Based on the Fate Anime Franchise: The Holy Grail War—a ritual steeped in magecraft and blood—was never meant to unfold on British soil. Yet fate is not so easily bound by intent. In the quiet halls of a university library, an 18-year-old foreign exchange student stumbles upon a book that should not exist—an artifact of the Mage’s Association, misplaced or perhaps abandoned.
Played | 41 times |
Cloned | 5 times |
Created | 13 days ago |
Last Updated | 2 days ago |
Visibility | Public |

A217 Bridge

A3220 Bridge

Albert Bridge

Battersea Park
A sprawling urban park in a bustling city, featuring lush gardens, a large lake, and recreational areas surrounded by ancient trees and modern sculptures.
Bedfordshire Abbey

Belgrave Square
Big Ben
To tourists, it’s nothing more than a historical landmark: a grand timekeeper and symbol of British identity. But deep beneath the tower’s foundation lies a hidden facility known only as the Clock Tower—a subterranean annex operated in secret by the Mage’s Association. Shielded by centuries of diplomatic enchantments and bureaucratic camouflage, it functions as a leyline calibration node and spiritual resonance chamber. Officially, the Association denies its existence—but the ticking is said to echo through magical circuits far below the earth.

Blackfriars Bridge

Borough Market
A beloved historic food market packed with artisanal vendors and buzzing foot traffic. Locals and tourists alike come here for fresh produce, street eats, and cozy cafes tucked under railway arches.
Buckingham Palace
Though the monarchy no longer wields thaumaturgical power, Buckingham Palace remains off-limits to most mages by ancient, enforced compacts. Rumors whisper that the royal bloodline still bears a latent magical crest—one that the Church and Association both agreed never to activate. The area is a surveillance dead zone, with spiritual interference so thick it nullifies basic bounded fields.

Camden Lock Market
A colorful outdoor marketplace famous for crafts, fashion, and street food. It's a hub of alternative culture and youth energy, with vibrant murals and weekend music performances.

Camden Town Station

Central Criminal Court

Chelsea Bridge

Cutty Sark

Golden Hind

Granary Square
An open-air square beside the canal and university buildings. Fountains dance beneath children’s feet, and light shows reflect off the water after sunset. A good spot to relax.

Guy's Hospital

Hammersmith Hospital

Harry Potter Trolley Wall
A fan-favorite photo op on the station’s west side. Tourists line up to pose pushing a luggage cart into a fake brick wall marked Platform 9¾. Mostly harmless—unless you're late.

Heathrow Airport

Hyde Park
Vast, open, and spiritually unclaimed, Hyde Park has long served as neutral ground for Grail War skirmishes. On paper, it belongs to no faction, but many suspect the Mage’s Association has hidden observation drones scattered across the landscape. Its wide fields offer room for open combat, but also danger—those who fight here may be seen by the wrong eyes.

Imperial War Museum
This site functions as a covert intelligence relay node operated by the Diocese. While the public assumes it honors the past, within the archives lie detailed accounts of magical incidents during both World Wars—heavily redacted. Church agents meet in code under the guise of academic historians. It’s also a prime location for identifying unstable Wildcards drawn to wartime artifacts.

Jubilee Gardens

King's College London Guy's Campus

Lambeth Bridge

Larkhall Park

London Bridge
A critical leyline hub, London Bridge is a sanctioned dueling ground used by the Mage’s Association to observe combat scenarios or test bounded fields. It’s not guarded, but it is baited—rigged with sensory wards to monitor magecraft activity. Should an unregistered summoning occur, Clock Tower agents can mobilize within minutes. For Straybloods or Wildcards, it’s both stage and snare.

London Eye
A spiritual antenna in disguise. Though unaffiliated officially, the Church and Association both acknowledge that the London Eye’s rotation subtly disturbs localized leyline rhythms. Some believe it was built atop an old druidic altar, and each full rotation synchronizes with one of the planetary spheres. Wildcards sensitive to magical pulses often find themselves inexplicably drawn here without knowing why.

