Mist, Memories, and Mana Potions

I was only trying to queue for the cooking daily.

One click too many and—poof—I was standing in the upper reaches of Hellfire Citadel, wrapped in the vaguely sulfurous scent of The Blood Furnace, wondering why I’d equipped my tea-stirring spoon instead of my proper staff.

“Wait, are you the healer?” asked the draenei paladin at the front, squinting at me as though I might still poof away.

“Er. Yes! That’s me. Auremai. Mistweaver monk, mostly merchant, occasional healer,” I said, bowing. “I dabble.”

The group charged ahead before I could elaborate, which was probably for the best because my last healing run had been before Deathwing redecorated the planet.

I took a deep breath and shifted into mistweaver stance, letting the familiar flow of chi swirl through me. It was like riding a gryphon: you never really forget… but that first jump still makes you question your life choices.

The first pull? A lesson in humility. And combustion.

I targeted the wrong person, cast Life Cocoon on the rogue who hadn’t taken any damage, and managed to roll directly into a Firebomb.

“Gnome down! Gnome down!” the mage laughed, while I extinguished myself with a small squeal and a health potion that tasted like burnt pennies.

But I didn’t give up.

Monks fall, monks rise. And monks—especially gnome monks with a sense of misplaced confidence—improvise.

I planted my Jade Serpent Statue this time (in the right direction!), let Renewing Mist dance through the group like a breeze, and used Vivify so fast my fingers blurred. The tank, bless him, only died once more after that.

“Getting the hang of it, shortstuff,” the rogue grinned after we survived a rather dramatic encounter with a room full of technicians who really needed a union.

“Thanks,” I muttered, cheeks warm, as I ducked behind my cartwheel to dodge another Fel Nova. “Just… channeling the mist. And mild panic.”

By the time we reached Keli’dan the Breaker, I had settled into the rhythm: soothe, roll, heal, repeat. The boss ranted something about destruction, but all I could think about was how very rude it was to yell indoors.

When he finally exploded in a spectacular burst of fel energy (and flair), everyone stood—somehow still alive. Even the mage.

We looted in silence, the good kind, and the paladin finally gave me a thumbs-up. “Not bad for someone who said they ‘dabble.’”

I shrugged, blushing as I tucked a small healing charm into his bag when he wasn’t looking. “Helping people is the easy part. It’s the not panicking that takes training.”

Back in Stormwind, I climbed onto my cart, pulled out my notebook, and jotted down a new idea: Love in the Time of Felfire. Maybe with a paladin and a baker trapped in a fortress together…

Maybe next time I’d heal on purpose. But for now? I had tea, a story brewing, and no scorch marks.

A pretty good day, all told.

The Last Rifter

The feed had gone galactic.

Live relays from New Eden’s largest newsnets flickered across the command deck of the Kinetic Regret, each one centered on the bright burning corpse of the 1DQ1-A Imperial Palace—the Imperium’s long-standing Keepstar, now in its final moments. Years of history, thousands of pilots’ stories, and enough market tax revenue to fund a small war were vanishing in a hail of ceremonial autocannon fire.

The terms of the sendoff had been simple: bring a Rifter.

And bring Rifters they did. Over 3,800 pilots descended on the Keepstar in a rust-colored swarm, celebrating the final breath of the station that had, for so many, meant something. Top damage and the final blow were both delivered by Rifters, as per tradition.

There were no dread bombs. No gate camps. Just a mass of enemies and allies, sitting shoulder to shoulder in tribute.

Except, of course, for Pandemic Horde.

Back in E8-4, Captain Gobbins stood at the front of the deck, holding a datapad with far too much smugness for a man in Crocs and a ratting shirt. He tapped the display like it was a punchline.

“No way,” he said, grinning. “We stole the 1DQ Imperial Palace Keepstar Core. And got away with it. LMAO.”

The bridge crew exchanged glances. Someone coughed, uncomfortably.

“Massive props to Nestor X85, by the way,” Gobbins continued, undeterred. “Dude just yoinked it right out from under them. In front of three thousand Rifters.” He let the number hang in the air like a trophy. “Imagine going to a funeral and coming back with the casket.”

Ensign Brin cleared her throat. “Sir, if I may… that Keepstar was—”

“A monument to hubris, Brin,” Gobbins cut in. “Let’s not forget what they did with that thing. Endless ganks. Nullbloc politicking. Remember when they charged 3% market tax and called it a deal?”

