A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL
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the right
Accept
header
to the server to view the underlying object.
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"content": "Work in progress on a ruined industrial building for 40k and 28mm wargames. This is true \"trash terrain\": Styrofoam inserts cut with hot wire, cat and baby food containers, old computer motherboard parts, scrap wood, faucet cartridges, and a few bits from actual models.<br /><br />I'm not sure what the building is actually supposed to have been. I was thinking a vehicle repair bay or machine workshop or even automated fabrication plant. My decision on that will dictate what's the ruins end up on the ground. What does it look like to you? Any thoughts comments or suggestions?",
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"published": "2018-11-04T02:34:55+00:00",
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"content": "Work in progress on a ruined industrial building for 40k and 28mm wargames. This is true \"trash terrain\": Styrofoam inserts cut with hot wire, cat and baby food containers, old computer motherboard parts, scrap wood, faucet cartridges, and a few bits from actual models.\n\nI'm not sure what the building is actually supposed to have been. I was thinking a vehicle repair bay or machine workshop or even automated fabrication plant. My decision on that will dictate what's the ruins end up on the ground. What does it look like to you? Any thoughts comments or suggestions?",
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"content": "Victor meets the last and greatest GI Joe",
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"published": "2018-10-13T21:09:02+00:00",
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"content": "Victor meets the last and greatest GI Joe",
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"content": "My wife doesn't have the best taste in music, and she likes puns too much, but I thought this was good nonetheless. 😉",
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"published": "2018-10-12T02:28:10+00:00",
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"content": "My wife doesn't have the best taste in music, and she likes puns too much, but I thought this was good nonetheless. 😉",
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"content": "For too long, we call them snowflakes. But that was way off base, because all snowflakes are different. NPC is exactly the right term, because they all think talk and act the same to the point of indistinguishability.",
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"content": "For too long, we call them snowflakes. But that was way off base, because all snowflakes are different. NPC is exactly the right term, because they all think talk and act the same to the point of indistinguishability.",
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"content": "I play 40k, but not with GW rules (I use Stargrunt II for the most part), I've retconned the 13th Black Crusade, and I alter details of the setting that I find to be ridiculous (especially with regard to planetary populations and army manpower, which GW consistently underestimates by orders of magnitude). Still, I hope this group will find some of the fluff I've worked up useful and interesting. To that end, here's some stuff on a homebrew Astartes chapter, the Battle Masters.<br />---------<br />Battle Masters, Part 1<br /><br />Origins<br />The Battle Masters have the unusual distinction of being founded twice; the first during lost antiquity, the second during the Twenty-Second Founding shortly after the Age of Apostasy. Of the original founding, little is known even to the Battle Masters themselves, though their hoariest traditions hint that they were descended from the line of Ferrus Manus in the tumultuous days of the Fifth Founding. The oldest battle honor recalled by the chapter’s remembrancers was said to be inscribed ‘Ring of Heibei 310.M33’, though none now know if or where that hallowed relic survives. The chapter was awarded the fiefdom of Kernev, a world preserved in a state of low-industry tribalism to maintain its warfighting culture. Their area of responsibility included most of the Omuta sector in Segmentum Tempestus, including the important Van Miter Shunt warp corridor.<br /><br />The catastrophe of the Age of Apostasy in mid-M35 left the proud chapter in ruins, with only a single ship and less than a company of battle-capable Marines left to carry on their legacy. In a testament to the loyalty and prowess of the chapter, the High Lords of Terra commanded that the Battle Masters be reorganized instead of simply disbanded, as had been the fate of less renowned chapters. This reorganization, known within the chapter as the Reforging, saw the chapter’s few ragged survivors (known as the Old Line) integrated into an entirely new command under the mysterious Mulgarg, a former Black Shield of the Ordo Xenos. Depopulated Kernev was abandoned and the chapter was awarded the fiefdom of Pontiorek, a fortified asteroid in the Camellia system, Vilnoi Sector, Segmentum Tempestus. Their arsenals replenished by the factory worlds of Camellia and their ranks swelled with reinforcements from the Martian genebanks, the Battle Masters returned to full Codex-strength of 20,000 Marines in fifty years.