The Campaign of '68: Difference between revisions
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'''''UNDER CONSTRUCTION''''' | |||
'''The Campaign of '68''' was a disastrous attempt by [[London|British]] forces to invade [[Hell]]. | |||
==At What Cost?== | |||
Not even a decade after the Fall, and upon finding themselves just downriver of Hell, the Royal Army planned a good Christian invasion. The invasion went straight to hell, in exactly the wrong way. | |||
The operation was a complete disaster, as the soldiers were overrun in [[the Forgotten Quarter]]. Only a few units and troops actually managed to breach the borders of infernal territory. They told of strange and terrifying sights: fields of burning roses, devilbone churches, brass triremes, a vast and pitiless bureaucracy, a throne that stands in the shadow of a gallows. Too many lives were lost that day. | |||
One can find veterans of the invasion around the city: traumatized warriors in the bars of [[Watchmaker's Hill]], peculiarly ambitious [[The Church|clergymen]], drunkards passed out in the gutter. The invasion left a long shadow on London, but even after such a dramatic loss, there’s no way the clergy doesn’t have more plans in store for the devils. | |||
[[The Church#The Bishop of Southwark|The Bishop of Southwark]] is a notable veteran of the campaign. He was part of a brigade that was captured in battle; his scream of pain after touching a fiery hellish rose alerted the devils to the regiment's presence. Most of his comrades were hanged, but the Bishop himself lived to tell the tale. |
Revision as of 02:13, 9 July 2022
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UNDER CONSTRUCTION
The Campaign of '68 was a disastrous attempt by British forces to invade Hell.
At What Cost?
Not even a decade after the Fall, and upon finding themselves just downriver of Hell, the Royal Army planned a good Christian invasion. The invasion went straight to hell, in exactly the wrong way.
The operation was a complete disaster, as the soldiers were overrun in the Forgotten Quarter. Only a few units and troops actually managed to breach the borders of infernal territory. They told of strange and terrifying sights: fields of burning roses, devilbone churches, brass triremes, a vast and pitiless bureaucracy, a throne that stands in the shadow of a gallows. Too many lives were lost that day.
One can find veterans of the invasion around the city: traumatized warriors in the bars of Watchmaker's Hill, peculiarly ambitious clergymen, drunkards passed out in the gutter. The invasion left a long shadow on London, but even after such a dramatic loss, there’s no way the clergy doesn’t have more plans in store for the devils.
The Bishop of Southwark is a notable veteran of the campaign. He was part of a brigade that was captured in battle; his scream of pain after touching a fiery hellish rose alerted the devils to the regiment's presence. Most of his comrades were hanged, but the Bishop himself lived to tell the tale.