Ninpocho Chronicles

Ninpocho Chronicles is a fantasy-ish setting storyline, set in an alternate universe World of Ninjas, where the Naruto and Boruto series take place. This means that none of the canon characters exists, or existed here.

Each ninja starts from the bottom and start their training as an Academy Student. From there they develop abilities akin to that of demigods as they grow in age and experience.

Along the way they gain new friends (or enemies), take on jobs and complete contracts and missions for their respective villages where their training and skill will be tested to their limits.

The sky is the limit as the blank page you see before you can be filled with countless of adventures with your character in the game.

This is Ninpocho Chronicles.

Current Ninpocho Time:

Open The Life of a Loser [Seeking Tutor]

Masaru Renji

New Ninja
Joined
Feb 3, 2026
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14
Yen
350
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The Aurora Eruditio was a masterpiece of order, a three-story pagoda that stood as a defiant middle finger to the passage of time and the scars of training. To Masaru Renji, the cleanliness was the most unsettling part. It was polished, clinical, and entirely foreign. Back home, things had a habit of staying broken; here, even the air felt curated.

He looked toward the mountain peaks of Kumogakure, pondering the invisible weight of the Raikage. People spoke of the leader as the sun around which the Land of Lightning orbited, yet to Renji, she was just another ghost in a land of legends. How great can a person be if you only ever see their minions? he wondered. But his skepticism was a luxury he couldn't afford to indulge. He wasn't here to critique the architecture or the politics. He was here for her. The memory of his mother being taken was a jagged shard in his mind, one he sharpened daily. He wasn't naive, he knew that a boy with empty pockets and untrained hands stood no chance of finding someone the world had stolen. To gain power, he had to enter the belly of the beast. He had to become a shinobi.

It was a bitter irony. His mother had often reminisced about his father’s formative years within these very walls, her voice filled with a warmth Renji couldn't quite share. To him, the Academy was a factory that turned children into weapons for the frontlines. If that was the price of admission to find his mother, he would pay it. He would play the loyal student, the humble recruit, or whatever other mask the instructors required.His only real edge was a temperamental connection to the earth beneath his feet. He could make the ground groan and shift, grinding stone into fine sand, but it was a fickle gift. It paled in comparison to the raw, terrifying power he’d felt the day he fractured the legs of those men. That day, he hadn't just moved the earth, he had broken it.

Since that day, his power had felt muted. He had not been able to produce enough force to bind a person’s limbs or cause any real harm. It was a frustrating contrast to the violence he had once unleashed. Yet, as his physical strength seemed to stagnate, his internal awareness shifted. His third eye was opening with newfound clarity. The static and diffraction that once clouded his spiritual vision were smoothing out, allowing him to sense the distinct heat and weight of the energies surrounding him. He could feel a change taking root deep within his bones. It was no longer just about potential. There was a raw, growing storm inside of him that felt increasingly difficult to contain. He realized that if he did not become stronger soon, he would lose the ability to control the very power he was trying to cultivate.

Checking his posture, he thought back to the letter he’d sent, penned by an old woman he’d commissioned to make him sound "proper."

I, Masaru Renji, humbly seek acceptance into your training program. I am ready to begin my journey as a proud shinobi who represents the honor of Lightning Country and Lord Raiden.
The words felt like a foreign language on his tongue, yet as he sat on a wooden bench, drifting into memories of Daku and the others who had looked after him, a rare, genuine smile tugged at his lips. He was a boy built on secrets and sand, waiting for a path to reveal itself in the dark clouds.

WC: 600
[MFT]
 
Kouin sat at his desk as he held the letter in his hands. Masaru.... The name held a ring of familiarity; one that he hadn't heard in years, back when he finally reconnected with his father after many years. Though he hadn't heard of the Masaru being an active clan in Kumogakure. He stood from his desk, and peered out the window, his eyes locking with the mountainscape, a place his father was born, and where his story began.

