| Seattle OOC room - This is where Out Of Character things happen. Such as waiting for a victim to roleplay with. While in the out of character room do not put others down or the different venues, the admin have worked very hard to bring the venue to life and do not need to be made to feel like they are not doing the best they can. Be respectful. |
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| Storytelling Room - Where storytellers can run scenes without interruption. Do not enter this room unless invited. |
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| IC ROOM - Where scenes take place that don't fit into the other rooms. Please take into consideration that the scene might be some place remote, please ask before joining. |
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| North Coast Beach - Summertime wonders at the beach, located in the water. Come around, have some fun, spend a relaxing night by the water to see the ocean sunset. |
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| Downtown - Downtown is the central business district of Seattle, Washington. It is fairly compact compared to other city centers on the West Coast because of its geographical situation: hemmed in on the north and east by hills, on the west by the Elliott Bay, and on the south by reclaimed land that was once tidal flats. It is bounded on the north by Denny Way, beyond which are Lower Queen Anne (sometimes known as "Uptown"), Seattle Center, and South Lake Union; on the east by Interstate 5, beyond which are Capitol Hill and First Hill; on the south by Yesler Way, beyond which is the International District and part of Pioneer Square; and on the west by Central Waterfront and Elliott Bay. Belltown, the Denny Regrade, and the rest of Pioneer Square are sub-neighborhoods of Downtown. Near the center of Downtown is the Metropolitan Tract, owned by the University of Washington, the location of the university's pre-1895 campus. Downtown is Seattle's main financial district, waterfront, and shopping area (surrounding Westlake Center and connected to Seattle Center by way of a monorail), which make up the bulk of Downtown. It is also home to the landmark Pike Place Market. |
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| Undercity - In the 1800s a fire engulfed the old city. Instead of repairing the city they literally built a city over the city giving the city a lower level like a basement. There are tours that are given of the undercity |
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| Seattle Center - Built for the World Fair, the Seattle Center is home to the Space needle, EMC/Sci-Fi Museum as well as a fair and international eatery. |
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| Dantes Rings - Dante's Rings: It's on three stories if you include the basement. The decor look likes a medieval dungeon,the mood very gothic yet much more as those filling up the place are a far cry from goths. Men and women, dressed in latex or latex, dominant, submissive, switch, mostly in their late 30's early forties.
Inside there'sa bar, looking more like a castle tavern where people can chat if they want to or drink whatever they want. The barmaids are ghouls and knows when to offer a special vintage. Amateur Dominatrix are there on the floor and mingle with the subs who wants their services. Depending on what is their favorite pleasure or pleasures, they will be lead in one of the 9 sections of the club in the basement or first floor. It ranges from light bondage, to animal play (not to be confounded with bestiality), submission, pain..anything you can imagine and that's legal. Every section is equipped with various bondage tools: chains, cuffs, whips...if you can imagine it, it's in one of the rooms.
There's a VIP section taking all of the second floor but only a Kindred and Ghouls are allowed [Elysium] |
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| Starbucks - Starbucks found down town and usually active with coffee drinkers, Free Wifi! |
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| U District - The University District (commonly, the U District) is a neighborhood in Seattle, Washington, so named because the main campus of the University of Washington (UW) is located there. The UW moved in two years after the area was annexed to Seattle, while much of the area was still clear cut forest or stump farmland. The district of neighborhoods grew with the university to become a microcosm of urban American cities. |
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| Washington Park Arboretum - The Washington Park Arboretum is a spectacular urban green space on the shores of Lake Washington just east of downtown Seattle and south of the University of Washington.
