…to write up little experiences from each trip I go on, both to mark my journeys and to improve my descriptions of settings…
“I want to elaborate on this tonight after work,” I told Twitter, as I QT’d @PaulJessup sharing Lincoln Michel’s article “Worldbuilding Doesn’t Need to Build Everything.” After my book came out, I learned that worldbuilding is one of my strengths.…
Way back in 2014, I posted about building a planet generator for auto-generating planets in the Kemtewet Empire (the big baddies in Rights of Use). I’ve referenced that sheet many times: a little while polishing Rights of Use, a lot…
I spoke a panel on history and mythology and realized Rights of Use had more history than I thought.
The queens killed me like they did every little thing: artistically.
The Grand Empire of [[who’s ruling today, again?]] is a three-planet system used as the Kemtewet penal colony.
Tewet are a species of genetically-engineered aliens adapted from aquatic parasites on a water world at (0.5, 0, 0). They were developed to be biological memory augmentation devices, but they developed unexpected self awareness after general release. Most of the…
The Kemtewet Empire is ruled by an Empress. The outlying worlds are comprised of five kingdoms. Each king has a capital world and manages five lords, who each manage three planets. Control of the lords’ planets and kingdoms passes to…
The Kemtewet Empire was established shortly after Neith consolidated her power on Keidem and abolished the augmentation development program. When it became apparent that Kemtewet population growth would outpace human population growth, Empress Neith established colony worlds to both grow…
The Kemtewet Empire was responsible for colonizing all populated worlds in the galaxy except Earth, the Kemtewet capital world of Sais, and Gertewet worlds. It consists of 84 planets indexed in the standard navigation system: the Imperial capital, five kingdom…