roar of distant turbolasers and the vibration of the ship's engines, he keyed his comm.
"Yes," he said calmly. "I jumped onto the corvette."
A faint chuckle followed.


"You should've seen Yaga Minor. I blew an anti-air gun while standing on it."
He disengaged one boot and began moving, low and fast across the hull, Ashen Maw already in his hands.
Jaikell reached the maintenance hatch first.
Cluster round.

Explosion.
The hatch blew inward in a burst of metal and atmosphere.
Jaikell dropped inside.
Korda didn't slow.

He pushed off the hull and dove through the same smoking breach, boots hitting interior plating with a heavy thud. The Ashen Maw came up immediately, muzzle tracking the corridor in clean, practiced arcs.
Smoke curled around them.
Alarms began to scream.

Red emergency lights flooded the passage.
Korda's visor scanned for hostiles.
"Flagship internal layout will be layered," he said, voice steady now, all humor gone. "Command won't be central. It'll be buried."
He glanced at Jaikell briefly.


"We split."
Not a suggestion.
"We cover ground. Collapse inward toward command. Force them to react instead of fortify."
The Ashen Maw hummed faintly as he checked its readiness one final time.

"If you hit resistance too thick to chew through, mark it. I'll reroute."
A beat.
"And don't die doing something theatrical."
There was the faintest trace of amusement under it.

Then he stepped past Jaikell into the smoke-filled corridor, boots heavy against the deck, ready to turn the Eye of Lianna into a maze of broken bulkheads and detonator scars.

Tags: Jaikell Wyrvhor Jaikell Wyrvhor Siv Kryze Siv Kryze
 
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OBJECTIVE IV-Charros IV
Armor: Owl-type Beskar'gam
Blade: Tal'Alor Beskad
Primary Weapon: Plasma Bow
Secondary Weapon: Paired Beskar Tonfa

Kael looked around what could only be described as a temple dedicated to industry, design, and manufacture. He had heard of the Xi Char, a fanatical insectoid race that saw manufacturing as a divine ordinance. Using his naturally extrasensitive hearing, owing to his being a Tagruta, and that augmented by the force, he starts moving through the darkened corridors. He thought of what he had read on the history of Charros IV; The Xi Char had developed such ships and droids as the C-9979 landing craft, the Vulture fighter droid, Hyena Droid Bomber, and even the IG-227 Hailfire Droid. All of these were old CIS hardware, but Kael was taken with the idea of getting parts and tech to bring to the Mandalorian Empire. If anything, he could get the good parts to add to our Basilisk war droids.

 

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Eye of Lianna
Tags: Aselia Verd Aselia Verd | Liorra Liorra

A scale of one to Monroe-sized nukes? Adelle had no context for that, in spite of having fought with the Liberator not terribly long ago in her Verd’goten. But if it was anything like what Mishel unleashed on Corellia…

Aselia, however, seemed familiar with Liorra’s scale.

"Maximum of one," she said dryly, firing once more to suppress a flanking angle rather than clear it outright. "But remember, we are in space. I highly advise against poking holes."

“If it’s anything like a Force bomb,” Adelle said, angling her saber to catch a bolt and send it back at a stormtrooper, “let’s not and say we did. I don’t feel like getting launched again.”

Her lightsaber screeched as she continued to catch blaster bolts meant for their squad of Mandalorians. Adelle stayed mindful that, while she was doing most of the shielding, she was as much an obstacle for her own people as she was a target for the Imperials. She listened to the Force, creating openings for those behind her while still trying to deflect as many bolts as she could. Blasterfire rang against armor slightly behind her and some of the incoming bolts tracked away from her as Aselia moved away.

Stormtroopers took cover up ahead as the hallway narrowed. Great. A reinforced choke point.

“Moving in.” Adelle gathered the Force in her body. She sprinted forward, faster than the Imps could track, until she was in the middle of their frontline. The cobalt blade became a whirlwind of light. Blaster fire from behind her kept the platoon from immediately overwhelming her. Adelle blocked a blaster bolt into a trooper to her left and carved through the shooter on her right. Overhead, the P.A. system came alive but she could hardly hear what was being said. Sparks flew as she cleaved through blasters and plastoid armor, a thought sending a strong telekinetic push at the troopers before her. Some of the Imps hit the architectural struts others had taken cover behind.