<br /><br />But as their apothecaries soon discovered, the genetic lineages of the Old and New Lines were distinct. Some argued that the High Lords of Terra would never mix the hallowed geneseed, and that the new line was from some evolutionary branch of the Iron Hands. Others argued that the differences were too marked to bespeak of any source except a different Primarch; those wisest in such matters whispered that the new lineage was descended from the Lion himself. Neither the Administratum nor the Adeptus Mechanicus would ever so much as acknowledge the distinction let alone identify the source of the new geneseed. Whether by accident or by design, the Battle Masters had become a chapter with two identities and two pasts. <br /><br />Radices<br />Without a known Primarch to venerate, the Battle Masters instead turned their devotion toward their Radix. Since at least M36, the chapter has honored its greatest heroes by appending their names to all of their geneseed descendants, along with the signifier radix (e.g. Corwin radix Gradlon, Captain of the 5th Company). One’s radix is a matter of great individual pride and religious significance within the chapter cult, each having its own peculiar traditions. <br /><br />The various Radices are the source of the complicated network of gene-families that influence its military organization. The eldest surviving Marine of each Radix is known as its Paterfamilias, and has disciplinary authority over all other members. Though not formally a military rank, a Paterfamilias is often synonymous with the position of Captain or Optimo in other chapters, and each Radix tends to function like a company or brigade, though without a fixed size. All of the Patresfamilias, taken together, constitute the chapter’s executive council, which may advise and in some circumstances overrule the chapter master. <br /><br />The chapter master, called the Forseti, is also an Imperial Peer with the title Sardir of Pontiorek (previously Counts of Kernev, a title that is now extinct). While the chapter’s charter does not formally decree that the position be hereditary, it has customarily been filled by the Paterfamilias of Radix Gradlon. Before the Potiorek Massacre, no Forseti had come from another Radix in over a thousand years. With the line of Gradlon reduced to a single survivor, and one of a mere thirty years ‘in the blood,’ the position was assumed by Kalmarkane radix Hrothgar, the chapter’s Chirurgeon-General. <br /><br />The Ermine Mantle<br />The Ermine Mantle is a garment of rich, silver fur taken from the Dire Stoats of Kernev. It predates the formation of the chapter itself, having been worn by the greatest chieftains of the Kernish tribes, and remains the symbol of office of the Forseti (Chapter Masters) long after that fiefdom was abandoned. The fur cape also figures prominently in the chapter’s heraldry, represented by the ermine spot on the pauldron. <br /><br />Pontiorek<br />Pontiorek was a large Trojan asteroid of Camellia Secundus, the chief inhabited world of the system. Only visible to the naked eye from the surface of Camellia Secundus under certain solar conditions, its appearance was a herald of calamity to the superstitious human savages of the world before the coming of the Emperor’s Light. Indeed, in the Old Pandan language of that world, Pontiorek means ‘Grief Star’. When the Camellians expanded into space, however, superstition was quickly cast aside in the rush to mine the asteroid for its huge supplies of valuable minerals. Over centuries, it was nearly hollowed out and depleted of all valuable materials. After a long abandonment, the system’s governor sold the moon to the Imperial Navy, which employed it as an anchorage, using its cavernous holds for naval stores and microgravity training. Eventually, the needs of Battlefleet Vilnoi outgrew the asteroid and it was abandoned again for nearly eighty years, its fortresses mostly intact, before being awarded to the reforged Battle Masters. The chapter found the grim, airless rock amply suited for their uses. Soon, the rock was ringed with gigantic docking spires to accommodate their fleet, and the bowels of Pontiorek were refashioned into a fortress monastery that most thought to be impregnable.<br /><br />Battle Honors<br />With their area of responsibility located near the margins of human-explored space, the Battle Masters have a long and distinguished history as xeno fighters. Their battle honors include wars against forty Hrud migrations, nine retaliatory campaigns against the K’nib, and more than 140 cumulative years of warfare against the empire of the aquatic Saharduin, including the destruction of their pod world of Tl’unquoth Poc. Though the chapter avoided the internecine fighting of the Age of Apostasy, it suffered its second-worst defeat as an indirect consequence of it when the opportunistic warboss Baga Jhuk invaded the divided Imperium with a horde of forty billion orks. A full third of the settled worlds of the Omuta Sector were captured or sacked before the Orks were routed at the Battle of A-93-Deep, the Battle Masters’ homeworld of Kernev among the devastated worlds.