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[RWBY] RWBY Shorts

Whitley Schnee, Team Leader New
-Whitley pulls a Ruby in this universe and joins Penny's team at Vytal.



He's made the leader thanks to his skills, but frankly, his team is a nightmare.



Whitley: "Penny. Stop fraternizing with the enemy!"



Penny: "But Friend Ruby is my friend!"



Whitley: "No, she's the enemy!"



Penny: "Frienemy!"



Whitley: "No!"



Penny: *puppy dog eyes*



Whitley: "... Fine."



Penny: 'YAY!"



With Ciel...



*Everyone silent in the common rooms*



Ciel: "..... do you ever think of the inevitability of the sun blowing up one day, blotting out all light and life from our planet, sending us all to the welcoming hands of death?"



Whitley: "Who the hell starts a conversation like that?! I just sat down!"



And Indie, Sift Green 's creation...



Team WICP flees a gigantic monster Grimm.



Indy: "I wanna fight it!"



Whitley: "WE ARE NOT FIGHTING THAT GIANT GRIMM!"



Indy: "BUT I WANNAAAA!"



Whitley and Ruby end up commiserating over their headaches in human and Faunus form that are their teams.
 
Beacon the Show New
Had a idea for one of those RWBY is a show AU kind of things.

Velvet and CoCo interview (in)famous star Raven Branwen.



Coco: So what made you come back to Beacon?

Raven: a paycheck and a daughter who wants to work with her mom for once.

Velvet: oh, the rumor was that you were returning because the Beacon franchise was one of your favorites from childhood, being your first job and all.

Raven: *snorts* Favorite huh? I guess it is just because it got me a job but I didn't know anything about the show.

Coco: the most popular franchise in Remnant and you didn't know anything about it? Sure pull the other one.

Raven: Little hard to keep up with current media being homeless and eight years old brat.

Raven: you want the truth? Fine. They needed a ornery little brat for their show, I was there and Salem Mandias, bless the bitch, figured she could save a few bucks hiring a homeless kid and letting part of my pay be in room and board.

Velvet: That has to be illegal!

Raven: no shit it's illegal. It's also the best thing that ever happened to me. I rode that woman's coattails from job to job and stayed off the streets until her husband noticed I never left and got CPS involved.

Coco: wait is that why First Edition Media group split in half?

Raven: well that and a few other things Salem was sweeping under the rug.

Coco: surprised you did any work with Salem and her grimmland productions after that.

Raven: why wouldn't I? Like I said she was good for me. But after a while she started getting more controlling and nasty so I bounced between her studio and Oz's Clocktower films until I set out with my own little talent agency.

Velvet: and now you're working with them again?

Raven: you said it yourself Beacon is one of the most beloved franchises out there. They both wanna do something with it, they have scripts and sets, I have talent and history.

Coco: and a kid trying to make it big.

Raven: try three. Yang, Sun, and saffron.

Velvet: the triplets. You must be so proud.

Raven: right. Proud. Listen this has been...not terrible but I have a meeting in a hour with Salems daughters summer and Ruby so I need to leave.



A few things that didn't make it into this bit.

Raven is a only child in this universe, Qrow is a friend.

A few families have been shook up a bit.

She lied on Suns birth certificate. He was the third born and she was so tired from back to back births when she saw him she just said Son. She just lets them think she meant sun.
 
The Philosophy Knight 6 New
In a dimly lit warehouse on the outskirts of Vale—White Fang banners hanging crookedly from the rafters—Adam Taurus stood in the center of a chalked-out sparring circle, Wilt drawn and Blush sheathed at his hip. A dozen of his most loyal lieutenants formed a loose ring around him, some nursing bruises, others looking nervously excited.

"Again!" Adam barked, resetting his stance. "This time, argue your point properly! Convince me your ideals are worth dying for while you attack!"

A burly bull Faunus charged, swinging a massive axe. "Humans will always oppress us! We take what we deserve!"

Adam parried effortlessly, Wilt flashing red as he absorbed the strike and countered with a precise slash that shattered the man's aura in one hit.

"Weak!" Adam snarled. "That's not conviction—that's whining! Easily defeated, by word and by sword!"

The bull Faunus fell back, groaning on the floor. Adam shook his head angrily.

"Jaune Arc would never settle for such a pathetic monologue!"

The room went dead quiet.

One of the younger recruits, a fox-eared girl, raised a tentative hand. "Uh... sir? You mean the human from Beacon? The one who is like your friend-?"

"MY ETERNAL RIVAL!" Adam roared, then immediately composed himself, sheathing Wilt with a dramatic flourish. "Not a friend. Never a friend. Friends are for the weak. Rivals... rivals are forged in fire and respect."

He turned away, pacing. "He understands. The drama. The philosophy. The sheer artistry of a well-timed Moonslice under a blood-red sky!"

A lieutenant coughed. "Sir, isn't that the third time this week you've practiced that exact speech?"

Adam froze. "I am honing my craft. Preparation is the mark of a true warrior."

Another recruit whispered to his neighbor, "He has that poster of Arc in his quarters. The one from the Vytal Festival promo shoot."

"And action figures," someone else muttered. "Saw him posing them on his desk. Him, Arc, and... Belladonna."

Adam whipped around, mask hiding his flush but not the sudden tension in his shoulders. "Those are tactical models! For studying my rival's form! And Blake is... strategic nostalgia! Nothing more!"

The bull Faunus, now back on his feet, grinned despite the bruise forming on his cheek. "Sure, boss. And you definitely don't do the voices when you play out your big showdown scenes."

He was knocked out with a single blow by Adam.

"I DO NOT PLAY WITH THEM!" Adam shouted, then caught himself. He straightened, adjusting his coat. "I... rehearse. Extensively. 'To the best enemy I ever had!'—delivered at sunset, thunder rolling, auras clashing in a symphony of—"

He realized the entire room was staring.

"...Dismissed," he growled.

The lieutenants scrambled out, trying (and failing) to hide their smirks.

Alone in the warehouse, Adam waited until the last footsteps faded. Then he stalked to his private quarters—a spartan room with a single cot, weapon racks, and yes, a full-wall poster of Jaune Arc mid-Aura Slash, looking heroic and ridiculously earnest.

On his desk sat three hand-painted action figures: Adam (with a mini Wilt), Blake (posed dramatically with Gambol Shroud), and Jaune (complete with tiny Crocea Mors and removable shield). He hadn't figured out the kung fu action yet, but he'd get it soon.

Adam glanced at the door. Locked.

He picked up Jaune's figure, turning it in the light.

"My eternal rival," he muttered, voice softening just a fraction. "One day, Jaune Arc... we will meet again. And it will be legendary."

He set Jaune down opposite his own figure, carefully positioning them for maximum dramatic tension.

Then, in a whisper barely audible:

"'You were a worthy opponent, Adam Taurus... to the best enemy I ever had.'"

He posed Adam's figure with Wilt raised high.

"'No, Jaune Arc—the honor was mine!'"

A pause.

"...And then Blake runs in dramatically, conflicted but ultimately choosing—"

Adam froze, realized what he was doing, and hurriedly shoved all three figures into a drawer.

"NOT WEIRD!" he declared to the empty room.
 
Jaune Once and Future Knight New
This Interaction is Inspired by Jaune SI BS and my own head canon regarding Great Temporal Step Sibling War, I would try to get the characterization as close as possible but it is completely possible I may write something that would stray from the two character's original intent.

I give you, Jaune Once and Future Knight

The hallways of Beacon had changed. Gone were the familiar beiges and muted greys, the practical greens that once defined its quiet discipline. In their place bloomed a richness of hue, velvet purples, burnished golds, deep ambers and radiant yellows, colors that wrapped the academy in defiant splendor.

They circled Beacon like a living mural, a bold refusal against the ever-encroaching darkness that sought to smother the fragile flames of all that yet endured. Each shade felt deliberate, almost reverent, as though the walls themselves remembered what they were protecting. As though someone had taken a color wheel and had decided to overhaul every corner of the institute one spoke at a time.

This rebellion was spoken not merely through saturation, but through form. Hallways once merely prestigious had become unmistakably royal. Ornate detailing traced the arches, tasteful vegetation breathed life into every corner, and the very skeleton of the academy had been reimagined, refined, elevated, and lovingly restored.

It was not the Beacon Jaune Arc knew. It was not his current Academia that he may as well have fought against the world itself to get a chance to attend. No, this Beacon, with its high arches, with marble busts of Heroes he had no recollection of doting every corner, with pupils and faculty out numbering the busiest day of his beloved school..... this was not his Beacon.

More evidence that this was not his world.

Vale had changed, Mistral had changed, Atlas had no mention of but in its place people spoke of the Icy plains of Epimetheus.

As he walked through this living palimpsest of layers of modern and classic, of various countries, he pondered upon his destination.

Three days since he woke up in this World, after already being transmigrated into this body, he had not expected to be part of another multiversal picnic stop, but here he was after attending the reception of his friend/ex-bully he had gone to sleep in the arms of his lovely girlfriend, someone that he had much difficulty accepting in the beginning of this newly topsy-turvy possible after life of his.

He had not but the clothes on his back, waking up in the old apartment he had rented in Vale when he had started his journey to Beacon proper, with an envelope on his chest that spoke to him about this new world in a very utilitarian but sparse detail.

After much silent panicking on his part he had decided to follow the advice of the letter, written in a script that was oddly reminiscent of his own penmanship but more flowy and legalese in its formatting. What he had learned of this world had shaken him, but that just made this trip all the more important.

Now here he was, after getting an anonymous message on his scroll that accompanied him, he walked towards the elevator that took him towards the Headmaster's Office.

He looked into a mirror, a much more regal, mature, older mirror.