Adelle raised a hand to signal advance when the Force jolted down her spine.

Dozens of boots sprinted down the corridor towards the next junction. Adelle lowered her hand and readied her lightsaber. White armored troopers rounded the corner in numbers, a wall of blaster fire causing her to back up while she deflected bolts. Behind them a small fireteam began to set up a tripod with a powerpack. Two troopers carried a blaster cannon in.

Osik.

Adelle ducked behind a strut.

“Hey Chaos Junior,” she called to Liorra. She nodded down the hall. “E-WEB. You’re up.”



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"A Force bomb?" Lio shot back, her voice warped slightly through the modulator. "I don't even know how to do that, wait, do you know how to do that?"

The nickname Chaos Jr. didn't even register.

There wasn't time.

She broke from cover anyway, pivoting out just enough to bring the borrowed blaster up and fire. The weapon kicked wrong in her grip off-balance, unfamiliar, and then promptly jammed with a sharp, useless click.

Liorra froze for half a second.

"Ah, kriff it."

She didn't bother trying to fix it.

With a sharp flick of her wrist, she tossed the blaster aside, somewhere to her left, not particularly concerned with where it landed or who it nearly clipped on the way.

Fine.

If subtlety wasn't working...

Lio planted her feet, shoulders squaring as she drew one arm back like a starball pitcher. Her fingers flexed, curling inward as she reached, not outward, but down, into that familiar well she always found a little too easily.

Heat answered.

It started small. A shimmer in the air, barely visible. Then a flicker, like a match catching in a vacuum that should have smothered it. The Force bent around her hand, feeding it, giving it shape where there should have been none.

Fire gathered anyway.

A tight sphere of orange-white flame coalesced in her palm, growing brighter, hotter, the edges snapping and licking as if alive. Reflections danced across her visor, the glow painting her armor in pulsing light.

"Okay, yeah, this I can do," she muttered.

The heat climbed fast, contained, but barely. Her grip tightened, stabilizing it through instinct more than discipline, compressing it into something dense and volatile.

Not elegant.

Not subtle.

But very, very effective.

The troopers by the E-WEB rushed to get out of the way, meanwhile the E-WEB was no longer an E-WEB but had turned into a volatile ka-pow that was now all over what was left of that part of the corridor. "So uh..." Lio began, "when you said holes, it's fine so long as we're not spaced right?"


 
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Charros IV, Surface


Aether tapped her on the brow affectionately when she stepped up to him, responding to her by saying that it wouldn’t be the last time she would have to fly through a shit storm - but he was proud she had made it in one piece. As am I, she thought dryly to herself. He didn’t speak immediately once she had arrived, as he seemed to be looking, or perhaps waiting, for someone else.

That someone else arrived only a moment later, a quip on her lips: "
...I think this would be a terrible place for a picnic, so it's a good thing we aren't having one here. I hope."

Despite the situation they were currently in, Torva couldn’t help the small half smirk at Kirae’s remark.

"
You're correct, there's no picnic basket today. Instead, you'll be learning in real time." Aether responded before motioning them both to follow him. He led the way up a set of freshly constructed stairs and into a chamber that Torva figured would turn into a war room at some point, once it was finished. In the center of the room sat a long table with some chairs, and a holoprojector built into the table itself.


Torva cast her eyes about the sparsely furnished room as the Mand’alor stepped to the table to activate the holoprojector. He tapped on his wrist data-pad for a moment, before a live strategy feed of the battle taking place in orbit revealed itself to them. Torva noticed the blue triangles that represented their ships, the red of the enemy’s, and orange ones that belonged to pirates.


Then, Aether addressed them both, starting by reminding them that they had heard him say before that he considered them the future of Mandalore; one day their generation would be in his place, deciding who lived and who died. Torva swallowed at the reminder, a somewhat serious expression coming over her face. It was a weighty responsibility - something she knew she couldn’t take lightly. She mused briefly on the fact that she had gone from being a simple seamstress, to perhaps someone who could stand in Aether’s shoes one day.

