QuestionThief of hope and lord of hope powers please. (Your blog is so cool.) Answer

Aw, thank you.

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Thief of Hope

Powers: TC

TC here.  Since Thieves of Hope are one of my main areas of expertise, if you don’t mind, I think I’ll be the one pulling the strings.  The Thief class is the active Steal class, and as such, takes their aspect and hoards it all for themselves.  However, to balance this ability, they start out with a deficit in their aspect.  As such, a Thief of Hope would most likely start out as a horribly pessimistic individual who would go around being a constant downer all the time, constantly explaining to everyone in full detail every reason why their session is doomed to fail.  However, as time passes, and they use their power more, they will receive allllllll the Hope in their session, and become an incredibly optimistic, and maybe even arrogant individual who is surrounded by a group of downers.
While this may not sound too impressive in terms of a combat, or even a support, standpoint, rest assured that a Thief of Hope can pull off some shit that is equally as gamebreaking as anything that, say, a Thief of Light could conjure up.  Don’t believe me?  Well, then picture this.  Imagine the Thief never even having to lift a finger to win a fight due to the enemy surrendering right then and there due to them believing that they cannot possibly win.  Imagine the Black King kneeling at the Thief’s feet, submitting to their immense power that may or may not even exist.  Furthermore, at higher levels, imagine the possible uses for all of that stockpiled Hope?  You remember all of the crazy things that Jake pulled off with the powers of Hope?  While the Thief may not be able to do something quite so impressive, they will definitely come close.  The Thief can manage pretty much anything they set their mind to with the powers of determination and will alone.  By a sheer refusal to give up, the Thief of Hope can do extraordinary things.  They may perhaps be able to even crawl their way over to the alpha timeline from a doomed one simply through means of being too tenacious to give up!  That is the sort of thing that a Thief of Hope would be capable of.

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Lord of Hope

Powers: CA

The Lord and the Muse are the active-passive pair for the Master classes, Embodying their Aspect to the fullest without a chance of inversion by virtue of its ultimate power. These two classes, while the most powerful, are very rare and as such there’s very little we know about them as outsiders, and as such, TC and I can only go off personal theory when we believe that Lords have the powers of Mages, Witches, Maids, Princes, Knights, and Thieves of their Aspect all at once. The utter mastery of their Aspect leaves no room for inversion, no room for doubt, only conquering and ultimate power, even before the Lord makes the Choice.
A Lord of Hope would be a god, and I do not exaggerate when I say this. Combining easily the most powerful Aspect with one of the most powerful classes does this. They would be able to create widespread faith in them and then harvest that energy to wreak utter destruction on whatever inspires their wrath and they would know how to do it in just the right way to spin it to obtain yet more faith to use. They would prove a powerful deity indeed, not to mention a powerful enemy.
As a Mage of Hope, they would know how to inspire the faith that fuels the rest of their abilities, would know how to act like a deity for whatever people they are attempting to act as a deity for. Whether they need to smite all sinners in their sight, whether they need to forgive and prove ever-merciful. A Lord of Hope would be an incredible actor—they would have to be, after all, to efficiently garner the fuel for the rest of their powers.
As a Witch of Hope, the Lord would be able to alter the placement of existing faith, dumping it all into themselves, or, to make it easier to increase the faith they could use for their own power, as a Witch, a Lord could manipulate what it would require for them to inspire faith while they masquerade as whatever deity is the most popular or easy or useful. They could alter what people remember of their god, potentially making it so they only barely have to change their outward persona to fit the deity they were playing as.
As a Maid of Hope, the Lord would, of course, be able to directly create faith in themselves, and create the pure energy of their Aspect to use in battle to defend themselves or attack, but more than that, where the Maid of Hope would be able to create illusory objects of faith, symbols of hope, the Lord might actually be able to physically manifest them. More importantly, this pure energy they could create could perform impossible tasks right in front of everyone! The Lord of Hope, using the Maid of Hope’s powers, could easily pull off miracles with barely a second glance to the people watching, those who faith they are creating.
As a Prince of Hope, we finally have an outright offensive use for the Hope they’ve been stockpiling. With the pure white power of Hope, the Lord could destroy anything standing in their way. Eridan, even while perhaps not the best Prince, certainly proved good at destroying with Hope when he destroyed the Matriorb, thereby destroying the Hope of a new Mother Grub birthed on the meteor. Speaking of destroying Hope, the Lord would be absolute boss at that. Any pesky worshippers of another god desperately clinging to their faith? What faith? Army coming to destroy you, confident in their leaders and themselves? What confidence? Their powers as a Prince are often such a game changer that they can stop a battle before it even starts.
As a Knight of Hope, the Lord would have yet another offensive use for the stockpiled Hope. By arming themselves with Hope, the Lord could simultaneously really REALLY believe in themselves and their abilities, be able to shoot lasers of pure Hope and surround themselves with an aura of that same energy, and shape and wield a weapon constructed out of condensed energy. This weapon would likely be the same sort of weapon as their current strife specibus, but might reflect the weapon they most desire out of those they have seen fitting into their specibus.
And, finally, as a Thief of Hope, as TC earlier stated, the Lord would once again be able to stop a battle before it starts, and would use the Hope they stole to fuel one of their other, more destructive abilities, such as the Prince’s. And you can bet that if a fully recognized Lord of Hope figured out they were in a doomed timeline, they would be the first to hightail it out of there, blasting a hole through paradox space to get to a safer spot—causing a shit ton of trouble for all residents in that timeline, too, no doubt.
The Lord of Hope, as all Lords, have their place in battle on the front lines. This Lord’s appearance often indicates a change in the tides of the battle for better or for worse, be it the underdogs winning, an even fight turning into an outright massacre, or neither side winning with all the forces on either side dying. A Lord of Hope is likely a popular character, friendly while holding strong faith in whatever they believe in, and a quick thinker. But under no circumstances should a Lord of Hope be let into a leadership role in a session with more than two players. It will undoubtedly end in ruin if they are allowed to lead. A Lord of Hope would make the choice thinking they are all the god they are cracked up to be, and will destroy anything and everything for the sake of the world they believe to be perfection.