The man waiting for him wore command as effortlessly as a tailored coat.
The man waiting for him wore a long, dark overcoat, tailored close and finished with a high collar that framed his face like a uniform refined by time. Muted brass buttons ran down the front in neat, deliberate rows, military in origin, but stripped of insignia or decoration.

The influence of command lingered in the details: squared shoulders, faint piping along the seams, a controlled flare at the waist. Beneath the coat, a crisp white shirt and narrow dark cravat completed the look, formal without excess. Polished boots and pressed trousers spoke of discipline rather than display.

"I didn't know I needed glasses, but it seems that's just another new thing I would need to keep track of", spoke Jaune to this apparent doppelganger of his.

"These? Habit, mostly. They help me focus. A physical reminder.", spoke the man standing in front of a large desk, standing calmly. One would expect him standing like a warrior or a trained soldier, calm but ready for action, but to Jaune's reading he came off as completely civilian. Odd.

"Now then, since it is somewhat clear to you what is happening, let's not tire ourselves and sit, we have much to discuss", said the strange man, as he politely pointed Jaune towards a chair in front of his desk while he took to sitting on the other side of the desk, on a grander chair.


........

As Jaune sat, he agonized over what to say but as if to save him some pain the man opposite to him spoke.

"Let's cut to the chase, yes this is not the Remnant you have come to know, do not worry you will be sent back to your house very soon, and no time would have passed, it took some effort to arrange such fortuitous circumstance but it is well worth it"

"Good then let me ask you another easy question, why?" asked Jaune.

"Perspective mostly", replied the probably older version of him, "To show you that even after the worst of times, humankind, including Faunus in that definition of course, would prosper." he said, "That would be the standard answer I would give you, because I know you realize the cracks underneath the facades"

To that Jaune replied, "....This peace, is somehow even more troubling than the one Ozma established, 16 years after her defeat, and even now you are running this place as if the webs underneath could dissolve."
Jaune continued after swallowing a little, "In that letter, you pointed me towards to things to look for, look underneath the underneath, and it all told me of a world that would heal, but the Doctors would have to fist fight the Gods for every day more"

For a moment, there was nothing but silence but Jaune spoke, "So what do I call you? Jaune Arc? That's still who I am in my head. Right now, you feel… further away from that than I do"

"Call me whatever you want, though Arc has been a common one to refer to me after so many years", spoke the more experienced looking man.

"Then tell me, Arc, you know a lot about what I am, not just externally but internally, spiritually, tell me what is the point of all this, not just this Remnant but me being me , why did I end up riding shotgun in someone else's life while the world suddenly hinges on things that shouldn't matter this much?", fervently asked Jaune.

"Its not up to us to decide what the collective rolling averages of the forces of the world consider important." said Arc, now looking a little sullen but still confidently looking in Jaune's eyes.

"I love this world, its people, what it represents." he said

"I love this world simply because it is where everyone I love lives, where I keep all my stuff ha ha ha, but it is much more than that, a place where stories come to rest, yet for every scrape of peace we earn, several more factors work to accelerate entropy. The fact of the matter is I simply could not accept the cost it came with, the sacrifices all those that should have lived and prospered had to make while the enemy sat in its grand halls."

"That still doesn't explain why all this? Why Jaune Arc and I?" asked Jaune.

"Because I do not have anyone else to fall back to, not in this world; not in any other", said Arc, "I am Jaune Arc, and only his choices do I have control over, you know of a world where his children found their way to him despite the divergent timelines, yes?"

"Consider yourself in a situation where both the worlds have some problem but different approach towards the solution."

"My world is a Pine that is caught in the fires, it may not be able to save itself, but as long as the seeds remain, life wins. I want to make places where everyone I have come to love may find peace."

"All that but it doesn't explain to me what happened to the Jaune whose life I upended"

"You didn't upend anyone's life, take that fear of being a parasite out of your mind.", said Arc, "You have given this story to everyone around you that you are an Oracle, yes?"

"Well that is the one that fits the best."

"Then let me ask you this, why do you remember everything in such a stark detail? Why despite being uncountable eons away from primary sources you remember things in such a reliable manner?" daringly challenged Arc, to which Jaune fell silent. He looked for answers that called to him, but as if some final push was required he couldn't make it on his own.

"Let's go a step further even, you are a good man, so you have self control, but what has made you noble, resourceful, and so eager to jump into the fires? Beyond the call of duty, thinking of yourself as someone who doesn't belong, beyond just your unique situation"

Arc removed his glasses, rubbing his eyes and then calmly set them down. As he focused on Jaune again, Jaune noticed how much darker his eyes looked, as compared to his Father's.

Father.

Jaune's eyes dilated, as he took a sharp breath, looking intently at Arc, now starting to pin point what he was getting at,"...This wasn't completely random, it was orchestrated, at least to some extent, and Jaune, Jaune, isn't completely gone is he? I am him, and he is ...me?"

That ease with which he noticed things about his, Jaune's parents, how he could integrate into this life, how he could just look into the eyes of this stranger and call him his reflection.

"
In that infinitesimal moment when you woke up, Jaune had a choice, Destiny made a tryst with him, the Tree, the Blacksmith, the force of nature you call Juniper, whatever thing you could think of, they rolled a dice."

"Truth is, this world wants to live, wants to prosper, yet things have gone FUBAR, so now it's carpet bombing solutions, Moses became the Noah for the other world, you simply became for this."

"You talk of the world as if it is....alive, as if there is a giant consciousness that silently judges it all"

"It is not exactly that. Think of it as the halfway point between Evolution and genuine Intelligence. It simply spread its roots to where it would keep it more alive, but then some took notice of it and decided to be proactive"

"Then where do I settle on this? Just an unwilling observer folded into it this chaos?" asked Jaune.

"I.... I am sorry, sometimes it does things no one is capable of predicting, believe me I have no control over the processes or what it thinks, but please understand, if there is a solution I am looking for it"

".....Literally Grand Ordered me into this, great. Want some free advice?" asked Jaune.

"Hmmm", inquisitively gestured Arc.

"Stop looking for these kind of things. As much as I was not a part of this, it's now personal, yeah it could be due to our shared life experiences, could be thousand other factors, but now in for a penny in for a pound I am seeing this through, I may not be this Hero/Deuteragonist like this blonde one, but I got my own pride as a man dammit, I know whatever happened to me wasn't probably nice or peaceful that my Soul ended so so far away from home, So instead of trying to be like Ozma junior, start looking for other solutions to your problems as well."

"Thank You, It really does help a lot", said Arc, "Now, let's get to my favorite part, shall we?".

"You have a favorite part in all of this?" asked Jaune quite befuddled.

"Would planning ways to Bitch slap Salem, Politically sweet talking all the greedy bastards on the planet into donating their Spine, and conveying designs and strategies to... what do they call it? Bring High Impact freedom to the Grimm count as a favorite part?" asked Arc.

"....Well, guess there had to be meat in this stupid sandwich of a world finally" said Jaune, "Talk shop, though if I could get something to drink, it would be golden."

"Agreed, I am partial to cold coffee, you?"

"Get me the same, Please and Thank You."

"Alright, and I suppose hard drinks for the After Party?"

"Ehhh, I wasn't gonna but if you insist." replied Jaune

They both laughed as Arc messaged the intercomm.

Two men sat in a grand office, planning, preparing.

Darkness approaches from all corners, it is ceaseless, blighted, voracious, yet those who stand against it are oft of remarkable ken.
 
Jaune Arc, Single Father 9 (Revised) New
The boutique district in Vale's upscale quarter was everything Weiss Schnee had grown up with: polished marble sidewalks, storefronts with gold lettering, mannequins dressed in fabrics that cost more than most people's monthly rent. She had insisted on this outing the moment she noticed Mia's favorite dress had become a crop top on her rapidly growing frame.

"Mia deserves clothes that fit," Weiss had declared in the common room two days ago, arms crossed, tone leaving no room for argument. "And Jaune, you have the fashion sense of a blindfolded Beowolf. I'm taking you both shopping. No excuses."

Jaune had opened his mouth to protest the expense, but Pyrrha's gentle hand on his shoulder and Nora's enthusiastic "DO IT, WEISS! MAKE HER THE CUTEST KITTY GIRL EVER!" had drowned him out. Even Yang, Blake and Ruby had allowed that letting Weiss splurge on Mia would do more good than harm-Or at least keep her from buying things for Mia Jaune wouldn't get to see.

So here they were on a crisp Saturday morning: Weiss in a tailored white coat and pale-blue scarf, Jaune looking mildly overwhelmed in his usual hoodie and jeans, and Mia skipping between them, one tiny gloved hand in each of theirs. Her fluffy ears poked out from beneath a beret Weiss had insisted was "seasonally appropriate."

Mia's eyes were saucers the moment they stepped into the first store-Les Petites Étoiles, a children's boutique that smelled faintly of lavender and new cotton. Racks of dresses in every color of the rainbow lined the walls, and a miniature carousel of hair accessories spun lazily near the register.

Weiss released Mia's hand with the air of a general unleashing troops. "Go. Explore. Touch everything. I need to see what styles you like."

Mia did not need to be told twice. She bolted, light-up sneakers flashing, and disappeared behind a display of tutus.

Jaune watched her go, fond and faintly anxious. "She's going to want one of everything."

"That's why I brought two arms and an unlimited credit limit," Weiss said dryly, steering him toward the dress section. "Relax, Arc. This is my treat."

He rubbed the back of his neck. "Weiss, you don't have to-"

"I want to." She cut him off, softer this time. "Let me do something nice for her. For both of you."

Jaune's protest died in his throat. He just smiled back warmly, and got one in return. He had to admit, he liked her smile.

They found Mia already buried in a rack of velvet dresses, ears twitching with delight. She emerged triumphant, holding a dark purple dress with tiny embroidered stars along the hem.

"Look, Papa! I'm a night sky!"

Jaune's smile was helpless. "You absolutely are."

