System

August 12, 2022 5:46 AM
0 System Team 3 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

Robyn Lundstrom

August 14, 2022 8:53 PM
Robyn didn’t really know enough people in Sonora to have an opinion on whether her team was above average in any respect—be that brains, athleticism, or friendliness. There were individual members of it that she could easily rank on that scale, and she was hoping to steer clear of Olaf, as much as one could whilst working on the same team. Graham seemed kinda closed-mouth, but not unpleasant. Pretty much all the other boys gave off solid older brother vibes, and she’d decided that Tommy reminded her of Joel. This might not have been based off much other than sheer force of will, and seeking out some way of feeling comforted. Ray was scary and looked like she’d eat someone who’d owned My Little Pony kneepads for breakfast, regardless of how much skating said person had done in them.

When they had discussed strengths and weaknesses, Robyn hadn’t known what to say. All of her strengths were relative, which was to say that, as a first year, they weren’t much. Based off the handful of weeks of classes she’d had, she didn’t suck at magic. She was quite athletic, but her speed, strength and stamina were all on the scale of her being eleven, and all the sports here were unfamiliar to her. She’d taken to flying well enough, compared to people who hated it, but none of that marked her out as special or different. She’d gone with ‘I’m quite fast’ as her best strength. The other thing that made her unusual was that she knew about non-magical stuff, but she thought that might be considered a flaw rather than an advantage, and it seemed unlikely to be useful, so she’d kept it to herself.

She was on team three, so she didn’t have to wait long, or put up with Xavier’s restless pacing. In fact, she didn’t have to put up with him at all, as he was spending his restless energy elsewhere until his team got called. Which also meant he didn’t wish her luck when she left, which was fine because she didn’t need him to… Joel would have, if he was the brother at school though.

They followed Professor Skies outside, and Robyn listened as she explained the first task. Apparently what Robyn thought about her teammates, and what she worried they thought about her, wasn’t going to matter because they were being split up. Well, okay, she could still make a bad impression if everyone else got back together and had to wait ages for her or if she had to get rescued or something. She actually found herself slightly regretful as they went into the maze… She was wary of the challenges, and wasn’t sure how she was going to contribute anything, but in the back of her mind there had been the possibility of her coming up with something super cool and impressing all these older boys and no one ever underestimating her for being a girl/the baby/the sister of that weirdly incompetent fourth year boy ever again. Now she wouldn’t get the chance. Any obstacles she successfully tackled would be without an audience.

She stepped into the maze. It was weird, finding herself suddenly alone. Adrenaline and competitive spirit was kicking in, and she felt pumped, like she might before a race or a soccer match. She also felt the vague prickle on the back of her neck that this wasn’t her world, and she wasn’t sure how PG they’d keep the obstacles. A maze where monsters leapt out at you sounded like something out of a horror movie. And Robyn had two older brothers and a complex about being left out for being the baby—she’d snuck glimpses of more than enough things for the very idea of being in the maze to freak her out slightly.

She took the right fork, and had gone just far enough that it would be annoying to double back when she saw darkness up ahead. Like, a literal cloud of it, hovering in the middle of the path. She considered retreating, but there wasn’t any way of getting through this without facing something, and who knew what lay down the left path? She wasn’t scared of the dark. Not really. Just what might be in it, and the fact that it was unnatural and she couldn’t be sure that it was just dark. What if it was some mystical terrible dark creature that sucked your soul out through your eyeballs if you touched it, and everyone knew that except her because she was just a useless, Muggleborn first year? Except, they’d said they would have threats they could deal with… Oh! She did know a spell for dealing with darkness. Just so long as it was only regular darkness, not wild, soul-through-eyeball-sucking darkness.

“Lumos!” she cast, almost laughing with relief. Except she still had to walk through there. But as her wand steadily illuminated the way around her, revealing nothing but hedgerows, and as the darkness continued not to physically gnaw on her, she relaxed.

She pressed forward until she got through the patch of darkness and extinguished her wand. Ha! She’d done it! She had completed an obstacle by magic, and it really hadn’t been too bad. She allowed herself a little fist pump, and continued on, feeling in much better spirits, and much more like this was a fun maze than a horror maze.