The letter was quite forward with intent and goal, though sounded much to formal to be penned by a student; Kouin didn't care who wrote it, but he sensed that Renji had their reasons to write it themselves. Setting the letter down, Kouin gathered his supplies, made his way out of his office; the sun basked his skin as he left the Sileo Tempestas, his eyes quickly readjusting to the increase of light. His footsteps carried a slight breeze with him with every step in his wake. It had been awhile since Kouin picked up a student, but this one was different; his father had mentioned a Masaru Yuuto from his formative years. They had fought in the Bear-Marsh War together, and had learned a lot from each other and the academy together. Raiden took the path of Anbu while Yuuto originally followed the track of Medical, they were almost two sides of the same coin.

Raiden had his reasons for returning to Kumo, and neglecting Kouin in Kirigakure, though that didn't stop him from growing stronger, making a name for himself. Figuring out the way of the Shinobi on his own. He knew not what the relation between Yuuto and Renji was, but Kouin couldn't help but feel a slight inclination of responsibility to do better by Renji than his father did for himself.

The streets were quiet and demure, a stark contrast to the average village life, though he wouldn't complain, Kouin wasn't much of a people person, even if he tolerated most people. He could feel a darkness looming around the Aurora Erudito, a darkness that he has felt within himself once before, many times.

Who are you.... Masaru Renji He thought to himself matter-of-factly, the wind humming behind his ear, as if beckoning him to not delay. His eyes loomed up at the sky, a sea of endless possibilities, but always out of our grasps, but never deterring our attempts. That would be Kouin with Renji, that was a promise to himself.

As he stepped into the courtyard of the Aurora Erudito the wind coalesced around him before scattering back into the Aether calmly; a loan boy sat solemnly on a bench, deep in thought, his eyes could tell him everything that words didn't need to. The boy appeared to be fighting something, but how destructive, how detrimental were these demons that plagued the young boy?

Kouin began walking towards the boy, a calm breeze following behind suit; he sat next to the boy in silence for a moment. Masaru Renji? The question was more rhetorical than literal.

How can Kumogakure help you? He left the question open ended, he would allow Renji to be as forward, dismissive or secretive as they pleased.

[Topic Entered]
[MFT]
[WC: 536]
 
Renji didn't look up when Kouin sat down. He was focused on a jagged piece of slate in his palm, watching with a detached sort of intensity as it slowly ground down into fine, grey powder. It wasn't a show of power; it was just something to do with his hands. He was quiet as he contemplated on how to begin, this stranger was clearly here for him.

"I paid an old lady to write that letter for me," he said. His voice was flat and dry. "She told me you people like to hear about honor and 'Lord Raiden.' I didn't see the point in arguing with her as long as it got me through the front door." He blew the remaining dust off his palm, finally cutting a glance toward Kouin. He didn't look intimidated. He looked like he was calculating the value of the man’s clothes. He was well put together, older, he smelled like old man. The kind who had seen several sunsets and the bottom of barrels twice his size. Renji would lean in, Hmph is that real? He'd wonder to himself. Show-off.

Renji leaned back, the wood of the bench feeling too smooth and curated against his spine. He wasn't here to be some village mascot or a loyal dog. He was here because the streets had taught him a very simple lesson: the only way to keep what was yours was to be the biggest person in the room.

"I'm not looking for a handout..." he said, his voice remaining flat and dry. "I am looking for an investment. Right now, I can barely grind a rock into dust without getting a headache, but I'm not staying at the bottom. I’m going to be at the top of this Academy, and eventually, this village." Renji took a moment to let his words settle. He was talking a lot but he needed

"It isn't about the honor. I just want to be the one who who doesn't lose for once." He gestured vaguely toward the expensive-looking pagoda, his eyes tracking a small ant crawling near Kouin's boot instead of looking him in the face. He wouldn't go in depth, He didn't mention his mother. He didn't mention the men who had taken her. Those were his secrets, and he wasn't about to give them away for free to a man who smelled like a library and a bar. He simply rubbed his thumb and forefinger together, the universal sign for currency.