"
Today, I will teach you how to read a battlefield. Any questions before we begin?"

Torva was thoughtful for a moment, but when no questions jumped out at her immediately, she shook her head. I don’t have any questions - not right now anyway.




 



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OATH OF IRON
The three of them dropped in one after the other—Jaikell's breach still venting heat and smoke as Siv hit the deck last, boots locking, rifle already up.

Red light flooded the corridor. Alarms screaming.

Siv didn't pause.

"We stay tight."

A trooper pushed the corner—one shot, down. Siv stepped over him like he wasn't there.

"They'll try to split us. We don't give them that."

He moved up alongside Jaikell, keeping pace as the corridor opened toward a junction ahead—multiple paths, multiple ways for the Imperials to flood in.

" Jaikell Wyrvhor Jaikell Wyrvhor , break us through the front. Keep them moving."

A glance back—brief, checking—

" Korda Veydran Korda Veydran , hold our rear. Nothing loops around on us."

More movement ahead. Forming up.

Good.

Siv angled slightly off-center, already reading the space.

"We take intersections and lock them down. Make it hard for them to reinforce anything important."

Blaster fire started to build—organized now, not scattered.

"They're already reacting."

He fired again, forcing a pair of troopers back behind cover.

"Which means we're in the right place."

A beat as he shifted forward with them—

"Keep an eye out for a terminal or control access point."


Short, direct.

"I can splice in—jam doors, mess with their routing, feed positions to the others."


Another step. Closer to the junction.

"If we choke this section and blind them, the rest of our people move easier."


No hesitation left in it now.

"Push."


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Tobi moved like he wasn't part of the fight.

Blasterfire snapped past him—he leaned just enough to let it miss, then dropped the trooper without breaking stride.

The ship felt… off.

Not broken.

Just wrong.

Lights flickering late. Orders overlapping. Troopers hesitating like they weren't sure what was real anymore.

Tobi tilted his head, listening to the open comm chatter.

"…yeah."

He keyed in, voice light.

"Hey, Sidonia Sidonia … I think I get it now."

Another trooper rushed the corner—Tobi shot him mid-step and kept walking.

"They're not really losing to us."

A soft hum.

"They're just… falling apart."

He brushed his hand along a sparking panel as he passed.

"Mandos cut it open nice and clean…"

A slight tilt of his head.

"And we make sure it doesn't go back together right."

A quiet breath.

"That's kinda mean."

A beat.

"I like it."

He turned the corner, spotting two Imperials trying to coordinate—hesitation cost them both.

Two shots. Silence.

"Oh—and…"

He tapped comms again.

" Charlana Charlana doing really good."

A small chuckle.

"Whatever she's touching is making everything worse for them."

He glanced down the corridor, unbothered.

"They're fixing the wrong problems now… just a little too late every time."

A pause.

"That's actually kinda funny."

He stepped forward, raising his blaster again as movement flickered ahead.

"They still think this is a raid."

A quiet, amused exhale.

"…it's not."


 
Objective - 2
Outfit: Nightsister Armour
Equipment: Lightsaber, Ichor Sword and Dathomiri Energy Bow
Tags: Korda Veydran Korda Veydran | Siv Kryze Siv Kryze | Jaikell Wyrvhor Jaikell Wyrvhor | OPEN

Remnants of the Imperial Confederacy were seemingly in dire need of reminder that they were not the intimidating threat that they believed themselves to be. Dreidi was still lingering on the thoughts and fears of what her mother was enduring and the desire to rescue her, but Dreidi knew that she could not do that mission alone. Time was against her so, to distract from her worries and anxieties, Dreidi signed up for this mission. Figuring it was going to be a good time to work on her heightened abilities that were unlocked after she abandoned the limitations of remaining a Jedi and their ideology to how one should use the Force.

The boarding pod was cramped for Dreidi but she ensured her safety by focusing on making sure it would not be detected with her Magick. Turning the pod invisible as it approached the capital ship. Dreidi was keen on making sure she was not the target of the large cannons on approach. There were going to be many pods that were shot in transit and Dreidi was not prepared to die this day.

