PaulImposteur wrote: ↑Sat Jul 10, 2021 9:53 pm
I'm not sure if that's part of the actual Forgotten Realms history or a making of your own. What I'd suggest is to avoid making your own lore if it's something as gigantic on a scale such as that, and read through some of the setting books or wiki for reference and build a character within the already pre-existing lore when it draws heavily upon it when utilizing classes such as Divine Casters or Warlocks.
Creating a back-story is a great first step to building a character, its best done within the restraints of already established lore. As players we won't be creating elaborate and significant lore history. What we usually do is create characters that live within the World with the DMs controlling grand events while utilizing the source material.
If I recall as well, AO on this server isn't referred to at all, as he is an unknown force that I think one day is learned about? Time of Troubles if I recall, which is next year.
It's rad to be really invested and wanting to create a story others can interact with in the long term but, the story you offered sounds pretty encompassing to the entire server in the level of danger it could present. That's more likely for a DM to implement than to be part of a player backstory.
If that is actual Forgotten Realms history though, sounds like an interesting Warlock trying to gift cursed items like a MLM!
 
Dang, OK... wasn't planning on it having an impact on the server other than creating items, more of just flavor text about how the omniscient Old Ones subtlety work 'waaay' behind the scenes or 'mysterious ways' vibe, tricking a dragon with lust for power to trade for their lineage unknowingly being raised as a 'possible' unwitting pawn
I guess I'll have to go back to the drawing board and do something simpler, Ill read up on Time of Troubles again to see any plot points I can pull for a backstory(maybe something about fanboy'girl'ing over one of the fallen deities 
 
  
 )
I know an extra-cosmic war between Io/Ao & the Old Ones of the Far Realm hasn't yet been 'outright' stated in lore & it never goes into detail as to just who is defending the 'existence' of the multiverse against the Far Realm's assault
 

 Kinda just mentioned them as a 'stand in' for the true nature/name of the Ancient primordial that 'created' the multiverse
(or 'became' it 

 )
I'm sure the two of them likely aren't even the 'true' Ancient primordial that did so, one being merely an Aspect of the World Serpent & the other the Overgod that runs just Realmspace, not the entire multiverse
I think the lore does go into how 'according to the dragons' the entirety of the D&D 'multiverse', including Realmspace, Eberron, Earth, wildspace of Spelljammer, & all the other 'solar systems' (crystal spheres/settings), is 'made' from the body of a being 'they' call Asgorath, or Io, with that beings very blood being the 'veins' of phlogiston
(I know there's the 'Luminous being' 

  but I think that's just a stand in personification of the Dungeon Master role)
But the thing is is that the Far Realm is the 'only' thing that isn't part of this being's 'multiverse' & clearly its inhabitants, even the corrupted humanoids that ended up there & turned into Kaorti, 'all' got beef with the mere existence of said 'multiverse'
I find at times there are truths hidden even within myths, even 'if' a lesser being or aspect of one is misattributed 'with' the creation of the multiverse
& the mere 'surprise' of the inhabitants of the Far Realm upon 'discovering' the Prime Material Plane due to the Kaorti as well as it causing a great urge within them to convert or destroy it...
It all just leads me to think all the lore about the 'dragon' blood, came instead from an Ancient primordial from the Far Realm, 
& its blood becoming the phlogiston 'is' the true nature of the multiverse due to having been killed & forgotten by those of the Far Realm but then its body 'became' the multiverse in defiance, much to the same tune as Asmodeus's 'true' body or other Progenitor Dragons but on a exponentially 'cosmic' scale