She made a few more twists and turns seeing some wooden blocks at intervals up ahead. They didn’t look like anything she couldn’t easily walk around or climb over. She kept going—and then abruptly stopped. She was sure she was moving forwards, but the scenery around her was retreating like she was moving backwards. She turned to her left but the world moved right. What the…? She stopped moving, dizzy and disoriented, and noticed something like a heat haze shimmering around her. She tried to back up out of it but found herself moving forward instead. Right. It was like… opposite land. She stood still again, gathering her thoughts with her eyes closed. If the staff thought she knew what this was they were sadly mistaken. She’d never heard of a jinx that did this! She could back up (by going forward?) and retrace her steps, or she could move forward (by going backwards) and hope she got to the far side, like she had with the darkness. She took a few steps backwards, opening her eyes to confirm that she was indeed moving forward. There were bars and blocks in her way, and she had to weave left to go right around them, or left if she wanted to go right. It was like trying to French braid in the mirror, and feeling like your hands weren’t going where you were telling them, only with your whole entire body. Was this what being drunk was like? It was how it looked in TV shows. If so, why did anyone want to do that to themselves? This was horrible. And frustrating. She was having to move so slowly. But she was making progress, and eventually she tumbled out the other side.

Thank goodness! She took a moment to shake her body, appreciative of how it went exactly where she expected, and then darted forward—SMACK. She hit an invisible barrier so hard that she fell to the ground with a loud “OW!”

She rubbed her nose, reaching out to explore the space in front of her. Beyond it, she could see an open area with many paths branching off it. But every time she put a hand out, it hit the same wall she had run into. No! She couldn’t be trapped! After all the effort she’d made to get through the backwards cloud, she couldn’t be stuck and have to retrace her steps through it! She wracked her brains for any spell she knew that might get a barrier out of her way.

“Finite incantatum!” she cast, feeling triumphant. She felt the spell warming her hand, pulsing through her wand. But when she tried to walk forward (admittedly more cautiously this time), the barrier was still in her way. She tried a couple more times, but it was still the same. ”Alohomora?” she tried instead, just in case. Still nothing. She turned back to the heat haze, wondering if she just couldn’t cancel any of the spells here. If they’d been made by the teachers it made sense that they were stronger than her magic. But it had seemed like such a good solution to something she didn’t recognise…

“Finite incantatum,” she tried, figuring it was worth a shot. The heat haze vanished. Okay. At least she didn’t have to go back through backwards land again. She still had to retreat though.

She was turning and heading back down that path, when she heard someone calling her name…
13 Robyn Lundstrom *bump* 1558 0 5

Phil Carson

August 19, 2022 5:48 PM
Phil gathered in the Cascade Hall with the rest of his team. As they were Team Three, they didn't have a whole lot of waiting time, and he'd watched the first two teams head out with some interest but there hadn't really been any clues to be gained from watching Professor Skies walk them out of the Hall. They never came back, though he wasn't really expecting them to. This was the gathering and launch place, not the celebration afterwards place.

Soon enough it was their turn. The Deputy Headmistress lead their group out to the Gardens and explained that they were supposed to find each other in the maze. They would, in addition to each other, find dangers in the maze, though nothing above their level. He wasn't quite sure how that would work, but trusted they had some means of ensuring that.

Green sparks, good to go for finding the other members of his team. Red sparks, only for emergencies. Got it. Green wasn't exactly an ideal color for drawing attention in a hedge maze but it was probably better than nothing.

He walked through the maze entrance and spun around quickly, as he realized he was abruptly alone, just as Professor Skies had warned. With nobody to overhear, he gave himself his pep-talk out loud. "Okay. Find the rest of the team. Defeat obstacles. I can do this."

He had arrived already facing a clear path so he kept walking that way, though his startled spin had revealed it kept going in the opposite direction as well rather than leading out where he'd come from. Still, there was no reason he could think of to turn and go what his brain told him was 'backwards' so he moved forward.

He soon came to a branch and he turned right. Then he came to another branch and he turned right. Then he came to another one and it was starting to look really familiar. He used a color changing charm to mark an arrow pointing right, turned right and kept walking. He came to the same too-familiar branch again with his red arrow on it. He turned left this time and walked until he found the same freaking intersection with the arrow pointing right.

