Daagi
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Symbol: A raised gauntlet gripping a broken chain beneath a blazing sun
Sacred Colors: Gold, iron, deep crimson
Daagi does not represent war itself. He represents the moment after struggle, when one stands bloodied but unbowed. He is not strategy, nor slaughter, nor conquest. He is triumph earned and claimed. Gladiators and sport fighters will often make offerings to Daagi in an attempt to earn his favour and guarantee their victory.
To win is to justify effort. To lose is to learn and rise again. To refuse the contest is to wither. - Guildmaster Vesk of the Imperial Colosseum, 1733-3A
The Pillars of Triumph
All followers are taught these principles. Champions and war leaders are expected to embody at least three fully.
1. Contest is Sacred
- Life is struggle. Struggle refines.
- Duels, tournaments, battlefield clashes, political rivalries, feats of endurance. All are holy arenas.
- A challenge refused without cause is spiritual cowardice.
Among orcs this manifests in ritual combat.
Among humans it may appear as jousts, legal trials, or grand competitions.
2. Strength Proves Right
- Might alone is not enough. Strength must be demonstrated.
- Victory legitimizes authority.
- A leader who cannot defend their claim does not deserve it.
3. Glory Must Be Witnessed
- Triumph hidden is triumph wasted.
- Victories are celebrated loudly.
- Names of champions are sung.
- Trophies are displayed.
- Orcs carve victories into bone and armor.
- Humans erect statues and compose epics.
- Memory is fuel for future greatness.
4. Endure and Rise
- Defeat is not damnation.
- Daagi teaches resilience above all.
- The fallen warrior who rises again earns more divine favor than the untested prodigy.
- Among his clergy, scars are sacred texts.
5. Claim What You Win
- Mercy is permitted. Weakness is not.
- If you defeat a rival, you are entitled to the spoils. Territory, title, weapon, honor.
- However, theft without contest is shameful. Victory must precede possession.
This principle resonates deeply with orc culture.
6. Triumph Demands Recognition
- After victory comes responsibility.
- A champion must protect their people.
- A king must secure the realm.
- A warboss must feed the tribe.
Victory is not an ending. It is the beginning of obligation.
Moral Tendencies
Daagi’s followers range widely, but commonly:
- Neutral Good champions seeking noble glory
- Chaotic Neutral warriors craving personal renown
- Lawful Neutral conquerors establishing order through strength
- Occasionally Chaotic Evil warlords who interpret victory as its own morality
Daagi himself is not evil. He respects strength in any form.
Worship Among Humans
Human temples resemble grand halls of banners and trophies.
Common practices include:
- Public victory feasts
- Champion’s anointing with oil and gold dust
- Recitations of ancestral triumphs
- Oaths sworn over weapons taken from defeated foes
- Knights and athletes often pray before contests, asking not for easy success but for worthy opposition.
Worship Among Orcs
Orcish worship is visceral and immediate.
- Shrines are marked by skulls of defeated beasts or enemies.
- Warpaint is applied in Daagi’s colors before battle.
- Victors take titles that must be defended continually.
- In many tribes, the warleader is considered Daagi’s chosen until defeated.
Unlike human tradition, orcs emphasize personal dominance over inherited right. This tension creates fascinating theological debate between the cultures.
Shared Rituals
Despite cultural differences, both traditions share core rites.
The Roar of Claim
After a decisive victory, the champion declares their triumph publicly. Silence from witnesses is considered ill omen.
The Breaking of Chains
Symbolic snapping of iron links to represent overcoming adversity.
The Mark of the Unbroken
A scar, brand, or tattoo earned after surviving overwhelming odds.
Taboos
- Claiming glory for another’s deed
- Refusing a fair challenge out of fear
- Killing a clearly defeated foe without cause
- Hiding from accountability after loss
- Allowing decadence to dull one’s edge
- Cowardice is the only unforgivable sin in most sects.
Clergy Structure
Titles differ slightly between cultures but align in meaning.
Merric Titles
- Laureate - Novice Initiate
- Banner-Priest - Senior Officiant
- High Champion - Seasoned Veteran
- Golden Hierarch - Recognised Victor
Orcish Titles
- Blood-Voice - Novice Initiate
- Skullkeeper - Senior Officiant
- War-Caller - Seasoned Veteran
- Iron Exemplar - Recognised Victor
Clergy are rarely frail scholars. Most have proven themselves physically or politically before assuming leadership.
Symbolism
Daagi’s imagery is bold, immediate, and unmistakable.
Common symbols include:
- A raised gauntlet gripping a broken chain
- A blazing sun rising behind a battlefield standard
- A crown set upon a scarred helm
- A broken weapon reforged in gold
Temples often display relic weapons taken from legendary foes. These are not seen as theft, but as proof of rightful victory.
Clerics / Paladins of Daagi as Adventurers
- They respect strength even in enemies.
- They dislike excuses.
- They accept defeat publicly but vow improvement.
- They maintain their body, armor and weapons with pride.
- They celebrate loudly and mourn fiercely.
A follower of Daagi might:
- Encourage taking bold but winnable risks
- Insist that a rival be faced directly rather than avoided forever
- Push companions to train during downtime
- Keep trophies from significant victories
- Show admiration for powerful foes
The greatest insult to a follower of Daagi is not defeat. It is being considered unworthy of challenge.
“Blood-Crowned Lord,
Let my foe be strong,
Let my arm be stronger,
And if I fall, let it be reaching forward.”