| − | Veila continued to experiment with magic when not tutoring others. Determined to find new ways of assisting her species, she worked tirelessly inventing new spells and magic-powered devices. A paramount example, and one leading to her notoriety, was that of the [[:Category:Gates|Warp Gates]]. Warp Gates, the evolution of her first basic levitation spell, allowed Raposa to traverse long distances instantly between other linked Gates. Treks that would take teams of Raposa days to traverse now could be made in mere seconds without need for bulky supplies. Naturally, this enabled her village to expand far beyond its original borders. In her lifetime, Veila created four gates within [[Raposa Village|Capital Village]], each leading to various destinations within the new regions: The [[Snow Gate]], [[Forest Gate]], [[Beach Gate]], and the [[City Gate]] (so named as it would later become the main area of expansion for her village). Though the Gates had limitations, they were a boon to the growing village and would continue to see heavy usage centuries into the future. | + | Veila continued to experiment with magic when not tutoring others. Determined to find new ways of assisting her species, she worked tirelessly inventing new spells and magic-powered devices. A paramount example, and one leading to her notoriety, was that of the [[:Category:Gates|Warp Gates]]. Warp Gates, the evolution of her first basic levitation spell, allowed Raposa to traverse long distances instantly between other linked Gates. Treks that would take teams of Raposa days to traverse now could be made in mere seconds without need for bulky supplies. Naturally, this enabled her village to expand far beyond its original borders. |
| | + | In her lifetime, Veila created four gates within [[Raposa Village|Capital Village]], each leading to various destinations within the new regions: The [[Snow Gate]], [[Forest Gate]], [[Beach Gate]], and the [[City Gate]] (so named as it would later become the main area of expansion for her village). Though the Gates had limitations, they were a boon to the growing village and would continue to see heavy usage centuries into the future. |