1st Hunger Games
These are the 1st Hunger Games, and the 29th on the site. They were the first "Retro Games" on the site (ie. games that took place before our original 54th).
200px The map of the 1st Hunger Games arena. | |
Theme | Abandoned Stadium |
---|---|
Victor | TBD |
Length |
|
Reaping date | August 28th, 2019 |
End date | TBD |
Gamemakers | TBd |
- | |
Contents |
Setting
Despite the commanders of the rebellion having been killed or captured, lined up in front of firing squads or locked away for extensive questioning, it still didn't feel like punishment enough. If the soldiers of those treasonous forces had been afraid of their own deaths then they wouldn't have taken up arms. Instead they would have stayed behind with their families, with their husbands, their wives... their children.
Defeat was not enough. The traitors needed to feel true regret, the kind that would be passed down from generation to generation and never be forgotten.
"In penance for their uprising, each district shall offer up a male and a female between the ages of twelve and eighteen." The announcement of the Treaty of Treason was made only weeks before the first Hunger Games was set to take place. It was a public declaration that the war was over, as if it were a simple thing with a simple end. While the president's speech was taking place, airing on every television across Panem, the most stubborn of rebel forces were still refusing to surrender — even in the wake of the bombs that had decimated District Thirteen. Unacceptable. "These tributes shall be delivered to the custody of the Capitol and transferred into a public arena, where they will fight to the death until a lone victor remains," President Imperiosa Ironsquall's voice implied that this was a reasonable punishment, something she considered merciful, "henceforth and forevermore this pageant shall be known as The Hunger Games." Perhaps if the rebels had known better when to stop, these lengths wouldn't have been necessary.
A special council handpicked a list of twenty-four names, each one a carefully chosen punishment. They were the sons and daughters of terrorists, of mayors, and of turncoat government officials who looked the other way when they should have been remembering their loyalties. Some of the names were rebels themselves, schoolchildren foolish enough to think themselves revolutionaries. Others were ordinary citizens who hadn't done anything except cower at the idea of bombs and gunfire, the kind of names that implied that this Reaping was random and wasn't purely intended to punish rebel soldiers. Then again... no revenge could be sweeter than forcing traitors to weigh their life directly against those of the very people they swore they were willing to die to protect.
Not yet wanting to gather large crowds of an unsettled populace together, all citizens were restricted to their homes for the televised announcement of the Reaping. Peacekeepers stormed the streets, breaking down doors as names were announced and school photographs flashed on screen. Most children were seized and taken away with little more than a moment's warning, but others had been captured directly from the battlefield, weeks earlier.
Life as they knew it was about to change, just not in the way most of them had hoped.</i>
List of Tributes
This is a list of all the tributes that took part in the 1st Hunger Games.
Place | Name | ID | Owner | Age | Killer | Day |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | -- | -- | ||||
2nd | ||||||
3rd | ||||||
4th | ||||||
5th | ||||||
6th | ||||||
7th | ||||||
8th | ||||||
9th | ||||||
10th | ||||||
11th | ||||||
12th | ||||||
13th | ||||||
14th | ||||||
15th | ||||||
16th | ||||||
17th | ||||||
18th | ||||||
19th | ||||||
20th | ||||||
21st | ||||||
22nd | ||||||
23rd | ||||||
24th |
† Death due to inactivity.
Arena
The First games took place in an abandoned sports stadium.
The official arena description, written by Lalia, reads as follows:
<i>"Beneath the blinding lights of the stadium, the greenest artificial turf money can buy stretches across an empty sports field ringed by more than seventy-six thousand empty plastic seats. Television screens across the nation cut from the field to the halls beneath as four dozen peacekeepers dressed in riot gear march in pairs, escorting the tributes of the First Annual Hunger Games from their makeshift holding cells in the locker rooms to the main event above. Wrists zip-tied behind their backs, they stand in two even rows of twelve along the sidelines, staring each other down. A series of soft clicks break the silence as their restraints are cut free. Nothing more than a small knife lies on the ground at each of their feet. They have been given no rules and no instructions, only the word of a police force that they have been raised not to trust that one of them will be pardoned — of their parent's crimes, of their crimes — and sent home. Choose."</i>
Bloodbath
Notes