"The Vagabond Emperor" is a 2D RPG where you begin as a simple vagabond who decides to become an emperor in the fictional Middle Ages during a spreading curse. It's up to you to decide what to do and where to go to achieve your goals.

Take part in battles and win personally by fighting in the front lines. Swords, axes, bows, pistols, and arquebuses are yours for the taking. Recruit fighters for your side and troops for your home and town garrisons. Gain rich spoils of war and lord your will over the vanquished.



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Enemies will try to get to you or your family. Friends will support you in a difficult situation. Build relationships with characters however you like. Execute, torture, show mercy, trade, insult and, of course, wiggle your eyebrows.

Create a unique character in the built-in editor. Find a loving partner and create your own family. Children will take on the traits and characteristics of their parents. After the death of the main character, the game will continue for the heir.

A completely open world and freedom of action. There is a terrible curse hanging over the world - Tlen. You are not limited in the ways of achieving your goals. Every journey is unique. Embark on adventures full of battles, dangers, plots, and chance encounters.

One of my dream projects is to visit all the last resting places of Mughal rulers. Easy said than done simply because one of them is in Pakistan, one in Afghanistan, one in Myanmar while the rest are here in India. In my lifetime there are slim chances for me to get a visa to Pakistan and visiting Afghanistan is a farfetched dream. The only easy option is to complete the ones in India and then Myanmar.

In 2018 I did a road trip from Kolkata to Myanmar and visited the whole country by any means except for a flight. The travel plan included three days in Yangon and one place that I did not want to miss was the last rest place for the last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar.

Unlike all the other Mughal rulers who all have splendid and opulent tombs, Bahadur Shah Zafar is the most unlucky to have his place of burial forgotten and then found back by chance. The British always considered Bahadur Shah Zafar as a potential rallying point for the freedom struggle in its dominion especially after the failed attempt of 1857 Revolt. Just to be sure that he never could create a similar situation he was tried in Delhi which lasted for forty-one days and then found guilty and banished from India.

Bahadur Shah Zafar was a poet and a mystic man, some even considered him as a saint. He wrote many poems in Urdu and kept many poets in court which included greats like Mirza Ghalib. He became the emperor in 1837 and more than an emperor who is expected to rule his kingdom with an iron fist he was a rather weak emperor. More so because by then the Mughal Empire was not that what it used to be. East India Company had already taken much of the country and the Delhi rule was virtually limited to Delhi and its surroundings only.


It was decided that he be sent to Burma (Myanmar) in Rangoon (Yangon) away from any communication which could be done with his supporters in India. It went to the extent that he was never given a pen and paper to write fearing that he would secretly use them to pass on messages.

The house where he lived was far from the palaces and forts of Delhi it was rather a small wooden house near Shwedagon Pagoda. This was in no comparison with the life what an emperor expects. He kept writing poetry often lamenting his life and expected death. With n pen and paper to write he used charcoal and used to scribble on the walls. The supply of food was limited and he often complained to the British officers about the limited quantity of food and water that was available to him.

During his death, he was completely bedridden and unable to eat. His relatives tried to spoon-feed him some liquefied food but that too stopped and his death was inevitable. Bahadur Shah Zafar the last Mughal emperor of undivided India died on the 7th of November 1862 he was 87 years old then.

The British government wanted his burial to be as conspicuous as possible. He had died at around 5 AM and by that same evening, his burial was done in a small grave nothing opulent rather just a small plaque. It was as per a policy decision to have him buried up and made sure it was forgotten over time to avoid this place to become a place of pilgrimage.

As per record, his wife Zeenat Mahal was also buried next to him in 1886. This small piece of the record however proved to be important information during re-establishing his grave spot which was discovered later. 


The last resting place of Bahadur Shah Zafar was lost in time just as the British rule wanted. Moreover, since he died in Burma and not in India thus there was no recorded history of the location nor was there and record purposely not kept to make people forget about him.

In the year 1991, there was an expansion work going on for the expansion of the prayer hall which was here at this location. During one such repair work, the laborers came across two graves which had stone inscriptions marking the grave as that of Bahadur Shah Zafar and the other of his wife Zinat Mahal. Upon excavation of the two graves intact, skeletal remains of Bahadur Shah Zafar wrapped in silk shroud were found.

After the discovery was made it was decided to construct a permanent structure over the renovated graves. Realizing the importance of this discovery the local community supported by the Myanmar government and foreign aid from India restored the grave and also built the new hall.

Once you enter through the iron gates you will come across a courtyard and a prayer hall to your right. