FULGORN: THE LEGEND OF MOON

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Summary

He was never meant to matter. Until they took the only person who did. In the ashes of Fulgorn’s dying empire, Moon—an Imp and outlawed techsmith—survives by fixing what the Triarchs forbid. But when the regime chains him in silence and kidnaps his blind sister, Yaya, Moon’s quiet rebellion ignites into war. Now, with the Skyspires crumbling and lava devouring the land, Moon must outwit a sadistic overlord, awaken ancient powers, and rally the broken castes. Because Fulgorn isn't just falling—it's burning. And if Moon can’t rise, everything will burn with it.

Status
Ongoing
Chapters
3
Rating
n/a
Age Rating
16+

Prologue

The Canticle of Light

As told by the Triarch High Creed

Before the first spark, there was only the Void — empty and still. Yet within that stillness stirred three primordial desires: to know, to be, and to shape.

From this triad of desire, the Great Flame was born. Not fire, but Fulgoria — the first light. A sentient force that shattered the Void’s silence with her hunger to create.

Fulgoria wept into the dark, and where her tears fell, three suns ignited — Solan, Velas, and Koreth. They swirled in celestial unity, their dance birthing Fulgorn itself.

Into this world, Fulgoria breathed her three gifts:

Omnipotence — the gift of shaping. From her boundless strength, she forged all life in Fulgorn and beyond. Then coded the laws of motion and mass, and granted dominion over the fabric of reality itself.

Omniscience — the gift of knowing. From her infinite mind, she mapped the ley-lines of truth and embedded celestial blueprints into the veins of all life. She unveiled the symmetries of time, the dance of particles, and wrote the song of every atom.

Omnipresence — the gift of being. From her eternal essence, she suffused the spaces between. She became the breath in lungs, the pull of gravity, and the hum of quantum fields unseen but unyielding.

These gifts were then bestowed upon sentient beings forged from stellar ash and fractal thought. Fulgoria then divided them into three castes:

The Traktators, architects of matter, whose minds bent metals and energies alike. To them, mountains were clay and metal became a servant.

The Pallators, scholars of the cosmic ledger, who parsed the codes of creation and glimpsed into the edges of infinity.

The Wisps, phantoms of the interstitial realms, who could split their forms into spectral echoes and slipped through dimensions like shadows.

United as the Triarchs, they vowed to steward Fulgorn as living temples to Fulgoria’s design.

But even perfection fractures; A fourth caste emerged; Imparen —flawed versions of the Triarchs. Born witho ut Gifts. They became equations unsolved, vessels devoid of Fulgoria’s sacred charge. The Triarchs condemned them to serve as hands without will. They labored in the shadow of their betters, and were forbidden from touching the tools of their makers.

Fulgoria, her creation complete, dissolved into the substrate of her creation. Her final decree echoed through the new world: “Let the Triarchs reign, until the stars rewrite my name.”