Privacy Policy

Effective date: July 01, 2018

Royal Road West (“us”, “we”, or “our”) operates the http://royalroadwest.com website (the “Service”).

This page informs you of our policies regarding the collection, use, and disclosure of personal data when you use our Service and the choices you have associated with that data. This Privacy Policy for Royal Road West is powered by FreePrivacyPolicy.com.

We use your data to provide and improve the Service. By using the Service, you agree to the collection and use of information in accordance with this policy. Unless otherwise defined in this Privacy Policy, terms used in this Privacy Policy have the same meanings as in our Terms and Conditions, accessible from http://royalroadwest.com

Information Collection And Use

We collect several different types of information for various purposes to provide and improve our Service to you.

Types of Data Collected

Personal Data

While using our Service, we may ask you to provide us with certain personally identifiable information that can be used to contact or identify you (“Personal Data”). Personally identifiable information may include, but is not limited to:

  • Email address
  • First name and last name
  • Cookies and Usage Data

Usage Data

We may also collect information how the Service is accessed and used (“Usage Data”). This Usage Data may include information such as your computer’s Internet Protocol address (e.g. IP address), browser type, browser version, the pages of our Service that you visit, the time and date of your visit, the time spent on those pages, unique device identifiers and other diagnostic data.

Tracking & Cookies Data

We use cookies and similar tracking technologies to track the activity on our Service and hold certain information.

Cookies are files with small amount of data which may include an anonymous unique identifier. Cookies are sent to your browser from a website and stored on your device. Tracking technologies also used are beacons, tags, and scripts to collect and track information and to improve and analyze our Service.

You can instruct your browser to refuse all cookies or to indicate when a cookie is being sent. However, if you do not accept cookies, you may not be able to use some portions of our Service.

Examples of Cookies we use:

  • Session Cookies. We use Session Cookies to operate our Service.
  • Preference Cookies. We use Preference Cookies to remember your preferences and various settings.
  • Security Cookies. We use Security Cookies for security purposes.

Use of Data

Royal Road West uses the collected data for various purposes:

  • To provide and maintain the Service
  • To notify you about changes to our Service
  • To allow you to participate in interactive features of our Service when you choose to do so
  • To provide customer care and support
  • To provide analysis or valuable information so that we can improve the Service
  • To monitor the usage of the Service
  • To detect, prevent and address technical issues

Transfer Of Data

Your information, including Personal Data, may be transferred to — and maintained on — computers located outside of your state, province, country or other governmental jurisdiction where the data protection laws may differ than those from your jurisdiction.

If you are located outside United States and choose to provide information to us, please note that we transfer the data, including Personal Data, to United States and process it there.

Your consent to this Privacy Policy followed by your submission of such information represents your agreement to that transfer.

Royal Road West will take all steps reasonably necessary to ensure that your data is treated securely and in accordance with this Privacy Policy and no transfer of your Personal Data will take place to an organization or a country unless there are adequate controls in place including the security of your data and other personal information.

Disclosure Of Data

Legal Requirements

Royal Road West may disclose your Personal Data in the good faith belief that such action is necessary to:

  • To comply with a legal obligation
  • To protect and defend the rights or property of Royal Road West
  • To prevent or investigate possible wrongdoing in connection with the Service
  • To protect the personal safety of users of the Service or the public
  • To protect against legal liability

Security Of Data

The security of your data is important to us, but remember that no method of transmission over the Internet, or method of electronic storage is 100% secure. While we strive to use commercially acceptable means to protect your Personal Data, we cannot guarantee its absolute security.

Service Providers

We may employ third party companies and individuals to facilitate our Service (“Service Providers”), to provide the Service on our behalf, to perform Service-related services or to assist us in analyzing how our Service is used.

These third parties have access to your Personal Data only to perform these tasks on our behalf and are obligated not to disclose or use it for any other purpose.

