Riftlight
Fractured · The Liar’s Law · Song of the Broken Choir · Children of the Halo
8,000 people from Ladysmith, British Columbia disappear from Earth and reappear in a medieval world. Magic is real. No one believes it yet.
A worldbuilding and narrative design project exploring what happens when modern psychological realism collides with a functioning magical society — and neither side comes out unchanged.
Not a Chosen Hero Story
The isekai genre has a problem: it almost always assumes the protagonist wants to be there. The Blacklight Event in Riftlight doesn’t displace a chosen hero — it displaces an entire town. 8,000 people of every background, age, and disposition, deposited without warning into a world that doesn’t want them and a conflict that predates them by centuries.
The Pactlands is a continent already in crisis when Ladysmith arrives. The Vectoran Empire has used a legal clause in the Concordance to occupy the Disputed Lands. The High Magus Council, the governing body of the continent, has allowed it. And Ladysmith — without electricity, without medicine, without any of the supply chains modern life depends on — has become a geopolitical variable in a game nobody in town understands yet.
The narrative tension is structural: two worlds with incompatible operating systems are being forced to interface. The Pactlands runs on honor-bound oaths, magical hierarchy, and millennium-old law. Ladysmith runs on democratic skepticism, institutional distrust, and empirical thinking. Neither yields easily.
Every dramatic conflict in the world can be traced to one of these structural frictions.
Honor-bound oaths as law
vs
Democratic skepticism of authority
Magic as birthright and social order
vs
Magic as inexplicable symptom
A world with thousand-year stability
vs
A town with no future to return to
Political legitimacy through lineage
vs
Authority earned through crisis
The Reaving as justice
vs
The Reaving as atrocity
A World in the Process of Breaking
The Pactlands has maintained geopolitical stability for over a millennium — not through peace, but through a legal framework powerful enough to contain its ambitions. Ladysmith’s arrival didn’t create the cracks. It just fell through them.
The Kingdom of Halen
vs
One of two kingdoms with an unbroken hereditary line dating back to the signing of the Concordance. Halen is internally stable and outwardly cautious. King Jarik Hillbreaker knows Vector’s expansion is illegal in spirit, if not in letter — but moving against it without the Council’s sanction risks becoming the aggressor. Halen’s dilemma is the same as every functioning institution facing an adversary willing to exploit its own rules.
Sends Nalya’s expedition unofficially — if it goes wrong, the King can deny it. If it goes right, he needs to claim it.
The Empire of Vector
vs
Fifteen years ago, Emperor Caius Kaen’s Ebon Reform centralized power and neutralized Vector’s senate. Since then, the empire has been expanding through legal mechanisms rather than open war — fabricating a pretext of Free Folk raids to invoke a Concordance clause allowing temporary occupation of the Disputed Lands. Vector’s army includes eight of the ten magical currents, plus Soulreaved shock troops: prisoners whose souls have been extracted and bound to military vessels. General Ajjiro Ryde doesn’t make mistakes.
Ladysmith’s 8,000 residents represent a city-sized population the empire didn’t plan for. Ryde’s response to that variable defines the stakes of the first arc.
The Free Folk
vs
Those born outside the Pactlands’ territorial claims — scattered in villages and nomadic camps across the Disputed Lands. The Concordance doesn’t protect them, the Academies don’t train them, and the High Magus Council doesn’t represent them. Vector has been using them as forced magi conscripts and fabricating their raids as a justification for occupation. The Free Folk aren’t a faction so much as a condition: the world’s best evidence that the Concordance only works for those it chose to include.
Stone’s Mouth — a Free Folk village near the Blacklight Zone — is the first location Ladysmith encounters that has already been destroyed by Vector.
The High Magus Council
vs
The continental authority established by the Concordance a thousand years ago. Controls the Deyish Academy system, regulates magical practice, and adjudicates disputes between signatories. Its approval of Vector’s petition to occupy the Disputed Lands is either corruption or catastrophic naivety — and neither answer is reassuring. The Council’s most troubling feature isn’t its power. It’s that most of the Pactlands still trusts it.
Ladysmith exists in legal grey space the Concordance has no framework for. Whether the Council declares them a protected population or an aberration determines everything.
The House of Roses
vs
A noble house within Halen’s aristocracy. Nalya carries its name — dels Myssandra el Ruus — as both credential and burden. In a military culture where her authority is questioned on the basis of gender, her noble lineage gives her standing that her rank alone might not. The House of Roses is not a major political actor in the first arc, but it shapes everything about how Nalya moves through the world: who defers to her, who tests her, and what she believes she owes the people under her command.
Nalya’s design principle: nobility as both resource and constraint, not as backstory decoration.
Ladysmith Emergency Committee
vs
The ad-hoc leadership structure Ladysmith assembles in the hours after the Blacklight. Alderman Fred Payne convenes it, but its legitimacy is entirely situational — built from whoever shows up, whoever has useful skills, and whoever people are willing to follow in a crisis. It is recognizably a democratic institution operating under conditions democracy wasn’t designed for: no information, no resources, no legal framework, and no time.