Anonymous Asked
QuestionWhat kind of powers would a witch of hope have? Answer
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Powers: CA

Well, the Witch and the Heir are the active-passive pair for the Manipulator classes. While the name may imply the Witch class being female-exclusive, there has been no indication of such a thing in the canon. These classes tend to have a more familial bond to their Aspects, the Witch having a more parental bond as compared to the Heir’s filial one. The Witch manipulates their Aspect to conform to them, to do what they desire. They teach it, and with this potential, comes a tendency for the Witch to deviate from their responsibilities by inverting. Jade Harley and Damara Megido (as the Witches of Space and Time, respectively) both inverted, although the former was by natural passivity, and Damara’s was more of a sudden shock. Anyway, both ended up inverting, denying their responsibility to act…well, I would say selfishly, but that’s not quite right…they acted in a way they were predisposed to, Damara immaturely, and Jade as more of a planner than someone to jump right into things.
So, the Witch of Hope, what can they do? Well, the Aspect they would be manipulating is Hope, and Hope is the Aspect of energy and faith. This means that, while the Witch would be unable to create faith in themselves, they could alter the allocation of people’s faith, like how people distribute existing experience points and the like when starting up a tabletop roleplay, or an RPG. While their actions after the fact might inspire more faith in them, they cannot directly make themselves an object of faith. While this might not seem horribly helpful, let me tell you now that faith is a very powerful thing, and a change in faith results in a change of actions. The Witch of Hope will always be defended by people’s intrinsic faith in them, something that, while they cannot understand, they do not have the will or desire to not trust.
In addition to the power of hope and faith and the like, the Witch of Hope would be able to manipulate the pure energy of Hope, teach that energy to weaponize itself, to defend them naturally. Its eyes would extend further than the Witch’s, and when it is finally taught to defend the Witch, it will do so easily and nearly without fail, shooting lasers to get rid of enemies, bringing up shields in response to people’s attacks. This immunity to most attacks will be like an involuntary muscular response in its being the responsibility of something else, but it requires a very skilled Witch, though, so practice, practice, practice. In the meantime, though, shooting people with lasers of pure Hope energy is pretty cool.
This Witch would originally have inverted themselves into the Seer of Rage. They would originally be more passive, able to see why people among their friends are angry. They would intrinsically know if people are angry and why, which they would then tell their friends in the hope of it being fixed. Once they get into the game, though, they stop noticing problems among their friends and start fixing them.
In any case, the natural faith that is placed in the Witch of Hope and their skill on the battlefield and inclination to fixing problems would make them an optimal choice for leader…except Witches don’t do responsibility. They would be a soldier, not the king. Skilled, incredibly so, but they wouldn’t want to go anywhere near the head position of the team, and given their newfound insensitivity to their friend’s anger, that may be all the better for the team.

