05-17-2015, 12:00 AM
Note: This is a closed topic. Only the forum moderator can post in this thread.
Hello and welcome to this exciting archaelogical discovery, for you stand here on the excavation site for the long-lost legendary city of Juliopolis!What's that?Juliopolis wasn't lost?It's ruins are found at Nallihan, near the city of Ankara in Turkey?No, no, no, not that Juliopolis, the other Juliopolis! The legendary ancient city where wizards crafted their spells, intergalatic travellers came to parlay with humans, and trees bore edible fruit!That's right, that Juliopolis!I'm glad to have you here at this exciting time as my team unearths buildings, artifacts, and scrolls thought forever lost, and it's my privelege to share these things with you as I come across them. I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.
Now there are a few simple rules that I ask you to abide to while you're here. These rules are designed to protect the dig site so that the ancient city can be unearthed as intact as possible. You wouldn't believe how easy it is to break some of these ancient artifacts or render a scroll unreadable by the simplest of benign actions. That's why, in order to make it possible to keep this digsite available for the public the following rules have been created.1. As captain of this dig team my word is law. This is not a democracy. I do try to be a benevolent dictator though.2. Only the captain can create posts here. I can't have you swinging a shovel randomly in the sand! It might go straight through the ceiling of a long buried temple, oxidizing ancient parchments before they've been prepared, losing who knows what secrets for humanity! Any posts created by anyone but me will be deleted and the holes filled back up with sand without notice.3. If you are inspired, you are welcome to participate in any of the threads here. When you do so, please remain on topic and keep your posts condensed, (IE, try to avoid posting multiple times in a row in the same thread). Any further rules regarding particular threads will be noted in those threads.4. Enjoy yourself. Well, this isn't really a rule, I just hope you do so as I think it's a good idea.
Hello and welcome to this exciting archaelogical discovery, for you stand here on the excavation site for the long-lost legendary city of Juliopolis!What's that?Juliopolis wasn't lost?It's ruins are found at Nallihan, near the city of Ankara in Turkey?No, no, no, not that Juliopolis, the other Juliopolis! The legendary ancient city where wizards crafted their spells, intergalatic travellers came to parlay with humans, and trees bore edible fruit!That's right, that Juliopolis!I'm glad to have you here at this exciting time as my team unearths buildings, artifacts, and scrolls thought forever lost, and it's my privelege to share these things with you as I come across them. I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.
Now there are a few simple rules that I ask you to abide to while you're here. These rules are designed to protect the dig site so that the ancient city can be unearthed as intact as possible. You wouldn't believe how easy it is to break some of these ancient artifacts or render a scroll unreadable by the simplest of benign actions. That's why, in order to make it possible to keep this digsite available for the public the following rules have been created.1. As captain of this dig team my word is law. This is not a democracy. I do try to be a benevolent dictator though.2. Only the captain can create posts here. I can't have you swinging a shovel randomly in the sand! It might go straight through the ceiling of a long buried temple, oxidizing ancient parchments before they've been prepared, losing who knows what secrets for humanity! Any posts created by anyone but me will be deleted and the holes filled back up with sand without notice.3. If you are inspired, you are welcome to participate in any of the threads here. When you do so, please remain on topic and keep your posts condensed, (IE, try to avoid posting multiple times in a row in the same thread). Any further rules regarding particular threads will be noted in those threads.4. Enjoy yourself. Well, this isn't really a rule, I just hope you do so as I think it's a good idea.

