Human - Cilanis
"We are the broken mirrors of all things that breathe; reflections of hunger, hope, folly, and flight. Where others root, we roam. Where others calcify, we shatter and rebuild. We have no scales thick enough, no songs pure enough, no lifespans vast enough to outpace the silence that hunts us.
Thus we forge, we crave, we burn. Our monuments rot; we carve them anew. Our names fall to ash; we teach them again to our sons and daughters. We dance because the earth will not remember. We love because the stars will not mourn us. We are the humans of Arora, restless, unfinished, and ever yearning."
Introduction
Of all the speaking peoples of Arora, humans are the most mutable, the most reckless, and perhaps the most astonishing. We do not possess the timeless grace of the Mni, nor the unyielding tenacity of the Seishi. Our lifespans, neither short enough for heedless abandon nor long enough for generational patience, are caught in a middle place; a tightrope stretched between hope and despair.
It is this very brevity that drives us. Humans do not build for eternity, nor do we idly await destiny's turn. We seize, shape, and shatter our worlds at a frantic pace, striving to etch our mark into a creation already too vast to notice us. Our cities rise in the shadow of our ruins. Our songs remember battles long since faded into dust. Every generation must forge anew, for no memory nor monument survives the passage of time unguarded.
We are not uniform. Across Erothi and the scattered fringes of Valenfar, the human race has diverged into a hundred peoples, shaped by jungle, tundra, desert, and plain. Our skin darkens or pales according to the sun’s judgement; our tongues splinter into a thousand dialects; our creeds quarrel and breed new ones in their ashes. This plurality is our curse. It is also our armour. Where other species ossify around tradition or bloodline, humans reinvent themselves with the seasons.
It is a commonplace among elder scholars to name us arrogant, grasping, or volatile. This is not without reason. We have carved empires across lands not our own, driven species into refuge or oblivion, and made war against the very soils that fed us. Yet it must also be said: we love fiercely, mourn without shame, and dream with an audacity unmatched by any elder race. It is not destiny that preserves us, but the stubborn refusal to vanish quietly.
To speak of humanity, then, is not to describe a people, but a storm: churning, chaotic, and brilliant, always on the cusp of either flowering into wonder or crumbling into ruin. We are what remains when permanence is impossible. It is in that impermanence that our true splendour lies.
Mechanics
Common Humanoid
Source: Arora Homebrew
Humans are the most widespread and prolific species in Arora, defined not by strength, longevity, or magical lineage, but by adaptability, ambition, and resilience. They are short-lived by most standards, lacking the innate advantages of other peoples. Yet their societies thrive in jungles, deserts, tundra's, and plains alike, and their inventions, philosophies, and wars have shaped history as deeply as any arcane cataclysm or divine edict.
Human cultures vary wildly, often even within the same region. Some are builders of empire, others scavengers of lost age; some hold to ancestral spirits, while others worship distant gods or none at all. Whatever form they take, humans do not wait for the world to offer them a place. They seize it, question it, and remake it in their own image. Often, disastrously. Sometimes, beautifully.
To be human is to change. It is a curse to some, a gift to others, and a source of endless wonder to those of us who study the restless species that walks the world with empty hands, and yet always finds a way to fill them.
You Might...
- Embrace new cultures, tools, or traditions without hesitation.
- View hardship not as fate, but as a challenge to overcome.
- Seek purpose in legacy, invention, or the freedom to choose your own path.
- Reject destiny in favour of personal willpower and adaptation.
Others Probably...
- See you as cunning, adaptable, or dangerously ambitious.
- Respect your resolve, but question your loyalty.
- Assume you're more interested in progress than tradition.
- Believe you are quick to fight, but quicker to rebuild.
Physical Description
Humans vary greatly in appearance, more so than most other species. Height, build, skin tone, hair colour, and eye colour differ across ethnicities and climates, shaped by generations of migration, adaptation, and cultural expression. While humans typically stand between 5 and 6 feet tall, extremes on either end are not uncommon.
Despite their perceived physical mediocrity, humans are extremely adaptable. Their bodies adjust rapidly to heat, cold, and altitude; their diet tolerances are broad; and their capacity for physical and mental conditioning is nearly unmatched. This versatility, rather than any single trait, is what defines their form.