It was a silent demand. He didn’t need to beg for a salary; he just needed to know that this place was a ladder he could actually climb. "I've spent enough time looking at the dirt," Renji added, his voice dropping to a low, scratchy murmur. I know what the bottom looks like. It’s cold and it smells like rot. I didn't come to this mountain to stay down there. He finally looked up, his eyes sharp and his third was unblinking. He didn't care if he seemed disrespectful, it's not as If he meant anything bad by it. Renji’s third eye caught the slight ripple in the air around the stranger, the way the wind seemed to wait for the man’s permission to blow. It was a level of control Renji craved.

[MFT]
WC: 550
 
The silence lingered between the two after he spoke up. A measured silence that wasn't forcing or dismissing. His eye watched the slate wither slowly in his palm, turning the rock into sand and dust in his palm. The ability was evident, but the lack of control was equally so. Strain, anguish, pain, lack of control leads many down this dark road.

His mind went to thoughts of his father before he joined the Academy; he's parents, Kouin's grandparents that he never had a chance to meet; they were arguing. Raiden's latent Santaru powers awoken, and brought forth The Black Tempest; at the time herald devastation and cataclysm for the surround area without proper control, something a young Santaru wouldn't have. Kouin couldn't help but give a faint smile. Everyone has to start somewhere.

I don't care who wrote the letter, personally.
He said plainly, though after Renji's next statement, he had to stifle a chuckle, Honor... Honor is only relevant to those that are bound by fragile ideals, easily broken under the weight of the world. As for 'Lord Raiden', he's just a pointless figurehead, to make excuses for poor decisions. He watched as the sand was picked up by the wind, carried out into the distance, like a lost memory or a forgotten time.

Kouin sat in silence, giving Renji the floor to speak candidly; he didn't care about the discrepancy in there ranks. His tenure didn't invalidate someone's claims or feelings. You won't get a handout, or sympathy for the life you've had from me. His words were blunt and to the point. He talked about his lack of control, and the strain it puts on his mind doing so.

If the top is what you seek.. To become stronger... He stood up from the bench, and placed a hand his pocket, the other gestured towards the horizon. Then don't lose sight of your guiding principle, keep your eyes focused on moving towards that goal step by step.

His eyes drifted down to the boy. Kouin dropped down to his level, meeting eye to eye for the first time. My home was overran by eldritch beasts that ravaged the lands, making them uninhabitable. I was powerless to do anything. His voice tapered off into a solemn chorus, echoing the powerlessness when faced with a mountain.

His emerald ripples keeping gaze with Renji and his three eyes. But through adversity, I learned control. And through control, I gained power. Kouin's words would linger within the wind as he stood from the ground. And if it's power to rise that you seek, you must first learn Control over your powers.

He would allow his words to linger in the boys world for as long as needed, Control over the elements is something I am fortunately proficient in.

[MFT]
[WC: 468]
 
Hibana had recently completed one of her classes and was spending some time walking the grounds of the academy.

She enjoyed the absent mindedness of the action, taking in the sights and sounds of the bustling pagoda. She enjoyed spending time here, in truth, she enjoyed spending time away from home ever since the accident and her father's downward spiral.

Eventually, she'd walk by a strange duo.

Kouin-Sensei, she'd only recently met him on a mission, was seemingly attempting to console or cheer up another student. His voice booming against the otherwise quiet backdrop of the academy grounds, echoing his assertions back at the young shinobi in training.

The boy he was attempting to inspire stood out to her. Perhaps it was the third eye planted within the middle of his forehead, but Hibana could see that that boy had something about him...

Hibana thought nothing of her approach. In truth, she was simply heading in their direction because they were in her way. Once she'd gotten close enough, she'd politely walk around then in an effort to not interrupt whatever moment the two were having, as she could see it may have been a fairly tragic one, judging by the words she overheard Kouin-sensei bellowing.

