System

August 12, 2022 5:46 AM
0 System Team 9 0 System 0 5

Selina Skies

August 12, 2022 5:46 AM
Selina was excited for the first challenge. Traditionally, this was the closest to a pure ‘strength’ challenge that they got. It tended to either be athletic, or require subverting that need through use of magic. That brought in a problem-solving element, but you still needed fire power of one sort of another to back up your brains.

As ever, there were the needs of the specific cohort to consider. Whilst the challenges were designed to push people outside of their comfort zones, they weren’t meant to be downright traumatising or impossible, which meant they had to design them in such a way that students with access needs weren’t at a disadvantage—in this particular cohort, they had to consider how to make a challenge that was equitable for Lazarus, given that his communication method was more time-consuming than other people’s. That meant either limiting the need to talk, making a rule against it, or not making time the deciding factor. Whilst a few different ideas had been bounced about, the one they’d settled on leant more towards the first two options. This was a timed challenge, but one where he wouldn’t be at a disadvantage.

The groups were gathered in the Cascade Hall, although those with a higher number were permitted to wander the rest of the school, save for the Labyrinth Gardens (where the challenge would be taking place) and the MARS rooms (where the teams would go after finishing). They had been given a time to return to the hall by, which was an approximate estimate of when they’d be needed. The posters announcing the task had told them only to bring their wands.

In turn, Selina collected each team, and led them outside. Technically, a labyrinth was a single, meandering path. It was distinct from a maze in that, whilst it twisted and twined back on itself, there was only ever one single route. It was designed to be more of a meditative experience than a puzzle. The labyrinth at Sonora fell somewhere between this and a more traditional maze—it did have branches, and dead ends, but more to create separate areas and a chance for privacy than because they actually wanted students to get truly lost or stuck. However, the familiar paths had been warped and twisted, rearranged into something that was much trickier to navigate. That fact, at first, was only obvious from the large, curved wall they found themselves standing by.

“Welcome to the first challenge. In a moment, you will enter the maze. Although you will all enter through the same doorway, you will all end up in different sections of it. Your job is to find each other. You will primarily score points on how quickly you do that, although you may gain bonus points for the number of obstacles defeated or creativity of the spellwork involved.

“The maze is constructed in such a way that you will not meet an obstacle that is above your grade level whilst on your own.” By which she meant, there were age lines between the various sections, and they could only be ‘finited’ by someone who was old enough to cross them. Whilst that meant that lower years might hit an invisible barrier they couldn’t cross, it meant that they couldn’t wander into danger without an older student to help them. The obstacles in the maze consisted of some ‘combat’ style tasks like those they would find in their DADA classes—minor jinxes that were fired by visible dummies or tripped by less obvious (but still detectable) means, creatures suited to their age range and the fact that they weren’t under the immediate eye of an adult—but also more puzzle solving elements, such as hedges that would close up behind them or gaps that were too small to get through.

“You may use green sparks to try to catch your teammates’ attention, though I’m not sure how well they’ll be able to see them. Please only use red sparks if you feel genuinely unsafe and require intervention from a staff member.

“Any questions?” she asked, taking time to answer anything about the rules of the task, but not giving away any details about what they’d find inside. “Alright,” she smiled, once that was done. “Best of luck. On your marks, get set, go.” She waved her wand, and a doorway opened, which would scatter them to their starting points.


OOC: Welcome to your first challenge! You may make up any reasonable obstacle in line with the above descriptors. Your post will be graded by class standards - i.e. it is about length, relevance and realism, not about how amazingly awesome you claim to be. Your initial or most detailed post for each character will be scored on a scale of 1-5 and every other post you make will gain an additional 1 point.
Unlike normal threads, you do not have to follow a posting order (e.g. keeping the same order of speaking) though try to consult with your team mates in chatzy if more than three of you get back together.
You may not write for other characters. Please give teammates (or staff) room to respond if something happens that would get their attention.

The challenge will run for two weeks, from today until Friday August 26th.

You may also post celebration threads in the MARS room.
Subthreads:
13 Selina Skies Challenge One: A-Mazeing 26 1 5

Samara Crosby

August 18, 2022 11:00 AM
So far, Samara was really enjoying the Challenges. Although they hadn’t had any of the actual Challenges, she had met her teammates and they were so awesome. She was with Aunt Melanie’s nephew Ian and he was really nice so far. Phillipe and Theo were amazing too! They all seemed to really care about how comfortable people were, which was good, since she did like to be comfortable.. Like, Theo wanted to make sure they didn’t have to do things that they didn’t like and was willing to help them with the things they were iffy on

And Phillipe led a club of people like her great aunt, Margo, who had always been super nice to Samara because her middle name was after her aunt and Aunt Margo had always gotten a kick out of it. So he was cool too. Like he seemed to be really nice and open minded and seemed like he would make sure everyone was nice to each other.

