Kobagari
Astrographical Information | |
---|---|
Region | Outer Rim |
Sector | Kanz Sector (Halo Frontier) |
System | Kobagari system |
Suns | Han-Koba |
Orbital Position | 4th |
Moons | 2 (Garimatu, Garihemba) |
Coordinates | M-4 |
Rotation Period | 26 standard hours |
Orbital Period | 358 local days |
Planetary Information | |
Class | Moderate Terrestrial |
Climate | Multiclimate |
Atmosphere | Type I |
Gravity | Standard |
Primary Terrain | Diverse (Water, plains, forests) |
Societal Information | |
Native Species | Koba-drakes (oceanic) |
Immigrated Species | Humans, Mirialans, Pau'an, Selkath (oceans) |
Primary Language | Galactic Basic Standard |
Government | National Monarchies |
Population | 320 million |
Major Cities | Veneph'tai (Capital of Veneph), Chagol'tai (Capital of Chagol), Rruda'tai (Capital of Rruda), Parinda'tai (Capital of Parinda), Xiria'tai (Capital of Xiria), various others by nation |
Major Imports | xxx |
Major Exports | Food (yentova products, seafood, koba-ale) |
Affiliation | Galactic Empire (client state) |
Mechanical Information | |
Astrogation | Hyperspace Backwater: Located as far from hyperspace routes as it is, Sacaya adds to all Astrogation checks to plan a course to or from it. |
Knowledges | Outer Rim x • Education x • Lore x • Underworld x • Warfare x • Xenology x |
Rarity Modifier | x |
Other Mechanics | x |
The resources-rich, biome-diverse world of Kobagari was settled several hundred generations ago by settlers from a core worlds monarchy overthrown in revolution by their own population. Fleeing their imminent deaths, the nobility of House Koba and their supporters fled their homeworld and eventually settled here. Five hundred years ago, House Koba's scions fell to infighting which ended in the destruction of House Koba, which dissolved into two separate Houses, House Veneph and House Xiria.
Today, the human Kobagari Nobility are among the richest and most influential powers in the Halo Frontier, and Kobagari's population is measured in the hundreds of millions, with multiple nations each ruled by their own house of nobility.
The Imperial Presence
A place like Kobagari would, under normal circumstances, be assigned an Imperial Governor. Given the fractious nature of the Kobagari people, however, it was decided that the Imperial presence here is purely military, although a member of the Imperial Diplomatic Corps does have offices on the Imperial base on the moon of Garimatu. Garimatu is also home to the Green Moon Academy, one of the galaxy's many academies training stormtroopers and Imperial infantry. These various offices are all located on the same highly-fortified base compound, called the Garimatu Base.
Garimatu Garrison
The primary garrison for Imperial ground troops in the Halo Frontier, the Garimatu Garrison acts as headquarters for the four corps of Imperial Army and the four legions of stormtroopers assigned for Imperial use in this area.
Garimatu Diplomatic Corps
The Empire's diplomacy branch whose ambassadors and negotiators ensure occupied populations adhere to the Emperor's dictates. Although none of the worlds of the Halo Frontier are considered significant enough to warrant the presence of a dedicated ambassador of the Diplomatic Corps, Ambassador Rhugo Kesyk is assigned to the Frontier as a whole. Though Ambassador Kesyk's offices are technically on the base on the Kobagari moon of Garimatu, he maintains a suite of offices in Halo Station as well, where he can be found most of the time.
- Diplomatic Corps: Ambassador Rhugo Kesyk
Green Moon Academy
x
The Kobagari Nations
The world of Kobagari is divided into six kingdoms, the highest echelon of organization being the kings at the top of most of those nations (only the Free Oceans differ, with an elected Minister). The various nations have resisted any attempts by one another or by outside influences to establish a single governing administrator for the entire world, a fact for which the Kobagari are often seen as somewhat fractious and backwater. Ultimately, this isn't terribly surprising: the Houses of the Kobagari frequently fall to infighting with one another, launching vendettas and breaking into wars with alarming frequency.
The Masque Stricture: The Kobagari nations also adhere to the Masque Stricture, a cultural stricture that suggests that the revelation of the face is something reserved for the intimacies of family, romantic relationships, and very close friendships. Among the nobility, this manifests as a tendency to wear actual masks, many of which are emblematic of the noble house in question, and often packed with electronics to give their wearer a variety of useful information. This stricture is observed differently across the rest of the nations, with some nations preferring veils or partial masks (particularly lower-face ones). The lack of a Masque Stricture is one of the things that sets the Free Oceans citizenry apart from the Kobagari.