Piercing into the capital ship, Dreidi stepped out of the pod and looked around the ship. "Hmmm... let us see how dangerous these imperials believe themselves to be..." Tapping her comms, "board the ship, anyone else here? Anyone in need of assistance?" She called out to the others that were meant to be on the mission as she walked calmly forward, not feeling any rush or concern about the potential threats aboard this ship.
 
Korda almost moved to peel off when Siv said it.
Almost.

"We stay tight."

He watched the trooper drop under Siv's shot. Clean. Efficient.
"They'll try to split us."
His visor mapped the junction ahead in layered geometry. Angles. Vent shafts. Maintenance spines. Reinforcement routes.
Siv wasn't wrong.

Korda exhaled slowly.
"You've got a point," he muttered.
Over comms his tone shifted, lighter.

"Probably for the best. I'd have charged straight through the middle just to see what broke first."

He closed the distance as Jaikell advanced.
As he passed, Korda clapped a firm hand against Jaikell's shoulder plate. Something metallic snapped into place with a magnetic click.
A compact breaching charge.
"Extra kick," Korda said evenly. "In case subtlety disappoints you."
Rear sensors flashed.

He pivoted.
A squad of stormtroopers poured into the corridor behind them, rifles snapping up in practiced formation.
The Ashen Maw roared.

A tight burst punched downrange, plastoid cracking, sparks blooming as two troopers dropped instantly. The third staggered, armor smoking.
More boots thundered behind them.
Korda advanced half a step, controlling recoil like breathing.
Then he did something small.

A flick of his thumb against the side of his helmet.
The Kyr'amyc Shriek Node activated.
The corridor didn't change.
But the stormtroopers' did.

Their comm chatter spiked into bursts of static. Helmet feeds glitched. Targeting reticles jittered. One trooper hesitated mid-aim as phantom silhouettes flickered across his HUD.

"Contact rear-" one started...
His voice dissolved into distortion.
Korda laughed softly.
Now he unleashed the Ashen Maw properly.

Rounds tore through the confused formation. One trooper fired wildly into the ceiling. Another stumbled backward into a half-sealed bulkhead as his visor display spasmed. A third ripped at his helmet instinctively as audio feedback screamed through his systems.

"Rear's locked," Korda said calmly.
He struck his fist once against his chest plate in a brief salute toward Siv and Jaikell.
The Shriek Node pulsed again.
Not enough to cripple.

Just enough to erode confidence.
The troopers broke formation.
That was all it took.
"Let them run," Korda added as one tried to dive into a side hatch. A precise shot fused the panel controls, trapping him against the door.


"Fear spreads faster than blood."
Red emergency lights strobed across smoke-filled air.
Blaster fire built at the forward junction now, heavier. Organized.
"They're reacting," Korda murmured.
His voice steadied.


"Good."
Behind them was a corridor of confusion and bodies.
Ahead was resistance tightening like a fist.
The Eye of Lianna had begun to notice them.
And Korda had just made sure it would remember.

Siv Kryze Siv Kryze Dreidi Xeraic Dreidi Xeraic Jaikell Wyrvhor Jaikell Wyrvhor
 


| Location | Charros IV, Mid Rim Territories

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The initial flow of communications unfolded with a sense of hesitation, a faint trickle of information gradually expanding outwards from those stationed closest to their arrival point. Sensor equipment crackled with effort, long-range responses little more than a distorted shriek, disrupted by the Imperial grey-and-white walls that covered the maze of corridors around them. Itzhal flickered his comms, reducing the range as more intelligible responses filtered in, those already aboard relaying their messages from one squad to the next as their web of knowledge slowly expanded.

Over one channel, a comms unit crackled with an urgent call for reinforcements as the Imperial forces dug their heels into the durasteel. Simultaneously, a report came through from another squad, detailing the fierce resistance they faced: the sounds of blaster fire and shouts of defiance, a faint murmur in the background, a report that was gradually pushing towards victory. With his own arrival relatively undisturbed, Itzhal gathered a force to tip the scale and sent them running as the rest of his squad gathered for their own push.

Sections of the hull behind the Mandalorian shuddered, hydraulics hissing into sharp movements that peeled apart pieces of the hull, revealing the squat black iron of the boarding pod's sides. Gases leaked from the gaps between the expanded plates, a faint mist uncoiled across the corridor, and a heavy crunch echoed outwards from the collapse of a ceiling panel that thudded to the ground.