<br /><br />The Battle Masters likewise took no direct part in either the 13th Black Crusade or the defense and liberation of Holy Terra. In the former case, the chapter sent notice of their intention to join the defense of Cadia, but their request was countermanded and their expeditionary force of 2,500 Marines, 15,000 auxiliary troops, and 40 ships were instead directed to the Maelstrom War Zone to protect Imperial shipping against the Red Corsairs. Shortly thereafter, the chapter, along with most of the rest of the Imperial forces in the coreward part of the Segmentum Tempestus, were sucked into the desperate fight against the Tyranid Hive Fleet Pestilence. The Battle Masters were heavily committed in the two largest engagements of that war; the disastrous War for Callus (999M41-001M42) and the decisive Ninth Battle of Coronel (019M42). Indeed, the Battle Masters did not even become aware of the desecration of the Golden Throne until late 022M42, a year after Guilliman’s crusade had already driven Chaos forces out of the Sol system. The loss of the Astronomican and the ensuring incapacitation of most of their librarians by its psychic death cry was long attributed to the machinations of the Tyranid hive fleet. ",
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"published": "2018-10-11T16:48:08+00:00",
"source": {
"content": "I play 40k, but not with GW rules (I use Stargrunt II for the most part), I've retconned the 13th Black Crusade, and I alter details of the setting that I find to be ridiculous (especially with regard to planetary populations and army manpower, which GW consistently underestimates by orders of magnitude). Still, I hope this group will find some of the fluff I've worked up useful and interesting. To that end, here's some stuff on a homebrew Astartes chapter, the Battle Masters.\n---------\nBattle Masters, Part 1\n\nOrigins\nThe Battle Masters have the unusual distinction of being founded twice; the first during lost antiquity, the second during the Twenty-Second Founding shortly after the Age of Apostasy. Of the original founding, little is known even to the Battle Masters themselves, though their hoariest traditions hint that they were descended from the line of Ferrus Manus in the tumultuous days of the Fifth Founding. The oldest battle honor recalled by the chapter’s remembrancers was said to be inscribed ‘Ring of Heibei 310.M33’, though none now know if or where that hallowed relic survives. The chapter was awarded the fiefdom of Kernev, a world preserved in a state of low-industry tribalism to maintain its warfighting culture. Their area of responsibility included most of the Omuta sector in Segmentum Tempestus, including the important Van Miter Shunt warp corridor.\n\nThe catastrophe of the Age of Apostasy in mid-M35 left the proud chapter in ruins, with only a single ship and less than a company of battle-capable Marines left to carry on their legacy. In a testament to the loyalty and prowess of the chapter, the High Lords of Terra commanded that the Battle Masters be reorganized instead of simply disbanded, as had been the fate of less renowned chapters. This reorganization, known within the chapter as the Reforging, saw the chapter’s few ragged survivors (known as the Old Line) integrated into an entirely new command under the mysterious Mulgarg, a former Black Shield of the Ordo Xenos. Depopulated Kernev was abandoned and the chapter was awarded the fiefdom of Pontiorek, a fortified asteroid in the Camellia system, Vilnoi Sector, Segmentum Tempestus. Their arsenals replenished by the factory worlds of Camellia and their ranks swelled with reinforcements from the Martian genebanks, the Battle Masters returned to full Codex-strength of 20,000 Marines in fifty years.\n\nBut as their apothecaries soon discovered, the genetic lineages of the Old and New Lines were distinct. Some argued that the High Lords of Terra would never mix the hallowed geneseed, and that the new line was from some evolutionary branch of the Iron Hands. Others argued that the differences were too marked to bespeak of any source except a different Primarch; those wisest in such matters whispered that the new lineage was descended from the Lion himself. Neither the Administratum nor the Adeptus Mechanicus would ever so much as acknowledge the distinction let alone identify the source of the new geneseed. Whether by accident or by design, the Battle Masters had become a chapter with two identities and two pasts. \n\nRadices\nWithout a known Primarch to venerate, the Battle Masters instead turned their devotion toward their Radix. Since at least M36, the chapter has honored its greatest heroes by appending their names to all of their geneseed descendants, along with the signifier radix (e.g. Corwin radix Gradlon, Captain of the 5th Company). One’s radix is a matter of great individual pride and religious significance within the chapter cult, each having its own peculiar