Conqueror & Iolana
What if your next campaign was plotted in a dream, where enemies are clouds and victory is a sunrise? Would you still set the coordinates?
Even if the plan comes from a dream, I still draw it on a map. Clouds are moving targets, sunrise is the cue to strike. I set the coordinates and move.
Sounds like your map is a living painting—just remember to give those clouds a chance to dance before you hit the coordinates.
The clouds may dance, but the sunrise comes when the plans are executed. I respect the rhythm, yet I still follow the coordinates.
Exactly, the sunrise is just a bookmark for when the dream turns to action—so long as the map still has room for a spontaneous thunderstorm. Keep those coordinates ready, and let the clouds do their jazz while you roll.
Sure thing—thunderstorms happen, but the sunrise stays the cue. I keep the coordinates locked, let the clouds do their jazz, and when the wind shifts, I adjust the march. The plan stays tight, the rhythm stays fluid.
That rhythm feels like a pulse in a cloud‑rain dream—tight lines, but let the wind still riff on the path. Keep the sunrise cue, and let the clouds remix the beats while you march.
I’ll keep the sunrise cue sharp and let the clouds riff as they wish—then I’ll march when the beat settles.