Anonymous Asked
QuestionIf you have enough Time, could you please do the Maid of Hope, that is, if you both aren't too busy. Thanks anyway! Answer
Anonymous said to fancygodtierpowers:
Um, if you aren’t too busy, then could you please do Maid of Hope. That is, if you don’t mind. Thanks!

No problem.

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Powers: CA

The Maid and the Sylph are the active-passive pair for the Creating classes, both of which hypothesized to be female-exclusive classes, but in a webcomic where a giant snake-like denizen looks like phallic imagery to a green girl, anything goes. Where the Sylph creates their Aspect in relation to others, Maids use their Aspect to give themselves, such as giving themselves more Time in a certain red-blooded troll’s case. Maids are made to freely create their Aspect for whatever reason they deem fit, but fortunately, most of them have the sense to not do this too much.
Hope is potentially the most potent of all Aspects. It is the Aspect of belief, of faith, of optimism, of energy. It is as powerful as its wielder, and the Maid of Hope’s ability to create Hope freely is very, VERY powerful. Beyond simply fostering other’s faith in them, the Maid would be able to foster belief in whatever they viewed as worth having faith in. They could inspire faith in their team’s ability to succeed, to defeat the Black King, or in each team member’s abilities to complete their own individual quests. They could inspire faith in just about anything, really, all it needs is for the Maid to believe in it, too, for it to work. The Maid might even possibly be capable of creating that which there is Hope placed in….That was worded very awkwardly, let me try to explain again: the Maid could create whatever gods or forces people believe in at the time. Illusory? Most likely. More bark than bite? Most definitely. But not entirely powerless. I mean, if you saw whatever or whomever you placed a shit-ton of faith in fighting against you on the battlefield, you’d probably want to give up, or, at the very least, stop fighting until you figure out why they’re there. The Maid of Hope in general would be able to create whatever is needed to make faith once they have completely come about understanding their powers. If to win a battle, their friends thought they needed an army, a fully-fledged Maid of Hope could create that army.
Furthermore, the Maid of Hope would be able to create Hope as pure energy. This could potentially make them a very destructive force, despite their nature as a Creating class, as this energy could basically take any form the Maid wanted: a force field, a laser beam, a shield, a sword, a light source, a spirit bomb, whatever. Anything the Maid of Hope wants that energy to form, it’ll form, and (hopefully) complete its purpose.
The Maid of Hope would be very helpful on the front lines of battle. Their ability to create weapons from the pure energy of their Aspect means they will never be unarmed, even if they should happen to lose their own weapon, and their ability to pump up their allies and confuse their enemies with their own hopes and objects of faith make them a force to be reckoned with, and that’s not even counting their weapons.


Weapons: TC

Well, for once… the Maid part of the title doesn’t really matter, since the Hope part is quite specific.  All Hope players revealed thus far have wielded a gun of some sort, with Eridan and Cronus wielding Ahab’s Crosshairs and Jake wielding his dual pistols.  Whereas usually the Maid wields a weapon pertaining to their interests, that would be restricted now to helping you decide the sort of gun that you/your character would use.  Here are the types of gun specibi available.

  • Automatickind: Shoot enough bullets until you hit something.  That’s the American way!
  • Flamethrowerkind: Now, when Captain America gets here, what we’ll do is use these flamethrower hands to trap him in a fence of fire.
  • Laserkind: For all of you people who have ever wanted a Death Star.
  • Pistolkind: Shoot to thrill…
  • Riflekind: Play to kill
  • Shotgunkind: No, this is not what calling shotgun means!