He had no idea how to get out of this infinite loop. He pulled out his wand and cast, "Finite Incantatum!" at the hedge where the red arrow was and the red arrow went away but he didn't know if it did anything more than that. He did again just for good measure, then piled up some rocks as a natural trail marker and turned right.

"Freaking fudge!" he shouted when he walked on and came upon the same bloody intersection all over again with his rock marker right where he left it. He'd turned right (a bunch of times) and it just brought him here again. He'd turned left and it did the same thing. He'd tried breaking the magic, but that hadn't worked either.

If you get lost, try to retrace your steps, his mother's voice advised.

He wasn't sure that would work in a magical maze as well as it did in a national park, but he turned around and walked back the way he'd come. And then he started seeing new turns and different hedges (he assumed - hedges all looked pretty much the same to him, but there were some new flowers growing next to them that hadn't been in his infinite loop). He breathed out a sigh of relief. He'd escaped.

When he did come to an intersection - a different one with no trail marker made of rocks - he drew a big X in the dirt from the way he'd come. Then he remembered they were getting points based on creative spellwork, so he found a big stick and used some transfiguration to turn it into a wooden staked signpost that read "DEAD END" and jabbed it into the middle of his dirt X.

He looked down the two branches that were new territory to him, one looking bright and cheery, the other dark and ominous. He picked the ominous side because the sunniness was clearly a trap.

It wasn't so dark that he needed a light spell, but it was starting to get cold. Like, really really cold. Like, he probably needed a winter coat, gloves, and a scarf or he'd get sick or possibly die kind of cold. He cast a warming charm on his school robes and pulled them tighter around himself. That helped a little. He cast two more on each of his feet as his toes were getting really cold. Better.

He kept going, and looked down a side path and was surprised to see another person down it. "Hey!" he called out. "Robyn!" He hurried toward her and between one step and the next, the cold was gone. "Oh, blessed warmth!" he declared, raising his arms up toward the sun and soaking in its sweet sweet ultraviolet radiation.

Then he grinned at the first year and held out a fist for a fist bump. "Whoo! Two of us found each other! So far I found an infinite loop puzzle and a freezing cold patch!"


OOC: Godmodding to figure out the age line and move on is acceptable or they can post about figuring out what is going on there, as Phil has no idea he even crossed one. Or that such a thing exists.
1 Phil Carson *fist bump* 1536 0 5

Robyn Lundstrom

August 19, 2022 7:00 PM
It was Phil who’d called her. Not the biggest of big brother vibes, but not Ray or Olaf either. Robyn gave him a big grin, relieved to feel like she was both making progress and not entirely alone.

“Hey, look out there’s a—” she began as he ran full tilt at the invisible barrier. And through it. Huh? He was talking about blessed warmth and freezing patches, and her brain processed enough to nod vaguely along, as the rest of it pondered what had just happened. Was it a one way thing? Oh no, were they trapped here now?

“There was a really dark bit and a kind of… make your vision go mirror imagery thing. But I lumos’d and finited them.” She presented the good news first, or at least the ones that showed she’d achieved something. “But there’s a barrier here,” she reached out her hand, pushing against it to check that it hadn’t somehow been deactivated by Phil running through it. “I couldn’t finite that. So, uh, we might be kind of stuck in my bit of the maze now? On the plus side, there’s nothing too dangerous here, I guess.” Which could be a plus side if Phil didn’t want to get horribly eaten, but a downside in terms of adventure and potential bonus points if he didn’t want to be stuck doing baby spells.
13 Robyn Lundstrom No bump? 1558 0 5

Graham Osbrook

August 28, 2022 9:15 PM
Graham was unsure what to think of the composition of his team. On one hand, they had the Head Boy, who...was a little unusual, but one expected that of Aladrens, and presumably, the 'Head Boy' part overruled the 'odd' bit. Hopefully, the 'Aladrens are smart' bit overruled the 'odd' bit when it came to the guy from Claire's year (Graham thought he was the one she identified primarily as 'the guy who wears sunglasses indoors,' which he was...pretty sure would at least be an improvement over 'guy who annoys portraits'). Tommy was fine as far as he knew. And then there were...some first years and a girl who appeared to wish to frighten or intimidate.

