Liberta Duel Academy is a Yu-Gi-Oh! roleplay site set in an Alternate Universe (AU) version of the original series of Yu-Gi-Oh!, set roughly 50 years after the end of the Dark Side of Dimensions movie. Liberta Duel Academy is set in the city of Silvershine located in a fictional small country known as Silva, somewhere along the western coastside of Europe.
September through October 20X1 - Welcome, Class of 20X4!
The new school year at Liberta Duel Academy is here! Students - new and returning - are adjusting to their school life and getting themselves settled in. The entrance ceremony presented the principal's address, spoke of Dorm Rankings, and introduced the Student Council. Alongside the standard Master Duels, the experimental "Specialty Duels" were announced to those new to the academy. So unpack; duel a fellow or two; explore the academy and the city of Silvershine! Action; adventure; slice of life; it's up to you! How will you have yours unfold?
Post by Stella Harmonia on Jan 19, 2022 4:26:55 GMT
Off the campus of the Liberta Duel Academy, at a location slightly westward from the school, there were stories of a young girl who would occasionally perform on the street with her back to the river. Sometimes, it would be near a bridge. Sometimes, it would be in the park areas. Though the locations seldom were consistent, there was a chance that someone who frequented that area would have probably seen her at least once.
A girl with pink hair and a newsboy hat that stuck out like a sore thumb among the rest of the cityscape was what she would be described as. She would be standing or sitting behind a keyboard with numerous extensions and wires attached, playing it as she sung out before her. It didn’t matter if she had an audience at the start, she would press forward without any hesitation and sing.
Before her keyboard would be a small sign advertising a website—Musica Universalis-Harmonia—where anyone could download her songs along with a set of physical copies of her two homemade albums—free for anyone to take and keep.
Such was no different today. Before the riverbank, surrounded by a plethora of equipment, Stella Harmoia sang. Like many other days, it wouldn’t be a long set. She was a high school student after all, so she still needed to divest time for other things.
She was halfway through her second song, an upbeat song that she considered to be a fragment of her personality, when she had noticed that her audience had hit gone beyond double digits into about 20.
Yes, it was just another day of performance for Stella.