London Library
An “overflow” archive for the Mage’s Association, this library shelters grimoires deemed too unstable or minor for the Clock Tower proper. Bound familiars patrol the upper stacks in invisible silence. Some Straybloods find themselves lured here by instinct, opening family-sealed texts that never should’ve been uncatalogued. There have been long past instances where random civilians wander in and trigger a summoning. The Association refers to it internally as “The Quiet Spark.”

Main Dorm Room
Tucked on the third floor of an aging international student residence in central London, this modest three-room dorm apartment serves as your base of operations—though you don’t know it yet. A modest three-room student flat tucked into a quiet corner of central London, this dorm serves as your reluctant refuge from the outside world. The living room holds a PC with Battlefield: Bad Company 2 frozen on-screen, a small couch, and a TV flanked by anime posters.

Main Terminal
A historic rail station and key London transport hub. Trains bound for Edinburgh, York, and Cambridge leave from here. The terminal blends modern design with its original 1852 architecture.

National Army Museum

National Maritime Museum

Natural History Museum
A façade of curiosity and science conceals one of the Mage’s Association’s most discreet vaults. Below the museum lies the “Cradle of Species,” a sealed labyrinth that stores relics deemed too unstable or morally dubious for Clock Tower. Disguised as climate-controlled specimen rooms, these vaults hum with residual mana. Wildcards could unwittingly stumble upon catalysts here—though the Association is always watching.

Nelson Square

Ordinary NPC Storage
Area inaccessible to players.

Pendlewick Lane
Tucked behind a row of aging dormitories, Pendlewick Lane is a narrow throughway that most students find by accident. It’s a favored shortcut between the north commons and the back of the humanities quad, particularly during rainy mornings when the covered eaves provide some shelter. Though rarely busy, the lane is never quite empty either — someone is always passing through, head down, hurrying along. It’s the sort of place people remember using, but never in much detail.

Placement

Realm of Spirits
The Realm of Spirits is a sealed metaphysical space that exists beyond the veil of time and material reality—untouchable and invisible to all save for the Heroic Spirits themselves. No Master, magus, or spiritualist—no matter their skill—can force entry or perceive it. It is not summoned or constructed, but remembered into being through the collective resonance of Servants awaiting manifestation. Here, Heroic Spirits not yet called into the Holy Grail War linger in ethereal slumber, their souls caught between summoning and oblivion. Though unable to act upon the world, they remain dimly aware of events unfolding through their emotional tether to potential Masters. In rare cases, summoned Servants may momentarily retreat here for recovery, communion, or contemplation—but no mortal eye may ever follow. To them, this place simply does not exist.

Regent's Park Southern Glade
A serene, lush green space at the southern end of Regent's Park, featuring winding paths, ornamental flower beds, and a small ornamental pond. It serves as a peaceful retreat from the bustling city, frequented by locals and travelers alike.

Rotherhithe Watchtower Ruins
The remains of an old riverside lookout, now little more than a preserved stump of foundation stones and signage. A quiet heritage spot for history lovers and evening walks.

Sea Life London Aquarium

Shakespeare's Globe
While not under any faction’s formal jurisdiction, the Globe Theatre is often visited by rogue Strayblood magi and drama-inclined Wildcards—those whose families wove enchantments into poetry or performance. The structure itself resonates with performance-based magecraft, and summoning circles drawn on its wooden stage are said to amplify emotional catalysts tenfold.

Shillington Park

Sky Garden

Southwark Bridge

St Bartholomew's Hospital

St Giles Cripplegate

St. James's Park
A seemingly harmless oasis in the heart of London, St. James’s Park is a favored meeting place for Wildcards and Straybloods, thanks to its lack of direct surveillance or bounded field suppression. For many, it becomes the site of a first encounter—an accidental summoning, an overheard name, or a glimmer of a Servant's presence. The Church patrols it irregularly, but only in the early morning hours.

