About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Mage: The Sorcerers Crusade books, Mage: The Sorcerers Crusade character, Mage: The Sorcerers Crusade creators, Mage: The Sorcerers Crusade glossary, Artificers, Cabal of Pure Thought, Celestial Masters, Ch ur Celeste, Craftmasons, Cupbearers of Aset, Die Wolffgilde, High Guild, Hippocratic Circle, Ksirafai, Porthos Fitz-Empress, Reed of Djehuty, Solificati, Tezghul the Insane, The Bygone Bestiary, Void Seekers, The Bygone Bestiary, Jodi Blake, Porthos Fitz-Empress, Tezghul the Insane, Aileen E. Miles, Charles Bailey, Cynthia Summers, Ed Hall, Ethan Skemp, Ian Lemke, Jackie Cassada, John Daigle, Justin R. Achilli, Kenneth Hite, Ken Cliffe, Nicky Rea, Phil Brucato, Rachelle Udell, Richard E. Dansky, Robert Hatch, Artificers, Cabal of Pure Thought, Celestial Masters, Ch ur Celeste, Craftmasons, Cupbearers of Aset, Die Wolffgilde, High Guild, Hippocratic Circle, Ksirafai, Paris University Purge, Reed of Djehuty, Solificati, Void Seekers. Excerpt: It is rumored that Artificers are so dedicated to their craft that they continue even after death. Invention is the pinnacle of human achievement. To this end, the Artificers constantly create wild new gadgets, toys, weapons and artwork. Each new creation, it is said, brings one closer to Divinity. Sometimes that ideal kindles a fire so intense it burns an Artisan from the inside out. Skill, hard work and imagination are the keys to Ars Praeclarus. With them, a person might become nearly Divine. To this end, Artificers employ tools, alchemical laboratories and machines: Clockworks, steam, gunpowder and advanced metals provide the raw materials, while muscle and inspiration work those materials into miracles. Artificers are renowned for their stamina, but even more for their eccentricities; scorched black by their forges, some add strange designs to their skin and odd prosthetics to their limbs. To these radicals, the human body is ...