Society
Human societies are vast in their variety. Some form hierarchical empires ruled by noble lines or religious castes; others favour egalitarian councils or anarchic kinships. While most species are bound to ancient traditions, humans reshape their societies generation by generation, building anew over the ruins of what came before. This dynamism makes them unpredictable allies and dangerous rivals.
Community is central to human survival, family, guild, army, or town. Their bonds are often more ideological than ancestral, united by shared vision rather than bloodline. It is this capacity to form identity across distance and difference that has allowed human cultures to dominate so many regions of Arora, for better or worse.
Beliefs
Faith, in some form, exists in nearly every human culture. From the grand temples of the Taro Pantheon to the animist rites of rural clans, humans seek meaning in what lies beyond the visible world. Religion may serve as comfort, control, inspiration, or rebellion, sometimes all at once. But where gods are absent, humans build new ones: ideals, nations, movements. They will worship anything that offers them purpose, or claim its throne themselves.
That said, there are many among humans who live without gods or spirits, relying instead on logic, tradition, or individualism. Even this absence becomes a belief in its own right, often shaping cultural identity just as powerfully.
Popular Edicts
- Pursue your ambitions with courage and ingenuity.
- Protect your kin, your craft, or your cause.
- Adapt to changing times and survive by learning.
- Seek meaning, whether through service, invention, or defiance.
Popular Anathema
- Reject responsibility for the consequences of your choices.
- Submit blindly to oppression or tradition without question.
- Exploit others without purpose beyond greed.
- Destroy knowledge or history out of fear of its implications.
Names
Human names vary immensely between cultures. Some carry ancestral or dynastic significance; others are chosen based on birth omens, geography, or personal aspiration. Most human societies include a given name and at least one family or clan name, though some use titles, patronymics, or achievement-based modifiers.
Sample Names: Verran, Elira, Dajun, Thalia, Oskar, Rensha, Kael, Mirin, Tolvas, Alira, Feran, Jolan, Myra, Seska, Varun
Human Mechanics
- Hit Points: 8
- Size: Medium
- Speed: 25 feet
- Lifespan: 80–100 years
- Available Ethnicities: Akran, Causan, Ekfron, Eralic
- Attribute Boosts: Two Free
- Attribute Flaw: None
- Traits: Humanoid
Species Traits
- Cultural Memory: Choose one Lore skill at character creation. You are trained in it and treat it as if you were trained in Recall Knowledge checks using it, even when untrained. This reflects the intergenerational survival knowledge passed down through story and custom.
- Relentless Spirit: At the end of each of your turns, reduce the duration of the fatigued, frightened, or sickened conditions you have by 1 (in addition to normal recovery).
- Versatile Heritage: At 1st level, choose one General Feat for which you meet the prerequisites. You gain this feat as a bonus feat.
"To study human flesh is to study potential, not in its perfection, but in its endless struggle against imperfection."
Biology
The physical nature of humanity is a testament to the quiet ferocity of adaptation. Where other races boast the blessings of longevity, elemental affinity, or innate strength, humans are shaped by subtler gifts: versatility, tenacity, and a restless defiance of limitation. Across the continents of Arora, human physiology bends and shifts to fit the demands of mountain, jungle, tundra, and sea. No single idealised form exists among them; humanity is instead defined by its multiplicity, a living record of trials endured, and victories seized against hostile worlds.
Though often viewed by longer-lived species as fragile or short-sighted, it is precisely humanity's urgent vitality, that fierce grasp upon each fleeting moment, which allows them to flourish where others falter. The following entries detail the fundamental traits of humanity as a species, from their anatomy to the unique patterns of growth, resilience, and cognitive acuity that define their place in the world.
Human anatomy is deceptively unremarkable at first glance: bipedal, medium-framed, with a flexible musculoskeletal structure allowing for both endurance and agility. Their bodies are built neither for extreme specialisation nor for singular excellence, but for adaptability across countless terrains and conditions. Their senses are sharp enough to survive, but rarely exceptional compared to other spcies; it is their coordination, rapid learning capacity, and improvisational instinct that close the gap.
Sexual dimorphism is present but moderate: males often display greater upper body strength, while females typically show greater endurance and cold resistance. Yet even these patterns yield easily to environmental demands and personal variation. Humans, more than most species, shape their bodies by the lives they lead.
Human reproduction is characterised by high fertility and relatively short gestation compared to many other sentient races: an average pregnancy lasting around nine months. Infants are helpless for longer periods than most species, necessitating strong social bonds and cooperative child-rearing, a feature that has deeply influenced human social structures over millennia.