Silver steel glinted in the dim light as it was carefully drawn from the confines of the black iron pod. The smooth, polished metal extended outwards, unfurling gracefully until the delicate outline of an antenna emerged, its slender form signalling the expansion of their communication systems as the faint trickle of previous calls spiralled into a deluge of information.

Itzhal's boots clacked against the durasteel surface, each step measured, a sense of urgency rapidly consuming the length of the corridor as he hurried onwards, the information overlaid across his visor.

He stepped around the corner, closer to where other squads reported a central elevator, and straight into the sight of a dozen Imperials rushing towards their next objective. Their blasters raised, but he was quicker. Oath and Honour unleashed a hail of bolts, the colour almost white as crackling containment fields sparked with energy. The first Imperial Stormtrooper took the bolt to their chest, where it punched through, and, in the blink of an eye, the rest of the energy erupted into a halo that expanded outward to slam into the surrounding soldiers, their return fire disrupted by the blow.

Undaunted, his stride carried him over the corpses of the rest.

It almost felt too easy, a slaughter rather than a battle—reports across the ship reminded him that his boarding point was merely fortunate enough to have avoided the primary conflict points. It was only a matter of time before Imperial forces made themselves known.

Itzhal marched ahead with purpose, determination radiating from him as he sought to minimise the time available for them to react. His footsteps echoed with urgency, each stride filled with the wariness of an impending confrontation, driving him to close the distance swiftly, before the bloodshed drowned them all in madness.

Tags: [Open]​

 



Tags: Aether Verd Aether Verd Torva Vikar Torva Vikar

As soon as the projector was on, Kirae had stepped forward to get a closer look at it. She hadn't bothered to take a seat, nor pay attention to the lack of much furniture. Her gaze flickering between the different colours, as she seemed to be trying to process things in her head. It was a fresh fight, so it was near enough perhaps a level playing field. Her gaze flicked over towards the orange, frowning for a moment in thought. The pirates may have been allies, but how much could they trust them? It wouldn't be a good idea to rely on them too much in her eyes. She seemed to snap out of her thoughts however, as Aether and Torva began talking again.

"Likewise. No questions on my part."

Instead she just paced around the project, trying to get a mental map in her head over the 3D image. This is something that Kirae knew would be a weakness for her. To choose the mission or her people. What was the most important thing to focus on. Victory, or loyalty. What would her legacy be? Even if that was something that didn't need much thought right now, she couldn't help herself as she stepped back, folding her arms along her front and turning her gaze towards Aether, to see how this lesson would go.​

 


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Tags: Mia Monroe Mia Monroe

"A cat?" he echoed, blinking at the display like it had personally offended him. Of course it's a cat. Of course the one thing you come up with is already taken by something that licks itself and knocks things off tables. A small laugh slipped out before he could stop it. He shook his head, the tension easing just a little. "That's… yeah, that tracks." He pictured it for a second. Some smug little creature answering to Phantom. Honestly, it probably wore the name better. His smile lingered, softer now. Stupid or not, it felt good to laugh. It felt… normal. He wasn't used to that.

Then her words settled in. You are a foundling.

He looked at the display, but he wasn't really seeing it anymore. A clean slate. Just like that. No past hanging over him, no expectations tied to a name he couldn't remember. It should have felt hollow. It didn't. It felt… lighter.

"I guess being called Foundling is better than sharing a name with a cat," he said, a hint of humor still there. This time, when he glanced at her, it wasn't as quick. "I can work with that." He nodded once, more to himself than to her. Yeah. That part made sense. Maybe the first thing that had in a while.

"Thank you," he added, quieter now. Not awkward this time. Just honest.

He leaned forward, resting his hands lightly on the edge of the console, eyes tracking the shifting battle again. The green and red didn't feel as meaningless as before. Still overwhelming, but… less distant.

So this is what it looks like from the inside. His gaze followed a cluster of ships, watching their paths tighten. Then, because apparently he was committed to asking questions that could make him look like an idiot, he tilted his head slightly.

