In order to be recognized as Water Seekers, protos must promise not to engage in harmful practices. Some are beginning to question the breadth of the stated prohibitions, which also prevent potentially beneficial applications.
At the completion of their time at the Eddy, proto-Seekers gather before the Dancinglight and a quorum of Sages to be formally granted the title of Water Seeker.
An intelligent being with unimaginable control over water anywhere in the entire ocean. Thank the tides there's only one.
Can a Water Seeker who has been publicly remprimanded also gain a reputation as a public hero? And what does it mean to feel water instead of moving it?
The title of Water Seeker began as a misunderstanding, but is now the rank held by most people who live at the Eddy.
As the title suggests, a proto-Seeker is a pre-Seeker, learning the skills required for promotion to Water Seeker and, perhaps eventually, Sage.
Truth at heart is the principle that every story, no matter how impossible or fantastical, is built around some truth.
Cooperation between multiple Tiderider families saved dozens of fish farmers who would otherwise have had to abandon their stock.
White middle-aged cis female aro-ace American...and very shy, especially online. Also ADHD and ASD, which isn't useful information as that describes a sizable percentage of World Anvil users, but at least provides context.
Cats. Knitting and crocheting. Procrastination. Languages--I'm learning Scottish Gaelic, with the goal of being proficent enough to write in it someday. (Will probably not happen.) I don't really watch TV or movies anymore. I don't have the mental bandwidth to engage in my hobbies and also do social media, so I've opted out of the media.
There are a few movies which if you told me you'd never seen them I would immediately invite you over for a pizza and movie night so that I could be there when you experience them for the first time.
Apollo 13 (based on true near-disaster space mission)
Blackbeard's Ghost (1960s Disney slapstick)
A League of Their Own (women playing professional baseball in the 1940s)
The DIsh (Australian comedy about the first moon landing, with brilliant characters)
In the interest of keeping my author profile to a reasonable length, I decline to answer this question. I can't even pin myself down to a genre because I don't care as long as the writing and characters draw me in. I blame it on the children's librarian I live with.
This is where too much of my time goes. I don't seek out new games anymore because when I play I play obsessively. (I've been running the same Animal Crossing town for nine years.) I have enjoyed far more games than I can name off the top of my head, but the subset I have cared enough to make spreadsheets (and sometimes fanfic) for is smaller: Animal Crossing New Leaf, Baldur's Gate 1 and 2 (not 3--never, no way, I don't dare), Earthbound, FFVII (also I-VI to a lesser extent), Fire Emblem (mostly Awakening, nothing more recent--again, I don't DARE), Pokémon (Blue, Crystal, Emerald, Pearl, Sun, Shuffle), Tales of Symphonia, Tales of the Abyss, Ultima 4 and 6, Wind Waker. Please do not suggest to me any games you think I would like. You are probably right, and the answer is NO.

