The Coilheart Games: Difference between revisions
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==The Sixth Coil?== | ==The Sixth Coil?== | ||
<blockquote>''"'INFORMATION WANTED: What's in the SIXTH COIL? | <blockquote>''"'INFORMATION WANTED: What's in the SIXTH COIL?<br>Good MONEY Paid for SOLID & PUBLISHABLE Leads!<br>Report EXCLUSIVELY to the Offices of the GAZETTE.'"''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Examine_the_card|Examine the card|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote> | ||
In the false-summer of the fourth 1899, a gaggle of regally-clad [[urchins]] darted through London's streets, bearing the news that the [[tigers]] of the Labyrinth and the [[Court of the Wakeful Eye]] would soon be making a grand proclamation.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Grab_a_flyer Grab a flyer, ''Fallen London''] ''"The tigers – of the Labyrinth, and of the lands across the zee – have an announcement. Today. In Tyrant's Gardens. Already a slow trickle of citizens, pockets bulging with discarded sapphires, meanders in the direction of the excitement."''</ref> When the day arrived, the tigers gathered in Tyrant's Gardens to announce that a contest would be held in London, to determine who in the [[Neath]] was worthy to enter the sealed '''Sixth Coil''' of the Labyrinth and claim its boundless riches.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Stripes_in_the_Bandstand Stripes in the Bandstand, ''Fallen London''] ''"Our Labyrinth has many coils. [...] One coil has remained shuttered since before my tenure: the sixth. Soon, it will open [...] To show the beneficence of the Wakeful Eye, a select group will be permitted to enter the Coil and partake of its riches. This group [...] will consist of the winners of a tournament [...] that we shall hold in the coming weeks. A tournament not just for London, but for the whole Neath."''</ref> Speculation gripped the city: what lay within the Sixth Coil? None were more eager to find out than [[Mr Huffam]] of the ''Unexpurgated London Gazette'', who issued an open invitation to his offices for any who possessed knowledge of the Coil.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Examine_the_card Examine the card, ''Fallen London''] ''"'INFORMATION WANTED: What's in the SIXTH COIL?''' | |||
''Good MONEY Paid for SOLID & PUBLISHABLE Leads!'' | ''Good MONEY Paid for SOLID & PUBLISHABLE Leads!'' |
Revision as of 10:51, 4 June 2025
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Beyond this point lie spoilers for Fallen London, Sunless Sea, Sunless Skies, or Mask of the Rose. This may include midgame or minor Fate-locked content. Proceed with caution. You can find out more about our spoiler policy here. |
"The Tiger Keeper rises to his hind legs. "London!" He is bellowing now, gold eyes alight with zeal. "The Sixth Coil is opening at last! And we shall share its boundless riches... with the victors of the Coilheart Games!" The Tiger Keeper's shout ends in a roar, quickly adopted by his fellows in the Gardens."[1]
The Coilheart Games were a notable event of (the fourth) 1899, in which London hosted an international sports competition to judge who would be worthy to enter the Sixth Coil of the Labyrinth of Tigers.
The Sixth Coil?
"'INFORMATION WANTED: What's in the SIXTH COIL?
Good MONEY Paid for SOLID & PUBLISHABLE Leads!
Report EXCLUSIVELY to the Offices of the GAZETTE.'"[2]
In the false-summer of the fourth 1899, a gaggle of regally-clad urchins darted through London's streets, bearing the news that the tigers of the Labyrinth and the Court of the Wakeful Eye would soon be making a grand proclamation.[3] When the day arrived, the tigers gathered in Tyrant's Gardens to announce that a contest would be held in London, to determine who in the Neath was worthy to enter the sealed Sixth Coil of the Labyrinth and claim its boundless riches.[4] Speculation gripped the city: what lay within the Sixth Coil? None were more eager to find out than Mr Huffam of the Unexpurgated London Gazette, who issued an open invitation to his offices for any who possessed knowledge of the Coil.[5]
The Coilheart Games were held within the Labyrinth, whose first coil was transformed into a grand stadium; there were also smaller amphitheaters erected across London.[6] Four major international delegations descended upon London to participate in the Games: the Wakeful Court tigers,[7] the Khanate,[8] tomb-colonists,[9] and a mysterious European Surface power called the Koloman Republic.[10]

The opening ceremony proceeded without a hitch - until a tremor rippled through the arena just as the Tiger Keeper raised his paw.[11] The crowd began to panic, but was halted by the determined Tiger Keeper,[12] who continued into his planned speech but seemed unsettled afterward.[13] The Keeper, notably, said the Coil was shifting...[12]
Let the Games Begin!
"The Labyrinth of Tigers exerts an incontrovertible pull, distorting the usual tides of London's crowds. The Coilheart Games are well and truly underway, the thundering of the spectators often audible across the city. Nobody wants to miss the next wonder, the next intrigue, the next snippet of raw and juicy gossip."[14]
The Coilheart Games consisted of four grand tournaments, each of which tested a different virtue: imagination, intellect, science, and body. There were also hundreds of smaller contests of various skills, whose winners were awarded the Distinction of the Waking Fire, a symbol of excellence in all four virtues.[15]
The Tournament of the Sciences took place at Wolfstack Docks, and featured a shipbuilding challenge and a subsequent race. Competitors had to construct a vessel capable of enduring the treacherous, toxic waters between Hell and the Sere Palace; the survivors of the race would then continue across the Unterzee.[16] While the Eagle Clan might have been the expected forerunners, they instead built a mysterious device that exploded in their shipyard and was quickly confiscated by the Constables.[17] Mr Huffam's investigation into the incident revealed that the device was seemingly intended to counteract some Parabolan force hidden within the Labyrinth.[18] With the Eagle Clan otherwise occupied, it was the tomb-colonists whose trireme claimed victory.[19]
Veilgarden’s open studio amphitheatre hosted the Tournament of the Imagination, an artistic free-for-all where any medium was permitted[20] — painting,[21] sculpture,[22] dance,[23] theater,[24] and beyond. There was a brief scandal when the Pantherine Impressionist, a tiger painter, was ordered by representatives of the Banded Prince to sabotage her own work. She complied,[25] causing Mr Huffam to investigate and discover that the tigers had held previous Coilheart Games to just as much spectacle, and that they had a long tradition of competing in the Games but always ensuring they did not win.[26] Ultimately, this tournament was won by a troupe of bohemians, who staged an avant-garde play so bewildering that the judges had to declare it the winner.[27]