Crossbreeding with other sentient species is biologically impossible, despite persistent myths and romanticised legends to the contrary. The human genome is remarkably malleable within its own boundaries, however, allowing for rapid shifts in inherited traits across relatively few generations in response to environmental pressures.
Humans pass through several distinct stages of growth: childhood (birth to roughly 15 years), adolescence (15–20 years), adulthood (20–60 years), and elderhood (60+ years). Physical maturity is reached quickly compared to other sapient species, but mental and emotional maturity may lag depending on social context.
The average human lifespan ranges from 70 to 100 years, varying significantly based on health, environment, and culture. Compared to the ageless contemplation of the Mni or the burning brevity of the Seishi, humanity exists in a delicate middle ground: long enough to build lasting legacies, short enough to fear time’s advance.
Humans display limited biological cycling compared to more environmentally attuned species. They do not hibernate, nor do they shed fur, scales, or other coverings in response to seasonal change. However, human bodies do show subtle adaptations: thickening skin in colder climes, increasing melanin production with prolonged sun exposure, adjusting sleep patterns with seasonal light shifts.
Aging in humans is inexorable and visible, with physical deterioration beginning in earnest around midlife. While medical and alchemical arts can delay these effects, they cannot arrest them entirely. Among humans, aging is a public journey, not a hidden shame: wrinkles, grey hair, and bent backs are often regarded as badges of survival, rather than blemishes.
In matters of raw cognitive capability, humans stand among the upper tiers of sentient races. While they may lack the self-proclaimed wisdom of the Alemni or the hyperfocus of the Seishi, humans compensate with extraordinary creativity, emotional range, and the ability to think abstractly across disparate domains. This flexibility of mind underlies their rapid technological advancement, their constant social innovation, and, perhaps most critically, their capacity for hope in the face of despair.
It is often said by scholars of other races that "humans learn because they must; others learn because they can." Nowhere is this more evident than in their insatiable drive to explore, adapt, and remake their worlds, even when failure is all but certain.
"The river carves its bed not through strength, but through the patient wearing away of stone; so too does humanity adapt and reshape itself with each passing storm."
Appearance and Adaptation
Human appearance across Arora defies simple categorisation. Shaped by ancient migrations, regional climates, and countless cultural interweaving’s, the diversity of the species is astonishing. While certain patterns emerge, lighter skin tones in colder regions, darker tones near the equator, variations in hair texture and eye colour tied to lineage and migration, humanity as a whole resist’s typology.
Rather than a singular "human look," there exists a shifting mosaic: an endless array of forms, each testifying to the quiet triumph of survival over adversity. Human adaptability is not only physiological but aesthetic: what is prized as beauty in one realm may be considered plain or alien in another, and customs surrounding appearance have evolved as fluidly as the people themselves.
The following entries summarise the core patterns of human physiology as observed across Arora.
Height among humans’ averages between 1.5 and 1.8 metres, though environmental factors and nutrition can produce considerable variance. Body builds range from wiry and agile in mountainous or arid regions to heavier and more robust in colder, harsher climates. Bone structure tends towards moderate density, allowing for a balance between endurance and strength rather than specialisation toward either extreme.
Humans are uniquely adept at self-modification: cultural practices such as tattooing, scarification, piercings, and body painting are widespread, with regional variation deeply tied to rites of passage, faith, or personal achievement.
Facial characteristics among humans vary enormously. Broad or narrow noses, full or thin lips, high or low cheekbones, all are represented somewhere across the continents. Hair textures range from tightly coiled to straight, with colours including black, brown, blond, red, and even silver in old age. Eye colours likewise vary across brown, blue, green, hazel, grey, and combinations thereof.
Despite these differences, humans are almost universally recognisable by the expressiveness of their faces: a wide emotional palette visible even in infancy, honed over generations as a tool for survival, persuasion, and intimacy.
Human skin tones cover the full spectrum from nearly ivory-white to deep ebony, typically correlating with ancestral climate adaptation. Hair colour is equally diverse, and greying is considered a normal, even honoured, part of aging rather than a malady to be hidden.
Unique to humans is their tendency towards patterned markings, either natural (freckles, birthmarks) or acquired (tattoos, scarification), many of which hold deep personal or cultural significance. Some remote groups incorporate ritualistic body painting that changes seasonally, tied to harvests, wars, or religious observances.
