There's this paragraph of the Current Unroyal history that's a bit weird.
[quote]
They banded together and named themselves in defiance of their former rulers: The Unroyal.
Slowly they learned the magic of their oppressors in addition to their own, turning it to
righteousness, introspection, and construction rather than excess and domination. After
decades of seeking through the Kaleidoscope, they returned home to their own world, the Great
Basin of humanity. There they found a new homeland, where they sought to end the
Interregnum. They worked to teach love and respect, to sue for freedom when they could and
fight for it when they could not, so that no one would ever suffer what they had.
[/quote]
"End the Interregnum": I'm assuming this means stop the collection of wars and revolutions that ensued as a reaction to the gift in the entire basin.
"Sue for freedom when they could" : The Unroyal are themselves free. I'm not sure why some foreign despot would recognize the Unroyal making a direct plea on behalf of their oppressed subjects who haven't started a revolution yet. They could try threatening despots into compliance and might win without a single blow, they could try buying out the oppressor to end the oppressive policy, but I'm not sure what them suing for others freedom precisely means.
Heres the interesting bit.
"Fight for it where they could not": This can be a potential split in Unroyal sensibilities. Ending wars and revolutions by kicking off and joining in wars and revolutions? That sounds almost like Celestial Being from Mobile Suit Gundam 00. Their thing is stopping war, by exploiting hardware superiority to beat the living daylights out of people who try to fight each other. Using war to end war. I haven't watched it but its treated as questionable logic in universe too apparently. Which leads to the question of how many Unroyals just want the interregnum to stop vs continuing their campaign of being angel investors and shadowy foreign backers for revolutionaries until all the tyrants are gone.
On another line of thought, given the Travel Grid and how territory works in the Basin, if the Unroyals don't use the homeland they claimed, how do they still have it?
Tangential points of potential curiosity I'm mulling if they give you ideas(I'm not too concerned about answers given how open ended they are and that we're significantly pondering the Unroyal in general).
What are Unroyal internal disputes like? Herding Cats when everyone's an experienced practicioner of guerilla warfare/agent of chaos? Circular Firing Squads?
Do the Unroyals have a meaningful civilian population(If so, what do they do)? Or are revolutionaries/spies/soldiers their economic backbone like a more anarchic version of a Naruto Hidden Village? Given wild magic as their main tradition, personas, and the fake it until you make it nature of some of it, might their society operate on say… a Deception Mana standard, where that's the mana everybody uses to trade with each other and the government takes its taxes in if it has a government that taxes? Do they make a point of learning magic styles from other civilizations to teach their deep cover operatives? Learning foreign magic styles seems like something that would be important for espionage.