In all honesty though, Samara was actually surprised to like her teammates. And sort of confused by it. She had expected that she would dislike everyone, that they’d be annoying or mean but so far she hadn’t met anyone awful at all. Honestly, the first year had only met nice people at Sonora.

Then again, she rarely hated anyone on their own merits.Most of the time, she picked up on who she was supposed to dislike,because of who her mother disliked-which was most people-and Samara didn’t want to make her mother angry. Merlin, did she not want to make her mother angry!

Of course, a couple of those people were really awful, like her great-grandmother Gloria and her cousin Angus’s wife Whitney, but mostly the Crotalus just kept her distance from people she wasn’t supposed to like and didn’t know well. Which was unfortunate in some cases, like with her cousin Caleb who was only slightly older than her. However, Mother really didn’t like Aunt Pippa, who was Caleb’s mom, and that extended to her husband and children. So, Samara was not about to risk it.

However, Mother didn’t know any of the other Sonora students, therefore, the first year was free to form her own opinions. She had found a loophole there and she did love a loophole. Although, she did wonder if she was allowed to like Ian. He was Aunt Melanie’s nephew-as well as some distant cousin on her Mother’s side too- and Mother didn’t like Aunt Melanie, supposedly because Aunt Melanie-the wife of her dad’s brother, Uncle Marcus-reminded Mother of her sister, Aunt Pippa.

The thing was though, that Samara did secretly like Aunt Melanie. Also, even if she didn’t, disliking someone for being the nephew or niece of someone Mother didn’t like and that she was not supposed to like, would mean not liking her brother or herself. So, Samara reasoned that it meant it was okay to like Ian. Meanwhile, Mother didn’t know her teammates or her roommate Lyla, and as for that group of girls who were her distant cousins, well, clearly Mother approved of the Crotalus hanging out with them since she was the one who basically shoved Samara at them and telling her to go hang out with them.

Which meant that she did have a ready made group here and she did talk to them although she wanted to make friends with other people too. While being clannish and only hanging out with family was not a good thing, she still was glad to have a support system. And Piper in particular was pretty good at helping the first year out. The older girl was very helpful when telling Samara all about the Challenges since her first cousins had all done it minus the one that was currently at Sonora.

Honestly, she sort of wished she hadn’t been Sorted into Crotalus since basically all of those girls were in either Teppenpaw or Aladren. On the other hand, her brother had been one too and she absolutely adored Martin. He was a person who made Samara feel special because she was the only person that he liked, aside from a girl named Jezebel that he’d become friends with when they were at Sonora.So, Samara was proud to have ended up in the same house that he’d been in.

Unfortunately, though Martin had graduated already and he was not here with her. And she was alone in Crotalus. She guessed she would try and make friends with her roommate. Lyla seemed really nice. Also, her teammates Claire and Winston were both Crotali and Claire wasn’t that much older than her so maybe they’d become friends too. After all, Professor Skies had flat out said that these Challenges were designed to create connections between people who might not otherwise ever talk to each other. Which was great. She was super happy to bond with them.

On the day of the first Challenge, she gathered in the Cascade Hall with the rest of the students, happily joining her teammates. It turned out that each team would be doing the task one at a time, in numerical order. As Samara was on Team Nine, she was going to have quite a wait.

Finally, it was their turn and they were collected by Professor Skies and led out to the Labyrinth Gardens. However, once she heard the instructions, she frowned. It was not the task itself-she was not the most athletic person but since they had been instructed to bring her wand, that likely meant she was going to be able to use magic for everything-but the first year wanted to do this with her team, not on her own! Not that Samara didn’t think she could do it alone, a first year path was likely to be pretty easy, especially given that it wasn’t even midterm yet. They certainly could not throw anything at her that she hadn’t learned yet as Professor Skies had specifically said they wouldn’t and so far, she was pretty decent at magic. She just liked her teammates and wanted to get to know them better.

Also, Samara was actually unsure of how they could even come up with many obstacles for the first years. They had pretty much almost any spell one could think of at their disposal for the seventh years but for the first years they were very limited, especially since it wasn’t even midterm yet. Merlin, did the Crotalus hope that this did not mean that she would have to rely on athletic skills. Those were very firmly on her yellow list and she would be alone without her team to help.