Humans do not engage in symbiotic relationships to the degree seen in some species, but they do maintain a myriad of domesticated animals, crops, and micro-ecosystems tailored to their needs. However, certain parasites, lice, intestinal worms, and skin mites, are known to afflict human populations, particularly in less sanitary or tropical environments. These minor biological nuisances have historically driven advances in hygiene, medicine, and communal living practices.
Legends in some regions speak of mystical bonds between humans and beasts or plants, guardian spirits, totemic allies, but no verifiable biological symbiosis has been confirmed by scholars to date.
"Give a human a barren rock and a blade of grass, and by season’s end they will have quarrelled over it, named it, and built a home upon it."
Habitat and Lifestyle
If one defining truth governs humanity’s relationship to the world, it is this: they do not simply inhabit their environments, they alter, exploit, and remake them. Across the shifting landscapes of Arora, human settlement patterns, subsistence strategies, and social adaptations testify to an unrelenting drive to bend circumstance to their will. In their triumphs and in their scars, the lands themselves bear the imprint of human persistence.
While the specifics vary across ethnicity and geography, certain commonalities emerge: a reliance on flexible subsistence methods, a relentless expansion into new frontiers, and a stubborn refusal to yield entirely to nature’s demands. The following entries explore the primary ecological and social patterns that characterise humanity as a species.
Humans thrive across nearly every ecological niche Arora offers. From tundra hunters following herds across frozen wastes, to rice-farming riverine civilisations, to desert traders carving paths through shifting dunes, humanity’s presence is as inevitable as the turning of seasons.
Their settlements range from isolated homesteads eking out fragile existences to sprawling city-states controlling fertile deltas and critical trade routes. Urbanisation, where it occurs, tends to cluster near stable water sources, defensible terrain, or fertile soils, yet even marginal lands find human tenants in time.
Unlike species such as the Varlimni or Paokus, who harmonise passively with existing ecosystems, humans shape and often degrade their environments through deforestation, irrigation, mining, and overhunting. It is a common lament among naturalists that "where humans tread, the wild world retreats," though others argue that such transformations are simply a new kind of ecology, no less natural for its artifice.
Omnivorous by both necessity and inclination, humans consume an astonishing variety of food sources. Agricultural societies rely on domesticated grains, legumes, livestock, and orchard crops, while coastal and riverine communities add fish, shellfish, and aquatic plants to their diets. Hunter-gatherer groups persist in marginal environments, sustaining themselves on wild game, roots, berries, and seasonal foraging cycles.
Dietary habits are deeply intertwined with local culture. Some communities elevate cuisine to high art, crafting complex spiced dishes and elaborate feasts; others regard food as a simple fuel for labour. Fasting, ritual slaughter, and food taboos feature prominently in religious and cultural life, binding communities and marking sacred calendars.
Food scarcity, whether from failed harvests, war, or natural disaster, remains one of the primary drivers of human migration and conflict, and is etched deep into the cautionary legends of nearly every culture.
Social instincts dominate human psychology. Alone, a human is vulnerable; together, humans become builders, traders, warriors, and dreamers. Cooperation emerges early among even the most disparate tribes, often manifesting through familial bonds, shared work, and oral traditions.
Yet humans are not content merely to survive; they seek meaning. Storytelling, mythmaking, ritual, and record-keeping are all natural human behaviours, shaping communal memory and shared identity. Risk-taking is particularly prominent: exploration, invention, and conquest stem as much from innate daring as from necessity. Where others wait for certainty, humans gamble on hope.
Emotionally, humans possess a volatile mix of empathy, ambition, pride, and fear. Such complexity fosters both profound compassion and brutal cruelty, sometimes within the same heart.
Human societies are organised along lines of kinship, territory, ideology, or shared enterprise. From patriarchal dynasties to democratic councils, from mercantile guilds to roving mercenary bands, social structures arise wherever groups of humans interact regularly and seek stability or advantage.
At the smallest scale, family remains the core unit. Clans, tribes, villages, and guilds expand this principle outward, often intertwining blood ties with pragmatic alliances. Larger polities, city-states, kingdoms, empires, usually emerge where surplus resources enable stratified leadership and specialisation.
