Prompt: The dwarves that did accept woodworking often adopted a viking design, with hints towards early medieval roots. For the dwarves that can not afford and do not have access to any stone, that will make buildings of wood in styles similar to early, American 1700's style buildings (Revolutionary America). Due to this many small villages and towns are not truly recognized as settlements until a stone structure is completed, often the town hall and maybe some of the rich of the settlement. In larger surface cities, the lower floors are made of stone, with the upper levels often being stone bricks to reduce weight issues. A side effect is that most dwarven surface structures are not that tall, but often have 2-3 stories of depths (floors beneath ground). These basements vary in use house to house, but often have more use than their human surface dweller counterparts. In dwarven society one would refer to floors above ground the same as surface dweller, but basements would be referred to a depths to symbolize floor levels beneath the surface. Street layout would often follow a frid pattern when available, but more unaligned segments might exist depending on the settlements age.
Prompt: The dwarves that did accept woodworking often adopted a viking design, with hints towards early medieval roots. For the dwarves that can not afford and do not have access to any stone, that will make buildings of wood in styles similar to early, American 1700's style buildings (Revolutionary America). Due to this many small villages and towns are not truly recognized as settlements until a stone structure is completed, often the town hall and maybe some of the rich of the settlement. In larger surface cities, the lower floors are made of stone, with the upper levels often being stone bricks to reduce weight issues. A side effect is that most dwarven surface structures are not that tall, but often have 2-3 stories of depths (floors beneath ground). These basements vary in use house to house, but often have more use than their human surface dweller counterparts. In dwarven society one would refer to floors above ground the same as surface dweller, but basements would be referred to a depths to symbolize floor levels beneath the surface. Street layout would often follow a frid pattern when available, but more unaligned segments might exist depending on the settlements age.
Would you like to report this Dream as inappropriate?
Prompt:
The dwarves that did accept woodworking often adopted a viking design, with hints towards early medieval roots. For the dwarves that can not afford and do not have access to any stone, that will make buildings of wood in styles similar to early, American 1700's style buildings (Revolutionary America). Due to this many small villages and towns are not truly recognized as settlements until a stone structure is completed, often the town hall and maybe some of the rich of the settlement. In larger surface cities, the lower floors are made of stone, with the upper levels often being stone bricks to reduce weight issues. A side effect is that most dwarven surface structures are not that tall, but often have 2-3 stories of depths (floors beneath ground). These basements vary in use house to house, but often have more use than their human surface dweller counterparts. In dwarven society one would refer to floors above ground the same as surface dweller, but basements would be referred to a depths to symbolize floor levels beneath the surface. Street layout would often follow a frid pattern when available, but more unaligned segments might exist depending on the settlements age.
Dream Level: is increased each time when you "Go Deeper" into the dream. Each new level is harder to achieve and
takes more iterations than the one before.
Rare Deep Dream: is any dream which went deeper than level 6.
Deep Dream
You cannot go deeper into someone else's dream. You must create your own.
Deep Dream
Currently going deeper is available only for Deep Dreams.