“Still,” she said cautiously, “it was meant as a tribute. To an old director of theirs, I heard. The Rifter thing was symbolic. An homage.”

Gobbins waved his hand dismissively. “If they wanted it to be sacred, they shouldn’t have left the core in. That’s like building a shrine and forgetting to lock the donation box.”

From the corner, Gallente Citizen 4586793463 blinked, then returned to typing quietly. The title on their notepad: “When a Warlord Steals the Gravestone.”

“I’m just saying,” Gobbins went on, pacing now, “this sends a message. We’re not just winning on the map. We’re winning in the mind. Every Rifter in that system was firing blanks. We were taking.”

He held up the datapad again. A grainy image of the core being dragged out of the dying station, pixelated and triumphant.

“No structure is sacred,” he said. “No space is safe. And no farewell is without cost.”

“Sir,” Brin said after a moment. “Should we… say anything? You know, public comms. Condolences, or…”

Gobbins raised an eyebrow. “You want me to issue a condolence ping for a Keepstar we robbed during its funeral?”

“…Right,” Brin muttered. “Never mind.”

The bridge fell quiet again. Outside the viewport, a Rhea freighter drifted past—likely full of “salvaged” Keepstar fittings. The war went on. The map changed. And in some forgotten subchannel, three thousand Rifter pilots raised a toast to the fire they’d lit, unaware that the core had gone missing while their backs were turned.

The South, Redrawn

Aboard the Kinetic Regret, Docked in E8-4

Captain Gobbins stood at the main holotable, fingers steepled, a faint smudge of blueprint toner still smeared across one knuckle from some earlier encounter with a stubborn industry hub. The map of nullsec hovered above the surface in flickering 3D, glowing with the aftershocks of recent upheaval.

“Delve and Querious,” he began, his voice echoing slightly in the command deck. “Officially evacuated about a week ago. The region’s been a bit like a nullsec garage sale ever since.”

Several crew members chuckled quietly. One of them—Ensign Brin, possibly regretting her transfer from Jita customs enforcement—tapped through ownership changes on a side console.

“So who’s moving in?” she asked.

Gobbins zoomed in with a flick of his fingers. “The biggest chunk’s gone to a new mid-sized coalition—XIX, Siege Green, OnlyFleets, SYN, and a few others. Not bloc-aligned, working together, and from what I can tell, not completely exploding yet. Promising start.”

He tapped again.

“Streamer Ahront—yes, that Ahront—and his crew took a decent slice too. Remember those guys that anchored the BWF Keepstar way back? Looks like they finally carved out a piece of Delve for themselves. Credit where credit’s due: they did it without bloc support and somehow didn’t implode. Yet.”

Another swipe.

“The rest? Sold off to Init. Classic Goonswarm move—sell the furniture before the house catches fire.”

A quiet ping sounded as Gallente Citizen 4586793463 entered the room, datapad in hand, taking notes silently from the corner. No one greeted them. They didn’t expect it.

“But here’s what isn’t being talked about,” Gobbins continued, walking slowly around the glowing map. “The way Goons pulled out. Or more specifically—how many neutral groups they shoved out the airlock on their way.”

“Wasn’t XIX neutral?” Brin asked.

“They were,” Gobbins said. “So were Siege Green. SL4GS. All of them made deals just to be left alone. Gave up space. Agreed to neutrality. Guess what it got them?”

“Nothing?”

“Eviction,” Gobbins said flatly. “Goons demanded they give up the rest. No more pretexts, no more lies about ‘Panfam pets’ or jump bridge fairy tales. Just straight-up ultimatums.”

A ripple of silence moved across the bridge.

“And yet,” Gobbins said, “compare that to what we did when we had the South. From the collapse of FireCo in early 2023 to late 2024, we held the strongest force down there. Did we evict neutrals? No. We protected them. SEA agreement. Even when it ended, we left them alone. When we pushed Catch, we didn’t demand space or bridges. We just flew smarter.”

Brin raised an eyebrow. “So what changed?”

“They overextended,” Gobbins replied. “And that gave us the opening. Their reach into Delve and Querious cost them everything they tried to hold. And now—neutral entities can thrive there again. Irony’s a lovely thing, when properly aged.”

He tapped the map off. The lights rose slightly. In the pause that followed, Gallente Citizen 4586793463 scribbled a single note:
When Goons go full tyrant, the void grows fertile.”