[topic entered]

207
 
Renji watched the way Kouin’s emerald eyes held his gaze. He didn't look away, but he didn't offer a hug either. To a kid who had spent his time in the back of taverns and on the dusty edges of the road, a story was just a story, no matter how tragic. Everyone had one. He didn't think Kouin was weak for having a home that was destroyed; he just thought it was the way the world worked. The strong take, the weak lose and those in between either profit or spiral, sometimes both. Of course he only knew as much as the mercenaries cups' did.

"Where was it?" Renji asked, his voice genuinely curious in a rough sort of way. "Wherever it was, it sounds like it sucked big time.' Renji went silent for a moment, letting his question find a home before continuing," but then again, they say there's always a place where something's trying to eat it or burn it down. That's just the road, I guess." A small experience from his time watching rrandom events happen in the throes of the lightning country.
He wiped his hands on his pants, finally standing up. He was shorter than Kouin, but he stood with a certain stillness, his weight shifted like he was ready to move at a moment's notice. He caught the flicker of white hair in his periphery. He didn't turn his head, but his third eye tracked the girl as she tried to give them a wide berth.

He raised a hand in a blunt, lazy wave, the kind of gesture a tired foreman might give a worker.

"Yo." he called out, his voice sounding oddly weary for his age. "Who's the kid? She yours, or is she just passing through?"

He looked Hibana over with a clinical, detached interest. He wasn't being mean, he didn't know her and to be honest Renji was interested in making one thing in Kumogakure primarily, Yen. If he happened to make friends or a reputation too he'd take it, but more than anything else he needed finances. He'd take a moment to note her appeareance she looked clean, well-fed, and focused.

She looks like she actually knows where the bathrooms are in this pagoda he remarked to himself, a small, lopsided smirk tugging at one corner of his mouth. It was the first sign of anything resembling a sense of humor, even if it was a bit dry. He turned his attention back to the man who smelled like a library.

He talks about control a lot. He's seen plenty of guys in the bars talk about power until they were blue in the face, but most of them couldn't hold their liquor, let alone an element. "Does this mean I'm in? I don't work for free." He'd say cheekily as he followed Kouin as little trails of sand would follow underfoot. Slowly Renji was building sand pre-emptively bit by bit. He was still trying to figure out a personal thing, like where'd he storing his sand but that was another problem for another day, or was it?
 
"Seeking control"



All of the sudden the insects went quiet. Dayu stopped walking, one hand pressing against his ribs through the hoodie. The crawling sensation under his skin, the constant itch he'd been dealing with all life, just... stopped. Not slowly. Not gradually. Just gone.

Voices carried across the courtyard. He couldn't make out words yet, but he could hear the way someone was talking. Serious. The kind of voice his teachers used when they actually meant something instead of just reading from a scroll. His feet made the decision before his brain did. Five steps closer. Close enough to see now.

An older guy, the kind who looked like he could break you without trying, stood talking to a kid on a bench. Another girl was walking past, trying not to look like she was listening. The kid on the bench had three eyes. Dayu tried not to stare at that. Failed. Stared anyway for half a second before his goggles hid where he was looking. He stopped at the edge of their space. Not close enough to be in the conversation, but close enough to hear. His hands found his pockets. They always did when he didn't know what else to do with them.

The older guy was definitely someone important. His clothes were too clean, his posture too confident, and there was something about the way the air moved around him that made Dayu's skin prickle. Like standing near his father when Masato was about to do something with the Kikai, that feeling of controlled power that made you want to either run away or watch closer. Dayu chose watch closer.

"Through control, I gained power." the words hit him square in the chest. Not because they were profound, as an eleven year-old boy he didn't really know what profound meant, but because they connected to something immediate and frustrating. Control.

His insects were supposed to be controlled. His father made it look easy, like breathing. Just think and they moved. Just want and they obeyed. But for Dayu it was like trying to herd cats that lived under his skin. They moved when he was nervous. They rippled when he was frustrated. They did whatever they wanted and he just had to deal with the crawling sensation and hope nobody noticed. Except right now they were still. Completely, perfectly still.

