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Magi of Sinlung

Chwang
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In the heart of Xiaxo, a land where magic and nature breathe as one, the tides of change threaten to engulf its people. The ancient traditions of the Xiaxoan are under siege by the sprawling Kirat Empire, whose reach extends deep into the hills and forests, reshaping the fabric of this mystical land. Yet, whispers of forgotten powers and a looming cataclysm spark embers of resistance in the hearts of the oppressed. Amid the shadow of imperial rule, a young generation stumbles upon the remnants of a time when Xiaxo’s magic was unbroken. The knowledge they uncover—mysterious, transformative, and forbidden—offers both a beacon of hope and a harbinger of upheaval. As the Xiaxoan people face impossible choices, alliances are tested, and the line between survival and defiance blurs. Xiaxo is a tale of resilience and rediscovery, where the echoes of the past call out to shape a future yet unwritten. In the battle between oppression and freedom, the land itself becomes both a battlefield and salvation.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

The princely state of Xiaxo rests like a hidden jewel in the southern reaches of the vast Kirat Empire. Once a collection of indigenous lands, its terrain is as diverse as its history: undulating hills stretch endlessly toward the Xiaxoan horizon, lush and veined with cascading streams. To the east, fertile plains give way to windswept grasslands, and to the south, the mighty Luxo Ocean churns, carrying whispers of distant shores. For centuries, Xiaxo's rugged landscapes and vibrant cultures remained untouched by the outside world, preserved by their isolation. Yet in this era of magic-fueled industrialization, the state finds itself caught at a crossroads where the threads of tradition and modernity are tightly intertwined—sometimes in harmony, often in conflict.

Xiaxo's past is etched in blood and resilience. A mere century ago, its people waged a desperate twenty-year war against the Kirat Empire, a sprawling dominion notorious for its iron-fisted rule. The Empire's magical artillery—gleaming weapons capable of obliterating entire hillsides—and their airborne war machines, known as Aeras, turned the tide of battle again and again. The war was a lopsided affair: Xiaxo's tribes, bound by a love for their land and an unmatched knowledge of its terrain, resorted to guerrilla tactics. In the dense forests and treacherous hills, they launched ambushes and vanishing strikes, their unity forged by shared suffering. Each tribe brought something unique to the fight: the shadow-dwellers of the eastern plains, who moved like whispers through the night; the coastal mariners, who turned their ships into nimble raiding vessels; the hill-dwellers, masters of tracking and setting traps.

But even the most cunning strategy couldn't hold back the Empire's relentless advance. The people of Xiaxo endured atrocities that stained the annals of history: entire villages razed, families torn apart, mass graves concealed in the earth's embrace. Men and women disappeared without a trace, their fates whispered in rumors of secret prisons and forced labor camps. To this day, the stories of those years are told in hushed voices, their pain undiminished by the passage of time. The scars left by those atrocities ensured that Xiaxo's people would never truly see themselves as part of the Kirat Empire, even after their defeat.

When the war finally ended, the Treaty of Nerma formalized Xiaxo's annexation into the Empire. The terms were steep and humiliating: self-governance was partially allowed with tributes and taxes being forced upon to the people of the land, and the practice of Xiaxo's indigenous magics was outlawed, though the people still secretly practiced it. Yet, the end of the war marked not only a loss but also the beginning of a transformation. Over the next hundred years, Xiaxo became a hub of trade, innovation, and learning. Its strategic location—a crossroads between the Empire's eastern colonies and its central heartlands—turned it into a bustling center of commerce. Magic academies sprouted in its cities, drawing students and scholars from across the Empire. Factories powered by both steam and spellcraft churned out goods that flowed into Imperial coffers. Xiaxo's capital, Tlangthar, came to be known as the "fifth capital" of the Kirat Empire, a testament to its newfound prominence.

Yet, beneath the surface, Xiaxo's identity remained a battleground. Before the advent of teleportation portals and the Empire's road networks, the region's isolation had been its greatest protector. The steep, craggy hills and winding dirt paths made travel arduous and time-consuming; rivers were the lifeblood of commerce and communication, their meandering courses connecting scattered communities. This natural seclusion had allowed Xiaxo's traditions to flourish, untainted by external influences. But now, those traditions were under siege.

The Dysno, the Empire's state-sanctioned religious order, played a central role in this cultural erosion. As part of its "civilizing mission," the Dysno imposed its doctrines on Xiaxo's people, declaring their tribal magics heretical and their ancient practices barbaric. Temples dedicated to Xiaxo's old gods were torn down, replaced by gleaming spires where priests preached the virtues of "modern magic and science." The Dysno's schools became mandatory for Xiaxo's children, their curriculums designed to erase ancestral knowledge and instill loyalty to the Empire. Over time, the rhythms of daily life changed. Ritual dances performed under starlit skies grew rare; the songs of elders, once sung to teach and preserve, began to fade into silence.

Yet, not all were content to watch their heritage disappear. In hidden valleys and forgotten corners, small enclaves resisted the tide of assimilation. Elders passed down forbidden spells in secret, their voices hoarse with urgency. Rebel scribes copied ancient texts by moonlight, smuggling them out of the Dysno's reach. Xiaxo's people had endured conquest and oppression before; they would endure this, too. But the question loomed: how much of their identity could survive?

This story unfolds at a pivotal moment in Xiaxo's history, a tipping point where the forces of empire and tradition collide with unprecedented intensity. Ancient secrets, long buried beneath the hills, begin to stir, their power awakened by the hum of modern inventions. The crumbling ruins of Xiaxo's past hold answers that could shape its future—answers sought by both those who wish to preserve its legacy and those who aim to exploit it.

It is a time of colonization and resistance, of invention and rediscovery. The Kirat Empire's reach grows ever stronger, its gaze fixed on Xiaxo's untapped potential. But the people of Xiaxo, though battered, are not broken. Their story is one of survival, defiance, and an unyielding connection to their land. In the shadow of empire, as airships cast long silhouettes over verdant hills and factories churn out smoke that blots the sky, the people of Xiaxo stand at a crossroads. Will they find a way to reclaim their destiny, or will their identity be swallowed by the relentless march of progress?

As the first notes of this tale are struck, one thing is certain: the winds of change are blowing across Xiaxo. They carry with them the scent of the ocean, the whispers of forgotten gods, and the promise of a future yet unwritten.