The Tournament of the Intellect was held at Spite's abandoned opera house, and involved a high-stakes chess tournament... although none of the delegations participating could agree on the rules.[28] In this tournament, it was the Koloman Republic that encountered setbacks; two of their competitors, erstwhile lovers, fell into a heated argument that culminated in the revelation that they were both Surface spies.[29] Further investigation revealed that the Koloman Republic itself was a fabrication — its entire delegation was comprised of agents from various Surface powers. Evidence also surfaced suggesting that the Sixth Coil imprisoned not treasure, but a tiger.[30] Despite the aforementioned tradition of self-sabotage, the Wakeful Court's representative did win this tournament, though their expression betrayed that victory was not something to be celebrated.[31]
The Tournament of the Body, a dueling tournament, took place on a football field near Bugsby’s Marsh in Watchmaker's Hill.[32] In a particularly harrowing bout, a tomb-colonist faced an Eagle Clan lieutenant, but Feducci intervened and pulled the tomb-colonist away just before she could kill her opponent permanently.[33] Investigating the matter, Huffam discovered that those who had entered the Sixth Coil during previous Fallen Cities were trapped inside; the tomb-colonist was attempting to rescue her love, lost for almost a thousand years after winning the Third City's games.[34] In the end, a fighter from the forsaken Presbyterate kingdom of Skite claimed a hard-fought and bloody victory.[35]
One Coil, And Another
"The Gazette can report this morning, after an extraordinary effort of international journalism, the truth of the Labyrinth's oft-touted Sixth Coil. We shall not bury the lede. We have all been deceived..."[36]

As the Games drew to a close, as crowds spilled from the Labyrinth, another, stronger earthquake struck — nearly destroying the amphitheater,[37] though fortunately the stands had already emptied enough that there were no casualties.[38] The Striped Officiant, a Wakeful Court tiger, was the first to investigate, and found the gate to the Sixth Coil slightly ajar; Mr Huffam and four delegation representatives, notably excluding the Tiger Keeper, quickly caught up.[39] Though the Officiant desperately deflected their questions, Huffam and the delegations still pieced together what the Games had been hiding, and he wasted no time in writing an exposé.[40] He and a contingent of victorious athletes returned and cornered the Officiant,[41] forcing him to confess what he knew.[42] The tournament winners taken as tributes were indeed not dead, but trapped within the Sixth Coil; worse still, the Seventh Coil — an ancient shame of the tigers, half-tiger and half-serpent — lurked within, threatening to break free.[40]
Desperate, the Striped Officiant implored the gathered representatives for aid in containing the Seventh Coil and rescuing the imprisoned tributes.[43] The victors of each tournament planned to descend into the Sixth Coil, mapping its terrain[44] and arming themselves with anti-Parabolan technology,[45] before using lightbulbs to blind the entity inside and free the tributes.[46] Once everyone was safe, they would seal the gate with a powerful Correspondence sigil.[47]
The plan encountered one unexpected variable, however: the missing Tiger Keeper, whom the group found standing before the colossal chimeric form of the Seventh Coil itself. The delegates watched as the Keeper pleaded with the entity, trying to free it,[48] but the Coil wished to stay.[49] The Keeper, who had apparently fallen in genuine and voluntary love with the Coil, ultimately chose to merge with it — just as the forbidden union between a tiger and a Fingerking had birthed it long ago.[50] At that point, the tournament winners sprang into action; the old tributes were freed,[51] and a brief skirmish with the Tiger Keeper left him wounded[52] and the Seventh Coil howling in distress.[53] The Coil did not chase the tributes. It only protected the Keeper.[54] And so, as the last of the group emerged, the great doors to the Seventh Coil's lair were sealed, with only the couple inside.[55] (The outer doors to the Sixth Coil were damaged, and remained open.)[56]

London erupted in celebration at the aversion of yet another disaster. The Banded Prince visited to personally honor the victors of the Coilheart Games,[57] and the Striped Officiant was appointed the new Tiger Keeper, charged with maintaining the seal now that the Games were no longer necessary.[58] Mr Huffam’s damning report was swiftly censored by decree of the Empress and the Banded Prince, so he instead published the story as fiction, altering names and details to slip past the censors.[59] The international delegations, alongside some of the rescued tributes, departed; other tributes chose to stay and adapt to life in London.[60] And although the Sixth Coil could no longer be sealed entirely, the watchful eye of the new Tiger Keeper ensured that what lurked below the Labyrinth would never be forgotten.[56]
Historical & Cultural Inspirations
The structure of the Coilheart Games, with its diverse international participation, draws clear parallels to the Olympic Games. This resemblance is further accentuated by the event's timing, which coincided with the real-life Paris 2024 Summer Olympics.
Imagery throughout the event narrative draws heavily from English poet William Blake's 1794 poem The Tyger, which delves into themes of creation, beauty, ferocity. and the duality between innocence and experience.
The Koloman Republic's name is a nod to Coloman of Stockerau, an Irish pilgrim martyred near Vienna in 1012 after being mistaken for a spy. The republic's flag also incorporates symbols associated with him.
References
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