His attention was caught by the three-eyed kid, that was doing something with rocks, grinding them down to powder. It looked hard. Looked like it hurt, maybe, from the way the kid's jaw was tight. Raw power without... without... Without control. Dayu's fingers found a gold lock in his dreads, twisting it once. Twice. A habit his mother had tried to break him of and failed. He did it when he was thinking, when he was nervous, when he was trying to figure something out.

The older guy was teaching the three-eyed kid. About control. About power. About the thing Dayu had been failing at for three years. His father had tried to teach him. Had been patient, had shown him techniques, had explained about treating the Kikai as extensions of self rather than separate entities. Dayu had nodded and agreed and understood the words but somehow his insects still did whatever they wanted.

Dayu shifted his weight forward half an inch. Not moving toward them. Not yet. Just... leaning into the possibility. The girl was trying to walk past without interrupting. The three-eyed kid noticed her, called out something. The social dynamics were happening but Dayu wasn't paying attention to that part. He was paying attention to the insects that were still quiet.

What's different? What changed? He twisted the gold lock again. His external track, the part of him that had learned to smile and volunteer answers and project confidence he didn't feel, was calculating whether he should stay or go. Whether interrupting would be rude. Whether anyone would even want an eleven-year-old kid hanging around a serious conversation. His mind was screaming that he didn't belong here, that he should leave, that they'd probably tell him to get lost anyway. But the insects were quiet around that man. And that was worth staying for.

Dayu's hand stopped mid-twist on the gold lock. His breath came easier than it had all morning. His ribs didn't itch. The constant background noise of the Kikai moving under his skin had gone completely, blessedly silent. If this man understood something about control that made even his unruly insects pay attention. His foot shifted forward another inch. The courtyard felt bigger and smaller at the same time.

He stayed.



[TOPIC ENTERED]
[WC: 769]

 
He would aimless point off somewhere to the east. Somewhere over there, and yea, it totally sucked. He shrugged, That's just life sometimes, but our past doesn't define us. Renji greeted another student that he had heard of previously Bakuen Hibana, they would know of each other from being slated for the same mission.

No, wouldn't want to outlive them honestly. It was a harsh truth, through the pacts, and deals he made with various entities, aside from being killed, he was in terms of health and longevity, he couldn't die. That's Bakuen Hibana, we're both going to be on a mission together. Though it was odd that Hibana didn't say anything, but nevertheless, she learning more control would be paramount.

His ears perked, a silent hum loomed in the distance, but it didn't sound like any normal type of insects; they sound specific and unique. Kikai? He was quite familiar with the skills that the Aburame had, from their Kikai bugs to their infamous bug clones.

Kouin didn't have to turn have a rough estimation of where the other one was, I might not be able to assist with the specific of your bloodlines, but the principle of control is all the same. He would stare at the sky, Whether it the Storms.. His eyes moving to Renji, Sand. Turning to face Hibana and the newcomer, Explosives or Kikai He would pause for a moment before continuing, You'll all be able to take something away from this; even if it it doesn't click now, doesn't mean it won't click tomorrow.

Does that mean I'm in. He gave a smirk, this kid was definitely a smart ass, Only if I'm the only one you're this much off a smart-ass too, otherwise you might have some problems. Every student had some potential, in some regard, but it was bringing that potential out and letting it flourish into something powerful. He would wait for the other two to get a bit closer so he wasn't shouting.

Control of your power comes from seamless focus. The ability harness the power of your blood without mental strain. He would do a simple whirl of his hand, a would create a small vortex of wind in front of the all, a simple demonstration of years of control work. If you expect the control, your powers will fight back, you must grow along side with it, and practice. He would pause for a moment, If you try to rush it, you will feel like a fish trying to climb a tree. A failure.

