Roekron is named after the Battle of Four Powers
The compact calendar marks Roekron's birth at the Battle of Four Powers and names Dsesnor as ruler of the land.
Sources [9]
Chronology
In-game chronology extracted from time jumps, plot updates, and related records.
Chronology
The compact calendar marks Roekron's birth at the Battle of Four Powers and names Dsesnor as ruler of the land.
Sources [9]
The early calendar describes the arrival of elves, the long Dark Age, and a prosperous Third Age led by the Wizards Trade Order.
Sources [9]
Svodlun slave labor and the fall of Celendil open the Fourth Age. Dark Cities, Carakwaith, Dagdeoth expansion, and later the Rebel Republics reshape Roekron's political order.
Sources [9]
The calendar moves through Dragon Talons, the Skull Demon, the dawn of the Sixth Age, Hostor/Pinnacle missions, Kuni Kendrai's rule, and Sorikonian shrine conflicts tied to the Shadowlands.
Sources [9]
The 2009-2010 jump reports growth in government, a leadership change in the Wizards Trade Order, instability in Andionion, and broader hardship after Dagdeoth and the Sisters.
Sources [12]
The winter jump frames Roekron as near political collapse: Obimi Baraku refuses an heir, Kuni Kendrai becomes central, and isolationism, debt, and regional conflicts deepen.
Sources [13]
The 2011-2012 update says many overthrow plots were averted and Kuni Kendrai retook Dsesnor after a vampire impersonation crisis, but legitimacy remained contested.
Sources [14]
The 2012-2013 jump identifies a divine-political conflict around Dsesnor and the Wizards Trade Order, while Sorikonia faces shrine traps and Shadowlands gateways.
Sources [15]
The 2013-2014 update tracks the Shadowlands war, the emergence of a new Dark City, vampire power struggles, the Blackspire uprising, and failing oracles.
Sources [16]
The all-regions plot update describes Seer Possessions leveling cities, widespread chaos, and the risk of total Dagdeoth invasion across Roekron.
Sources [10]
The 2015-2016 jump centers the Tower of Morganti, Dagdeoth wars, Blackspire rebels, new rulers, Hobbit civil war, and the dwindling of the Fae.
Sources [18]
The 2017-2018 update tracks Wizard Trade Order wars, a vampire narrative, Dead Plague escalation, Blackspire rising, Andionion renaissance, Sorikonian rebels, and Dark Wilds reconstruction.
Sources [3]
The 2018-2019 notes describe a Trade Order-Svodlun alliance, Dead Plague zones, the Mists of Shabarax, a United Alliance of Roekron, Orcish cultural reform, and Dagdeoth upheaval.
Sources [4]
The summer 2019 update says magical items around Roekron, especially Dsesnor, transform into spirits or haunts, changing economy, equipment, and encounter design.
Sources [32]
The implementation notes mark a harsh age: dragons are largely absent, Roekron's economy collapses by half, the United Free Republic Alliance forms, and the Army of the Starless Night controls conquered areas.
Sources [28]
The expanded jump covers item spirits leaving, magic OP recovering, Blackspire's permanent magic item flaws, conversations with Death, and Astengrad's destruction breaking links to other worlds.
Sources [29]
The winter update reports a major crisis overcome, Starless Night control slipping, divine effects remaining absent or transformed, Death behaving strangely, the Forgotten Faith rising, and dragon sightings increasing.
Sources [30]
The summer 2021 start writeup describes Dsesnor recovery, mobile Plague Zones, Starless Night nomads, the Society of the Rising Star, Morganti reclamation, and the Free Republics emerging.
Sources [31]
The 153-year jump breaks up non-divine zones, changes death and divine effects, recasts the Forgotten Faith as neutral, expands the Wildwood, and establishes Infernal and Angelic Rising Star powers.
Sources [33]
The 2023-2024 jump features Celendil et Necrenef returning, the tide of Deparia breaking, psionic forest pools, the fall of the Dragonsworn, the Plague Zone Wall dissolving, and an Infernal-Dagedrask alliance.
Sources [34]
The 2024-2025 jump introduces new political maps, CROWN influence levels, Morganti healing, Wild Forest stilling, Deparia retreat, Shadowlands takeover, and Dagedrask's Council of Eight Hands.
Sources [35]
The current game-world update describes weakening governments, economic strain, Seekers of Nightmares, changing magic, Khufalden and Shadowlands pressure, Shagaoath fading, and Dagedrask advancing through the Council of Eight Hands.
The 2025-2026 political map is the canonical geography layer for this version of the atlas. It anchors the current region list, including seas, faction territories, refuges, and realms that do not yet have a separate long-form timeline note.
The Weekend Character League event record says the league follows the Roekron storyline like the Wednesday and Friday leagues, but in its own location with its own characters and plots.
Sources [?]