Analytics

We may use third-party Service Providers to monitor and analyze the use of our Service.

  • Google AnalyticsGoogle Analytics is a web analytics service offered by Google that tracks and reports website traffic. Google uses the data collected to track and monitor the use of our Service. This data is shared with other Google services. Google may use the collected data to contextualize and personalize the ads of its own advertising network.

    You can opt-out of having made your activity on the Service available to Google Analytics by installing the Google Analytics opt-out browser add-on. The add-on prevents the Google Analytics JavaScript (ga.js, analytics.js, and dc.js) from sharing information with Google Analytics about visits activity.

    For more information on the privacy practices of Google, please visit the Google Privacy & Terms web page: https://policies.google.com/privacy?hl=en

Links To Other Sites

Our Service may contain links to other sites that are not operated by us. If you click on a third party link, you will be directed to that third party’s site. We strongly advise you to review the Privacy Policy of every site you visit.

We have no control over and assume no responsibility for the content, privacy policies or practices of any third party sites or services.

Children’s Privacy

Our Service does not address anyone under the age of 18 (“Children”).

We do not knowingly collect personally identifiable information from anyone under the age of 18. If you are a parent or guardian and you are aware that your Children has provided us with Personal Data, please contact us. If we become aware that we have collected Personal Data from children without verification of parental consent, we take steps to remove that information from our servers.

Changes To This Privacy Policy

We may update our Privacy Policy from time to time. We will notify you of any changes by posting the new Privacy Policy on this page.

We will let you know via email and/or a prominent notice on our Service, prior to the change becoming effective and update the “effective date” at the top of this Privacy Policy.

You are advised to review this Privacy Policy periodically for any changes. Changes to this Privacy Policy are effective when they are posted on this page.

Contact Us

If you have any questions about this Privacy Policy, please contact us:

  • By email: hello@royalroadwest.com

Royal Road West and Ancient Kesteva

An Introduction

The following is excerpted from the book Discover Kesteva, published by Royal Road West. It appears in Chapter 2: History & Fiction: How to Use the Source Material With Dungeon World.

Once every couple of months at Royal Road West’s offices, never on a predictable day, a housecat-sized parcel wrapped in dark brown kraft paper and secured with light brown twine arrives.

This is the good time.

Word spreads through the office. One by one staff amble into the shipping room. They hold porcelain mugs or paper cups of coffee or tea—Earl Grey is popular, and our copy intern swears a whiff of bergamot goes out on every letter we send—and gather around the table in the center of the room. Our Publisher lays out the bundle, slices the twice, unwraps the paper, reaches in with both hands, and brings out the contents. Sometimes it’s faded side-stitched copies of what might be logs. Sometimes it’s what appear to be journals. Sometimes it’s a collection of folded sheets of paper tied together with colorful ribbon: theses usually are copies of Ulric’s Little Descriptives. In most cases, we have no idea of the contents at first, for all of it is written in the language of ancient Kesteva or something even less familiar.

A thumb drive accompanies the haul. The drive contains the Translator’s conversion of the documents into English. The translations are not always complete, but they are extensive enough for Royal Road West to prepare reproductions of ancient Kestevan documents and make them available to the public. The Publisher takes the thumb drive and adds its numbered translations to the office network while other staff photograph the original documents, note dimensions, binding and other details, and file them away into the company archive. Writers, editors and artists go away to continue work on the year’s planned publications. The latest haul’s translations may or may not make it onto the editorial calendar; that’s a decision for the publication committee. Sometimes archives originals are brought out for display in Royal Road West’s Museum of Kestevan History. Most of it remains hidden, awaiting the kind of academic study the Editor wants but has so far not received.

The Editor’s interest in serious academic study of Kesteva and numerous rejections led him to Royal Road West. But to begin at the beginning:

One day, the Editor—an anonymous former newspaper Editor in a fog-shrouded town of the American Midwest—discovered a multidimensional door. He opened the door. He stepped through.