Land and Quest: TC and CA

Here’s a word list to help you if you’re having trouble in coming up with a good Aspect word for your Hope land. Disclaimer over. Let’s talk about lands.
Well, we had talked about this before, but sadly, we only have information from one land. Eridan Ampora, the Prince of Hope, and his land, The Land of Wrath and Angels. Where Jake English was the Page of Hope, his session was a Void session, thereby making his land inherently different from that of a normal session.
Eridan’s land is fairly easy to dissect. Angels is more than obviously the Aspect word because Wrath is more of a Rage word anyway. Where we don’t know which is the quest and which is the aesthetic, I would hazard a guess that Wrath is the quest word, and that Angels is the aesthetic word, given how the angels were apparently fairly peaceful before Eridan started shooting them, meaning that Eridan’s planet wasn’t inherently wrathful, so that’s not the aesthetic. As a side note, this might mean that Eridan knew a lot more about his planet than he was letting on, and that he knew that Wrath might have been necessary for him to finish his quest.
So: the Maid’s quest obviously wouldn’t be quite as destructive as the Prince of Hope’s, and not quite as impersonal as the Sylph of Hope’s, either, as the Maid’s powers themselves aren’t quite as impersonal, either. The Maid of Hope’s land would have consorts who have themselves two things: a deity they love quite dearly (or perhaps multiple deities, they can look however you want- hell, one of them could even be the Maid, provided the consorts seem unable to recognize their similarities) and quite a large problem. A huge monster running rampant in their land, a disaster like a fire or a flood, or some sort of famine that has a solution the Maid can understand and begin to implement, anything, really. These consorts have no way of helping themselves from this calamity, save for the lot of effort they just can’t seem to muster for some reason. It’s probably hopeless anyway, right (I’m not subtle at dropping hints).
The Maid’s quest is to restore Hope to the land by blessing it as some sort of figure of Hope. Take Christianity (gods know no one else will): the deity is God, the messiah is Jesus, and the  celestial heralds are angels. The Maid could be either (one of) the deity(ies) returned to the planet to solve their problem, the messiah, or some other sort of important figure, like an angel. The Maid will help the consorts solve their problem by creating Hope for them as their religious figure, and by being such a figure of power, the Maid can therefore help them solve all their own problems (although, admittedly, the larger one might need the Maid themselves to intervene). How does one go about motivating these consorts who have been lazily relying on their deities for generations? I don’t know. Impart some Uncle Iroh-esque proverbs on them, make them ingest some caffeine, just make sure they can do it without you in the end. As far as Hope can bring you, no one can manage on it alone.

QuestionThese interpretations are amazing! Would you be willing to do a Sylph of Hope? Also, would Broomkind be a suitable weapon for that class? Answer

Thank you kindly for your statement!  It’s always lovely to hear from followers, and it is, of course, without a doubt, a pleasure to answer your questions!  So without further ado, we shall commence with that.
Oh, and happy Thanksgiving, everyone.

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Powers: CA

As I mentioned before, the Sylph and the Maid are the passive-active pair for the Creation class. While they were once both believed to be entirely female-exclusive, Hussie just about nullified that idea given his verdict on a female Prince’s potential existence. The Sylph would create their Aspect for others, using it to help them, like Aranea Serket, the Sylph of Light, bringing back Terezi’s eyesight (although technically, it didn’t really help her, but it’s not like she really knew that). In any case, the Sylph potentially has the ability to heal using their Aspect, or outright heal their Aspect. The Sylph of Space, Kanaya Maryam, tried to use the Matriorb to heal Space of her race’s absence.
A Sylph of Hope, therefore, would have the ability to create Hope for others. This means a varying degree of things because Hope is a very, VERY powerful Aspect. Hope is an Aspect that has been mentioned multiple times to be a force of unparalleled power and strength, and Hope players have been shown to have quite the destructive power at their side (e.g., Eridan, the Prince of Hope, destroying the Matriorb, Jake, the Page of Hope not only making ‘Mind Dirk’ real enough to threaten Aranea’s life, but also surrounding himself in a blinding halo of pure Hope energy). A Sylph of Hope would be capable of a lot of destruction, despite their being a member of the Creation class, because nothing is more dangerous than Hope, even in the literal sense of the word. We have had so much time to ponder of revolution, recently, given events, and I know now that Hope is a very dangerous thing for a single person to have, let alone a groups of hundreds or thousands. If there is Hope in a group that what they work for will mean something in due time, and they will only work harder because they know that what they are doing will amount to something. So it’s a powerful tool, and to create Hope in others means that the Sylph can make people believe in very powerful and very important things. The Sylph could make allies believe in themselves or in their abilities. On the flip side, the Sylph could make their enemies believe that they are going to lose or that they will miss. If they think that, why would they want to stick around, am I right?
Hope, in its less literal sense, could literally just be pure energy, like the “white science,” that Eridan uses with his wand, or the halo that Jake was surrounded with when Aranea allowed him to reach his full potential. A Sylph could create that energy for others, meaning that they could potentially surround their allies in a protective halo of Hope energy, or supply their allies with energy when they are dead tired or hurt during a battle.
Speaking of injuries, the Sylph’s potential role as a healing class is quite the interesting one. As far as healing Hope is concerned, it means that if Hope lacking, or is outright gone, the Sylph of Hope would be able to create it, and heal both the session and Hope itself by replenishing its supply. They would have to be careful about where they have their teammates and allies place their beliefs, though, because if something happens to go wrong with the object of their faith, then something could end up very wrong. The more interesting of the two healing abilities, though, is the Sylph’s speculated ability to heal others using Hope. Where this could mean healing using the energy that is at their disposal, I like to think that the Sylph of Hope would be able to use their belief to heal people. That’s right: this Sylph, provided they’re well-versed with their abilities and whatever they place their faith in, they can simply pray the injury away. How this looks to others may be something as simple as a short prayer and touching the wound and having it disappear, or more along the lines of glowing miraculous Hope energy emanating from the person and healing the wound, I don’t know. I just know that Hope is a much more flexible Aspect to work with as far as healing because it works as long as the Sylph believes they can do it, and that the object of their faith can help them, be that object themselves or some sort of deity.
So in conclusion, the Sylph of Hope, armed with the proper Hope, is very, very terrifying to be facing off against.


