Entropic Hyperliminae

Entropic Hyperliminae, sometimes called "Places of Power", are spaces influenced, or created (see Instance Liminae), by Entropic phenomena. They are thought to be the result of an effect called hyperdimensional displacement, where three-dimensional spaces that exist in our world are somehow moved along higher-order axes, directions of travel that we can't properly comprehend or represent in three dimensions.

Hyperliminae were first discovered in ::01130, when a walk-in clinic's waiting room was found to have expanded itself by three metres, impossibly intersecting the space of an adjacent office. The office, and the building's geometry, was otherwise unaffected. Since then, many more Hyperliminae have been identified, though few are so dramatic.

Leading theories suggest that our collective consciousness influences the spaces we inhabit in subtle ways, and that variations in 'styles' of thought between people causes interactions within the Entropic that can then affect our world. These interactions can give the rooms we inhabit 'forms' within the Entropic, which then manifest certain effects such as spatial dilation, as in the above case.


Instance Liminae

Created Hyperliminae, or Instance Liminae, aren't as well-understood as their pre-existing, thought-influenced counterparts. An Instance Liminus is typically restricted to an Entropic Object, and can usually only be accessed through a navigation technique known as Entropic Frameshift.

The interiors of these spaces are most fascinating of all Hyperliminae, being truly not-of-this-world. Their sizes can vary from no larger than a broom closet to vast landscapes, and the way their 'internal logic' varies drastically from one another.