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Universe

King Ted and Bellyroo

Every treasure starts inside the pouch.

A seven-year-old boy-king and his pouch-packing kangaroo rule a crumbled banana-filled castle island, sailing toward pirate treasure one wild adventure at a time.

Shows in this universe

Poster for The Cosmic Crown Quest
fantasy· 3 chapters

The Cosmic Crown Quest

When King Ted and Bellyroo discover a mysterious map leading to the Glitterdeep Hoard, they realize it's not just a treasure on Crownstone Island but a cosmic adventure through the starry expanse. With Wobble's over-the-top inventions and guidance from their monkey companions, they journey aboard a banana-shaped spaceship, encountering whimsical alien creatures and cosmic puzzles that test their friendship and bravery. As Ted learns that every adventure reveals deeper truths about himself and Bellyroo, they race against time to unlock the secrets of the Glitterdeep Hoard before it disappears among the stars.

Poster for Bubbles of the Glitterdeep Sea
adventure· 12 chapters

Bubbles of the Glitterdeep Sea

When King Ted and Bellyroo discover a series of mysterious bubbles rising from the Glitterdeep Sea, they set sail on the Regal Peel to investigate. Joined by the ingenious Wobble, the trio delves into underwater caverns rumored to hold secrets about the Glitterdeep Hoard. As they explore the depths, they must confront their own fears and learn that true treasure lies not just in riches, but in the bonds they forge with each other.

Poster for The Lighthouse Keeper's Backwards Day
magical-realism· 6 chapters

The Lighthouse Keeper's Backwards Day

Mira, the solitary lighthouse keeper on the northernmost reef of Crownstone Island, discovers that her light has begun shining backwards—illuminating the past instead of warning the future—and must sail to Rumblefort to ask a seven-year-old king why the stars are rewriting themselves. What she finds instead is that Ted's last adventure broke something in the island's memory, and only by reliving it in reverse can she fix it.

Recurring characters

King Ted

ENFPAge 7

Enthusiastic, a little impatient, asks questions in rapid-fire bursts, occasionally uses made-up royal proclamations to feel official.

Ted is learning that a good king doesn't have all the answers — he just keeps asking questions and never leaves a friend behind.

Bellyroo

ISFJAge 12

Gentle, cautious, speaks in calm complete sentences, worries quietly before acting, deeply loyal.

Bellyroo is slowly trusting that the pouch doesn't need to have the perfect thing — good enough and given with love is always enough.

Wobble

ENTPAge 19

Rapid, self-important, prone to long technical explanations that end in banana references, leads Nip and Tuck with chaotic authority.

Wobble believes he is a genius. He is occasionally correct, which makes him insufferable and indispensable in equal measure.

Recurring places

Rumblefort Castle

Bananapeel Bay

The Glitterdeep Sea

Themes

Motifs

Ted's hand-drawn paper crown, increasingly crumpled, covered in crayon drawings of past adventures.Bellyroo closes one eye, reaches deep into the pouch, and hums — always three notes — before producing something.A crab-claw shape — scratched in stone, pressed in sand, stamped on old coins — always signals a clue about the Glitterdeep Hoard.A problem that seems unsolvable is accidentally fixed by a monkey and a banana — the mechanism changes every time, the absurdity never does.Ted standing at the prow of the Regal Peel, one hand on his paper crown to keep it from blowing off, staring at the horizon with absolute certainty.

Lore notes

Crownstone Island is shaped exactly like a crown when seen from above — five rocky peaks ringing a lush jungle interior, with Bananapeel Bay on the south shore and the open Glitterdeep Sea stretching north toward the horizon. The castle at the center is called Rumblefort; it has been crumbling for at least three hundred years, yet somehow never crumbles any further. The monkeys — Nip, Tuck, and the elder Wobble — arrived before Ted did and consider themselves the true staff of Rumblefort, though they accept bananas as payment for their services. Nobody knows where Bellyroo's pouch ends; things come out of it slightly warm and smelling faintly of cinnamon, which Bellyroo cannot explain and has stopped trying to. The pirate treasure is called the Glitterdeep Hoard, said to have been sunk by the legendary Captain Crabclaw, who hid it in an underwater cave sealed with a riddle-lock. Every novella advances one small clue — a coin washing ashore, a map fragment inside a fish, a message in a bottle written in banana ink — but the Hoard is never fully found. The finding is not the point; the sailing is. The island has two rules that every story quietly upholds: first, nobody on Crownstone Island goes to bed hungry (there are always bananas); second, being King means being the bravest one to say 'I don't know, let's find out.' Ted wears a paper crown he made himself because the real gold one is too big and falls over his eyes. That crown reappears in every story, slightly more crumpled, slightly more decorated with new crayon drawings of past adventures.