Unnamed Kink Setting Worldbuilding 1
Envision elaborate architecture – arches, steeples, towers – all of it built with an eye to defense.
These are cities which have been under siege before; which have been attacked by human foes and by monsters, by magic and by war engines. War isn’t a constant state, but someone might be coming next week is a constant mindset.
Start with the walls: any city in this land is surrounded by at least three tiers of walls; even the smallest town has two tiers. The largest cities have seven to ten, added onto as they have grown over the last hundred years.
Inside the outermost ring is grazing land, crop land. There are these things outside the walls, too; what’s inside the walls is a refuge when attacks come.
There are always houses on this land, unless the wall has just been built. When there is no more grazing land, work begins on another wall outside the last one.
Inside this level is cheap housing. These houses, like ancient Pueblo dwellings, have no doors on the first floor – often on the second floor, either. Access is from the third floor and up, via ladder from below.
There are so many wards around a city that, even if you can fly, flying in a city is almost impossible. Almost everyone uses a ladder.
Back to the buildings. These buildings are often adobe-covered. Deeper into the rings, the buildings have often been joined together; three or six one-family homes are used as the foundation for a taller multiple-family dwelling. The further towards the center you get, the more elaborate the buildings get, and the taller. The houses of the elite in the center are said to touch the sky (although generally no more than 13 stories tall, in modern terms).
As you look at the construction, you will easily note that both buildings and walls appear to be made out of a mish-mash of building materials. A great deal of effort has been made to unify the mish-mash into attractive patterns – sandstone spotted with brick in some sort of checkboard, for instance – but the materials themselves, on very close inspection, have very likely been used for something before.
Indeed, the gates that stud each wall look as if they are built from I-beams and odd slabs of wood, shaped into a pleasing form.
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Ooooo. I like the visuals. I’ve been to Pueblos. They were often built into the side of cliffs… This idea makes sense for places on a plain. One wonders what they do when someone is injured or looses the use of one or both legs for some reason (it seems they are at war a lot).
slings! Or hope they’ve earned a place in a deeper Circle/Ring.
That makes sense. Maybe it earns you such a place, to loose a limb in battle.
I wouldn’t say so, not unless you did so spectacularly. Meritocracy, after all.