Washington's official State Arboretum contains internationally recognized woody plant collections on 230 acres. Noteworthy are North America's largest collection of Sorbus and Maple, the second largest collection of species Hollies and significant collections of oaks, conifers and camellias |
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| Club Echo - Done in the style of the 20s. This Jazz club is open from noon to 4 am to the public. They serve pub style food too. To Fae this club is clearly a safe haven, as rumor has gotten around about it. And if you have not hurt about it, the Troll bouncers are a sure sign of such |
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| The Knights Bastion - Located in the U-District, this Dojo teaches the secret of steel or more importantly how to use them. |
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| The Mercury - The Mercury - A goth/Industrial club. A beautiful club! This spacious subterranean hideout with its lush oxblood walls, ambient lighting and under lit bars and seating areas is a big departure from Machine Works, this club's previous incarnation! They are 2006 NW People's Pick winner for Seattle's Best Nightclub and finalist for best djs, drink menu and bartenders! |
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| Capital Hill - capitol Hill is the second most densely populated neighborhood in Seattle, Washington, United States, after Bell town (in northern downtown). It is the center of LGBT life in Seattle and also a center of the city's counterculture, while also home to some of the city's grandest mansions and many attractions. |
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| Freehold of Exalted Light - (Pending) |
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| Mercer Island - Mercer Island was first settled in the 1870s. It was named after early visitors, the Mercer brothers, who often rowed from Seattle for berry picking, hunting and fishing. The first large settlement was on the northwest side of Mercer Island, called "East Seattle." C.C. |
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| Lake View Cemetery - Lake View Cemetery is a cemetery located on Seattle, Washington, Capitol Hill just north of Volunteer Park. It is named for its view of Lake Washington to the east. It was founded in 1873 as the Seattle Masonic Cemetery. |
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| Cathedral of St. Anastasia - Nestled within the trees of Interlaken Park the gothic cathedral of St. Anastasia the Pious lies ruined and abandoned. Once a hotspot for drug-users and wastrels few mortals have stepped foot upon its unhallowed soil for over a decade. The catacombs underneith hold the rooms of Seattle's Infernal Court. |
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| Queen Anne Hill - Queen Anne Hill is a Seattle neighborhood. Although several neighborhoods in Seattle, Washington are of similar or higher elevations (e.g. Broad view, Maple Leaf, and Southwest Seattle), Queen Anne is the highest named hill in Seattle, with a maximum elevation of 456 feet (139 m) (although the highest point in the city is High Point in West Seattle, at 520 feet). Queen Anne is situated just north of Seattle Center and just south of Fremont across the Lake Washington Ship Canal. The hill early became a popular spot for the city's economic and cultural elite to build their mansions (the name derives from the architectural style, typical of many of the early homes). |
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| Chantry of the rising Phoenix - A rather large mansion in Bellevue about a half hour from Seattle proper. It rests on a well groomed lawn and set away from other houses. It does not appear much beyond a old style manse, infact most eyes seem to slide away from it as if it didnt exist despite the grandure of the manse [OATHED mages only] |
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| Warren G Magnison Park - Magnuson Park is a 350 acre, park on Sand Point at Pontiac Bay, Lake Washington, in the Sand Point neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. The park is the second largest in Seattle after 534 acre, Discovery Park in Magnolia. Sand Point is the peninsula with Pontiac and Wolf bays that juts into Lake Washington, |
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| Cougar Mountain - The lowest and westernmost of the Issaquah Alps, Cougar Mountain is part of the highlands in suburban Seattle, Washington that rise abruptly from southeast of the intersection of I-90 and I-405. About two-thirds of Cougar Mountain has experienced residential development, and is home to many neighborhood communities such as Lakemont, but the forested heart of the hills was officially preserved by King County in June 1983 as Cougar Mountain Regional Wildland Park. Cougar Mountain is also home to the Cougar Mountain Zoo. |
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| Sept of Gaias Grace - Nestled in the side of Cougar Moutain this is a quaint sept with wooden buildings lining the single road that leads in and out. Some are houses and some are former buisnesses now converted into the offices and buildings that are needed in the running of the sept. With street street lights and flower pots lining the edges of the road it brings back memories of a simpler time.[shifters only] |
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