Humans are prone to revolution and reform; no structure, however ancient, is safe from scrutiny or overthrow. Social mobility, whether through marriage, merit, wealth, or conquest, is a persistent feature across human cultures, creating a dynamism unseen among more rigid societies.
"No beast so thrives as the one that knows when to bend its neck and when to bare its teeth."
Culture and Civilisation
Though their bodies are bound to the earth and their lives brief compared to the Mni or Seishi, humans have made culture their immortality. Songs endure longer than bones; stories outlast the dynasties that forged them. Wherever they settle, humans weave a tapestry of art, belief, law, and ambition, reflecting both the aspirations and the anxieties of their restless hearts.
Despite staggering diversity across ethnicities, climates, and faiths, certain patterns emerge again and again. These traits, more than any empire or invention, define humanity’s true heritage.
Creativity is humanity’s birthright, and their burden. No other species innovates with such desperate, heedless speed. Invention, adaptation, improvisation: these are not merely traits, but necessities. Where others perfect a tradition across millennia, humans tear it down within generations to make way for the new.
Storytelling binds their communities, encoding history, values, and shared dreams into forms that can be sung, carved, or whispered across distant fires. Conflict, too, is a near-constant: humans argue, rebel, compete, and make war with the same fervour that they build cathedrals and pen epics. Laws emerge in response to this volatility, growing into elaborate systems that both protect and constrain the society they attempt to tame.
The human gift, and curse, is that nothing is ever truly finished. Their civilisations are always in motion, crumbling, renewing, striving, as if some ancient grief urges them to outrun the erosion of time itself.
Humanity’s linguistic diversity mirrors its cultural proliferation. Though hundreds of languages flourish across Arora, scholars categorise them broadly into several primary language groups:
- Akralic: Dominant in Daqah, Koraq, Numbe, and Parakh; features melodic cadence and rhythmic syllable patterns.
- Causic: Spoken in Dhagari, Flybatia, and Rashara; rich, flowing, with formal structures tied to ritual speech.
- Efronic: The tongue of Mascra, Firdan, and Rostoq; pragmatic, guttural, favouring compound words for complex ideas.
- Gulish: Used in Cienne and Faela; lyrical and organic, interwoven with references to land and nature.
- Liric: Found in Carthia, Dranar, Ellia, and Rosena; elegant, refined, favouring poetic phrasing even in everyday use.
Each language family reflects adaptations to climate, trade, warfare, and storytelling priorities. Dialects shift rapidly, and multilingualism is common among traders, diplomats, and adventurers. Only the most isolated communities remain monolingual for long.
Religion among humans springs from a deep, visceral need to impose meaning upon the unpredictable cruelty of existence. From grand pantheons to whispered ancestor rites, faith permeates human culture in countless forms.
The Taro Pantheon, the worship of a celestial family of gods governing fate, nature, and destiny, remains the dominant faith across Erothi. Variations abound: some elevate Taro above all others; some weave local spirits into the pantheon’s hierarchy. Elsewhere, Arorism venerates the spirit of the living world itself, and countless smaller sects flourish in borderlands and forgotten valleys.
Even sceptical or agnostic communities often engage in ritual forms that echo older religious practices: blessings before voyages, funerary chants, harvest festivals. For humans, faith is not merely belief, it is tradition, community, and a balm against mortality’s looming shadow.
Despite their diversity, certain taboos persist across nearly all human cultures. The taking of innocent life without cause, incestuous relations, and betrayal of sworn oaths are almost universally condemned, regardless of region or creed. Even where war and ambition flourish, personal treachery often earns more scorn than battlefield slaughter.
Manners and etiquette, however, vary wildly. A gesture of respect in Dhagari might be an insult in Carthia; the concept of hospitality that binds a village in Faela might be alien to a merchant in Numbe. Regional flexibility ensures that while underlying taboos persist, the expression of acceptable behaviour constantly evolves.
Taboo-breaking, too, can be a form of rebellion. Many pivotal human social movements began by challenging deeply entrenched norms, sometimes at enormous cost.
"The dead remember only the stars they once followed; the living invent new constellations with every turning of the age."
History and Relations
The history of humanity in Arora is not a tale of grand inevitability, but of relentless improvisation. Where other species chart slow, careful paths through time, humans surge forward in chaotic waves, building, warring, migrating, forgetting, and remembering anew. Their past is a tapestry of collapsed empires, forgotten prophets, shattered alliances, and desperate voyages across seas and deserts.