Its relationship with Nalya’s expedition is the first genuine diplomatic challenge — and the first test of whether modern institutions can negotiate with pre-modern ones.
Design Note — The Concordance as Narrative Engine
The Concordance of Aligned Realms was co-signed over a millennium ago by a Greenseer — a Chronomancer born once per thousand years, capable of seeing not fixed events but possibilities. The stability it produced wasn’t accidental; it was designed by someone who could see what instability would cost. The dramatic irony is that the next Greenseer is Terra Murphy, a college student from Ladysmith who doesn’t know what she is yet. The document that was built to protect the world from chaos was built by someone with the same power as the girl most likely to witness its failure.
The Ten Currents — Magic as Social Architecture
The Ten Currents aren’t a combat system with lore attached. They are a social and political architecture — one that determines legal status, institutional belonging, and who gets to wield power in the Pactlands.
Pyromancy
Flame & Temperature
Hydromancy
Water & Moisture
Terramancy
Earth & Minerals
Electromancy
Lightning & Magnetism
Aeromancy
Air & Gases
Luxomancy
Light & Radiance
Vitamancy
Healing & Life
Animancy
Soul & The Unseen
Psychomancy
Mind & Thought
Chronomancy
Vision & Time
Mantles Manifest Around Puberty
Magic is not chosen or trained into existence — it emerges, usually in adolescence, whether the person is ready for it or not. In the Pactlands, this is the moment a child enters a legal category: they become a magi, with all the institutional obligations that entails. In Ladysmith, the same thing is happening to modern people with no framework for it — no Academies, no mentors, no legal standing in the Concordance.
This is not a detail. The moment Ladysmith’s newly-manifested magi come to the attention of the High Magus Council, the question of whether the Concordance must extend its protections — or its controls — to them becomes the central political crisis of the mid-game.
The Reaving — Punishment as Narrative Stakes
The Pactlands’ supreme punishment is soul extraction: the Reaving. A condemned person’s soul is drawn out and bound into an inanimate vessel. The body continues to function — emptied. Vector has industrialized this process. Animancers bind extracted souls to soldier-vessels, creating Soulreaved: tireless, fearless shock troops with no will of their own.
The Reaving exists in the world not to establish that the Pactlands is cruel, but to establish the stakes of every confrontation with Vector’s military. Understanding it changes what it means to be captured. It changes what Mira Tessith’s legal status actually is. It makes every Soulreaved soldier on the battlefield a person — or what remains of one.
Psychomancy — The Isolated Current
Psychomancers are not trained at the Deyish Academies. They are taken by the Covenant of Wisdoms and trained in isolation, deep beneath the Eye — the High Magus Council’s seat of power. The reason given is peace: someone who can read minds, influence thoughts, and uncover secrets could unravel any government. For peace to endure, some truths must remain buried.
Boomer Sproule can’t turn his mantle off. He hears everyone, all the time, without permission — including thoughts people have no idea he can access. He has no Covenant to go to. No one in Ladysmith knows how to help him. He is, by the Pactlands’ own standards, the most dangerous kind of magi on a continent that has already decided his type must be controlled.
Greenseers — Possibility vs. Prophecy
Standard Chronomancers — Blueseers — witness fixed events. They are born every fifty years or so and are a known, managed quantity. A Greenseer is categorically different: born once per millennium, they see not what will happen, but what could. The last Greenseer co-authored the Concordance. The next one is Terra Murphy.
This distinction — fixed events vs. possibilities — is not a small one. Terra doesn’t see the future. She sees branches. What that actually means for gameplay and narrative is that her visions are interpretive challenges, not prophecy. The dramatic pressure of her arc is that she is the most politically significant person in two worlds, and she has no idea.
Contrast Over Correspondence
No character's background was designed to mirror their role. The interesting design space is the gap between who someone was and what they're now required to be.
"Survival is often the first step to war."
Nalya is a Halish noble operating in an institution — the military — that grants her rank while quietly contesting her authority on the basis of gender. She is idealistic about what the Concordance is supposed to be and clear-eyed about what it actually is. She doesn't resolve this tension. She operates inside it.
Her Luxomancy is a detail, not a personality. Her command style is characterized by measured restraint that occasionally breaks into cold steel — and those moments are more effective because they're rare. She volunteers for the Disputed Lands expedition not because she was ordered to, but because she understands the stakes better than anyone who would give the order.
"The Blacklight shattered all of that, dropping her into this fractured world where medieval villages sat next to impossibly tall forests and magic felt as real as gravity."
Terra had a plan: graduate, get a job, maybe leave Ladysmith for somewhere bigger. The Blacklight ended that. She's adapting — but adaptation isn't acceptance, and there's a version of her that will resist the significance being placed on her for the entire first arc.
Her visions precede her understanding of them. She interprets them as anxiety symptoms, then as trauma, and only gradually as something that demands a framework she doesn't have. The dramatic work of her character is in that gap: she is the most important person in two worlds, and her emotional experience is of someone who just wants things to make sense.
"I've been buried before. Didn't take."
