Sir Geoffrey Blockington stands as a stalwart knight of the realm in the Kingdom of Corrington, a land once proud but now humbled in the wake of the Long War. He pledges his sword and his shield to the crown of King Edmund III “the Weak”, determined that the crown’s honour shall not fade in the twilight of defeat. In a kingdom where the royal voice grows faint and nobles whisper of revolt, Geoffrey takes his oath seriously: to uphold the king’s justice, defend every hamlet and city from chaos, and ensure that Corrington’s tradition of order and civilisation endures.
In the rolling hills and grim marches of Corrington, Geoffrey has carved out his reputation—steadfast and resolute. He roams the frontier, rallies the common folk, and confronts the stirrings of rebellion in the borderlands. The March-Lords bristle, the Taemric clans gaze northward, and the shadow of rival claimants looms, but Geoffrey remains unflinching. He is a bulwark of red and white—Corrington’s colours—and his banner, marked by rampant lions, flies in the face of unrest. With sword in hand and unwavering loyalty in his heart, he reminds all that the kingdom may be battered, but its spirit is not broken.
Yet Geoffrey’s service is more than martial. In the quiet halls of Belson, Corrington’s orderly capital, he takes his place among the lesser nobles and knights who believe the crown’s rule must be reinforced not only with steel, but with governance. He speaks plainly to the citizens of the cities, auditing taxes, ensuring fair trade, and rebuilding trust in the central monarchy. As a knight of the realm, he knows that the kingdom’s salvation lies as much in wise leadership as in battlefield triumph. In doing so, he offers hope that Corrington’s lecture on civilisation, class and the use of might to maintain order may yet flourish again in these uncertain times.