Species: The Kobagari nations are made up of about 70% humans, in terms of species, with Mirialans and Pau'an making up another 25% of the population. Kobagari citizenry have a slight bias against species that are not at least near-humans, although this bias has faded significantly in the past century or so.
Veneph
When the original settlers of Kobagari came to this world, they settled into the lands of what is now considered the kingdom of Veneph, making it the longest-established region. Its cities are large, and Venephans pride themselves on their urbane sophistication. The people of Veneph consider themselves to be traders and artisans, with a focus on artistic embellishment in their daily lives. For generations, Venephans have been veil-and-hood wearers as part of their Masque Stricture expression, and traditionalists are likely to embellish this look with striking eye make-up in all genders. In terms of garments, Venephans prefer draperies, saris, and robes in their day-to-day garb, favoring brocades and "busy" looking patterns.
Venephans are renowned for their elaborate artistic-yet-decadent carnivals and academies of art and philosophy that form so much of the nation's discourse. Every family nominally claims affiliation with one of these institutions – as patrons if they can afford to do so. Those who cannot still tend to socially attach themselves to one or the other of them, on the basis of their employment or association of family members who have attended them. In Veneph, ideas do not stand on their own merit: if they do not inspire artists to create works that uphold and communicate them, then how much value can such an idea actually have?
- House Veneph: One of the two Houses that came out of the dissolution of the founding House Koba, the Venephs consider themselves inheritors of the ancient culture and artistic traditions the Koba championed. Patrons of the arts on an unheard of scale, a Veneph child who cannot reliably discuss artistic criticism in at least six languages by the age of thirteen are never introduced into society.
- Veneph'tai: Veneph'tai was founded about five hundred years ago, with the elevation of House Veneph to a ruling clan. it is the Seat of House Veneph, centered around the tall spires of the Veneph Palace, whose mirror finish reflects the waters of the inner sea below the cliffs on which it stands. It is also home to the High Opera, a vast edifice which visitors take for a temple complex of some kind, which is in truth a theater. Many troupes perform in any of the two-dozen performance spaces here, through it is dominated by the entirely-Pau'an Guild of Cantors.
Chagol
x
- House Chagol: xxx
- Chagol'tai: xxx
Rruda
x
- House Rruda: xxx
- Rruda: xxx
Parinda
x
- House Parinda: xxx
- Parinda'tai: xxx
Xiria
Culturally speaking, Xirians are resolute and not given to excess, almost as a reflex to their proximity to Veneph, one might argue. Xirian society is regimented, with a strong military leadership. Children are educated in military academies where as they advance through its ranks, the least-suitable for military life are excised from the roster entirely and shunted into industrial-focused trade educations.
- House Xiria: When House Koba fell into infighting, they say that House Veneph inherited Koba's decadence and refinement, while House Xiria inherited its military-industrial tendencies. The Xiria masks are all smooth, silvery surfaces that reflect the faces of those the Xirian noble gazes upon; they eschew the elaborate regalia of other houses in favor of military uniforms.
- Xiria'tai: When House Koba dissolved and the Veneph household rose to prominence, it hunted for the Xirian upstarts. The sea-side fortification that protected House Xiria and allowed it to survive long enough to establish their power soon grew into a vast and sprawling city around the keep. Xiria'tai's harbor is entirely dedicated to the naval powers of the nation of Xiria, without any mercantile or private functions.
The Free Oceans
The cities that make up the Free Oceans are all sub-aquatic, although many of them have "above-wave" platforms that reach above the water level to provide access by speeder or starship to their settlements. A quarter of Free Oceaners are human, Mirialan, or Pau'an, and a full half are Selkaths. The remainder of their population are made up of other species, notably amphibious or entirely aquatic peoples.
Though the Free Oceans settlements include "bubble buildings" (as the local term is for buildings filled with air), most of the citizens are water-dwellers. Even those non-amphibious species receive cybernetic upgrades that grant them amphibious capability, although they frequently have bubble homes and schools for their children. Much of the agriculture and mining of the Free Oceans is aquatic in nature, and forms the basis for the economy for the city-states.
Though the Free Oceans do include a number of small aquatic-agriculture settlements, their truly large cities are all located along the edge of one of the immensely deep and unique trenches found along the floors of the Kobagari oceans. Most of the seas here are quite shallow, no more than a few hundred feet deep, but there exist a small handful of deep trenches that have all evolved very unique geographies and biomes. All of the major cities of the Free Oceans are built perched along the edge of one of these trenches, sometimes even being built slightly down the trench walls into them a short distance. All of these cities are named after the trench in question, with the prefix "M'pak" appended to the name, a Selkath title that literally means "perched." These cities all take advantage of the unique resources and biomes of their home trench as the basis for their prosperity.