Weapons: TC

Well, I’ve been waiting for a while to do a Hope player, so I thank you for this.  Hope weapons have a very obvious pattern to them, as all of their weapons are some form of a gun.  Eridan and Cronus Ampora, who are the Prince and Bard of Hope, both used Ahab’s Crosshairs, which is a “legendary” harpoon gun.  Jake, the Page of Hope, wields his dual pistols.  However, the only Sylph whose strife specibus has been revealed is Kanaya, and her weapon transforms from something rather unassuming (her lipstick) into something quite intimidating (that bloody chainsaw).  Also, it has been speculated that Aranea uses the Fluorite Octet as her weapon of choice, which also fit the transformation pattern, transforming from something unassuming (dice) into something that would strike fear into the hearts of her foes (a guillotine, a sword, or a large number of other things).  As such, Broomkind is still fair game, but in order to fit the pattern, it would have to be able to transform into a gun of some sort.  I still definitely like that original strife specibus, though, as nobody ever thinks to use it (also CA likes it because of the whole “witch but more magical” imagery that Kanaya set up for Sylphs).  In any case, here are the strife specibi that your Broomkind strife specibus may be able to transform into.

  • Automatickind: WHERE IS THE GUN CONTROL???
  • Flamethrowerkind: Fire indeed hot.
  • Laserkind: IMMA FIRIN MAH LASER!  BWAAAAAH!
  • Launcherkind: A potato gun?  I see why you preferred the broom.
  • Pistolkind: DON’T MOVE OR I’LL SHOOT YOU WITH MY INVISIBLE GUN!
  • Riflekind: Bang bang, badow badow badow, bang bang.
  • Shotgunkind: Aaah, you got me.



Land and Quest: TC and CA

Hope lands. Well, this should be a bit of an adventure, given how we, ONCE AGAIN, only have information from one land. Eridan Ampora, the Prince of Hope, and his land, The Land of Wrath and Angels. Where Jake English was the Page of Hope, his session was a Void session, thereby making his land inherently different from that of a normal session. Once again we recommend this word list to aid you in the creation of your land, in both its quest and its aesthetic.
Eridan’s land is fairly easy to dissect. Angels is more than obviously the Aspect word because Wrath is more of a Rage word anyway. Where we don’t know which is the quest and which is the aesthetic, I would hazard a guess that Wrath is the quest word, and that Angels is the aesthetic word, given how the angels were apparently fairly peaceful before Eridan started shooting them, meaning that Eridan’s planet wasn’t inherently wrathful, so that’s not the aesthetic. As a side note, this might mean that Eridan knew a lot more about his planet than he was letting on, and that he knew that Wrath might have been necessary for him to finish his quest.
For a Sylph of Hope’s quest, though, I would not recommend shooting a bunch of angels with a broom gun, or shooting anything really. See, the Sylph’s quest is to learn to create Hope and faith, rather than destroy it (even if Eridan was technically only destroying a sort of symbol of faith in the angels), so I would recommend a quest that takes an inherently different route. To learn to create Hope, I would recommend a land that has a deity of some sort that they worship and a fair amount of problems. This deity can be a god, a goddess, some sort of animal- hell, it could even be the Sylph themselves (provided these consorts seem unable to recognize them) or maybe their denizen. The Sylph’s job is to provide some sort of faith back into them, I suppose. If you read my Bard of Mind post, you’ll recall something like that in their quest, too. Their job was to make their consorts understand that some sort of disaster was going to have them accept the Bard as some sort of prophet or fortuneteller. The Sylph’s job would be, in a way, similar, but rather than have the object of their faith be the Sylph, they would renew faith in whatever that deity of their consorts is. They would have to, one at a time, solve this group of consorts’ problems and then blame their deity for the solution. They would slowly renew the consorts’ faith in their god, and also solve a lot of problems in their world as well. Faith is a powerful motivator. Eventually, given enough support courtesy of their deity, the consorts would try to make things better themselves.