Yet through every ruin and every renaissance, humanity endures. Their history is a story written not in monuments alone, but in the stubborn breath of each generation that refuses extinction. Their relationships with the world’s other peoples, like their own internal histories, are complex: marked by curiosity and conquest, trade and treachery, alliance and annihilation.
Origin myths vary wildly. Some human cultures claim descent from divine ancestors shaped by Taro’s hand, others speak of emergence from sacred rivers, trees, or mountains. Yet among scholars, a general consensus holds: humanity first arose in the temperate belts of Erothi, likely along the fertile valleys of the eastern forests and riverlands.
The earliest humans lived as nomadic gatherers and hunters, adapting with startling speed to new environments. Within a few thousand years, they had spread across every habitable zone of Erothi, from the sweltering jungles of Pecha to the frigid wastes of Skiftesvik. Small bands became tribes; tribes coalesced into kingdoms; and wherever surplus allowed, villages blossomed into cities.
Humans crossed the shallow seas into neighbouring continents sporadically: trading with Paokus settlements along isolated coastlines, and encountering Mni-descended peoples whose histories stretched back far longer. Each migration brought both renewal and destruction, an endless tide, remaking the world one battered shoreline at a time.
A cyclical pattern defines human civilisation: settlement, expansion, conflict, collapse, and rebirth. Empires rise with dazzling speed, only to fragment or fall into ruin within mere centuries. Some fall to external conquest; others rot from within under the weight of ambition, corruption, or apathy.
Yet even in collapse, human cultures preserve seeds of future greatness. Traditions evolve, technologies scatter into new hands, and languages fracture into myriad dialects. While the ruins of ancient cities may crumble into dust, the descendants of their builders often forge new realms atop the same bones.
In Arora today, human-dominated realms cover most of Erothi: from the mountain strongholds of Mascra to the merchant cities of Carthia, and the ancient highlands of Caerney. Their political forms are as varied as their tongues, monarchies, federations, theocracies, and anarchic city-states, and none can claim permanence.
Human relations with other sentient species are as mutable as their own internal histories. Pragmatism often overrides prejudice: if trade is profitable, treaties are signed; if resources are scarce, wars are waged without hesitation.
With the Alemni, relations are tense but respectful. Humans view the Alemni’s order and refinement with admiration tinged with resentment, admiration for their longevity and stability, resentment for their arrogance and disdain.
The Varlimni inspire both fascination and frustration: their forest-bound ways are romanticised in human tales, yet human expansionism frequently brings them into territorial conflict.
The Yorimni are respected, and feared, as fellow wanderers of the sea, though landlocked humans often regard them with suspicion, half believing the old sailor tales of curses and blood-oaths beneath the full moons.
With the Urman peoples, especially in border regions, humans oscillate between exploitation and uneasy camaraderie. Their martial prowess is admired, even as their differences are often misunderstood or feared.
The Paokus are rare trading partners, their aloofness both intriguing and infuriating to human merchants. The Seishi, with their short lives and amphibious nature, are treated with a mixture of admiration and pity, regarded as brilliant, fleeting sparks against humanity’s longer flame. As for the Kathuri, humans find them unsettling: their devotion to cosmic balance, and their deadly pragmatic ethics, seem alien to human notions of loyalty and compassion.
- Akra - GeoLoc - Continent
- Arora - GeoLoc - Planet
- Caerney - GeoLoc - Realm
- Cienne - GeoLoc - Realm
- Cogru - GeoLoc - Realm
- Daqah - GeoLoc - Realm
- Dhagari - GeoLoc - Realm
- Dranar - GeoLoc - Realm
- Ellia - GeoLoc - Realm
- Erala - GeoLoc - Continent
- Erothi - GeoLoc - Supercontinent
- Faela - GeoLoc - Realm
- Firdan- GeoLoc - Realm
- Flybatia - GeoLoc - Realm
- Frakal - GeoLoc - Continent
- Koraq - GeoLoc - Realm
- Mascra - GeoLoc - Realm
- Midang - GeoLoc - Realm
- Numbe - GeoLoc - Realm
- Parakh - GeoLoc - Realm
- Rashara - GeoLoc - Realm
- Rosena - GeoLoc - Realm
- Rostoq - GeoLoc - Realm
- Siana - GeoLoc - Continent
- Tianjin - GeoLoc - Realm
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