| Forum Name | Topics | Posts | Last Post |
| Out of Character |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Information The board rules and information on the different clans ect. can be found within
| 11 | 12 | on Mar 4, 2009, 5:04am by Constantine Noble in History |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Character Profiles (1 sub-board) Come here to post a new profile or look through the list of approved characters Moderator: Kalia LeBeau | 3 | 5 | on Mar 16, 2009, 5:17am by Constantine Noble in Kevin Jones |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | O.O.C Talk You can talk about anything and everything in here and it doesn't necessarily have to be related to the game. Moderator: Kalia LeBeau | 1 | 1 | |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Affiliates This is where to come to affiliate with us
| 16 | 16 | on Sept 25, 2009, 2:44am by LILITH in ETERNAL DAMNATION |
| The French Quarter |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Jackson Square Adjacent to the mighty Mississippi River and St. Louis Cathedral, the square is home to an eclectic bunch of street performers, jazz musicians, artists and fortunetellers. It is popular among kindred as the best known Elysium. Jackson Square is often dubbed the heart of the French Quarter, where most of New Orleans’s early town gatherings and where the planners built the city around it. By day it is a busied tourist attraction, by night it hosts just as many tourists but among them many Kindred as well.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Royal Street Just above Chartres Street, Royal Street is the second most famous street in the French Quarter. It is lined with some of the most beautiful houses in the city. The business district of Royal Street is also famous for its assortment of antique and book shops. Perhaps the best known shop is at 333 Royal Street, Nez Coupe Books, specializing in rare books, documents and old maps. Ventrue and Tremere tend to patronize it more then any other Kindred and enjoy pursuing these reminders of earlier days.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Chartres Street West of Decatur Street is Chartres Street, which runs by the west side of Jackson Square. At its south end is the usual assortment of bars, open air jazz clubs and restaurants. The north end, conforming to most of the French Quarter is residential, and may of New Orleans’ more well to do Kindred own several houses here. Though they may not all live in these houses they often serve as guest houses, rentable properties or temporary havens when needed.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Bourbon Street Bourbon Street is the city's world famous strip of bars and jazz clubs and forms the center of nightlife in New Orleans. Business here is a 24-hour affair and the party never stops. Despite Bourbon Streets reputation, however, the brightly lit, raucous, nightclub and bar filled southern district of street filled only the half dozen blocks. The closer one gets to Esplanade Avenue the more residential it becomes. The first few blocks are the most famous, as well as the part where the greatest number of Kindred congregate.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | The French Market One of the Few Places that Kindred strictly avoid, claiming that Mages often frequent it looking to buy herbs. Café du Monde marks the beginning of the French Market, a combination of renovated buildings and open air markets extending several blocks along Decatur Street, French Market Place and North Peters Street.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Rampart Street Located on the west side of the French Quarter, Rampart Street is favored by Kindred because of its easy prey. The junkies, prostitutes and pushers who regularly hang out there.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Storyville Though now subsumed within the residential areas of Basin and Bienville Streets, where today the Iberville housing project stands, the notorious brothels of Storyville were once located in the northwest corner of the French Quarter creating a Red Light District. The area was created to permit easy feeding for Kindred though most native Kindred found it déclassé and avoided it instead leaving it to visitors. Today it is said a ghost of a murdered prostitute still haunts the area luring unknowing Kindred into the darkness with an overpowering ghostly blood scent which fills the air.
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| The Hive |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Uptown (2 sub-boards) Brujah, Toreador and Ravnos tend to avoid the area leaving it to the Ventrue and Tremere elders. The most popular gathering places of the kindred that live in the uptown section are Pontchartrain Hotel on St. Charles Avenue, LeMoyne's Landing on Riverwalk and Tipitina's on Napoleon Avenue. New Orleans’ more prominent elders tend to make their havens either in the isolated plantation homes on the outskirts of the city or in the best known section of the uptown area, the Garden District. This elegant picturesque part of the city is bordered by St. Charles Avenue, Jackson Avenue Louisiana Avenue and Magazine Street.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Downtown (2 sub-boards) The area is favored by both Lupines and Kindred. There are two main thoroughfares that run through it: Elysian Fields Avenue which is the busiest street in the section and often inhabited by refugees and anarchs. The other is Esplanade Avenue which goes through a strictly residential area, home to some of the finer middle class buildings, contrasting completely with the other thoroughfare. Elysian Fields hosts many bars and nightclubs on its south side and also cross’ several railroad tracks and bisects some of the roughest and poorest neighborhoods in New Orleans. Esplanade Avenue heavily contrasts Elysian Fields. The three lined roadway forms the north boundary of the French Quarter running from the river to Bayou St. and ending at City Park.
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| The Mississipi |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | The River Muddy and Opaque the river stretches half a mile wide from bank to bank at New Orleans. The river had served to separate the Lupines and Kindred until the two major bridges were built to cross it. Now the kindred try to keep the Lupines from crossing them into the city. Barges from as far away as New York City and Montreal dock at New Orleans Ports, and more then 70 barge lines, some owned by Cainites still operate on the river.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | The Port of New Orleans (1 sub-board) The Port of New Orleans spans 50 miles of water frontage on the Mississippi. Within this vast network of river docks and wharves are dozens of public warehouses and cold storage plants. Of the docks, 43 are state controlled the rest are controlled by the city's prince and the Ventrue although a small number are controlled by the Setites and Giovanni, fronted by mortals so they can run their smuggling operations from them. Within the vast network of river docks and wharves there are dozens of public warehouses and several cold storage plants. No other part of New Orleans is as dangerous at night as the docks. Most Kindred that can be found there are new comers awaiting allowance to stay or not, illegal immigrants, Setites, Giovanni gangsters and spies of the other clans.
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| The Garden District |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | St Charles Avenue The St Charles Streetcar runs the entire length of the Avenue from Canal Street to Riverbend. The first few Blocks are strictly business areas however when travelers cross Jackson Avenue they find themselves in one of the most elegant residential areas in the city.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Lafayette Cemetery Some of the tombs are in a presentable state although a great many more are neglected, decaying or in ruins making it the perfect place for refugees.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Residential Section Where Many of the Kindred have their havens, more often than not old plantation houses and manors.
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| Everywhere Else |
![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Lake Pontchartrain (1 sub-board) The North end of the Lake is somewhat residential while the southern part has become far more recreational. The West End and coastal areas support some of the finest resorts in southern Louisiana and the Prince controls at least one of these.
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![[ ]](http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/cc288/lilsweetscotgal/vcnonew2.jpg) | Other Cemeteries Come and visit the City's other cemeteries or perhaps take up residence in one as a refugee.
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