Samara entered the maze. She looked around, trying to figure out a quick way to find her teammates. If she found them fast, they could help her out through any of the more…athletic tasks. Honestly, it was kind of unfair to expect that of the first years. Just because they hadn’t learned much magic yet, they would have to use physical abilities, which meant if someone wasn’t great on them, they’d have a more difficult time. Surely, though,they were supposed to use magic.

And there was a spell that she’d learned, that she thought might help. The Softening Charm. It would make the ground in front of her rubbery and bouncy. Maybe if she cast it on the ground in front of her, she would bounce so high that she would spot one of her teammates over the wall. Samara drew her wand and performed the spell. “ Spongify!

She tested the ground in front of her and found that her spell had worked. The first year happily stepped out onto the affected area, jumped up and looked around. Jumped up and looked again. And again.

After repeating this process a few times, not to mention extending it out a little further, Samara spotted one of her teammates. “Hey! Hello!Yoo-hoo, I’m over here!” She continued bouncing along, sending up green sparks, so her teammate could see her.

Then she felt herself crash down, not on the hard ground fortunately, but not on her nice bouncy Spongified ground either. Instead the first year found herself in what could only be described as muck. “Eeeew!”

Fortunately, she looked up to see one of her teammates in front of her. She looked up at them with a sheepish grin. “Hi. Can you dry and clean me off please?” Samara meant, of course, using the drying and cleaning charms to do so.

She managed to get up out of the muck. “I suppose now that you’re here, I don’t have to walk through that either.” It wasn’t that deep, so it would have just been one of those obstacles that Samara would have to get around some way. Either by walking through it or jumping over it-and fortunately, she didn’t have to do that because she didn’t think she physically could do so. Samara supposed if her teammate hadn’t shown up, she would have had to find a branch or something to transfigure into something big enough to be a bridge. Which may or may not have been successful.
11 Samara Crosby Representing Team Softeness! 1563 0 5

Theo Spurn

August 24, 2022 2:43 AM
Theo’s team was last, which meant they had a very long wait. Waiting was a complicated thing. It could be boring, but also anxious at the same time because you had to worry about not being late, which was a challenge, especially when it was a long enough wait that you would want to do something distracting. Luckily, Theo had strategies for that. He went to his room and got his collaging materials, and brought them back down to the Cascade Hall. Collaging was a very good way of losing track of time, which would make the waiting disappear, and being in the place you needed to be meant you couldn’t be late.

He was working on a collage for Anya, figuring Philippe could give it to her along with her hug at Christmas. His idea was to rip out lots of browns and reds to make a volcano and a literal floor of lava (only not literal because it was only paper and fabric and shiny things), and then add lots of flying things very much not touching the lava floor, like birds and gymnasts and butterflies and whatever he could find. He was currently in the collecting stage, and had piles of brown, red, and flying which he was adding to. He thought he might have enough brown so he was laying it all out on the page when he was informed he was supposed to go. Oh.

He asked whether a prairie elf could very carefully move all the things exactly as they were back to his room, and then followed his team, hoping that challenge one was something that was as fun as collaging otherwise he might actually kind of be annoyed about it and it would be annoying to be annoyed about it because he’d actually been looking forward to it before, and he didn’t want to be in an annoyance loop but sometimes that just happened.

Challenge one sounded… fine? He still hadn’t fully finished collaging, even if he was only doing it in his head now.

“Red list, red sparks,” he noted to his team, taking in that key bit of information. Ian had concerned and confused him when they’d talked about that. He had done something off his red list. Which meant that either Ian didn’t understand what a red list was or the school didn’t. You couldn’t do things off your red list. It was to the point of absolute no, freeze up, melt down. He wasn’t sure how those things had happened and no one had stopped it. Still, hopefully they wouldn’t happen today. There was a safety mechanism built in.

They all stepped into the maze, and Theo found himself entirely alone. He wandered forward, eventually sending up some green sparks because that was what they’d been told to do.

He’d only gone a little further, when several eyes snapped open, peering out of the hedge at the point where he was standing. An alarm sounded, and a metal grate slammed down in front of him. Theo stumbled backwards, disturbed more by the noise than the eyes. He didn’t mind convivial loudness—he was the source of a lot of it—but the sudden loud and jarring sound was unpleasant. As soon as he stepped back from the section with the eyes, it stopped, and the grate slid up again.

Hm.

Theo tentatively reached an arm out but as soon as he saw the eyes flicking open, he withdrew. He could go back, but he was supposed to problem solve. He stood thinking. He had three problems, the biggest of which was the unpleasant noise. He looked around for something to cast a ‘silencio’ on but he couldn’t see any likely source. He tried it anyway, just vaguely aiming at midair, but the sound started up as soon as the eyes opened. He needed to not be seen.