"So…" he started, glancing sideways at her. "Does being a foundling come with any of that armor?" He tapped a finger lightly against the console. "Or is it more of a 'prove you won't trip over your own feet first' kind of situation?"

He huffed a quiet breath, half amused, half serious. Because if that armor worked even half as well as he'd seen with Kirae Orade Kirae Orade … yeah. He wanted in.

 


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Objective 3
Charros IV - Fort Hardhome

Tags: Open

Things seem to be progressing rather well. Despite his sisters heckling comments. Elian chuckled. "Like she could do anything anway." There was one, two and then three sensor arrays that were now up and running good as new at various points across the area. Signal's strength would be increased and there would be a much clear wavelength to root out signals that did not belong. He would just have to run a test before giving it full power.

Elian began move down the ramp towards the next structure until there was a loud cackle followed a shower of sparks from the array he just finished. The young Abrantes turned quickly and sprinted back that way.
"NO! NOT THAT ONE! STOP!!!!" Elian shouted, and the Wookiee roared back and him, and there was a series of shouts and back and forther between the two until the array was finally shut down.

"Noooooo!" Elian said in a dramatic fashion, his hands raising to his face. "We don't power this one on fully yet....." Elian sighed, a frustrating sigh as he watched the array slowly catch fire. For a brief moment Elian didn't move, he just stared in disbelief, before he moved to get the exstinguisher and put the fire out.

The wookiee, stood next to him and started to laugh. Elian looked over to him, a rather unhappy look on his face. "Laugh it up jerkface. Your lucky I enjoy doing this sort of work."


 




OBJECTIVE II - THE FLAGSHIP

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Jaikell jumps into the blown open hatch as Korda and Siv follow behind him,
"We Split, Cover more grou-" said Korda, but before he could finish his sentence, Siv spoke,
""We stay tight." "They'll try to split us. We don't give them that."
as he shot a trooper, while moving forward

Jaikell laughs, "Well this is going to be fun," he says to himself

Siv looked towards Jaikell, "break us through the front. Keep them moving." and then he moved towards Korda,
"hold our rear. Nothing loops around on us."

"Sounds good to me, lets run it" he said.
As they move forward, together in step,
Siv said, "Keep an eye out for a terminal or control access point."
"I can splice in—jam doors, mess with their routing, feed positions to the others."


But then, Korda moved up towards Jaikell and put something on his shoulder with a metallic snap
"Extra kick," Korda said evenly. "In case subtlety disappoints you."
"he put a breaching charge.. on my shoulder??" jaikell thinks to himself. hopefully this ends well.
More troopers came,

But as they came we took them out just as quick, One in the back, a few ahead of us in the front, and as we were firing, a Message came over the comms-
"anyone else here? Anyone in need of assistance?"
A voice he didn't recognize, but since she is aboard the ship and on our coms, he's sure its a friendly.

"This is Jaikell of Clan Wyrvhor" he looks to his left, reading what section of the ship we are in, "We are in section B-12, on our way to the bridge, Link with us at your earliest chance." he said while moving to the front, pushing forward as he went and shot two more troopers.

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| Outfit: |
J O R I R
B E S K A R ' G A M

| Equipment: ALL |





 


Encrypted Message
To: Adelle Bastiel Adelle Bastiel
From: Sibylla Abrantes Sibylla Abrantes



Adelle,

Forgive me for the abruptness of my message, but dire circumstances have occurred within my family that require additional aid that I hope you may be able to assist me with.

My brother Elian Abrantes Elian Abrantes was wounded on Moorja, and the relay of his injuries includes the loss of his arm. I am sure you remember him from the Jousting event, and while he still seems to relay that he is fine and doing well, the way he is prone to joke and laugh things off make me believe he is anything but.

Would you be able to keep an eye on him? I do not want him to feel as if he is being watched, but I am asking that he does need someone else to connect to. He had a great loss with friends from the academy and I believe this with the news that his eyesight will eventually be lost may very well get to his head.

That is not even including the frighting news that my elder brother, Casssian, is missing. Father has deployed Abrantes' assets to investigate the matter beyond what the Royal Naboo Security Forces will look into, but I fear that there may be more at play.