Weiss plucked the dress from her hands with an expert eye. "Excellent taste. The color complements your ears. We'll take it in her size—and the matching coat." She handed it to the hovering attendant without looking. "Next."

The next hour dissolved into a whirlwind of cotton, corduroy, and sparkles. Mia tried on party dresses, practical jumpers, a tiny leather jacket that made her look like a pint-sized biker ("Auntie Yang will love this," she declared solemnly), and a winter coat with faux-fur trim that turned her into a walking snowball. Weiss approved, vetoed, and occasionally overruled Jaune's hesitant "Do we really need three cardigans in the same color family?"

"Yes," Weiss said each time, "because children grow like weeds and pastel pink is timeless."

Jaune eventually stopped arguing and started carrying the growing pile of bags.

At one point Mia disappeared into a fitting room with a particularly poofy lavender dress. The attendant took it in to help her, leaving Jaune and Weiss alone among the racks of miniature formalwear.

Silence settled, comfortable but heavy. Jaune fingered the sleeve of a tiny blazer, eyes distant.

"She would've loved this," he said quietly.

Weiss didn't pretend not to know who he meant. "Katie?"

He nodded. "She always talked about dressing Mia up. Said she wanted to dress our daughter up in every which way, make her feel like a star. Her own mother passed away when she was young, so... She wanted to be there for her. Cooking, cleaning, dressing up, braiding her hair." His mouth twisted.

"I'm… not great at the braiding part yet."

Weiss watched him carefully. "You're doing remarkably well at the rest."

Jaune's laugh was soft and self-deprecating. "Some days it doesn't feel like it. I'm twenty, Weiss. Most people my age are worried about midterms and dating. I'm worried about whether I remembered to pack extra snacks and if I'm selfish for dragging a four-year-old to a combat school because I can't let go of a promise I made to a dying woman."

Weiss's expression softened in a way she rarely allowed in public. "You're honoring a promise to someone you love. There's nothing selfish about that."

He looked at her then, really looked. "You sound like you understand."

She glanced toward the fitting-room curtain to make sure Mia was still occupied, then spoke, voice low. "My father wasn't… a father. He was a master. Every lesson, every outfit, every social function was designed to make the Schnee name shine brighter. I learned early that love was conditional on performance." She smoothed an invisible wrinkle from a nearby dress. "Coming to Beacon was the first decision I ever made purely for myself. Not for the company, not for Father's approval. Just… me."

Jaune was quiet, listening.

"I used to think that made me selfish," she continued. "Wanting freedom, wanting to be a Huntress instead of a heiress. Wanting to sing because it made me happy, not because it polished the brand." She met his eyes. "But watching you… you're chasing a dream for Katie, for Mia, for the people you want to protect. That's not selfish. That's the opposite."

Jaune swallowed. "I want to be the kind of man she believed I could be. The kind who keeps people safe. Mia, my team, my friends… people I haven't even met yet. I want to stand between them and the darkness." He gave a small, wry smile. "Selfish dreams can still serve something bigger, I guess."

Weiss's lips curved-almost a smile, almost something warmer. "Exactly."

The curtain swished open. Mia twirled out in the lavender dress, skirt billowing like a princess. "Well?" she demanded.

Weiss's composure snapped back into place, but her eyes were soft. "Perfect. We're taking it."

They would have left the final store with enough bags to require two trips to the bullhead if Jaune hadn't put his foot down, but number of shopping bags was still immense. Mia was half-asleep on Jaune's shoulder, new beret crooked, clutching a stuffed snow leopard Weiss had slipped into the pile when he wasn't looking.

Weiss led them to a small corner café she claimed had "the best éclairs in Vale." The place was all warm wood and soft jazz, with a patio overlooking a quiet courtyard fountain. They claimed a table outside; Mia perked up the moment hot chocolate was mentioned.

Jaune eyed the menu prices and winced. "Weiss, you really didn't have to buy all that. I can pay you back-"

"Absolutely not." She cut him off with an imperious wave. "I wanted to. Consider it an investment in Mia looking presentable when she inevitably charms the entire student body."

"But-"

"Jaune." Her voice gentled. "I have more money than I could spend in three lifetimes. Father made sure of that. Let me use it on people who matter. On friends." She paused, then added with a small smirk, "You can buy lunch next time. Fair?"

He exhaled, relieved. "Deal."

Mia sipped her hot chocolate with both hands, whipped cream on her nose, ears twitching happily as she swung her legs under the table. Jaune ordered sandwiches and soup; Weiss got tea and an éclair she insisted on splitting three ways, when she wasn't cooing and playing with the eager Mia.

While they waited, Mia started telling a rambling story about how her new snow leopard plush was actually a secret Grimm hunter in disguise. Jaune listened with the patient, adoring expression that always made Weiss's chest feel oddly tight.

The food soon arrived. Jaune cut Mia's sandwich into tiny, manageable triangles, and Mia tore into it happily. This gave the adults a moment of relative quiet.

"You're a good father, Jaune," Weiss said suddenly.

He froze, fork halfway to his mouth. "I… try to be."

"No. You are." She set her teacup down precisely. "You're responsible, patient, loving. You put her first every single day, even when it's hard. Even when you're exhausted. That's… rare."

Jaune's ears turned pink. He ducked his head. "Thank you, Weiss. That means a lot. Especially coming from you."

She allowed herself a small smile. "I only speak the truth."

Mia chose that moment to yawn hugely, nearly toppling out of her chair. Jaune caught her instinctively.

"Someone's ready for a nap," he murmured, settling her against his side. She was out within minutes, head pillowed on his arm, new coat draped over her like a blanket.

Weiss watched them, something soft and unfamiliar unfolding behind her ribs.

This feels suspiciously like a date, her mind whispered gleefully.

Lunch with a friend and his daughter, she corrected sternly.

A friend whose eyes crinkle when he laughs, who carries more weight than any twenty-year-old should have to, who looks at you like you hung the moon when you buy his child hair ribbons.

Shut up,
she told the voice. He's a widower.

But she didn't look away when Jaune glanced up and smiled—small, tired but grateful and warm.

"Thank you," he said again, quieter. "For today. For all of it."

Weiss lifted her chin, composing herself. "You're welcome. Though next time, we're doing shoes. Those light-up sneakers won't match formalwear."

Jaune groaned dramatically. "My wallet weeps in advance."

"Your wallet is safe. I've already decided. And it will stay that way until I say otherwise."

"Yes ma'am..."

- - -

Some White Knight for those of you craving that in this little story.
 
Jaune Arc, Single Father 10 (Revised) New
The hallway outside Team RWBY's dorm was supposed to be secure: familiar faces, locked doors, the usual Beacon bustle. And Mia Arc was supposed to obey the rules of staying where it was safe. But Mia, ever the explorer, had slipped away during a game of hide-and-seek with Ruby's cloak as camouflage. One moment she was giggling behind a potted plant; the next, her tiny feet had carried her two doors down to a room she'd never seen open before.

The door to Team CMEN's dorm was cracked just enough for a curious four-year-old to squeeze through.

Inside, Cinder Fall stood in front of a full-length mirror, adjusting the fall of her elaborate red dress, the golden accents catching the lamplight like dying coals. Emerald Sustrai lounged on a bed, scrolling idly through her scroll, while Mercury Black leaned against the wall, boots kicked up on a chair, practicing lazy spins of one of his taloned feet.

The soft patter of small shoes made all three freeze.

Mia stood in the doorway, ears perked high, eyes wide with wonder. She took in the room like it was a treasure cave—then zeroed in on Cinder.

"Your dress is so pretty!" she announced, voice bright and fearless. "It's like a villain princess! But the good kind!"

Cinder's visible eye narrowed a fraction, but her cover as the poised, mysterious transfer student held. She turned slowly, forcing her lips into something that might pass for a smile among people who didn't know better.

"Thank you," she said, voice smooth as silk over steel. "That's… very kind."

Mia toddled closer, undaunted, clutching her stuffed bunny by one ear. "And your hair is all fancy! Can I have hair like that? Pleeease?"

Emerald sat up, exchanging a quick, panicked glance with Mercury. Mercury just raised an eyebrow, clearly entertained by the sudden hostage situation of the cuteness variety.

Cinder hesitated—only a heartbeat—then gestured to the vanity chair. "Why don't you sit? I'll show you."

Mia scrambled up without waiting for a second invitation, kicking her legs happily. Cinder picked up a brush from the vanity—ebony handle, surprisingly gentle bristles—and began working it through Mia's soft blonde curls. She sectioned the hair with practiced precision, twisting it into an elegant half-up style that echoed her own severe, sweeping waves.

Mia watched in the mirror, utterly enchanted. "It's like magic! You're really good at this!"

Cinder's movements stayed careful, almost mechanical. "Practice," she murmured.

Emerald leaned forward, forcing enthusiasm into her voice. "Hey, kid, you like my hair too?"

Mia twisted to look, nearly toppling off the chair until Cinder steadied her with one hand. "It's super cool! All green and bouncy! Like a forest fairy!"

Emerald's cheeks colored slightly-she wasn't used to compliments. "Uh… thanks?"

"And you!" Mia pointed at Mercury with the authority only a four-year-old could muster. "You're super neat! Your legs are like robot boots! Do they go zoom?"

Mercury barked a short laugh, dropping his feet to the floor. "Kid, you have no idea."

The door suddenly burst open.

Jaune stood there, breathless, relief crashing over his face like a wave. "Mia!"

"Papa!" She hopped down and ran to him. He scooped her up instantly, holding her tight against his chest.

"I'm so sorry," he said to the room at large, though his eyes lingered on Cinder with extra caution. "She wandered off during hide-and-seek. Thank you for… keeping an eye on her."

Cinder set the brush down with deliberate calm. "It was nothing," she said, voice perfectly pleasant. "She's a charming child."

