Planetary System chart, with five opening flaps, depicting Eclipse of the Sun, The Moon, The Zodiacal Light, and Meteoric Shower, from Yaggy's Geographical Study, 1887
Before reading the series, I assumed Octavian died in MOTM. Now I know he didn't. He jumped through the Nexus portal.
This whole scene messes me up so much bc of what he saw compared to everyone else's. Jorge saw that he would have had worse friends, Oliver would have had an awful dad, and Mya would have had her mother. The kids saw that they either made the right choice (Jorge) or a future they had no control over (Oliver and Mya). But Octavian had control, and he made the wrong choice.
He could have saved Paula. OF COURSE he jumped though the portal. He saw a chance to be with his wife AND make the right decision this time.
Can you imagine the guilt he felt in that moment? Seeing a future where he fought off the protectors and pulled Paula to safety? No wonder he jumped in.
And the tragedy is that he's never going to get what he wants. There may be infinite timelines with infinite Paulas, but his Paula is already gone.
But it doesn't matter. I think he's going to keep blaming others and never truly forgive himself. He's got to keep going.
Poptropica’s lore is a massive nightmare to piece together when it comes to trying to go by both the game canon and the MoTM canon. So I came up with an idea(at least for my AU)
The game and MoTM are two completely separate timelines.
Tbh it makes more sense to me since MoTM and the game operate under completely different sets of rules and realistically if the secret society and the adventurer’s league met, they would absolutely despise eachother. Poptropica Adventures and Worlds are apart of the game timeline since the main game islands exist there. The books will be apart of the MoTM timeline since as far as I’m aware of, some of the books have plotpoints that are drastically different from the game counterparts. Poptropica English, I’d say is also part of the game timeline albeit the islands are in a different region and operate under a completely different adventurer’s league. Poptropica forgotten islands is a bit of a weird one. Instead of being a part of either timeline, it’s basically an interdimensional bridge between both timelines. This is me taking the “forgotten islands” part of the title and turning it into something actually lore important, the islands are called the forgotten islands because they are in perpetual state of limbo between the two timelines and is uncharted territory to both the adventurer’s league and the secret society.
Anyways this is me trying to make sense of how poptropica canon works while mixing it in with headcanons, thanks for coming to my TED talk.
In Dimapur, the Kachari ruins are a collection of intricately carved stone pillars. These remains are located in the Rajbari region, formerly fortified by three walls and the River Dhansiri. The doorway on the eastern side of Rajbari still represents the historical significance of Dimapur even if the three walls no longer stand. It is a brick-built archway doorway. These are a collection of pillars with mushroom-shaped domes. They were developed by the Kachari Kingdom, which governed Dimapur before to the 13th-century Ahom conquest of the region.
The Ahoms
There are three parallel rows of about 100 stone pillars in the Kachari ruins. The tallest pillar was about 15 feet, and the smallest one at the southern end was 8 feet and 5 inches. Most of these pillars were around 12 to 13 feet. The lotus was evident in all of the carved work.
The Kachari Walls
The history of the Kachari ruins has been interpreted in several ways. As it is thought that Lord Shiva was once revered here, some historians claim that they were constructed in homage to the Hindu God Shiva. Another version is that Rajbari served as a cemetery for notable Kachari figures. Their history and function are mostly unknown.
The pillars
The pillars are not kept up well. Some pillars are still standing tall and proud, while others have fallen. There, it is said, chess-like games were played with the mushroom domes. These pillars are therefore regarded as memorial stones at the grave sites. Despite these conflicting stories, these monoliths are regarded as triumphant monuments of the Kachari kingdom.