Bayne is the most reliable person in the expedition and the least comfortable to be around. He is sworn to protect Nalya by an oath to her deceased father — not by choice, not by admiration, but by the kind of obligation that the Pactlands takes with absolute seriousness. He would die for her. He would also say exactly the wrong thing to the wrong person at the worst possible moment, and he'd consider that someone else's problem.
His cynicism is not performed. The world has confirmed his worst expectations too many times for him to hold provisional theories about it. His warmth — and it exists — emerges slowly and unexpectedly, always in the wrong register.
"People were so much worse than they pretended to be. And some things couldn't be unlearned."
Boomer's Psychomancy is always on. Not because he hasn't learned to control it — but because it doesn't work the way he imagined mental powers would. He doesn't project into people's minds. Their thoughts project into his. The noise is constant, involuntary, and often involves things he would strongly prefer not to know.
He is building a mind palace — a visualized internal architecture to organize and contain what comes in. It works. It also turns out to be something more interesting than a coping mechanism. His inclusion as a POV leader was a deliberate choice: he is the character most likely to understand what is actually happening, and the one least able to act on it without unraveling every relationship around him.
Two Worldviews, One Conversation
Every cross-world exchange is a negotiation between incompatible epistemic frameworks. The goal is for each character to sound precisely like themselves — and for that precision to generate conflict without requiring anyone to be stupid.
Nalya's expedition has just encountered Ryan and Terra on a logging road that shouldn't exist. Neither side has any framework for what the other is. This is the moment the world changes — and both characters handle it according to their nature.
Nalya opens with threat assessment, not greeting — she is a soldier on a mission, and Ladysmith is an unexpected variable in it. Terra's response ("we just want to survive") is both entirely true and politically naïve. Nalya's reply is the thesis of the entire game in one line — and it lands as a gut punch because Terra has no answer for it.
Goose Payne is learning about Vector's military capabilities. He has been skeptical throughout. This is the moment the skepticism stops being a viable position.
Goose's "the hell does that mean?" is the Ladysmith default: demand clarification, don't pretend to understand. His sardonic summary at the end ("Fantastic") is the voice of someone whose skepticism has just been outpaced by reality. He hasn't accepted the world — he's accepted that the world doesn't require his acceptance to function.
Ariella Silverlyn, a Terramancer from the Pactlands, explains to Boomer why Psychomancers are kept isolated — not as a warning, but as a fact about how the world works. Two lines of dialogue do more tonal work than a full scene could.
Ariella's explanation is impersonal — she's describing institutional logic, not threatening him. Boomer's deflection with humor is his established pattern. Her dry reply ("None at all") is the first moment of genuine warmth between them, precisely because it matches his register rather than correcting it. The goal for every cross-world relationship in the game is this: connection through contrast, not in spite of it.
What the World Is For
"The interesting question isn't 'what happens when magic is real?' It's 'what happens to the first person who has to believe it against everything they know?'"
Worldbuilding exists to serve character and drama. The Pactlands' political structure — the Concordance, the Concordance's legal exploitation by Vector, the High Magus Council's complicity — isn't backdrop. It's the pressure system that makes every decision Nalya makes consequential and every alliance Ladysmith builds fragile.
The magic system was designed around a single constraint: magic must create social and political problems, not just tactical ones. The Reaving is the clearest example — it's not in the world because a fantasy world needs a dark punishment. It's there because it makes the Soulreaved more than soldiers, because it gives Mira Tessith a reason to fear her own legal status, and because it gives Ladysmith a specific, visceral reason to distrust every institutional power structure in the Pactlands.
Character design follows the same principle: backgrounds were chosen for contrast, not correspondence. A Psychomancer who can't filter the noise. A Greenseer who doesn't know what she is. A noble commander whose authority is legally valid and practically contested. A sworn bodyguard who fulfills his oath while making the job harder. The gap between who someone was and what they're now required to be is where character lives.
The dialogue design goal is that every cross-world exchange should be a genuine negotiation between two internally consistent worldviews — where the conflict isn't manufactured but structural, and where both sides are right about something the other side can't see yet.
Kyle Emmerson
Riftlight: Fractured is the flagship project of the Riftbourne Legacy — a transmedia universe developed as a solo authorial project. I am the sole writer, narrative designer, and worldbuilder. The game is implemented in Unity with a team of collaborators for 3D modeling and voice performance.
The world was built with sequel and transmedia continuity in mind from the start: the novel (Book One: Song of the Broken Choir) and the game are parallel entry points into the same universe, not adaptations of each other.
The game's narrative design draws on the structural lessons of Final Fantasy Tactics — ensemble casts with genuine political stakes, no clean heroes — and the dramatic premise of shows like The Terror or Station Eleven: ordinary people under extraordinary pressure, where the drama comes from who they actually are rather than who the genre expects them to be.
The worldbuilding philosophy is closest to Le Guin: the world should be a thought experiment, and the thought experiment should have consequences that surprise even the author.
I'm currently seeking internship and junior narrative design roles in the game industry. The project is in active Chapter 1 development, with the full first arc narrative designed and in production.
Get in Touch
Available to discuss the project, the design process, or the world in more depth.
✉ Contact