Pegoran Doors
"The Pegoran saw the circle as the link between this world and the next," the mage said. Before he could pontificate further, "So the door rolled in Raygar to send him to the next?" the rogue blathered, "What a mad peoples!"
The Pegorans were an ancient culture of note, with a fascination for the "other worldly" and an emphasis on the symbolic, they have left their marks upon the world in the areas or architecture, math, and calligraphy.
Pegoran doors are special symbolic doors used in tombs, holy places, and places of the hearth. They are found in ancient buildings (when they were all the craze), places with pretense of being stately, artisitic, or "eternal" (like the City Folk of Artimas), or tombs.
Pegoran doors are circular doors made of stone (except when used in houses - which are wood). The door range from a hand span to finger span thick. Thicker doors have been found when used as "main entrances" or "security doors". While they can be plain, most proper doors have a bas relief of an intricate interwoven geometric pattern. The pattern is based upon the symbolic need/ purpose of the space the door is a guardian of, the location/ facing of the door, and the era of the door (styles change over time). The patterns weave, intermingle, and point, in a hauntingly beautiful way (think proper celtic knot work). Some modern copies incorporate heraldic or state devices into said pattern.
Some collectors use these doors as "art", either as free standing statuary or inset into a wall. The Prince of Artimas is known to pay many gold dragns (gold coins) for doors in good condition.
The door appears to be an circular indention in the walls. This door is set in a channel and rolls into wall to the right. That wall is usually thick with a carved out area for the door. When the door is rolled out, it leaves a circular passage to pass through.
While doors can be rolled by hand, most are moved by clever lever work. Simply touching the door or a point on the right side of the wall, will cause the door to roll. Since many "frames" are intricately carved, it can sometimes be a challange to find the "right place" to press. And since interesting prick traps can also be intergrated into the artwork, those who do not know the proper place to open the door can be quickly poisoned.
Some doors will close automatically after a certain amount of time will pass, others have to be actively closed (finding the corresponding "right spot" on the other side).
Note: Most "old doors" have a basic enchantment woven into the pattern. This prevents them from being opened by most knock or unlocking spells. Some will even resist magical liftings.
The problem with Pegoran doors is that they can be "tricky".
*Some Doors have activation mechanisms that are multipart. So there may be a "right place" or knob that may need to be switched down the hall or in another room entirely. So for an entrance to a location's chapel might require you to stop and "nudge" the Image of The Patron God in the entryway, showing proper piety by stopping to reflect before entering the chapel.
* They may open when using an easy to find "right place". These doors will then slam the stone back in place (using a spring or sand and level mechanism). Some will slam when stepped through, others will wait a few moments and quickly roll shut automatically. Some of these are for security, others are simply door closers.
*A second "locking door" may roll or drop into place if the wrong door is opened the wrong way. Clearing these doors often required brute strength or a number of things to be tweaked to make it roll back.
*If a door's weight if removed from its track (if removed or broken), this will often trigger a trap or locking door or heavy drop block.
*Getting in may be "easy", but out may be difficult. Especially if there is a timed trap involed to stop "interlopers" from entering the tomb.
*An reoccuring feature is the Hallway of the Gods. It is a hallway with a 22 doors, space every 8 feet for so. Each door has a touching challange. You must press the correct letters or pictographs to "answer" the common prayer. These answers can be memorized (okay 3rd door, we click here, here, here and over there) or if one knows the old tongue you select the answer to the classic prayer. However, in the Grey (late) Era, these Hallways were changed into "challanges of piety", so you needed to know the 22 gods and select the correct answer (requiring riddle or ancient lore checks). In the Grey Era selecting the insulting or wrong answer would set off an ironic trap.
In metagaming, these are great doors for two reasons. The first is that they are complicated. They will make players wary. The second, is that since they are "treasure", your PCs won't go breaking them down.
The languages of the Norther use the term Pengoran for Pegoran, it is just a lingual quirk based on how the "Great Scribe of the North" decided to spell Pegoran in the Northern Root Tongue.
It's Quest time once again!
This time, we want Dungeon submissions. Anything that would fall into the Dungeon category counts.
You get a bonus 10 XP for Quest submissions. What are you waiting for? Create Dungeon bits! Do it now!
The winners of the Dungeon Quest will be the first Citadellians to receive Strolen.Com T-Shirts!!
Not Registered Yet? No problem.
Do you want Strolenati super powers? Registering. That's how you get super powers! These are just a couple powers you receive with more to come as you participate.
- Upvote and give XP to encourage useful comments.
- Work on submissions in private or flag them for assistance.
- Earn XP and gain levels that give you more site abilities (super powers).
- You should register. All your friends are doing it!
? Responses (18)
5/5 for explaining those tricky dungeon doors.
A nice justification for why dungeons have all these complicated secret doors.
I like the fact that the doors are circular and incorporate an artistic sense, and even artistic value outside of the dungeon.
Besides making it an interesting element to the world, it creates an invunerability to the door. Few people will just go breaking them, as they know they are worth money.
'We break down the door', traditional dungeon player
'NOOOO!!!!', cry the campaign regulars.
'Wha?'
'They are worth 500 gold back in the city. We have to keep it intact!' says the campaign regular.
'But we are drowning in here... we need to open the door or we will all die,' the tradionalist says.
'We keep looking for the place on the wall that opens the door. We have to keep that door intact!' says the greedy campaign regulars.
Nicely done Moon! You managed to make 'doors' interesting! One question...Pegoran or Pengoran? you have both listed.
Fixed and explained
Ooh, sneaky fix... :D
Updated: Pengoran to Pegoran
Yeah, these doors are fun!
Some questions asked in chat:
The doors are kept inside the wall in their own groove or channel to keep it in line. The door appears to be an circular indention in the walls. This door is set in a channel and rolls into wall to the right. That wall is usually thick with a carved out area for the door. When the door is rolled out, it leaves a circular passage to pass through. (and a tiny groove gap that makes up the exposed part of the channel.
The doors are not slid in their channel, but roll. Are they perfectly quiet, heck no. But neither are primative doors either. If you have ever rolled a tire (preferably big) on a road, you know that crunching noise. Any dust, bug, or piece of grit in the channel will make a bit of noise.
There is a little mechanism that helps move the doors. Some of it is as simple as a stick in a hole acting as a lever to get the door rolling. Other more complicated, and more prevolent, versions use a combinations of springs and a few gears (plus levers) to start the door rolling either way.
Updated: Updated some punctuation and one spelling event.
I used them without voting! Shame shame! My guilt is absolved now though.
How did you use them? Details. We want them.
Scattering these throughout a setting with just the name and no other explanation would really give a sense of veiled history. Good job on making doors into interesting artefacts in their own right.
A nice addition to dungeons.
*Commented on for the Commenting Challenge
5/5 This will finally stop my players from trying to destroy each door they meet.