I am not sure if Elian has heard about it yet, but mother and father likely are keeping it from him for now. Knowing Elian, he just may very well get it in his mind that he needs to search for Cassian as well. If he does, some sense needs to be knocked into him. It is a matter best left to professionals... and yes, I realize it is rather hypocritical as I am also making my own investigations on the matter....

Regardless, let me know your thoughts.

~Sibylla

 
The world unfolded beneath Varek like a map drawn in shadow and ash. Jagged mountains clawed at a copper sky, rivers of molten rock cutting through blackened plains. He moved across the terrain with the patience of a predator and the inevitability of a storm. Every step in the dust, every shift in his weight, was measured—not for stealth alone, but for purpose. The prey did not yet know he had arrived. That was the luxury of anticipation.

The heat of the twin suns pressed against his beskar, dull grey now streaked with ash and grime, and yet it did nothing to slow him. Sweat beaded at his brow, ran down the side of his mask beneath the layered plating of his helmet, but he did not falter. His target had made a mistake the moment they left civilized space, and now, in this harsh, unclaimed wilderness, that error would be exploited.

Varek’s sensors flicked constantly, scanning the horizon, mapping the air, the dust, the subtle vibrations in the ground. Even this world, so alien and untamed, whispered to him: the slight tremor of a creature fleeing a scent, the metallic scrape of someone ill-prepared stumbling across volcanic rock, the dry crackle of displaced energy in the atmosphere. Every detail mattered.

The bounty was notorious. Slick, quick, cunning—but Varek had hunted cunning before. He had moved through deserts, jungles, snow, war zones, and netherworlds. He knew the rhythm of fear, the dance of desperation. He didn’t rush. He didn’t need to. The prey would make the mistake, and he would be ready.

A heat shimmer blurred the landscape ahead. Through it, he could see the faint glint of movement—metal on metal, the telltale shimmer of someone wearing protective gear, someone thinking they were safe in the open. Varek allowed a breath to escape, low and steady, his hand drifting toward the blaster at his side. The fingers flexed, barely brushing the grip. He did not need to draw yet. Patience was as lethal as fire.

He adjusted his trajectory, shifting across a ridge to use the terrain as cover, a shadow against shadows. Dust rolled underfoot, and the air tasted faintly of sulfur and blood. The creature—or human, if they still deserved that name—thought themselves alone. They would not see him approach until it was far too late.

Varek’s mind wandered briefly to the quiet of hot springs, to something soft, to something unattainable, and he blinked it away. This was not a time for reflection. This was a time for calculation, for anticipation, for destruction.

The target paused, scanning the horizon, and Varek’s breath hitched in perfect synchronization. The prey’s attention flicked in the wrong direction, a minor misstep—enough. Enough to calculate trajectory, to gauge movement, to decide when the strike would fall.

He leapt from shadow to rock, silent as a creeping fog, the motion fluid, deadly. His armor flexed with him, absorbing impact, redistributing weight, a perfect fusion of flesh and machine. The blaster found his hand, and with a single calculated motion, he fired.

The bolt struck with precision, a crack of light against the dusk, and the prey crumpled where they had stood. The world exhaled around him: the heat, the dust, the faint whisper of a wind through jagged stone. Varek approached, each step measured, his eyes—visible now beneath the visor—calculating the kill, cataloging every mark and scar he left behind.

The bounty was collected, the task complete, and yet even as he stood alone amid the ash and stone, he felt the familiar, quiet solitude settle over him. The satisfaction was clinical, unadorned. There was no warmth here, no soft laughter, no quiet recognition. Only the rhythm of purpose fulfilled, only the cold inevitability of the hunt concluded.

Varek turned, scanning the horizon again. New worlds, new prey, new hunts. The galaxy was wide. The universe was endless. And he would always be moving, always hunting, always alone—but always precise. Always inevitable.

The suns sank lower, painting the volcanic plains in streaks of fire and shadow, and Varek Ordo walked on, a solitary storm in the unclaimed wilderness, the whisper of inevitability trailing in his wake.
 


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Aselia was already set when Adelle called it.

