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Sunshine History ([personal profile] sunshinehistory) wrote2015-08-27 03:31 am
Entry tags:

Land of Demons, Land of Glass, Land of Fruits, Land of Steel, Land of Swords, Land of Talons

Land of Demons

A religious country led by a priestess who is said to be able to see the future. Although it possesses shinobi, they are few and exist only to serve and protect the priestess. Their country specializes in spiritual jutsus, sealing away creatures in non-living objects and permanent henge, taking on the form of someone else irreversibly. Maintaining sealed away creatures appears to take chakra directly from the priestess and seems to require a constant drain. It's said the priestess' jutsu allows her only to see her own death, which allows a chosen protector of hers to take her place and die instead to protect her from this. This jutsu appears to be a kekkai genkai and is only inherited through female descendants. Further, the sealing jutsu can only be performed and maintained by the female with the kekkai genkai.


They claim to have sealed away a large portion of dark chakra somewhere in their land, but the location is secret and heavily guarded. Most not from their land dismiss their ways as their religion, and nothing of use is to be found in the country to be worth conquering it.

Megami no Tochi

What exists of a civilian population in the Land of Demons is situated in Megami no Tochi. For the most part, they're in charge of making sure that those in the Priestess' Compound are well supplied, and are usually the ones communicating with the outside world instead of the Priestess or her personal retainers.

Priestess' Compound

The closest thing to a 'capital' in the Land of Demons. The leader of the country, the Priestess, lives in the Compound, along with her loyal and powerful retainers. According to the people of the Land of Demons, her primary role is maintaining the seal on the dark chakra hidden in their land, keeping it from the body of the potentially-world destroying monster hidden elsewhere. The plausibility of these claims is dependent on how much the listener believes in the religion the people of the Land of Demons observe.