Mia waved enthusiastically over Jaune's shoulder. "Bye, pretty lady! Bye, forest fairy! Bye, robot boots!"

Emerald managed a weak wave. Mercury smirked and saluted with two fingers.

Jaune backed out, murmuring another apology, and pulled the door shut behind him.

Silence settled over the room like dust.

Cinder stood motionless in front of the mirror, staring at her own reflection-or perhaps through it.

Emerald broke first. "…You okay?"

Cinder's lips curved, but the smile didn't reach her eye. "Of course. I was simply maintaining our cover."

Mercury's smirk widened, but he said nothing-just leaned back again, boots thudding onto the chair.

Cinder turned away from the mirror, the ghost of small fingers still warm in her hair where Mia had patted it in delight.

She didn't speak again for a long while.

- - -

And just the tiniest bit for the ArcFall fans.
 
Stop Being Racist, Blake! (Revised) Final (For Now) New
All's well that ends well... Sort of.

- - -

In the cozy chaos of Team JNPR's dorm room, the air was light with the usual banter. Ren was brewing tea, Nora was sprawled across her bed tossing a stress ball at the ceiling, and Jaune was fiddling with his sword and its maintenance kit. Pyrrha sat cross-legged on her bed, her fingers nervously twisting a strand of her red hair. The conversation had drifted to Jaune's past, and Pyrrha saw her chance to probe—delicately, she hoped—about this Katy Sith, the cat Faunus ex who'd been haunting her thoughts since Ruby's date proposal.

"Um…" Pyrrha started, her voice soft but deliberate. "So… You had a girlfriend?"

Jaune glanced up from his sword, oblivious to the weight of her question. "Hm? Oh, yeah. Katy Sith! She was great!"

Pyrrha's smile was tight, her heart doing a nervous little flip. "Was she?"

"Yeah!" Jaune grinned, his eyes lighting up with nostalgia. "We were childhood friends! Heh! I actually thought I'd marry her."

Pyrrha's breath caught, her fingers freezing mid-twist. "Did you?"

"But we decided we weren't going to," Jaune said, shrugging as he polished his blade. "We wanted other things out of life, ya know?"

Relief washed over Pyrrha, her shoulders sagging as her smile softened. "Oh! Oh… Yeah…"

Nora, catching the exchange like a hawk, sat up, her stress ball forgotten. "So! How far did you two get?" she asked, her grin positively devilish.

Jaune's polishing slowed, a faint blush creeping up his neck. "…"

Pyrrha's eyes flicked to him, her curiosity now tinged with dread. "… Jaune?"

"I uh…" Jaune cleared his throat, his blush deepening. "I really shouldn't say."

Pyrrha's expression brightened, latching onto his reticence as a lifeline. "Oh, you're being so polite and gentlemanly!"

"Yup!" Jaune said, seizing the escape. "How I was raised!"

Nora snickered, Ren let out a soft chuckle, and even Pyrrha giggled, the tension breaking like a wave. But Pyrrha's curiosity, once sparked, refused to die. She leaned forward, her voice carefully casual.

"… So… Um… How far did you two go?"

Jaune's hands fumbled, nearly dropping his sword. "Um… Well uh… It's not important, right?"

"Of-Of course not!" Pyrrha said quickly, her cheeks flushing as she waved a hand, trying to play it off.

"Right, right…" Jaune muttered, focusing intently on a nonexistent smudge on his blade.

A beat of silence hung in the air.

Nora grinned.

"You totally fucked, didn't you?"

"NORA!" Jaune yelped, his face turning a shade of red that rivaled Pyrrha's hair. His sword clattered onto the floor as he flailed, mortified.

"Well, at least you'll handle Blake just fine," Ren observed.

- - -

Blake Belladonna stood at the Bullhead port in Vale, her heart fluttering with a mix of anticipation and nerves. She'd chosen her outfit carefully—a white sweater that hugged her curves, a black skirt, and stockings that gave her the look of the naughty, book-loving girl she secretly fantasized about being. Her bow twitched slightly as she scanned the crowd, waiting for Jaune.

The rumble of an engine caught her attention, and her eyes widened as Jaune Arc rolled up on a Wayland 205 heavy offroad bike, its sleek frame gleaming under the Vale sun. His blonde hair was slightly tousled from the ride, and his easy smile sent a flush creeping up Blake's cheeks.

"Oh! Uh… I didn't know you had a motorcycle," Blake said, her voice betraying her surprise.

Jaune dismounted, patting the bike fondly. "Well, I couldn't travel from Radian all the way on foot. Besides, my dad gave it to me for my birthday. I've uh, I've kept it in storage because it's cheaper." He flashed a warm smile. "But it's a good day to take it out for a spin. Don't you think?"

Blake's blush deepened, her ears twitching beneath her bow. "S-Sure."

She climbed onto the back of the motorcycle, her arms wrapping around Jaune's waist, her heart racing as the engine roared to life. He pulled into traffic at a steady pace, but Blake's mind was anything but steady. As the wind whipped past, her imagination spiraled into one of her favorite fantasies.

"Even if it's just us against the world, Princess," the noble Biker Knight Tetsuo swore, dodging explosions with deft precision, "I will never leave your side!"

"Oh, Tetsuo~!" Princess Nekomata cried, clinging to him tightly as her kimono rode up over her smooth, long legs—


"We're here!" Jaune's voice snapped Blake back to reality.

"Ah! O-Oh! Good," Blake stammered, her face burning as she slid off the bike.

Jaune parked, and they walked toward the Celsus Bookstore and Coffee House, its charming facade promising a cozy escape. He glanced at her, his tone casual. "Do you want to browse or get lunch first?"

"I… I think lunch would be nice first," Blake said, smoothing her skirt.

"Works for me," Jaune replied with a grin.

They settled at an outdoor table, the sun casting a warm glow over the cobblestone streets of Old Vale. The waitress brought their coffees and teas, and Blake scanned the menu, her gaze drifting to the bustling city around them. The architecture was stunning, the people moved with purpose and joy, and yet… a shadow lingered in her mind.

Jaune's voice broke through her thoughts. "Blake?"

"Sorry… I just…" Her bow twitched, betraying her unease. "I guess I just feel… A little guilty. You're being very kind to me and… And I realize I haven't been very kind to you."

Jaune tilted his head, his expression softening. "Well… I mean… No."

Blake's scowl was immediate, her eyes narrowing.

"Quickly," Jaune added, raising his hands defensively, "you're doing okay now though."

Blake's frown deepened, her voice quiet. "I… I guess I just… I don't know what I'm supposed to say or do."

"Just talk," Jaune said, his tone encouraging. "About something you like. I mean, I don't read a lot of novels anymore, but I do like to read for fun."

Blake raised an eyebrow, skeptical. "I've only seen you with X-Ray and Vav."

Jaune chuckled, unfazed. "I mean, yeah, but that's just like, potato chip reading. My parents were actually really big on the classics."

Blake's interest piqued, her ears perking slightly. "Oh? Like what?"

"Well, um, Aristos' Physics, Politics, Metaphysics… Bardic's plays… The theological works of Saint Edmund, Eustace, and Lucy… And lots of classic kids' books. Ya know, Mark Clemens, T. Selliot, Yules Tern…"

Blake lit up, a small smile tugging at her lips. "I grew up reading a lot of those too, actually." Her smile grew. "I still do from time to time."

"No kidding? That's great!" Jaune's grin widened. "I mean, the CCT signal wasn't always the best out in Radian until my teens, so I had to entertain myself with a lot of other things."

"Same," Blake said, her voice warming. "Fishing, hiking… There are a lot of beautiful beaches around Menagerie, and coral reefs. Despite how dangerous it is, I always liked going out. Not so much swimming, but I loved watching whales and fishing. My father cooked a lot of food on an open fire."

"Hey, mine too!" Jaune said, leaning forward. "We had the mountains, and I hiked a lot. There's the Hanging Lake above Radian, and there's this beautiful waterfall! My uh…" He screwed up his face, counting on his fingers. "Great-Great-Great Grandfather made it as a wedding gift for his bride, by redirecting a mountain river. It's called the Love Story Waterfall."

Blake's eyes sparkled. "I've heard of that! I always wanted to see it…"

Their conversation flowed effortlessly, jumping from literature to childhood adventures. Their food arrived—sandwiches and salads—and they kept talking, barely pausing to eat. After paying, they wandered into the bookstore, their discussion growing more animated.

"I always thought Plateau was overrated as a philosopher," Blake said, browsing a shelf of dusty tomes.

"I dunno, I did like the dialogue he wrote about his teacher and the giant dragon monster," Jaune replied, picking up a book and flipping through it.

Blake smirked. "Heh. I suppose you would remember that one."

"Well, he is talking about how a creature that is so alien to our experience would see us as… As abominations," Jaune said, his tone thoughtful. "If it was like, a pure ideal in physical form. How something pure, even if it's pure evil, would be out of place in a world that's compromised like Remnant. That's kind of neat."

Blake's smirk faded, replaced by a grudging nod. "Hmph. His ideal 'Republic' is the very worst kind of tyranny."

"Yeah, but, nobody's perfect," Jaune said, making a face. "Urgh. My brain feels like it's turning rusty gears remembering all that stuff."

Blake glanced at him, her expression softening. "You know a lot more about it than I would expect a… Um, farmboy to know. No offense."

"None taken," Jaune said with a grin. "My mom wanted me to be a doctor, like her. But well… I wanted to be a Hunter more. Like my dad… And her."

Blake nodded, her gaze distant. "I see… My parents wanted me to take over their… Business as well. I worked very hard with the movement. I studied, I protested, I wrote letters… It just… It never seemed like it was enough."

Her frown returned, heavier this time. "I thought that… That political power only grows out of the barrel of a gun. That if you wanted real change to happen, you needed to force it."

