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The SOL Shogunate
April 26, 2026 at 11:27 AM
Expanded SOL Shogunate faction article with seat of power, lunar glass cities, two major clans table, genetic and scientific edge, clan conflict, class inequality, Yuzuki's place, and unconfirmed details
The SOL Shogunate is the ruling power of the alt-future solar system that SOL Shogunate is set in. It governs through a militaristic caste system inspired by feudal Japan and bushido, transplanted across colonized worlds and refitted for life off Earth. In this future, the way of the sword is law, and the order that enforces that law is a confederation of competing samurai clans rather than a single unified state. For the wider game context, see the Overview.
The political and economic seat of the Shogunate is on the Moon. From their lunar holdings, the ruling clans project influence outward across the colonized worlds. The samurai code provides the legal spine of the regime: rank is enforced through martial tradition, disputes settle through the blade as often as through office, and clan honor functions as both contract and currency. The way of the sword is law.
The Shogunate elite live inside the lunar glass cities, where centrifugal engineering and pressurized domes create artificial gravity, simulated day and night cycles, and Earth-like comfort. Inside those domes, the ruling class enjoys conditions that mirror the homeworld they no longer need to live on. Outside them, the lunar surface is still vacuum and radiation. The split between what life looks like inside the glass and what it looks like outside it is one of the clearest expressions of how the Shogunate orders its world.
Two major samurai clans have been confirmed as part of the current Shogunate landscape. Both have built their power on a specific industry, and both are tied to the genetic and scientific research that makes lunar life sustainable. Their domains overlap and their rivalry is part of the central plot.
Clan | Domain |
|---|---|
Tennoji | Interplanetary travel and the lunar bullet-train networks that connect the cities of the Moon. |
Karasuma | Lunar mining operations, including the resource extraction that supplies the rest of the Shogunate. |
Both confirmed clans are tied to the research that lets people live on the Moon at all. Genetic engineering, biological adaptation, and scientific advances in habitat, gravity, and life support sit at the heart of how the Shogunate sustains itself off Earth. Those advances are not distributed evenly. They flow first and most generously to the ruling caste, who experience the Moon as a livable home, and they reach the working population on far worse terms. The same science that protects an aristocrat in a glass city is rationed, withheld, or simply unavailable below.
The Shogunate is not a monolith. Its clans compete, and at least one of those rivalries has turned into open massacre. The Karasuma moved against the Tennoji and wiped out the clan. The protagonist, Yuzuki, is the surviving Tennoji heir. She walks the campaign as a ronin: a samurai without a master, marked by the regime that should have protected her, hunting the rival house that destroyed her family. The fact that one major clan can erase another and still operate inside the Shogunate is itself a statement about how the order really works.
Class inequality is the thematic backbone of the setting. The Shogunate elite are visible: their banners, their cities, their armor, their bullet trains. The colonial worker underclass that keeps the lights on is unseen by design. The miners and laborers on the wrong side of the dome wall are the population whose absence from the surface of Shogunate life is part of the point. The story repeatedly contrasts the gleaming top with the shadow workforce beneath it.
Yuzuki begins as a personal revenge story. As the Tennoji heir, she opposes the Karasuma directly, and the early campaign is built around that vendetta. The arc does not stay there. As she pursues the Karasuma, she pulls on threads that lead deeper into the Shogunate, uncovering wider conspiracies that connect her clan's destruction to the regime's class structure and to whatever the ruling caste is actually protecting. The vendetta becomes the way in.
Several aspects of the Shogunate have not been publicly confirmed and should not be assumed:
Other clan names beyond Tennoji and Karasuma have not been revealed.
The full hierarchical structure of the Shogunate, including how clans rank against each other, is undisclosed.
The identity of the current Shogun, or whether a single Shogun figure is on the throne at the time of the campaign, has not been confirmed.
Specific military ranks, named officials, and governance bodies inside the regime have not been detailed.
Corporate fronts, religious orders, intelligence services, and other institutions that may operate under or alongside the clans have not been publicly named.
This page will be updated as more lore is revealed.