And him. He was also...here, mostly just glad that it was this year and not last year. The pressure to figure his life out and perform at a higher level than he comfortably could hadn't lessened much, but a little was something - enough that he didn't feel in immediate danger of a nervous breakdown most days, anyway. This was a definite improvement and probably an asset to the group as well.

"Good luck, everyone," he said, to be polite, as their group was called out to the Gardens, and then he stepped into the maze, all tensed up and expecting something weird to happen....

And something weird did happen. He ended up in a completely random part of the Gardens that he didn't recognize, with no logical connection between it and where he had just come from (looking over his shoulder revealed that nope, he could not see the opening back toward the school anymore). It didn't, however, feel any different than walking into the place he 'should' have ended up would have. He didn't know if that was better or worse than the alternative - for about five seconds. Then he realized that no, feeling something weird was almost always the worse option when it came to magic, so he shook his head a little, took his wand out, and proceeded with caution, but without letting the inherent creepiness of being alone in an unfamiliar part of the maze get to him. Much, anyway.

At least it isn't CATS, he thought. Or RATS. Beside those, most things count as an improvement.

Most things. There were, however, worse things. Such as walking on what looked like a perfectly innocuous span of the ground and then realizing suddenly that he was sinking, and sinking rapidly.

Think. It could be some kind of illusion, or it could be, well, some actual sinking situation. Probably better to assume the latter; if he was wrong, the former probably would be easier to address later in the process than the latter. So he should address the second option first. What to do, what to do...probably couldn't levitate his shoes out and get himself out at the same time...Dehydration charm?

The dehydration charm worked, so the ground, beneath an illusion making it look ordinary, became dry sand instead of sucking mud. It also allowed Graham to learn something about himself: apparently, in a crisis, he was pretty calm. It was just afterward that he felt a little rattled. Which...he guessed at least it worked out, but he hoped it wore off fast, because who knew what was around the next corner? That was why he hated mazes, and did his best to scold his sister about spending so much time out here without actually letting on that he really worried about her, since....he loved Claire. He guessed she probably returned the feeling. He was pretty sure they would both rather walk on hot coals than talk about it or acknowledge it outright in any other way. That would just be...weird, wouldn't it?

The next obstacles were less easy to miss ahead of time, and he gained confidence as he went on....right up until he suddenly found himself in the air.

He didn't have a problem with heights...when he had a broom, or else was standing on something with guard rails. Something solid and familiar, something with spells built in for its safety. At the moment, he was not totally sure he was dealing with either of those situations, not least because he feared for the stability of anything that suddenly started rising out of the ground at a pretty quick clip. He could have jumped safely enough at one point, but he was sufficiently startled that this window of opportunity passed quickly (at least by his none-too-adventurous standards). Which...left him with a few options....

"Descendo," he tried, figuring it was worth a try before he tried to conjure a ladder from thin air (because he wasn't about to break off something and try to Transfigure it from there; the platform he was standing on was not nearly big enough for him to feel like that was a good idea). He wasn't too surprised, though, when it didn't prove amenable to moving under a relatively easy charm like that. So he could try to cast some kind of cushioning charm on the ground and jump, or else try to conjure a ladder....

A rare flash of creativity struck him, and he - very carefully - took off his shoes. Then he started tying the laces together between them. It would only be one direct Transfiguration - but with a visual model structurally similar to the end product, he thought he could get a few rungs out of it, then put a stretching charm on the whole.

The end result was not as sturdy-feeling as he might have liked, but it seemed at least a better option than jumping and counting on landing in the right place, and on having cast a charm at that distance. The wobbling made him question that assumption a few times (at least jumping would have been quicker), and he ended up jumping away before he got to the bottom when he heard what sounded a lot like splintering wood, but - it worked well enough, he guessed. He was on the ground again with nothing broken and alive and stuff. Now just to get his shoes back....

That done, he proceeded a little way and found humans. "Now we're talking," he said approvingly. "One from each class, huh? And three down, four to go."

16 Graham Osbrook I don't think it's time to jump. 1498 0 5