Jaune's own expression grew serious, his eyes meeting hers.

"… Turns out it's… Not that simple," Blake admitted, her voice barely above a whisper.

"No," Jaune agreed softly, offering a small smile. "I used to ask my great-grandma why she didn't just force people to do what she wanted. She was… Very powerful in her youth. Everyone in the town respects her deeply. But bad things still happen."

Blake tilted her head, curious. "What did she say?"

"She said that no one, no matter how much power they have, can fix everything," Jaune said. "And nobody with ultimate power can be trusted not to abuse it. So… You have give and take. It sucks, but…" He shrugged. "I guess no matter how right you can feel you are, you can still be wrong."

Blake's eyes softened, her voice quiet. "… I suppose there's something to that… But it's not the easiest thing to accept."

"No," Jaune said simply.

"But it is better to accept it than to deny reality…" Blake sighed, her shoulders slumping. "You've been nothing but nice to me. The others too… Even Weiss, sort of. And I just… Lash out. Like I'm fighting injustice. And… And I don't really think I am."

Jaune's tone was gentle but firm. "I mean… I don't think fighting injustice is the problem. It's just how you're doing it."

"I know, I know…" Blake said, frustration creeping into her voice. "I just don't know how to do it differently. Or if it would even work. And so I'm just… I'm frustrated. And I don't know what to do."

"I don't know either," Jaune admitted, his smile reassuring. "But I'm willing to help you, Blake. So is everyone else."

Blake hesitated, her eyes searching his. "… I'll think about it. It… That's not a no. I just…"

Jaune nodded, understanding. "Yeah. I-I get it…"

They paid for their books—a mix of classics and guilty pleasures—and headed back to the motorcycle. As they approached, Blake's voice took on a sly edge. "You know, all of our friends have been spying on us since we got here."

Jaune sighed, glancing at the not-so-subtle rustling bushes nearby. "Yeah… I'm aware."

Blake's smirk grew, her eyes glinting with mischief. "… You're… What do you feel about that?"

"Well, they're concerned about you," Jaune said, shrugging. "Pyrrha's also really concerned for some reason. I guess she's just being an overly protective big sister."

Blake stared, her smirk faltering. "… Really?"

"Well, that's how she comes off as," Jaune said, oblivious to the storm he was stirring. "Like, I appreciate everything she's doing for me, but she keeps coddling me like she's afraid she'll break me."

Blake had promised herself she wouldn't be mean anymore, that she wouldn't stir up trouble. But the opportunity was too perfect, and her playful side won out. She stepped closer, her voice dropping to a teasing purr. "I see… So… Are you still interested in Weiss?"

Jaune blinked, caught off guard. "Hm? No. I mean, she's great, but no. I was kind of a jerk, and she was like, the opposite of my last girlfriend—Oh, um, sorry. I shouldn't mention her—"

"You're not just taking me out on a date because I remind you of her, do I~?" Blake asked, her tone sultry as she closed the distance, her eyes locked on his.

Jaune gulped, his face reddening. "I uh… N-No! No! She um, she wasn't big on books or uh… Nerding out, really…"

Blake's smirk widened, her voice a soft challenge. "So you're… Definitely single?"

"Y-Yes?" Jaune stammered, his back brushing against the motorcycle.

Blake's eyes gleamed. "Not anymore." She grabbed his collar and pulled him into a kiss, her lips warm and bold against his.

- - -

From a poorly concealed hiding spot nearby, chaos erupted.

"WHAT?!" Ruby's voice squeaked, her hood falling back as she gaped.

Yang's jaw dropped, her fists clenching. "I-SHE'S JUST A RERUN! AND I CAN TALK NERD STUFF!"

Weiss's face turned scarlet, her voice a mix of outrage and denial. "How DARE she—She can't just—She's doing it to get to me, I just know it!"

Ruby, her tone dripping with sarcasm, shot Weiss a look. "I thought you didn't have any feelings for him."

"I DON'T!" Weiss snapped, her blush betraying her.

Pyrrha's eye twitched, her voice barely a whisper. "Sister…?! He sees me like a sister?!"

Nora, clutching one of Blake's novels, grinned wickedly. "I don't see the problem! It's right here in one of Blakey's books: 'Incest is best, put your sister to the test!'"

"NORA!" Ruby yelped, horrified.

"WHAT?!" Nora shot back, unrepentant.

Pyrrha's face turned as red as her hair, her mind spiraling as she… considered…

Ren sighed, his voice calm but resigned. "Jaune… I shall pray for your departed soul."
 
On Healing Dust Canonicity New
Also guys, GREAT NEWS!


Apparently using Plant Dust to heal and restore others' Aura is CANON to RWBY, via the Semblance of this... Severely underwhelming character in RWBY: The Grimm Campaign wherein the cast of RWBY played through a RWBY-themed DnD campaign.

Plant Dust is canon and apparently, so is this campaign (somehow).


So Healing Dust is actually a thing. Or can easily be a thing.
 
The Fall of Beacon : The Dragon's Last Resort New
Here is a breath of fire crossover. what if the Arc family was one of the few family's left that have dragon blood still left in them and for jaune he unlocked that powerful bloodline that even gods feared.

The Fall of Beacon : The Dragon's Last Resort

Beacon Tower was already dying when Jaune Arc finally broke. Pyrrha Nikos hit the stone hard, Aura shattering in a spray of red light. Her spear skittered uselessly across the floor as Cinder Fall stepped forward, calm, triumphant, incandescent with stolen power. "Such potential," Cinder said softly. "Wasted."
"No." Jaune's voice came out wrong, too deep, too strained. He stood between Cinder and Pyrrha, armor cracked, sword shaking in his grip. His Aura was nearly gone.
But something else was waking up.
Cinder frowned. "You're persistent. I'll give you..."

Jaune screamed no he Roared .
The sound tore through the tower like a living thing. Metal warped. Stone cracked. Heat flooded the air as crimson light bled from the seams of his armor. Bones shifted violently beneath his skin, wings of burning energy ripping free as blackened scales crawled over his arms and face. Horns curved from his brow. His eyes burned molten gold.

Ruby froze. "Jaune…?", deep down inside her she knew this was no semblance.
She could feel in down in her blood, and some how knew an ancient bloodline was awoken in front of her. Jaune vanished in a blast of heat and reappeared beside Pyrrha, lifting her with hands that shook as much from restraint as from fury. In a heartbeat he was with Team RWBY, pressing Pyrrha into Ruby's arms.

"She's alive," he growled. "Take her. Go. Now."
Ruby stared up at him, tears forming. "Jaune, what are you?" His jaw clenched, fangs grinding together, bits of flames leaking out. "…Something I swore I'd never be." He turned back toward the tower's peak, wings flaring wider, casting everything in hellish red light. "I can't control the next form," he said, voice breaking under the weight of truth. "If I change again...run, just run and don't look back."
Yang opened her mouth. "GO!" The shout shook the tower. Weiss dragged Ruby away as Blake grabbed Yang. They fled as the air behind them collapsed inward. Cinder watched, unease finally cracking her smile.

"Well," she said carefully. "This is unexpected."
Jaune straightened. "This," he said, his voice layering, human beneath something vast and ancient, and raw "is the warning."
The hybrid form shattered, not transformed, Shattered, like a seal breaking.

Reality screamed as the Kaiser Dragon forced itself into existence. The tower disintegrated beneath its mass. Wings eclipsed the sky. Claws the size of buildings tore into Beacon's foundations as a single, burning eye opened, an eye that carried the weight of extinction.
Cinder didn't run, she just didn't have time.
The Kaiser exhaled, Not flame, only thing you could call it Erasure. Cinder Fall vanished, no body,no soul,no echo, just a hole where she was standing. The dragon roared, and the sound was not victory, It was hunger.

Below the tower, as they were fleeing, Team RWBY felt it like a hand around the world's throat. Ruby, she collapsed clutching Pyrrha as the shockwave rolled through Vale. Weiss's summons shattered instantly. Blake's shadow clones dissolved. Yang couldn't stop shaking.
They looked up, And understood why Jaune told them to run
"…That's not Jaune," Ruby whispered.
Ozpin marched with them appearing from some rubble they didn't notice, as they all watch the creature and if you could see Ozpin you notice the staff trembling in his grip.
"No," he said quietly. "That is what happens when a dragon reaches the end of its restraint without learning why it should remain human."


As this was happening and Inside the Kaiser dragon, Jaune was still there, his soul buried, drowning in the power that is the kaiser dragon.
His Aura wasn't draining, it was being consumed, as the dragon genes were unstable, incomplete. His aura is sacrificing itself to find a way for jaune soul to stabilise.
He hadn't found the rites, the balance, the anchor his clan required, all complete knowledge was destoryed by the purge done by the brother gods and only thing left are the scraps.

The Kaiser was never meant to be used, It was meant to be survived, but the legends go there will be one that will tame this beast.

On the outside, you can see Instinct drowning out thought. All that remains in the Kaiser heard are these order buried deep in the connection
Purge all corruption, Erase opposition and Continue the line.

The dragon's head turned, Toward Vale, it looks over at the group before looking back at Vale. It can feel the corruption throughout that city.
Ruby felt it, Felt him drowning. "Jaune!" she screamed. "Please... come back!"
The Kaiser inhaled. Ozpin's eyes widened in horror. "…Evacuate the city," he whispered. "If he exhales again, there won't be a Vale left to save." but he knows it is too late.

But luckily or unlucky the answer came. The sky above Beacon rotted. Black ichor poured downward like rain flowing in reverse, tearing open the clouds as something vast forced its way through reality. A Grimm Dragon descended. Bone-white armor. Wings of shadow. Eyes burning with Salem's will.
"So," Salem's voice echoed through it, calm and curious. "The Kaiser truly exists." The Grimm Dragon roared and unleashed a beam of corrupted energy. It struck the Kaiser, enough power to destory a city block and the blast just ceased to exist. The Kaiser didn't dodge. Didn't block, The corruption simply failed. The burning eye focused, onto the grimm dragon and for the first time, the Grimm Dragon hesitated.