His goal wasn't to make them feel like losers, or failures, but they all held unique blood traits, all of which took a different amount of control and precision. Some were precise, some explosive, some fluid like wind and water; and each needed a different touch of grace to prevail.

[Tutor Started]
[As this is Dayu's first thread and tutor, the requirements for a tutor are simple: 5 posts, and a cumulative of 1000 words, which shouldn't be an issue.]
[TWC: 477/1000]
[Post 1/5]
 
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"But our past doesn't define us..."

These words hung with Renji, like a small tune dancing on the ins of his ears. Slowly drifting into the canals of his brain like grains of sand in an hourglass.

"You're alright old dude." Renji said, smirking. When wisdom found its way, you collected on that asap, or at least those drunkards from the tavern always told him. You never shied away from when someone gave you gems, or something to work with. The three eyed boy liked people like Kouin, they were honest and didn't sit behind facades. Something a kid from the outskirts was far too use to seeing. He followed the shinobi, a little more confident about taking in any lesson he had to give.

Renji didn't look away from the vortex. His three eyes were locked on the spinning air, tracking the way the pressure coiled and snapped. He wasn't just watching the wind; he was thinking about the dirt under his fingernails. He knew that if he could grip the air like that, his sand wouldn't just fall to the ground like dead weight. It would breathe. It would move.

"Hmph." He leaned in closer, his brow furrowed in a way that made him look thirty years older than he was. "Seamless focus. You make it sound like a quiet room, but when I try to pull the earth apart and mix it with the air, it feels more like a riot."

He looked at his palm, where the fresh dust of the slate was already beginning to stir, reacting to the proximity of Kouin’s wind.

He finally shifted his attention to the others. He gave Hibana a short, sharp nod, but his interest was quickly snagged by the newcomer. The kid with the goggles had a weird energy about him. Renji could feel the vibrations in the air around the boy settling down, like a frantic buzzing that had suddenly been muted. He looked the kid over, noting the gold lock in his hair and the way he carried himself. He didn't look like the soft, pampered types Renji usually saw around the upper districts.

"Yo, what's up, goggles dude!" Renji said, his voice dropping into a casual, street-level drawl.

He didn't linger on the greeting, but a small, knowing smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth. He’d spent enough time in rough crowds to spot a certain look. Goggle-dude wasn't a pushover. He had that "don't mess with me" stillness under the nerves. Renji could respect a kid who looked like he knew how to hold his own in a scrap.

Renji looked back at Kouin, his eyes wide with a more childlike, blunt curiosity.

"So, if I get good at doing things like that wind trick, I'm gonna make stacks... right?" he asked, his voice bright with the prospect of actual coin. "I’m talking real bread. Cheddar." he said inquisitively, it wasn't like he was trying to be rude. "I’m not here for a pat on the head. I wanna actually fill my pockets." He mumbled under his breath.

Renji turned his focus back to his hands, lifting them palms up. He reached out with his chakra, trying to hook into the vibrations of the earth beneath the pagoda's floor. He could feel it. He could command the stone to fold and collapse, forcing the molecules to grind against each other until they became fine grains. He wanted to whisk them away with the wind, creating a structure he could actually lead, but the connection was messy.

"I read somewhere that pulling metals out of the dirt is the better way to go," he muttered, mostly to himself. Seems better than just grinding up rocks, but I guess I’ll stick to what works for now.

He tried to exert his chakra into a steady form, but it felt like trying to hold a live wire. The energy fluctuated wildly, refusing to stay in the shape he wanted. He didn't realize that his chakra wasn't all going to his hands. It kept surging upward, flooding into the third eye on his forehead. For a fleeting second, his third eye sparked with a sharp, electric blue light, a microscopic discharge of wasted chakra that shorted out his focus. The sand he had started to form simply slumped back into a heap of dead dust. Renji hissed through his teeth, frustrated by the "leak" he couldn't see.

"It keeps fighting me..." he growled, though his eyes were still dancing with the thought of all that future gualla.
 

Current Ninpocho Time:

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