On the other side was an ancient library in the ancient world of Kesteva. Inside the library, the Editor found books, maps, letters, field manuals, logs, drawings …

Image of people walking on The Royal Road outside the city of Rattvik
The Royal Road, outside the city of Rattvik. Reproduced from Ulric’s Big Descriptive of Rattvik, 5th edition, published 303.

The Editor had no ease with foreign languages, and so he found and somehow persuaded a Translator to convert the texts into Modern English. It was slow going at first. But after a time, the Translator reported breakthroughs, and soon the first translations began arriving at the Editor’s doorstep. Within these previously mysterious texts, the Editor encountered an ancient world of soaring mountains, great cities, castles, monsters and magic. As he read the decoded material that began arriving in regular parcels, he gained appreciation for Kesteva and determined the world must know of it and its people.

He conceived a plan to bring the world of Kesteva to our world’s attention by inviting university scholars to examine the material. Academic papers would be written, grants would be awarded, courses would be offered, department chairs would be endowed. The world would learn of Kesteva.

None of it happened.

The Editor continued to cross the multidimensional door and retrieve texts from the ancient library to which it led. The Translator continued his work. But the academic study was not forthcoming. In his discouragement, the Editor envisioned a new project: to convert the ancient histories into role-playing games, which he had heard about through his years of journalism. His idea was to gamify the history and thereby support more “serious” work of translating and research outside of mainstream academia. With the sting of rejection from such institutions in mind, he turned to our publishing house as a last resort.

We try not to take it personally.

The Editor began by writing to our Publisher.

The modern world, he confessed, sometimes got him down.

“It’s all black boxes now,” he wrote to our Publisher. “Time was when you could understand how a thing worked. Now it’s a matter of ignorance impossible to overcome. You have to rely on faith in technology to exist in this world. That makes modern existence and reliance on technology a religion, doesn’t it?”

There were many letters.

“And everything is being optimized to death,” he wrote in one. “Even going to the movies these days, now they know exactly what buttons to push. Television, the Internet, books: everything is optimized to sell you something. … And don’t get me started on the black boxes we live in through daily life. On the one hand, nothing is understandable, and on the other it’s all too understandable. …”

The Editor told our Publisher of the multidimensional door. Of the library he’d discovered. Of his great project.

Kesteva, he wrote, presents a contrast to the modern world.

“Imagine a place where they’re still learning. All those optimizations? They haven’t figured them out yet. Oh, they have social constructs, and let me tell you they’ve optimized their knowledge of goblin anatomy to know just where to hit the hideous beasts in close combat. …”

Kesteva is not perfect; the Editor admitted that. It is a sprawling world of adventure, danger, intrigue … and dragons, castles, caverns, snowy mountains, dark woods and green fields. It also is home to human, elves, goblins, trolls and gnomes, all struggling to survive everyday existence. An imperfect world. A dangerous world.

“But they haven’t invented time clocks or Social Security numbers,” the Editor wrote. “They don’t know anything about overtime or point-of-purchase donations or parking meters. I don’t think electricity even works in Kesteva. Magic looks like real magic. …”

“Their world isn’t a machine like our world. Not yet.”

Our Publisher invited the Editor to visit our offices. The Editor declined. Our Publisher invited the Editor to meet in a coffee shop, a library … the Editor declined. The letters continued, explaining Kesteva, the multidimensional door, and the Editor’s grand vision.

The multidimensional door is the reason our Publisher knew the Editor was telling the truth about his documents’ origin. No one can fake a multidimensional door, he said, and who would make up such a thing? When the Editor proposed his Great Project, the Publisher heard him out and helped set the plan in motion.

The Publisher even changed the name of our publishing house to Royal Road West.

 

The Editor has never given his name, nor that of his Translator. He has never identified the location of the multidimensional door. He has never identified the specific fog-shrouded Midwestern town he lived in. The return addresses on his parcels are from all over the Midwest, and no one has been able to trace them back to the Editor.