Jaune's remaining consciousness screamed as the instinct surged higher. If the Kaiser destroyed the Grimm Dragon too quickly, the purge would continue. It wouldn't stop at Grimm. It wouldn't stop at Vale. The Kaiser inhaled again. Ozpin went pale. "This isn't a battle," he said hoarsely. "It's judgment."
Ruby sobbed. "JAUNE!"
For one heartbeat... One impossible heartbeat ..
The breath stalled. A memory surfaced through the storm. Pyrrha's weight in his arms.
Ruby saying his name like it mattered. A promise he never got to keep.

In that moment of weakness and sanity.
The Grimm Dragon lunged, slamming into the Kaiser with bone-shattering force. Mountains cracked from the impact. The Kaiser roared, not in rage, but in pain, a nd everyone understood the truth. All the wounds on its body from the Grimm dragon started to heal and it clicked with them, this form was never a weapon.It was a doomsday.

Jaune Arc hadn't mastered the dragon yet.
And Remnant was standing beneath a power that should never have awakened.
 
On Worldbuilding: Why Total Population Concentration is Bad in Remnant New
First, on the real world:

While it is technically possible for very small countries (city-states like Vatican City, Monaco, or Singapore) to have their entire population concentrated in what is essentially one urban area, for any country with a substantial population (tens of millions or more), concentrating everyone into a single city is practically impossible due to a combination of physical, logistical, economic, environmental, and social constraints. Here's a clear breakdown of the main reasons:

1. Limited Physical Space and Housing

Even the densest cities have limits to how many people can live comfortably and safely per square kilometer.
High-density urban areas (e.g., Manila or Mumbai) reach ~40,000–70,000 people/km² in their core districts, but sustaining that across an entire city is rare and comes with severe quality-of-life issues.
For a country of 100 million people at a realistic average density of 10,000–20,000 people/km² (similar to Tokyo or New York metro), the city would need 5,000–10,000 km²—roughly the size of Lebanon or Connecticut. Larger countries (e.g., 330 million like the U.S.) would require far more land, approaching the size of entire U.S. states.
Building upward (skyscrapers) helps but is extremely expensive, energy-intensive, and limited by engineering and safety concerns.

2. Food and Water Supply

Cities do not produce enough food locally. Most rely on surrounding rural areas or imports for agriculture.
Concentrating a national population in one place would eliminate nearby farmland, forcing total dependence on long-distance food transport or experimental solutions like vertical farming, which currently cannot scale to feed tens or hundreds of millions affordably.
Water is another bottleneck: massive cities require enormous freshwater sources (rivers, aquifers, reservoirs). A single city housing an entire nation would quickly exhaust local supplies and require impractical infrastructure to pipe in water from hundreds or thousands of kilometers away.

3. Energy and Infrastructure Overload

Power generation, waste management, transportation, and sanitation systems would be overwhelmed.
A city of 100+ million would need power plants, sewage systems, and roads/public transit on a scale never built. Current megacities already struggle with blackouts, traffic, and pollution at far smaller sizes.
Waste disposal alone would be catastrophic—imagine the garbage and sewage output of an entire country concentrated in one spot.

4. Economic and Resource Distribution

Economies depend on geographic diversity: mining, forestry, fishing, manufacturing, and energy production often require specific locations (mountains, coasts, fertile plains).
Forcing everything into one city would destroy most primary industries and create extreme vulnerability in supply chains. A single disruption (e.g., blocked highway or port) could cause widespread shortages.

5. Environmental and Health Risks

Extreme concentration creates heat islands, air pollution, and disease transmission risks (as seen in pandemics).
Loss of natural ecosystems would accelerate climate impacts, soil erosion, and biodiversity collapse.
Overcrowding correlates with higher stress, crime, and mental health issues.

6. Vulnerability to Disasters

Putting an entire nation in one location is a massive single point of failure. A natural disaster (earthquake, flood, hurricane), war, or pandemic could devastate or wipe out the population.
Spreading people across a country provides resilience.

Exceptions: City-States
Very small nations like Singapore (~5.9 million people, ~730 km²) or Monaco (~39,000 people) function as city-states because their populations are tiny, they have high wealth for imports/infrastructure, and they rely heavily on trade. Even Singapore actively manages density with strict planning and imports most food and water.

In summary, while technology could theoretically mitigate some issues (e.g., advanced desalination, vertical farms, hyper-efficient transit), the combined constraints of land, resources, infrastructure costs, and risk make it impossible in practice for any moderately large country to put its entire population in one city without catastrophic consequences. Populations naturally spread out because countries need geographic diversity to function sustainably.

And for Remnant:

In Remnant, the four main kingdoms (Vale, Mistral, Atlas, Vacuo) each have a single dominant megacity or capital that serves as the primary hub of population, government, defense, and technology. Yet, despite the existence of these megacities—and even extreme measures like Atlas literally floating its capital above the ground—no kingdom has ever succeeded in housing its entire population within one city, nor would such a setup be viable or historically realistic given the constant, existential threat of the Grimm. Here's why:

1. Grimm Are Attracted to Concentrated Negative of Human Presence and Negative Emotions

Grimm are drawn to large gatherings of humans, especially where negative emotions (fear, anger, despair) are high. A single megacity containing an entire kingdom's population would act as a massive beacon, attracting endless hordes of Grimm far beyond what any defense could sustainably repel.

2. Single Point of Failure Is Catastrophic

If a megacity housing everyone falls—even temporarily—the entire kingdom collapses. There is no fallback population, no secondary settlements to regroup or rebuild. No human civilization in history has ever put all of its eggs in one basket this way, for good reason: It would be suicide. In a world like Remnant that is a death world for humans, it would be even more foolhardy.

3. Resource and Logistic Requirements Cannot Be Fully Centralized

As established earlier, even with Dust's miraculous properties, kingdoms still need distributed agriculture, Dust mining, water sources, and other raw materials (metals, food, etc.).
Dust and other mines would often be in dangerous, Grimm-infested wilderness. Farming requires arable land outside protected urban cores. Trying to feed and supply tens of millions entirely within one city would require unsustainable imports from undefended territories or vertical/indoor farming on a scale never achieved in the real world, which would be even more vulnerable to natural disasters, accidents, failures of utilities, or other problems.
Atlas came closest to centralization but still relied on Mantle below for labor, mining, and basic industry-when Mantle was cut off, the floating city quickly became untenable.

4. Geographic and Natural Defenses Dictate Settlement Patterns

Kingdoms were deliberately established in locations with natural barriers that limit Grimm incursions (Vale's cliffs and forests, Mistral's mountains and plateaus, Vacuo's deserts, Atlas/Solitas's extreme cold).
These natural defenses protect a core city but cannot be scaled to enclose an entire kingdom's worth of territory or population.
Distributing some population into smaller, defensible small cities, towns, villages and outposts spreads the Grimm threat and allows resource extraction from wider areas.

5. Historical and Cultural Development Prevented Extreme Centralization

After the Great War, kingdoms were rebuilt with a focus on survival against Grimm, not maximum urban density. Societies evolved to maintain Huntsmen academies, mobile defenders, and scattered settlements because total centralization had already been proven suicidal.
Smaller villages and nomadic/trading routes (especially in Mistral and Vacuo) are necessary for cultural diversity easing tensions, and economic resilience. Forcing everyone into one city would require forcibly relocating millions—an impossible task under constant Grimm pressure.

6. Psychological and Social Sustainability

Cramming an entire kingdom into one city would generate enormous negative emotions (overcrowding, inequality, resource scarcity), further fueling Grimm attacks in a vicious cycle.
Remnant's people need space—both literal and psychological—to maintain hope and stability. Distributed populations reduce the emotional "signal" that attracts Grimm.

In summary, while Remnant's megacities are impressive feats of engineering and technology, the ever-present Grimm would force a distributed model of civilization. Total centralization would create an irresistible target, eliminate resource diversity, and guarantee extinction if defenses ever failed. Kingdoms survive precisely because they spread risk across protected cores and necessary outlying settlements—much like real-world nations avoid putting all citizens, agriculture, and industry in one place for similar reasons of resilience and vulnerability.
 
On Worldbuilding: Why Mundane Resources Are Still Needed in Remnant New
Remnant's civilizations in RWBY rely on Dust as their primary energy source and elemental manipulator, but even with its near-miraculous properties, the kingdoms still fundamentally require a vast array of conventional minerals, fossil fuels, and robust logistical systems (no matter what CRWBY says). Dust provides power and effects—it does not create physical matter, biological necessities, or stable chemical feedstocks. Below is a detailed explanation of why Remnant needs all of these resources, grouped by function, and why no combination of Dust varieties can ever fully substitute for them.

1. Structural and Construction Materials
These minerals form the physical backbone of everything built in Remnant—cities, airships, weapons, robots, walls, and infrastructure.
  • Iron, Aluminum, Titanium, Chromium, Manganese, Molybdenum, Tungsten, Vanadium, Niobium, Zinc, Beryllium
    • Required for steel and high-strength alloys used in skyscrapers, airship hulls, robotic frames (Atlesian Knights, Penny), bridges, railways, and weapons.
  • Lead
    • Radiation shielding in advanced labs, cables, alloys.
  • Fossil Fuels
    • Paints and coatings, adhesives, explosives (non-Dust), insulation, solvents, asphalt.
Dust cannot replace these because it is consumable and lacks the mechanical properties (tensile strength, ductility, heat resistance) needed for permanent structures.

