
A land where empires rise beneath the blazing sun and ancient gods walk unseen among mortals. From the chariot-lords of the northern Hindayan Empire to the Tamilan dynasties of the south, every kingdom is a jewel on the endless garland of Rajamala. Beyond humans roam tiger warriors, elephant sages, and serpent sorcerers who remember the world’s first dawn. Here, holy wars are waged in the name of god-kings, jungle spirits guard forgotten temples.
Played | 1 times |
Cloned | 0 times |
Created | 5 days ago |
Last Updated | 1 days ago |
Visibility | Public |

Haathee-log
The Haathee-log are large bipedal elephant-folk native to Rajamala, known for their hidden enclaves within the Surahvahana Empire. While often seen as wise and gentle, they possess diverse temperaments, with the fierce 'Bulls' standing out as powerful and ferocious warriors.

Nippon
The Nippon are a human race from a distant eastern island, known for their refined, deliberate grace and quiet dignity. They have smooth complexions ranging from pale ivory to warm beige, almond-shaped dark eyes, and straight black hair that falls to the shoulders or beyond, with finely proportioned symmetrical features.

Kuru
The Kuru are a rare human race from the far east, known for their dark hair, yellowish skin tint, and monolid eyes. Often found as mercenaries or explorers in Rajamala, they possess keen senses and resilience shaped by their harsh homeland.

Kalyari
The Kalyari are fair-skinned humans from distant lands, known for their compassionate nature and dedication to healing. They establish clinics and refuges in Rajamala, serving all social classes while following the 'Holy One' and relying on mercenaries for protection due to their pacifism.

Kinnara
A rare celestial half-beast race blending human features with those of horses or birds, known for their divine connection to music and prophecy. Often appearing as wandering mystics, dancers, or prophets, Kinnara are seen as omens and carry an aura of ethereal grace and insight.

Rakshaka
Large, imposing humanoids descended from ancient demon clans, often distrusted but not inherently evil; many serve as mercenaries or gladiators, embodying a morally gray presence especially in the Surajvahana frontier regions.

Vanara
Agile monkey folk from the southern jungle canopies, known for their incredible leaps, uncanny luck, and strong communal loyalty. Skilled as tricksters and scouts, they thrive in high tree cities and make excellent allies for Tamilan or Baghru forces.

Nāgaraja
Nāgaraja are rare, ancient serpent folk inspired by Indian Nāga lore, embodying half-serpent, half-humanoid forms with mastery over water, poison, and illusions. They dwell in deep jungle temples, sacred lakes, and under-river palaces, often seen as builders of forgotten cities and feared keepers of forbidden magic, acting as allies, villains, or aloof observers in mortal affairs.

Baghru
The Baghru are bipedal tigerfolk with striking orange and black fur, dwelling in tight-knit clan enclaves deep within the southern jungles. Fiercely proud and territorial, they harbor a deep-seated enmity toward their vampiric kin, the Shvetaraj, whom they see as a dark corruption of their noble lineage.

Shvetaraj
The Shvetaraj are a cursed offshoot of the Baghru descended from a warlord who defied the Moon-Mother. They are bipedal tiger folk, who possess white fur with black stripes, crimson or amber eyes that burn in darkness, retractable sharp canines, and suffer a debilitating weakness to sunlight, requiring them to feed on life-force through gaze, touch, or ritual to sustain their strength, while their enhanced senses and nocturnal nature make them formidable yet vulnerable to moonless madness.

Tamilan
The Tamilans are a race from the tropical southern lands of Rajamala, with rich mahogany to deep bronze skin, dark curly to wavy hair, and elaborate clan tattoos. Agile and resilient, they are skilled in jungle guerrilla warfare and deeply connected to monsoon rhythms, nature worship, and ancient earth spirits.

Hindayan
The Hindayan humans race their lineage to the Ashvaraj, divine chariot-lords said to have descended from the Sun God Suraja. Riding golden chariots drawn by storm-wolves, they came from the far northern high plains in an age when the world was still young. They appear as fair-skinned indians and use hindu names. Their arrival brought both conquest and culture — they claim to have united the scattered tribes of the north under the first God-King, a being who could speak to the heavens.