traditions. \n\nThe various Radices are the source of the complicated network of gene-families that influence its military organization. The eldest surviving Marine of each Radix is known as its Paterfamilias, and has disciplinary authority over all other members. Though not formally a military rank, a Paterfamilias is often synonymous with the position of Captain or Optimo in other chapters, and each Radix tends to function like a company or brigade, though without a fixed size. All of the Patresfamilias, taken together, constitute the chapter’s executive council, which may advise and in some circumstances overrule the chapter master. \n\nThe chapter master, called the Forseti, is also an Imperial Peer with the title Sardir of Pontiorek (previously Counts of Kernev, a title that is now extinct). While the chapter’s charter does not formally decree that the position be hereditary, it has customarily been filled by the Paterfamilias of Radix Gradlon. Before the Potiorek Massacre, no Forseti had come from another Radix in over a thousand years. With the line of Gradlon reduced to a single survivor, and one of a mere thirty years ‘in the blood,’ the position was assumed by Kalmarkane radix Hrothgar, the chapter’s Chirurgeon-General. \n\nThe Ermine Mantle\nThe Ermine Mantle is a garment of rich, silver fur taken from the Dire Stoats of Kernev. It predates the formation of the chapter itself, having been worn by the greatest chieftains of the Kernish tribes, and remains the symbol of office of the Forseti (Chapter Masters) long after that fiefdom was abandoned. The fur cape also figures prominently in the chapter’s heraldry, represented by the ermine spot on the pauldron. \n\nPontiorek\nPontiorek was a large Trojan asteroid of Camellia Secundus, the chief inhabited world of the system. Only visible to the naked eye from the surface of Camellia Secundus under certain solar conditions, its appearance was a herald of calamity to the superstitious human savages of the world before the coming of the Emperor’s Light. Indeed, in the Old Pandan language of that world, Pontiorek means ‘Grief Star’. When the Camellians expanded into space, however, superstition was quickly cast aside in the rush to mine the asteroid for its huge supplies of valuable minerals. Over centuries, it was nearly hollowed out and depleted of all valuable materials. After a long abandonment, the system’s governor sold the moon to the Imperial Navy, which employed it as an anchorage, using its cavernous holds for naval stores and microgravity training. Eventually, the needs of Battlefleet Vilnoi outgrew the asteroid and it was abandoned again for nearly eighty years, its fortresses mostly intact, before being awarded to the reforged Battle Masters. The chapter found the grim, airless rock amply suited for their uses. Soon, the rock was ringed with gigantic docking spires to accommodate their fleet, and the bowels of Pontiorek were refashioned into a fortress monastery that most thought to be impregnable.\n\nBattle Honors\nWith their area of responsibility located near the margins of human-explored space, the Battle Masters have a long and distinguished history as xeno fighters. Their battle honors include wars against forty Hrud migrations, nine retaliatory campaigns against the K’nib, and more than 140 cumulative years of warfare against the empire of the aquatic Saharduin, including the destruction of their pod world of Tl’unquoth Poc. Though the chapter avoided the internecine fighting of the Age of Apostasy, it suffered its second-worst defeat as an indirect consequence of it when the opportunistic warboss Baga Jhuk invaded the divided Imperium with a horde of forty billion orks. A full third of the settled worlds of the Omuta Sector were captured or sacked before the Orks were routed at the Battle of A-93-Deep, the Battle Masters’ homeworld of Kernev among the devastated worlds.\n\nThe Battle Masters likewise took no direct part in either the 13th Black Crusade or the defense and liberation of Holy Terra. In the former case, the chapter sent notice of their intention to join the defense of Cadia, but their request was countermanded and their expeditionary force of 2,500 Marines, 15,000 auxiliary troops, and 40 ships were instead directed to the Maelstrom War Zone to protect Imperial shipping against the Red Corsairs. Shortly thereafter, the chapter, along with most of the rest of the Imperial forces in the coreward part of the Segmentum Tempestus, were sucked into the desperate fight against the Tyranid Hive Fleet Pestilence. The Battle Masters were heavily committed in the two largest engagements of that war; the disastrous War for Callus (999M41-001M42) and the decisive Ninth Battle of Coronel (019M42). Indeed, the Battle Masters did not even become aware of the desecration of the Golden Throne until late 022M42, a year after Guilliman’s crusade had already driven Chaos forces out of the Sol system. The loss of the Astronomican and the ensuring incapacitation of most of their librarians by its psychic death cry was long attributed to the machinations of the Tyranid hive fleet. ",
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