“Oh, and before I forget,” Gobbins added, turning back to the room, “local notes: industry hub is now active in E8-. New ratting areas are going live around us. Our allies who lost ground are being resettled in Outer Passage—which also makes the region tougher to crack.”

He looked directly at the crew.

“Train Maelstroms. Buy Titans. And for the love of Bob, stop asking if MJ- is still safe.”

With that, he walked out, coat flaring slightly, trailed by a muted chorus of murmured “Yes, sir”s and one distant ping of someone trying to buy a Revelation off-contract.

Mount #481

Way back in April of 2024 I wrote about how I had earned my 420 something mount, and I was hoping that I would be able to break 500 before The War Within released.

That, obviously never happened – but I continue going after mounts. I now have 481, and today picked up two from the Mists of Pandaria timewalking merchant. Maybe I’ll be able to reach 500 before the next expansion (Midnight?) releases? It has been a very long time since I focused on pets or mounts to any degree, but we’ll see how it goes. I’m still missing 300+ pets, and that is something I’d really like to work on.

I currently have 1579 unique pets, and I’m missing 340 of them. I also need to level quite a few of them up, but that’s mostly to put them for sale.

As always, happy gaming, no matter where you find yourself!

Ore is Temporary, Salt is Eternal

The mess hall of the MBV Roidrunner’s Regret was abuzz with the slow-burning chaos that only a patch day could provide. The crew—miners, haulers, and opportunists alike—sat clustered around datapads, mugs of synth-coffee, and a running argument about Mordunium, stockpiles, and how many lies a patch note could legally contain.

Just reduce the volume of the ore,” muttered Ragmar Ohu, dragging a finger across a half-empty spreadsheet like it owed him money. “They say they’re worried about buffing stockpiles. Then just make the rocks smaller.”

“Yeah,” replied NWABroseidon, tapping rapidly into a price index, “but the only way people actually dump their hoards is if the market’s worth it. You want movement? You gotta make mining and selling not feel like self-harm.

He glanced around, daring someone to argue. No one did. He added flatly, “GG no re.”

From across the room, Aykira Sl4ker chuckled. “At least that panic dump in Jita helped me buy enough pyerite to build an entire Orca family. Thanks, hysteria.”

“Yeah, well now that everyone’s realized the buff was a nothing burger,” NWABroseidon muttered, “prices are crawling back up again. Like roaches. Disappointed roaches.”

“Hey,” someone said, “what’s this bit in the patch notes? ‘Empowering highsec miners to act on the pyerite shortage’?”

“‘Empower them to f*** off,’ more like,” NWABroseidon replied, without missing a beat.

“Is this the third time this happened?” asked aegeahg, flipping through old market charts.

“Ya.”

A notification pinged on someone’s pad.

5% mord, man.” NWABroseidon groaned. “That’s it. I’m going to bed.”

It’s 08:40.

“Exactly.”

Meanwhile, over at the newbie end of the table, RupKilla was having a revelation.

“Yo,” he asked, “can a covert ops Venture mine while cloaked?”

A slow, sympathetic silence followed.

“No,” said Erika Akiga, gently. “Can’t lock targets while cloaked. Goes for all ships.”

“So I just… cloak when someone shows up, then?”

“Exactly,” Munyi Mishi added. “Cloak, hide, don’t die. Basic survival.”

Epice RuinedEpice nodded. “Also lets you dodge gate camps, be sneaky in wormholes—real handy.”

RupKilla blinked. “That’s a pretty cool mechanic.”

“Yup,” said bogusman Aideron. “Warp to a ping, cloak mid-warp, just don’t try to dock while cloaked or touch anything. Cloaking is like introvert mode—you want to not interact with the world.”

Later, as the caffeine wore off and the pyerite market continued its dramatic impression of a rollercoaster on fire, Munyi Mishi checked her index again.

“Seems folks really did offload their pyerite stocks,” she said. “Price is tanking.”

Cube Collider grunted. “Mordunium buff. Wow.

Dariisa Asiirad looked up from her mining laser calibration manual. “Stop. Get help.”

“I didn’t say anything!” Cube snapped. “WTF.”

Across the room, Macuna Hatata shook their head silently, staring at a market window like it had betrayed them personally.

A final message pinged.

aegeahg: “Scordite got a 10% buff if anyone wants to make a trip to HS.”

No one moved.