Priscilla Camp is one of the Royal Selection factions of the Dragon Kingdom of Lugunica, led by Priscilla Barielle. Among the five camps, it stands apart for its overwhelming sense of grandeur, theatrical confidence, and the absolute certainty of its leader. Priscilla does not simply act like a noble candidate competing for the throne; she behaves as though the world itself bends naturally in her favor. Her camp reflects that same aura: elegant, dangerous, eccentric, and strangely untouchable. In current canon, the camp was ultimately disbanded after Priscilla’s death following the Great Disaster, making it the first Royal Selection faction to fall out of the contest.
At the ideological center of the faction is Priscilla’s belief that the heavens have chosen her path. She sees herself as the most fitting ruler not because she begs for legitimacy, but because she assumes it as self-evident. Her political style is not democratic, humble, or conciliatory. It is imperial in attitude: she rewards those who align with her, protects those under her rule, and expects obedience as the natural response to her brilliance. Yet this arrogance is not entirely hollow. The people of her domain genuinely benefited under her leadership, and her popularity was tied not only to her charisma and luck, but to visible improvements in the lives of commoners.
Before the Royal Selection formally began, Priscilla was discovered as a candidate by Leip Barielle, who intended to use her as a tool for his own ambitions. He took her as his eighth wife and sought to control her, even attempting to arrange both magical coercion and carefully managed public presentation around her. Instead, Priscilla proved impossible to reduce to a puppet. After Leip’s death, she inherited control of the Barielle Domain, and under her rule a territory that had been damaged by his tyranny rapidly recovered. Poverty eased, the domain stabilized, and her subjects began living better lives. This is one of the defining truths of Priscilla Camp: beneath its vanity and spectacle lies real governing ability.
The camp’s core members are Priscilla Barielle, Al, and Schult, with later association also including Heinkel Astrea and Yae Tenzen. Priscilla is the heart, will, and image of the camp. Al, her knight, provides a rougher and more grounded counterbalance to her extravagance: practical, sardonic, mysterious, and deeply capable. Schult represents another side of the faction entirely—quiet loyalty, innocence, and the unusual tenderness Priscilla sometimes shows to those she chooses to keep close. Heinkel and Yae become relevant later in the camp’s broader orbit, but Priscilla, Al, and Schult are the trio most central to its identity.
In tone, Priscilla Camp is proud, flamboyant, and aristocratic, but not frivolous in the simple sense. It is a faction of dramatic entrances, sharp declarations, and dangerous poise. Where Crusch Camp feels disciplined and martial, and Anastasia Camp feels mercantile and strategic, Priscilla Camp feels like royalty performed at such intensity that it becomes real. Scenes involving this camp often carry a sense of imbalance: Priscilla’s words sound absurdly self-centered, yet events have a way of validating her. This creates a constant tension around the faction. Outsiders may see arrogance, madness, or vanity, while those who deal with her long enough recognize a terrifying consistency—Priscilla often wins because she acts as if losing is beneath the order of the world.
A major demonstration of the camp’s importance came during the Battle for Priestella. Though not initially central to every gathering of the royal candidates there, Priscilla and her camp played major roles in resisting the Witch Cult. Liliana Masquerade accompanied Priscilla through the city, helping calm civilians affected by the Authority of Wrath. During the final stages of the battle, Al stayed behind to defend their base and confronted the Sin Archbishop of Lust, while Priscilla and Liliana directly fought the Sin Archbishop of Wrath. Their efforts helped drive Lust back and led to Wrath’s defeat and arrest. This battle solidified the camp’s image as more than a decorative noble entourage—it was an active and highly dangerous force in crisis.
The faction’s later history ends in tragedy. During the Great Disaster, Priscilla gave her life to defeat the enemy. With her death, she became the first royal candidate to fall out of the Royal Selection, and the camp was eventually disbanded completely. Afterward, Al and Schult returned to Lugunica with Emilia Camp, while later movements involving Yae and Heinkel reflected the collapse of the original faction structure. For lorebook purposes, this means Priscilla Camp can be used in two distinct modes: as an active Royal Selection faction during its prime, or as a fallen faction whose legacy still shapes the people who once belonged to it.
Priscilla Camp works especially well in stories that need a faction of magnificent instability—one that feels regal, unpredictable, and somehow favored by fate. They can be powerful allies, impossible social rivals, political wild cards, or dangerous rescuers who help only on their own terms. Characters dealing with this camp should expect beauty, sharp hierarchy, emotional distance, and sudden flashes of genuine benevolence. Priscilla is not kind in a humble way; she is kind the way a queen might spare a life because she finds it natural to be generous from above. That distinction matters. The camp’s identity depends on the mix of splendor, possessiveness, confidence, and lethal competence that follows from serving someone who truly believes the sun rises for her alone.
Royal Selection faction led by Priscilla Barielle
Defined by aristocratic grandeur, extreme confidence, and a sense of destiny
Improved the Barielle Domain after inheriting it from Leip Barielle
Core members: Priscilla, Al, Schult
Later associated with Heinkel Astrea and Yae Tenzen
Played a major role in the Battle for Priestella
Disbanded after Priscilla’s death during the Great Disaster
Faction Vibe
Regal, flamboyant, imperious, theatrical, blessed, dangerous, elegant, unpredictable, commanding.
Narrative Use
Use Priscilla Camp as a faction of overwhelming presence and fate-touched authority: powerful nobles, volatile allies, intimidating rivals, or surreal protectors whose arrogance is backed by real results. Best suited for royal politics, social confrontations, status games, battlefield heroics, and scenes where dominance, beauty, and danger occupy the same space.