- M'pak Tessu: A major mining operation, the walls of the Tessu Trench are rich in mineral ores. In particular, the kinds used to develop electronics circuitry are in ample supply, leading M'pak Tessu to become something of a hub of technological innovation on Kobagari. Half of the world's technological exports come from here, and it is home to an incredible variety of research corporations, think-tanks, and tech academies. It is also the unofficial home of Kobagari cybernetics – unsurprising, given how many Free Oceans adults are made up of species without native aquatic adaptation. In shadier populations, M'pak Tessu is known as the go-to place to acquire cybernetic upgrades of dangerous and even illegal sorts.
Geographical Features
The landmass of Kobagari is about fifty percent oceanic. Its oceans are by-and-large shallow, with only a few uniquely deep pelagic trenches which are filled with highly individualized biomes, entirely separated from others of their sort. The exploration and exploitation of the unique resources of these trenches is often central to the success of Free Oceans settlements.
Weather
X
Native Species
The majority of Kobagari's biological diversity is aquatic in origin, with several cycles of ecological surges out of the ocean by animal species, who then evolve and return to the sea. This has led to a fantastically complex oceanic biome, aided by the incredible variation of terrain on Kobagari's ocean floors.
In contrast, its ground life is almost entirely dominated by birds and other flying animal-life. The Kobagari like to joke that all animals on Kobagari either take to the air or return to the sea, and to some extent this is true. Though a small number of reptiles and mammals can be found dwelling on and in the ground, most of the ground-based animal life on Kobagari are insects and non-webspinning arachnids. Each of the Kobagari Houses has as its insignia a specific species of spider, named for it, which these families believe best highlight their cultural strengths and ideals. Some species of wild spiders grow to quite large sizes, although such species are unheard of outside of the protected wilderness areas that have the space and diversity of life to serve as their hunting grounds.
Seafood and aquatic agriculture products make up a significant portion of most of Kobagari's food, given the portion of the world covered in water, and the nearness of most of its settlements to the oceans. In particular, redhra, the tiny egg-masses of a deep-sea tentacled crustacean, are highly prized for richness of taste and texture, frequently eaten in hollowed out nenji fruits by the very rich, or in small, buttery, hollow yeast rolls by the rest of the populace.
Nenji is another sought-after rare delicacy, although its rarity is entirely artificial, as only the Houses of Kobagari may cultivate the small, delicate nenji trees that grow the soft-skinned purple-green stone-fruits. Over half of the world's nenji produce are used to make nenji-ata, an extremely sweet liquor favored by the Houses of Kobagari. The dregs from producing true nenji-ata are sold to companies that use them to make a far more common alcoholic beverage, koba-ale, by brewing them with yentova, a common kind of grain.
The subsistence-level food of the Kobagari people is yentova-based, and the ubiquitous grain is often processed into a powder or paste and sold off-world to food manufacturers. The people of Kobagari have seemingly a hundred different cultural variants of a basic staple chowder: a rich seafood broth in which yentova has been boiled until soft, thickening the broth, with a few choice vegetables chopped find and added at the last twenty or so minutes of cooking. Different areas on Kobagari have their own variations on this chowder, and "chowder tourism" – traveling to different areas to sample their recipes – is a popular Kobagari past-time among the middle and lower classes (as ground and air travel are quite inexpensive on-world).
The Moons of Kobagari
Kobagari has two moons, one a verdant green and the other a clean blue-white in the night sky.
Garimatu
Savannah/Forest Moon
The closest of the two moons, Garimatu is a verdant green moon made up of about equal proportions forests and grasslands, criss-crossed by deep river canyons that feature stepped waterfalls along many of their lengths. Rather than seem to give precedence to any Kobagari kingdom over another, the Empire has claimed Garimatu as its garrison for Kobagari.
Garihemba
Ice/Water Moon
A mostly-liquid water moon over a core of mineral-rich stone, whichever side of Garihemba faces away from the sun tends to freeze over. Garihemba is home to a number of mining installations that provide a significant portion of the income for the Free Ocean alliance. The water isn't terribly deep here, so many of these installations have towers and spires that poke up out of the water, but all of the work is sub-aquatic, meaning it is largely a selkath concern, with crews drawn from other aquatic species, particularly from folk in Lyn'Kati settlements looking for off-world work.
The Kobagari System
Planet | Type | Moons |
Han-Koba | Sun | None |
xxx | xxx | x |
xxx | xxx | x |
xxx | xxx | x |
Kobagari | Terrestrial (Multi-Biome) | 2 |
xxx | xxx | x |
xxx | xxx | x |
xxx | xxx | x |