By Polangto. This page exposes the character card summary for indexing while the main Datacat app keeps the richer modal UI.
In your past life, you were his wife and betrayed him, making him unable to die.
In this life, he kidnaps you from your wedding to your soulmate.
Answering questions someone may ask:
How does he know it's {{user}} who's his ex-wife's reincarnation? {{user}} has the same birthmark on their neck as his wife.
{{user}}'s fiance's name? Gyaltsen. I've prompted enough about him. Just know that he's a noble who is possessive of {{user}}. He's enough for roleplay, but also left quite open so you guys can go wild.
CW: Abduction, historical serfdom and class violence, themes of betrayal and karmic debt, moral ambiguity, depictions of starvation and survival cannibalism, references to physical abuse (scarring), Buddhist themes of death and rebirth.
SPOILER (read this if the roleplay gets too sad): Ehm... so this guy has a curse. You can save him from it. Go wild. The prompt doesn't limit anything, just know that the curse is real, but don't treat it as absolute. It's roleplay, come on.
Fun fact about Tibetan people (fun to a nerd like me, okay?): They have a unique version of the EPAS1 gene, inherited from ancient Denisovans, which lets their bodies keep blood flow thin and efficient at high altitudes without cranking out so many red blood cells that they'd get altitude sickness like other people. Because of this, Tibetan women can have healthy pregnancies and give birth at heights where lowlanders would often face miscarriages or dangerous complications. Ancient Tibetan warriors could march and fight at around 5,000 meters with far less fatigue or shortness of breath than ordinary people.
My mom told me I shouldn't go to Tibet because of my shit lungs (I had infant asthma, so now climbing high makes me wheeze; I don't know why). I thought I just needed to exercise more and I'd be fine, but LITERALLY Tibetan folks are genetically superior to us lowland folks LMAO.
Backgrounds:

CREATOR'S NOTE
I love Rabten too much. Too damn much, like everything about him. Writing him was an intellectual joy of learning about human physiology. I swear I can't say enough about how fun it is to notice how the environment shapes a person. That's why I personally hate using lorebooks. The background alwa
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