
Kepler
Kepler is often referred to by astronomers as “the lonely planet”. This is due to its distance from other planets in the solar system and the common belief that is the only planet in the galaxy which has life on it. Harboring two moons, one artificial, it currently is the host of over 4 billion Morphics, over 50 different morphic species, and over 12 million non-morphic species.
As of the year ####, Kepler has 9 continents, with over # countries. These countries vary wildly with a wide arrange of cultures and climates. Currently going through a technological renaissance, even minor countries have started to emerge and solidify their hierarchical position in Kepler’s geopolitical landscape.
What makes Kepler so fascinating to scholars is its constant exposure to a unique form a radiation from the system’s sun called Tol Rays. Along with its mutative properties, these rays are most known for causing physically tangible energy called “magic”. While Morphics themselves are not magical, most of Kepler and its non-morphic flora, fauna, minerals, and etc are. Philosophers and scholars have joked that one must not have a soul to be magical and that the soul itself might be born from the collapse of magic within new Morphic life.