Half a step ahead, tucked just off the main line of fire, she had angled herself behind a structural bulkhead in the corridor, rifle steady and sightline locked on the E-WEB team as they rushed to finish setting it. She didn't overextend, didn't try to force the shot through the forming wall of bodies. Instead, she kept pressure on the edges, picking at the troopers trying to widen their firing lane and forcing them to hesitate.

Aselia saw the shift immediately as Liorra stepped forward with the discarded blaster, the posture, the heat building where there shouldn't have been any. She lowered slightly into her cover, bracing without pulling away.

The detonation tore through the corridor.

Heat and force rolled outward, ripping the E-WEB team apart and scattering what remained of that section of the line. For a brief moment, everything went still except for drifting debris and the crackle of damaged systems.

She held her position, rifle still trained down the corridor, tracking for movement through the smoke rather than immediately pushing into it. A few controlled shots followed, not aggressive, just enough to keep any surviving troopers from peeking out and reestablishing a firing lane. She shifted slightly behind cover, one knee lowering to stabilize as she scanned. The hum of damaged electronics and distant alarms began to fill the space where blasterfire had been seconds before.

At Liorra's voice, there was the faintest exhale through her helmet.

"Preferably," she replied dryly, though the edge had softened just slightly. "No holes. But otherwise good job."

TAG: Adelle Bastiel Adelle Bastiel Liorra Liorra

 

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Eye of Lianna
Tags: Aselia Verd Aselia Verd | Liorra Liorra

“We’re not spaced, so I’m still calling that a win,” Adelle said. She stepped out from behind the support she’d taken cover behind, deflecting scattered bolts from the surviving troopers. “But yes. Preferably no holes. We’re trying to corner the Grand Admiral, not make the ship Alderaanian cheese.”

A subtle flick of two fingers sent a trooper flying into another while Adelle deflected a bolt back at its shooter. The action clarified something else that had bothered her about Liorra’s attack. Adelle reached instinctively for the Force first and preferred using it to a blaster. Liorra had tried to assault an E-WEB emplacement with a blaster.

“Tell me something, Liorra,” she said. She flung her lightsaber in a lateral spin that caught the last three troopers in that junction. “You can do that big fireball with the Force whenever you want, so why the feth did you try going against an E-WEB with a blaster first? Like sending a TIE to take out a Star Destroyer when you’ve got the fething Death Star.”

A message alert popped up on her HUD—her envoy line. She stopped short and stared at the alert briefly. Who possibly could be—well, alright, she knew who potentially could be messaging her right now. Why was another matter entirely. Something to be solved later.

Or at least when she had a moment to focus on the message.

“That’s weird,” she muttered to herself. Adelle tore her eyes away from the alert and over to their route. They were about nine decks down from the bridge and still very much towards the fore of the flagship. Any turbolifts they took now wouldn’t get them high enough, and Adelle wagered the turbolifts closer to the bridge would be shut down. Still, they were their best shot at getting to the bridge.

She located a set of turbolifts further in, down the corridor to their right.

Adelle nodded at the appropriate corridor. “This way.”

Even as she started walking briskly down it, she could hear the sounds of a horde of boots heading their way.

“Eyes up,” she said quietly, readying her lightsaber. But she did not slow.



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Mia smiled in response to his gratitude, inclining her head briefly before shifting her attention back to the battle map, her hands moving over the console as the foundling leaned in tracking movement. The image shifted, the Eye of Lianna growing in size to dominate the table as the fleet movements fell into the background. Around them chatter increased, movement of ships called out often enough for her to keep the wider battle in her mind while she tracked the progress on the Lianna.

The ships interior map was fragmented, updating in real time with data fed back from the team’s helmets. Not for the first time, Mia remembered that she’d sent people she cared deeply about into that fight. She reminded herself that she needed to spend some time with her daughter and her ward.

There was only so many times she could leave Liorra Liorra ’s messages on read before the temperamental teenager started throwing Kerrigan level tantrums. And why not make that Tessa’s problem? She smiled to herself before the foundlings words drew her back to the moment.

“We can absolutely get you set up with armour, but the beskar’gam you have to earn and build yourself.” She let her gaze slide back to him. “With guidance, of course. Have you found a mentor yet?”

Prisoner #36929 Prisoner #36929

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