He did elaborate on the multidimensional door once, in response to a query from a staff researcher. He said the ancient library into which he stepped appeared to have been closed up for a long weekend, for the Editor did not encounter librarians or patrons and found all the doors locked from the outside. This absence of other people enabled him to secure a trove of books, scrolls, pamphlets and other documents and take them through the multidimensional door back into our world.

Not much else about it is known. It may never be known. Nevertheless, our Publisher tells us at Royal Road West that in bringing the world of Kesteva to the public—more importantly, to YOU, dear reader—we are in some small way rebuilding our own world.

Will you join us?

Do you continue?

Man reading a book

Tales From the Royal Road: A Translation

Once upon a time, our Translator compiled stories of adventure from ancient Kesteva. Read about:

  • Wallik, a hedge wizard who chances upon a path that may lead to power
  • The Tragedy of Trolls
  • The Wizard’s Box, an annoying contraption discovered on the Royal Road
  • Brom, the kitchen-scrubber who longs for adventure
  • Real wizards, and not-real wizards, as observed by Jamaraus and his friend after a traveling show’s performance
  • A town crier who faces competition from printed words
  • The museum of the Battle of Malandren, built in an old warehouse by Rollin the Kobold-stlayer

The Translator makes no claims as to stories’ provenance or accuracy.

 


Products that may interest you

The harried staff at Royal Road West are analyzing and translating as fast as they can. Several types of products are available for purchase.

Dungeon World gaming aids

Ulric’s Little Descriptives

Packed with tips, lore and scraps of legend, these gaming aids are translations of the originals produced by Ulric of Skara’s copyhouse for use by travelers on Kesteva’s Royal Road. Print on two sides of an 8 1/2 x 11 sheet and fold just like the originals.

The downloads include Gamemaster Notes that give background and tips for adapting the contents for Dungeon World. Inside, find historical notes, lore and scraps of intel, Dungeon World stats and adventure hooks.

Use Ulric’s Little Descriptives as gaming aids or as inspiration for your own Dungeon World adventures! Available at DriveThruRPG.com.

A royal city, Milestone 114 on the Royal Road, and close to the Wild Wood
Another founding city, home of the Cog Calculator of Roxen and the Royal Library
A place so vast and murky that even Ulric won’t venture there. Yet he wrote about it.
Ancient Kesteva’s thousand-mile fortified highway of commerce, war and wishes
Ancient Kesteva’s official record, ordered by King Alfred to promote a national identity
A city near the Great Western Ocean’s coast. Known more for what once was than what is today.

Fiction

Before working with Royal Road West, the Translator published a book of short stories originating in Kesteva. It’s available on Amazon.com, Smashwords and other venues.

 

Journal of Kestevan Studies

At present, this is an in-house publication available for staff use only. (Staff, please enter your password to access.)

 

Ulric’s Little Descriptive of the city of Roxen

The download includes Gamemaster Notes that give background and tips for adapting the contents for Dungeon World. Inside, find:

  • Historical notes on Roxen: its history, services and importance to Kesteva
  • Lore and scraps of intel on the city’s denizens
  • A description of Mindy’s Adventure School, where lectures include goblin anatomy and the business of adventuring
  • Information about The Royal Library, which not only holds knowledge but actively collects it by issuing letters of marque to inquisitive adventurers
  • Adventure hooks, including The Missing Ingots, Hot Fair Escort and Intervention(?)

The Kestevan Chronicle

In the year 25, King Alfred commanded a narrative of the kingdom be compiled to celebrate the people’s deeds and provide their descendants with a history of their New World.

Within its pages, gentle traveler, you will find annals of the kingdom with the most important events for each year highlighted. For deeper reading, turn to the other contents: the memorials of people who have exemplified themselves for the kingdom, descriptions of important places, and narratives of important events.

 

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