2. Electronics and Advanced Technology
Remnant's Scrolls, CCT networks, robotic AI, sensors, and other such systems all require sophisticated electronics.
  • Copper, Gold, Silver, Tin, Tantalum, Indium, Gallium, Germanium, Silicon, Rare Earth Elements
    • Conductors, semiconductors, capacitors, displays, and circuit boards. Gold and silver for reliable contacts; tantalum for compact capacitors in Scrolls; rare earths for magnets in motors and speakers.
  • Beryllium
    • Lightweight, rigid components in aerospace and precision instruments.
  • Fossil Fuels
    • Synthetic rubber, plastics, lubricants, refrigerants, antifreeze and coolants
Dust can be woven into circuits for elemental effects (e.g., Lightning Dust for power), but the physical wiring, chips, and screens still demand these minerals. Dust alone would short-circuit or explode under sustained use.

3. Energy Systems and Batteries
While Dust dominates primary energy, stable storage and backup systems are still needed. And fossil fuels can provide other useful products.
  • Lithium, Cobalt, Nickel, Graphite, Manganese, Lead
    • Rechargeable batteries for portable devices, prosthetic limbs, vehicles, and grid storage. Lead-acid batteries for heavy machinery backups.
  • Fossil Fuels (Coal, Oil, Natural Gas)
    • Petrochemicals for plastics, synthetic rubber, lubricants, dyes, and explosives not suited to Dust's volatility.
    • Stable, long-duration power for remote outposts or industrial processes where Dust detonation risk is unacceptable.
    • Backup generators in critical facilities (hospitals, academies) during Dust shortages or embargoes.
Dust is consumable and volatile—it depletes and can detonate if mishandled. Fossil fuels provide consistent, non-explosive energy and chemical feedstocks that Dust cannot replicate without constant Aura control.

4. Agriculture and Food Security
No amount of Dust can sustainably feed millions.
  • Phosphate Rock, Potash
    • Phosphorus and potassium fertilizers essential for soil fertility for agriculture and animal husbandry. Plant Dust can force temporary growth in combat, but it depletes soil and cannot replace nutrient cycles.
  • Fossil Fuels
    • Diesel for farming equipment in rural zones, ammonia synthesis (Haber-Bosch process) for nitrogen fertilizers, and pesticides/herbicides derived from petrochemicals.
Remnant's villages and kingdoms still farm real crops and real animals on real land. Dust tricks cannot scale to year-round food production for entire populations.

5. Specialized Industrial and Chemical Uses
All of the man made items we see in Remnant still require chemical processes to produce.
  • Platinum Group Metals, Fluorspar, Tungsten
    • Catalysts, high-temperature tools, refractories, and chemical processing (e.g., refining Dust itself or producing synthetic materials).
  • Fossil Fuels
    • Base chemicals for plastics in consumer goods, inks, cosmetics, packaging materials. waxes, medical supplies, and synthetic fabrics.
Why All Varieties of Dust Cannot Replace These Resources
Even with every known type and combination (Fire, Water, Ice, Wind, Lightning, Gravity, Hard-Light, Plant, Steam, etc.):
  1. Dust Is Energy and Manipulation, Not Matter
    • It releases forces or temporary effects—it does not create durable mass. You cannot build a building, circuit board, or battery out of Dust crystals; they would dissipate or explode.
  2. Dust Is Consumable and Volatile
    • Once activated, it's gone. Infrastructure must be permanent and stable; fossil fuels and minerals provide that permanence.
  3. Biological and Chemical Limits
    • Food production requires real nutrients, soil chemistry, and stable energy sources. Water Dust makes temporary water; Plant Dust grows combat vines—not sustainable crops.
  4. Logistical and Geographic Constraints Persist
    • All these resources are location-specific and require mining, refining, farming, and secure transport chains—often through Grimm-infested areas.
    • Overreliance on any one resource would create catastrophic vulnerabilities (as Atlas's over-reliance on Dust showed).
  5. Historical Evidence in Canon
    • Kingdoms still mine metals, farm food, and maintain physical supply lines. Atlas's downfall was partly due to cutting off Mantle's basic resources, not just Dust.
In short, Dust is the spark that makes Remnant's technology spectacular, but the kingdoms are built on the same mundane foundations as real-world civilizations: metals for structure, minerals for electronics and agriculture, fossil fuels for stable chemistry and backups, and distributed logistics for resilience. Without them, even infinite Dust would leave Remnant unable to build, feed, or sustain itself.
 
On Worldbuilding: Petrochemical Production in Remnant: A Grounded Overview New
Petrochemical Production in Remnant: A Grounded Overview

In our version of Remnant—where fossil fuels exist as a critical complement to Dust—petrochemical production is a highly specialized, heavily defended industry that operates almost entirely within the safest kingdom territories. It is not as dominant as Dust energy, but it is indispensable for manufacturing stable, non-volatile materials that Dust cannot reliably produce (e.g., plastics, synthetic rubber, fertilizers, and lubricants). Production is limited in scale, geographically constrained, and deeply integrated with Dust technology for efficiency and defense.

1. Sources of Raw Materials
  • Oil and Natural Gas Deposits: These are finite, location-specific resources, much like Dust or metal ores. Major fields are found in:
    • Solitas (Atlas): Offshore rigs in frozen coastal waters or tundra drilling sites—cold slows Grimm, making extraction safer.
    • Sanus (Vale): On and offshore fields in protected inland basins or near Patch's coastal areas.
    • Anima (Mistral): Smaller, scattered deposits in lower valleys or terraced foothills, as well as offshore rigs in sheltered coves.
    • Vacuo: Limited desert shale plays, extracted via mobile, nomadic rigs that relocate frequently to avoid Grimm, or fortified rigs that become small towns in the jungles, deserts or badlands.
  • Deposits are discovered and mapped by Huntsmen-led exploration teams. Extraction is never done in open wilderness without heavy escort.
2. Extraction Process
  • Drilling and Pumping: Dust-enhanced rigs (Gravity Dust for lifting, Fire Dust for controlled heating in cold climates) bore into reservoirs. Platforms are fortified with armor and automated turrets.
  • Offshore Operations: Atlas dominates here with floating platforms protected by airship patrols. Wells are pumped using Dust-electric hybrid systems to minimize explosive risks.
  • Safety Measures: Operations have small crews to avoid creating large negative-emotion beacons. Workers rotate frequently, and sites include mandatory morale officers or recreational facilities to keep spirits high and Grimm attraction low.
3. Refining and Processing
  • Refineries: Located exclusively inside or near major cities (e.g., Mantle's industrial ring, Vale's port districts). These are massive, walled complexes with multi-layer defenses:
    • Atmospheric distillation towers separate crude into fractions (gasoline, diesel, naphtha, etc.).
    • Catalytic cracking and reforming units (powered by stable Lightning Dust generators) break heavy molecules into usable petrochemical feedstocks.
  • Key Outputs:
    • Light fractions → fuels for backup generators and heavy machinery.
    • Heavy fractions → lubricants, asphalt.
    • Intermediate chemicals → ethylene, propylene, benzene—the building blocks for plastics and synthetics.
  • Dust Integration: Fire/Ice Dust precisely controls temperatures in reactors; Gravity Dust assists in material handling. However, core chemical reactions still rely on traditional catalysis (platinum-group metals) because Dust is too volatile for sustained, controlled processing.
4. Downstream Manufacturing
  • Petrochemical plants polymerize feedstocks into:
    • Plastics (Scroll casings, weapon parts).
    • Synthetic fibers and rubber (clothing, tires).
    • Fertilizers and pesticides (via ammonia synthesis for nitrogen).
  • These facilities are clustered in industrial zones with direct pipeline connections from refineries, minimizing transport risks.
5. Logistics and Distribution
  • Pipelines: Buried lines within kingdom borders, patrolled by Huntsmen or drones.
  • Transport: Armored tankers (ground/rail/sea/air) for inter-kingdom trade, always under heavy protection. Vacuo relies on mobile tanker caravans.
  • Vulnerabilities: Sabotage or Grimm breaches can cause shortages and unrest.
6. Challenges and Limitations
  • Grimm Threat: Large industrial sites generate activity and occasional accidents (spills, fires) that attract Grimm. Refineries require constant Huntsmen presence and rapid-response teams.
  • Scale Constraints: Production is carefully managed to avoid over-reliance and to keep operations defensible. Kingdoms import specialized catalysts or rare additives when local mining falls short.
  • Environmental and Political Issues: Pollution is managed with Dust aided methods, but spills in rural areas can devastate villages. Faunus labor is heavily involved in dangerous extraction jobs in various polities, fueling discrimination tensions.
  • Why Dust Cannot Replace It: Dust provides energy and elemental effects but lacks the stable carbon backbones needed for complex polymers. Attempting to synthesize petrochemicals purely with Dust would be inefficient, explosive, and unable to scale.
In summary, petrochemical production in Remnant is a quiet but vital industry—far less glamorous than Dust, yet essential for the plastics in a Scroll, the rubber components of a Paladin, or the fertilizers feeding a kingdom. It reinforces the theme that even with miraculous Dust, Remnant's civilizations remain tethered to the same resource and logistical realities as our world, forcing careful, defended development within natural strongholds while under siege by the Grimm.
 
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Arc Super Strength Technique New
Jaune had always been the guy who tried too hard and still came up short. But the day he accidentally unlocked his mother's old Strength Enhancing Technique, everything changed.

He didn't even mean to do it. He'd watched his mom do it a hundred times back home—casual flex of Aura, a faint golden shimmer along her arms, and suddenly she could haul firewood like it was kindling. One afternoon in Vale's central park, Jaune saw a little girl crying under a tree because her cat, Mister Whiskers, had climbed too high. Without thinking, he reached for his Aura the way he'd seen her do it.

The surge hit him like warm lightning.

He wrapped both hands around the trunk of a full-grown oak and pulled.

