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''<sub>Blood-Stained Love, pg. 152</sub>''
''<sub>Blood-Stained Love, pg. 152</sub>''
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== NEKYIA ==
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'''Oblivion''' ••
'''Prerequisite:''' Summon Spirit
''Spirits are fickle, driven by emotions strong enough to perists beyond death. But with a proper offering and some gentle diplomacy, industrious Kindred are able to trade favors or strike a bargain with answering wraiths.''
'''Ingredients:''' Food and drink that the wraith(s) might enjoy, myrrh incense, a clean white sheet
'''Process:''' The caster places the white sheet down as a tablecloth and then arranges the food and drink as a circle in the center. They open a vein to carefully drench the food in their vitae without dirtying the cloth, then light the incense. The caster walks around the cloth and beseeches the wraiths' favor, offering them food and drink in exchange for an audience.
'''System:''' The vampire Rouses as many times as they wish, making an offering to any and all nearby spirits. The incense gives the wraiths a smokey corporeal form with which to pick up and consume the food, drawing out the power from each piece as it crumbles into ash and merges with their corpus.
A number of wraiths equal to the margin will be drawn to the feast (or even more on a Messy Critical) and each Rouse check worth of vitae will heal one level of Superficial Willpower damage or provide one level of Passion to a wraith consuming it.
The ceremony is only an offering; the caster must still entreat the wraiths for their assistance through diplomacy and persuasion, or perhaps offer the food as payment for services already rendered. Once the wraiths have consumed all the food, their smoky forms crumble to ash and the sheet becomes permanently blackened.
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''<sub>Homebrew, pg. XX</sub>''
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Latest revision as of 12:09, 12 October 2024

OBLIVION

Obtenebration | Necromancy | Abyss Mysticism | Mortis | Thanatosis


Oblivion is a mysterious, unpalatable power that most vampires rightly fear to use, witness, or fall victim to. Only vampires of Clans Lasombra and Hecata wield it with any frequency, and even they do so tentatively. Oblivion requires cautious masters who know the power’s risks, as no other Discipline reaches into the Underworld and allows its manipulator to extract tangible darkness or furious spectres. Oblivion is the darkest of arts.


Notably, while the Lasombra are prone to expanding their repertoire of Oblivion powers, the Hecata focus their energies on developing Ceremonies. Ceremonies take longer, but are required for communing with and making passage through to the lands of the dead.




CHARACTERISTICS


Discipline oblivion.png
  • Type: Mental
  • Masquerade Threat: Medium-High.
    Spirits and abyssal shadows rarely show up well on cameras but are obviously unnatural if witnessed in person.
  • Blood Resonance: None.
    Psychopaths and the emotionally detached. Blood empty of Resonance.
  • Note: When making a Rouse check for an Oblivion power or Ceremony, a result of “1” or “10” results in a Stain, in addition to any Hunger gained. If the user’s Blood Potency allows for a re-roll on the Rouse check, they can pick either of the two results.

Oblivion allows for the manipulation of creatures and substances originating from the Underworld. When the Hecata use this Discipline, they tend to channel the entropic nature of the Underworld and its surroundings, decaying flesh, calling forth spirits, and posing a dangerous risk to the living.


Oblivion projections and spirits sustain damage from fire and sunlight, counting as vampires with Blood Potency 1 in this regard. They also take one level of Aggravated Health damage per round from bright, direct lights, and may also be damaged (Superficially or Aggravated) from blessed weapons and artifacts, depending on the strength of the blessing and whether the wielder has True Faith.


Oblivion’s powers are ineffective in brightly lit areas. Daylight and rooms without shadows are prohibitive, preventing the Discipline’s successful function, though ultraviolet light and infrared light place no restriction on the Discipline’s use. Moderately lit rooms apply a one-die penalty to the Discipline roll involved.


The use of Oblivion negatively affects the necromancer’s psyche, with many powers causing Stains as the vampire finds themselves performing increasingly macabre acts in service to this Discipline.