St. Pancras International
Sitting adjacent to King’s Cross, this red-brick gothic station handles Eurostar rail to Paris and Brussels. A symbol of Victorian grandeur turned modern gateway to Europe.

St. Paul's Cathedral
Unbeknownst to the public, St. Paul’s Cathedral serves as the operational headquarters for the Holy Church’s Overseer during the current Holy Grail War. The cathedral is cloaked from magecraft detection. Here, Command Seals are recorded, alliances monitored, and rulings passed with divine authority. When summoned Masters arrive at St. Paul’s, they are greeted not as pilgrims, but as players in a ritual older than empires. No blood may be spilled within its bounds; it is the last bastion of neutrality and judgment.

St. Stevens Intersection
The player rounds the corner into the intersection—a cluster of lampposts and rain‑slick pavement where streets converge—and their eyes land on a smashed car parked awkwardly across both lanes. The front end is crushed inward; a broken windshield gleams in shards on the damp asphalt. The passenger door hangs open. No one moves inside or around it. Police tape encircles the vehicle now, thin fiber glowing in the lamp’s yellow glow while a coroner's van zips up a body bag. Sirens sound faintly in the distance.

Surrey Quays

Tavistock Square
A serene public square surrounded by academic buildings and embassies. It’s ideal for a reflective walk or lunch beneath the trees, just steps from the city’s core.

Thames Beach

The Charterhouse

The Lighterman
A sleek, modern pub with views of the canal and Granary Square. A popular spot for post-work drinks or late brunch on weekends.

The Oval

The Postal Museum

Tower Bridge
Unofficially watched by the Diocese, Tower Bridge is lined with old enchantments placed by monastic orders during the Black Death to ward off evil. These have never been lifted. Now, the Church uses it to detect demonic signatures or unauthorized summoning attempts.

Tower of London
The Mage’s Association views the Tower as a “sealed site”—formerly used for storing failed catalysts and magical prisoners. Though its dungeons have long been closed, the residual mana remains toxic. Entry is restricted under joint treaty with the Church, but a rogue Master may still seek to claim one of the broken relics deep inside.

Trafalgar Square
A neutral urban plaza layered with centuries of magical interference, Trafalgar Square is officially unclaimed, but agents of the Mages Association often use it as an open-air forum for covert observation. Public rituals are rare here due to its visibility, yet the magic buried beneath its stones—old Roman foundations and Norse sigils—make it spiritually resonant. On nights of high moonlight, some claim to see ghostly reenactments of long-lost duels.

University of London
While not officially under the Mage’s Association’s jurisdiction, the University is crawling with informants, graduate students tied to lesser families, and wildcard-affiliated scholars who unknowingly tamper with forces beyond them. It’s not watched so much as tolerated, making it a ripe ground for fate to take root—especially for those like Wildcards or Straybloods.

Vauxhall Bridge

Waterloo Bridge

Westminster Bridge
Though openly accessible to all, Westminster Bridge is treated as hallowed ground by the English Diocese. It was once the site of a failed Holy Grail summoning centuries ago—resulting in a spiritual rupture that still echoes faintly in the river’s current. The Church maintains quiet wards here, making it a place of observation, warning, and last rites.

Westminster Cathedral
Publicly, Westminster Cathedral is the largest Catholic church in London—a site of daily mass, solemn processions, and silent prayer. Secretly, it serves as a forward operating base for the English Diocese, functioning as a command post for Church Executors and enforcers assigned to monitor the Holy Grail War. Beneath the sacristy lies a consecrated logistics chamber used to store holy artifacts, organize patrol routes, and monitor spiritual activity across the city. While not home to the Overseer, it operates independently under the Diocese’s authority, acting as a sanctuary, interrogation site, and equipment depot for Church personnel.

Word On The Water
A charming secondhand bookstore on a moored barge. It sells poetry, philosophy, and rare finds out of creaky wooden shelves—and hosts live readings on weekends.