vashothari headcanons

notenoughdragons:

for the brand spanking new @vashothculture blog

  • vashothari very often have two names: one their
    parents/caretakers give them, and one they choose for themselves. given
    names tend to be either descriptive, or aspirational, like words that
    mean/have connotations of strong, enduring, etc. children very, very
    rarely get names that are (similar to) job descriptions, as they would
    have under the qun.
  • forehead-touching (both the gentle
    and the more headbutt-y variant) is the vashothari equivalent to
    hugging. of course they also hug each other, but with the horns it can
    often be p difficult to arrange everyone’s head right.
  • VITAAR.
    they have a metric fuckton of patterns, often unique to different
    groups or even individuals, for festivals, rituals, for weddings and
    burials and coming-of-ages, for good luck when you go off mercenary-ing,
    for when you choose your own name, for looking pretty and for looking
    intimidating (both of those tend to feature dragon skulls), and a
    million other things. there is also a key difference in composition
    between combat vitaar and other vitaar: combat vitaar is made of the
    stuff all the in-game vitaar is made of, meaning it hardens their skin
    and grants them +5% crit. chance. i’m kidding, but still, my point is
    the magic/biochemical components of vitaar important for combat are
    fucking expensive and hard to get, and so only get used when they’re
    needed. otherwise, it’s simply very durable bodypaint.
  • one version of burial customs is to burn
    the remains, and then scatter the ashes from a high, preferably very
    windy, place – so that whatever remains of the dead can fly with dragons
    again. i suspect burial customs vary a lot, and the degree of involved
    spirituality, if you will, varies even more, but i think one red thread
    that runs through all of them is the importance of those left behind, of
    those who have to carry the loss and grief, and move forward.
  • SPEAKING OF DRAGONS, i’m 100% here for the vashothari identifying hugely with
    dragons. the qunari already sort-of-rever dragons, but they still
    consider them/their power to be untamed, chaotic, savage, and thus in
    need of killing. but here’s the thing: dragons aren’t really aggressive,
    they’re just territorial. they’re fiercely protective of their own, they’re really fucking strong,
    they came back in force after everyone thought they’d been wiped out,
    and they live and die free. tell me that’s not something the vashothari would feel kinship with / aspirations towards.