The tree came up roots and all, dirt cascading down like brown rain. Jaune gave it an experimental shake. "Come on, Mister Whiskers… come out…!"

A small orange tabby dropped neatly into the waiting arms of the little girl.

So did Blake Belladonna.

She landed in a crouch, ears flat, amber eyes narrowed. The little girl hugged her cat and beamed up at Jaune. "Thanks, mister!"

"No problem!" Jaune said brightly, trying to figure out how to set a whole tree down gently. He didn't quite manage it. The oak slipped from his grip and crashed down—directly on top of a speeding getaway car the Vale PD had been chasing for three blocks.

Metal crumpled. Sirens wailed to a stop. Two officers jumped out, stared at the pinned vehicle, then at the sheepish blond holding a handful of broken roots.

"Thanks, kid!" one cop called. "Great work!"

Jaune rubbed the back of his neck. "Um… no problem…? Blake?"

Blake brushed leaves from her sleeves, expression unreadable. "Jaune."

A week later, Team RWBY's dorm was the scene of minor tragedy.

Ruby lay flat on the floor, one arm stretched futilely under the common-room fridge. "Ah, dang it! I dropped the new focusing lens for Crescent Rose…

Hey, Yang, can you—"

"I got you, Ruby!" Jaune chirped, already striding over.

He bent, slipped one hand under the fridge, and lifted the entire thing one-armed, like it was an empty cardboard box.

Ruby blinked up at the suddenly exposed underside. "There it is!"

She snatched the lens, dusted it off, and only then noticed the fridge was still hovering three feet off the ground.

"Uh… you can drop the fridge now, right?"

"Oh! Right." Jaune carefully lowered it back into place, though he reached out and swept several items out from underneath it.

"That's... A lot of stuff," Jaune observed.

A silver locket, a hairbrush, fifty lien in crumpled bills, and—Ruby's face heating bright red—a dog-eared paperback titled Captive Ninja Kunoichi, cover featuring a suspiciously familiar dark-haired Faunus in strategic ropes.

Blake appeared in the doorway, took in the scene, and plucked the book from the pile without a word.

"I wondered where that went."

Jaune's blush reached his ears.

The real test came in the Emerald Forest during a routine Grimm-clearing exercise.

A Deathstalker the size of a city bus burst from the underbrush, tail stinger already arcing toward Jaune. He threw his shield up on reflex. The tail struck with a sound like a cannon shot.

Jaune didn't move an inch.

The Deathstalker recoiled, confused. It struck again. And again. Each impact rang against Crocea Mors like a hammer on an anvil, but Jaune stood rooted, boots sunk half an inch into the soil, utterly unmoved.

He glanced over his shield at his teammates. "Huh. Uh… can someone kill this thing now?"

Weiss's jaw actually dropped. "What—HOW DOES THAT EVEN WORK?!"

Jaune shrugged, still holding back the furious Grimm with one arm. "I dunno, but it is!"
 
Winter Schnee and the Dragon New
The Schnee mansion's grand foyer felt colder than Atlas winter that night.

Winter Schnee stood before her father's desk in the study, uniform crisp, posture flawless—even as Jacques Gele's words cut deeper than any blade.

"You are no longer a Schnee," he said, voice like frostbite. "You defy me at every turn—enlisting in the military, rejecting the company's future. Leave this house. You are disowned."

Willow sat silent in the corner, glass in hand, eyes distant. Whitley and Weiss weren't present—spared this, at least.

Winter's chin lifted. "If that's your decision, Father, I accept it."

She turned on her heel, strides measured, refusing to let him see the tremor in her hands.

Fafnir stood guard outside the study doors—seven feet of shadowed menace, wings folded like a cloak, red eyes glowing faintly in the dim light. He didn't move as she passed, but his gaze followed her.

Winter paused at the top of the grand staircase, duffel bag slung over one shoulder—the few belongings she'd packed in defiance. She looked back at him.

"You're letting me go," she said quietly. "Just like that."

Fafnir's masked face was unreadable. "You're not a prisoner."

She descended a few steps, then stopped, turning to face him fully.

"You're a warrior, Fafnir. I've seen it—felt it—in every training session you risked giving me. You have honor. Code. Why do you continue to serve him? He's a corrupt monster who treats his own blood like assets to discard."

Fafnir was silent for a long moment. When he spoke, his voice was low, gravel over steel.

"I owe him my life. More than once. He pulled me from the gutter, gave me purpose when my clan was ash. Paid for these—" he flexed his cybernetic claw, metal gleaming—"when assassins left me in pieces. Debts like that don't fade."

Winter's eyes narrowed. "And I owe him nothing. I'm his daughter, not his debtor."

"You owe him your life too," Fafnir said bluntly. "The privilege you were born into. The safety these walls gave you. But you're right—you're not his daughter anymore."

He stepped closer, towering over her, but there was no threat in it—only a strange, solemn weight.

"Go," he said. "Become strong. Stronger than him. Stronger than the chains he thinks he forged."

Winter searched his scarred, masked face for mockery and found none.

"You truly mean that."

"I do."

She exhaled slowly, the anger and hurt shifting into something fiercer—resolve.

"I will," she said. "I'll become the soldier he never wanted. The protector he couldn't buy."

Fafnir inclined his head—a rare gesture of respect.

"Then go, Winter Schnee-no-more. And don't look back."

She did exactly that—walked down the stairs, through the doors, into the Atlas night without hesitation.

But his words burned in her chest like a glyph she'd never forget.

Become strong.

She would.

For herself.

And someday, perhaps, strong enough to face even the dragon who'd let her go.
 
On Worldbuilding: Knightly/Military Orders of the Church of the Tablebreaker in Remnant New
Knightly/Military Orders of the Church of the Tablebreaker in Remnant

Much like medieval knightly orders on Earth, the Church of the Tablebreaker maintains several semi-military orders across Remnant. These Orders function as respected, semi-autonomous religious-military-charitable institutions with a strong presence in humanitarian aid, Grimm response, Dust-infused medical care, and community defense. The Order of Saint Edmund is especially known for its work in urban hospitals, mobile trauma response teams, refugee/Faunus aid programs, and rapid-deployment "Hospitaller Companies" that support Huntsmen/Huntresses during major Grimm incursions. Below is a typical organizational chart for one such order: The Order of Saint Edmund.

Organizational Chart — Order of Saint Edmund (Modern Era)

Grand Master of the Order

(sovereign religious and executive head of the entire Order worldwide; elected for life or until resignation/incapacity; ultimate authority over doctrine, vows, and major policy)
Grand Seneschal
(chief operating officer and second-in-command; oversees day-to-day administration, legal affairs, and coordination between global and local structures)
Grand Marshal
(supreme commander of all armed and paramilitary forces of the Order; responsible for training standards, deployment doctrine, and coordination with Huntsmen guilds and national militaries during Grimm crises)
Grand Almoner / Grand Hospitaller
(head of all charitable, medical, and humanitarian operations; oversees hospitals, mobile clinics, refugee programs, charity initiatives, and medical research & relief)
Sovereign Council / Magistral Council (advisory & governing body)
  • Meets regularly under the Grand Master
  • Includes the four Grand Officers above + elected Councillors (usually 6–10 senior professed members)
High Central Officers (Aelia Paravel-equivalent staff roles, global but with strong influence on major Sects)
  • Procurator General (chief legal counsel and compliance officer)
  • Secretary General (handles communications, archives, and international liaison)
  • Seneschal of the Magistral Convent (manages the Order's central headquarters and ceremonial life)
  • Receiver of the Common Treasury (CFO — global finances, endowments, Dust & resource management)
Regional / Provincial Level — Radian Province Sect
Preceptor / Grand Prior of Radian

(regional superior; appointed or elected leader of the entire Radian Sect; reports directly to the Grand Seneschal and Sovereign Council; combines spiritual, administrative, and operational authority in the region)
Deputy Prior / Seneschal of Radian
(day-to-day manager of the Sect's operations)
Master of Radian Province/Provincial Master
(military / security commander for the Sect; leads all armed response units and liaises with Radian's Huntsman academies and city defense forces)
Almoner / Hospitaller of Radian
(directs all local medical, charitable, and social outreach programs — hospitals, clinics, soup kitchens, Faunus aid centers, orphanages, mobile aid convoys)Commandery / Preceptory Level (individual houses / bases in and around Radian)
Knight Commander / Preceptor
(leader of a specific commandery — e.g., Central Radian Hospital Commandery, Vale Border Relief Commandery, Lower Districts Aid Commandery, etc.)

Nicholas Arc is the Knight Commander of the town of Radian, the capital of Radian Province.

Professed Knights(full-vowed members)
  • Elite core
  • Have taken solemn perpetual vows
  • Serve in leadership, ceremonial, combat, or senior medical roles
  • Ranked from Knight Captain to Knight Major.
Knights in Obedience
  • Junior professed knights or those still in temporary vows
  • Serve as field commanders, trauma surgeons, Grimm-response squad leaders, etc.
  • Ranked from Knight Second Lieutenant to Knight First Lieutenant.
Serving Brothers / Knight Sergeants
  • Form the backbone of operational units: medics, drivers, engineers, logistics specialists, security details, Dust technicians, field cooks, etc.
  • Ranked from Knight to Knight Master Sergeant.
Lay Auxiliaries / Volunteers / Confraters
  • Unvowed members and associates
  • Include trained paramedics, drivers, counselors, translators, Faunus community liaisons
  • Many participate through affiliated programs (similar to St. John Ambulance volunteers)
Chaplains (parallel spiritual structure)
  • Ordained priests of the Tablebreaker Church assigned to the Order
  • Provide sacraments, spiritual direction, last rites on battlefields, and moral guidance
  • Report ultimately to the Grand Master (via the Grand Commander / religious superior), but serve locally under the Preceptor of Radian
 
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