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Gifts
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Immutable: You grow hungry or tired, but can
survive indefinitely without food, water, or even air. You
age slowly, but you will not die of natural causes.
Durant: You are difficult to injure and heal
quickly.
Glorious: Your physical appearance, in some ways,
stirs strong emotion in all mortals and (to a lesser
extent) Powers. Awe.
Flight: Self-explanatory.
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Handicaps
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Affiliation - Heaven: Beauty is the highest
principle. Justice is a form of beauty. Lesser beings
should respect their betters.
Cheap Date, Argumentative Family: (Family-wide
flaws) All family members are "cheap dates" extremely
easily affected by mind-altering substances. They are also
quite prone to arguing, drunk or not.
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Background
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The Emperor does not talk much about The Emperor's past,
but from what you understand, when the bomb dropped on
Hiroshima, the Imperator Alakh-Mu took advantage of the
situation, and united the destroyed minds into The
Emperor, Duke of Unity. The Emperor appears as a slight
and androgynous Japanese man of radiant beauty who floats
above the ground, rather then walk with the rest of His
servants. The ornate gold robes and formal tuxedoes The
Emperor wears are all beautiful and complex. At a close
examination, His clothes are not of uniform color, but
formed from the images of hundreds of faces, the sole
exception being a simple red mask The Emperor always has
hanging at His belt.
The Emperor can normally be found in His tower in the
Marketplace, near the Wall Street and Tokyo connections,
where He spends much of His time with His people, all
working as one to perfect His tower. The Emperor has a
great interest in workings of the mortal world, rarely
going a day without taking note of His former homeland and
the efforts to unify the planet. Despite His great
interest in the mortals, he seems distinctly inhuman. He
almost never talks about His experiences as a mortal, and
when He does the discussions are brief and unenlightening.
He fails to fault Japan for any of the atrocities it has
committed, only seeing a problem with its "woeful
inefficiency, which was its undoing". He is cold, driven
toward whatever the immediate goal is, quick to anger
(except with His family, he's gotten used to you by now),
arrogant, and never speaks in the first person.
Occasionally, for reasons The Emperor is unwilling to
discuss, He will fly into a rage while at His tower,
ruining several of His works of art, and sending away all
His servants. After a few wine coolers, The Emperor
places the blame of these outbursts on what he calls "The
Idiot Child".
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