Aha!

He took a deep breath and cast a disillusionment charm. He didn’t love the slithery, creepy, cold sensation, but he could run his hands over his clothes and they felt just the same as before. It wasn’t really making him slimy or anything else unpleasant. It was, however, hopefully disguising him from the alarm eyes. Sure enough, when he walked forward, there was no reaction, and he passed through the archway without the gate slamming down.

He continued on his way, having to stretch or shrink or vanish a thing here and a thing there, but not meeting anything that he found particularly bothersome. At least, until he rounded the corner and came across what was almost definitely a boggart—a slime and muck covered person lurching towards him from a pit of ooze.

“Riddikulus!” he cast, trying to imagine it sprouting feathers to replace the muck. That wasn’t funny, just delightful, but it would at least not be scary any more. Except the spell didn’t work. ”Riddikulus!” he yelled again, trying not to gag or run at the sheer grossness of everything in the vicinity. He wasn’t always good at not reacting to boggarts, but he was very good at wanting them to be unboggarty, and this usually worked. As it continued to remain unchanged, another possibility occurred.

“Don’t hug me!” he instructed, in case it really was Samara. He had set a precedent for hugs but he absolutely did not want one right now. He backed up a few steps. She possibly had a hard time noticing that, or the look of revulsion on his face, as he hadn’t remembered to lift the disillusionment charm. He wasn’t invisible, and when he did attention-grabbing things like yelling or casting spells, he was probably easier to find, but it would potentially be challenging for anyone to keep their focus on him. He dried and cleaned her robes, and then used a transfiguration to turn the mud to solid rock, which was much less disgusting.
13 Theo Spurn You're doing it wrong 1476 0 5

Claire Osbrook

August 25, 2022 1:44 PM
There was something about the nature of the challenge which was…something. Claire wasn’t sure what the exact word she wanted was – ironic, maybe? – but she knew there had to be one. She was in the Gardens, which she was pretty sure she knew about as well as anyone at the school, after all the time she’d spent navigating the mazes just to learn them - and now that this knowledge would have proven unusually useful for once, the staff had gone and changed the layout, at least a little.

Stepping through, though, she blinked and struggled to get her bearings as she noticed for the first time just how similar any given section of the Gardens could look to most of the others when she was just effectively dropped into the spot without any context. Maybe this would have been harder than she had thought it would be even if the layouts hadn’t been curved and stuff now….

…And if there hadn’t been a knockback jinx set to go off as soon as she got too close to a certain hedge only a few steps in the first direction she started to go. She wasn’t hurt by her tumble to the ground, but she did turn red with sheer embarrassment, hoping that the staff wasn’t watching them work somehow. Jinxes that weren’t being aimed at her by someone else in Defense Against the Dark Arts weren’t something she thought anyone would have really expected her to be on guard against, if only because they were so rare, but this was a challenge, and she felt stupid for forgetting that over something no bigger than being a little confused about where she was.

On the bright side, though, embarrassment was one of those emotions that rapidly translated into anything between annoyance and anger with her, and annoyance was actually useful at the moment. Being disoriented was a little creepy, a little unsettling; annoyance cleared her head from that, which enabled her to think more clearly about what she was doing and how she might be able to do it better.

It made the most sense, she decided as she (much more cautiously) continued to make her way forward, to assume that she was somewhere near the periphery of the Gardens. If part of the task was finding each other, then one way to make it especially challenging would be to fling them all as far apart as possible. If they all had sense, therefore, they would try to make their way inward with the goal of meeting up somewhere near the heart of the maze.

Sense, of course, was not something Claire attributed to most people just as a rule of thumb, but she thought it…might not be the stupidest thing she could do today, anyway. Most of the team was, after all, made up of people from her own House; nobody she knew all that well, of course, because that would have made the game too easy, but people whose thinking, she had to assume, was at least somewhat similar to hers. Plus, she’d be bound to run into either someone or an exit (in which case she might at least be able to place herself more precisely) if she followed that plan herself, at least as best she could without being a hundred per cent which direction she was even starting from.

Sense, to her mind, also included avoiding obstacles as best she could, though of course this wasn’t always possible. Such as when what looked like a holly bush attacked her…and then chased her, at least until she was able to deploy the same jinx against it that had tripped her up in the beginning and then hit it with a Freezing Charm. A jarvey, in turn, was stopped as it went with petrificus totalus, even though she wasn’t sure that was even the ‘correct’ charm to use – it was just the first one that came to mind. She got a little less lucky with the pixies, though; by the time she’d cleared enough of the swarm that went for her head to get through the opening in the hedges she’d been aiming for, there were scratches on her face and arms, and her robes were torn at both shoulders from where some of the nasty things had decided to pick her up and had managed to lift her off the ground with what seemed to her like way too much ease, even considering that her brother had once compared her appearance to that of a stick-bug.

Hitting the ground a second time hurt more than it had the first time, she thought as she rolled the rest of the way to where she wanted to go, taking advantage of how pixies seemed momentarily confused by her going lengthwise on the ground instead of moving the way people normally did. She wondered if it was because of the repetition or because she’d fallen from the air the second time. Muttering to herself – making non-verbal noises of disgust, really – as she dusted herself off after that encounter, she winced as she bent her knee forward and back – and then froze when she heard voices.

Probably teammates. Possibly a ruse, though, she thought, running through spells in her head. She couldn’t think of one right now that would make it sound like she heard someone talking when they weren’t present, but she didn’t think that necessarily ruled one out. It seemed logical enough to her that they could face obstacles that involved spells above their levels, as long as the solution was something they could handle, and voices…would be most likely to lead her the wrong way, if they were fake. Or at least, that was what she would do if she could do something like that. Still, though, it seemed stupid not to check….

Claire thought for a moment and then adjusted her grip on her wand. “Engorgio,” she said, pointing at a branch in the nearest hedge and expanding it until it was wide enough for her to put at least one foot on and about as long as she thought she could make it. She then repeated the process with a few others higher up, creating a rough sort of climbing apparatus, something somewhere between a very lopsided set of stairs and a very crude ladder. Then – carefully, because it would suck if it didn’t hold her weight and she fell a third time – she scrambled to look over the top of the hedge and down on…

…Well, a person, anyway. A person and…what sounded like Theo Spurn, but which was just a very erratic patch of light and texture – a visual illusion of some kind. That seemed to think that Samara Crosby was a boggart which…wanted to hug him?

“Hi,” she said, about as close to brightly as she usually got. “Do I, uh, even want to know?”
16 Claire Osbrook I mean, you are the one who just turned something into solid rock.... 1540 0 5

Theo Spurn

August 27, 2022 9:34 PM
Theo had met Claire before she started Sonora. She had bumped him and then her dad had said ‘sorry’ about it even though that was not how apologies were supposed to work. This was not something Theo held resentment for, it was just a fact about Claire that was filed in his brain—she was, and always would be, The Unapologetic Bumper. He had only mentioned this twice since they’d been teamed up.

Now, as her face and shoulders (which were all wrong) appeared over the hedge, he added Nonsensical Question Asker to her list of known traits. Did she even want to know what? And how was he supposed to know what she wanted to know? It was inside her brain.

“You’re a mess,’ the Theo-ish patch of shimmery air said instead of answering her question. That fact seemed much more pressing right now. Claire’s face had scratches on, which made his stomach squirm as he imagined the feeling that went with it. “I’m going to fix that,” he said, then remembering something else important about casting spells, especially medical ones, on other people, he added, “With your consent.” Though why anyone wouldn’t want to become unscratched, he had no idea.
13 Theo Spurn Messy is worse than hard 1476 0 5

Claire Osbrook

August 28, 2022 11:49 PM
“I know,” Claire said when Theo’s voice, which seemed localized to the shimmery, heat-haze like effect going on, informed her that she was a mess, as though she didn’t know. She was almost certain that her parents would have scolded her for not being a sweet girl despite the ostensibly pleasant tone, and she guessed she probably even would have deserved it, this time. Since she was ninety-nine percent sure that he hadn’t noticed the undertones, though, she decided not to worry about it too much, especially when she couldn’t help but think he was trying to get under her skin, with how he just kept bringing up that stupid thing from years ago at the Concert….

Since testing the strength of her branch-steps indefinitely didn’t seem like the brightest idea, she finished climbing to the top of the hedge as she spoke and then dropped to the ground near Theo and Samara. She pulled the hair tie out of her hair and redid her ponytail, thus tidying up that much of her own appearance.

“Uh…that’s nice of you, thank you, but I’m all right,” she said when he paused after having previously announced that he was going to fix the problem of her being a mess. “It looks like you and Samara both ran into worse than I did. Do you know if reparo works on sleeves? Let’s not go back the way I came, those pixies are awful. That’s the only real problem I’ve run into. I guess we should stick together, now that we've found each other," she observed. "It'll hopefully get us out of here quicker."
16 Claire Osbrook ...Yeah, fair enough. 1540 0 5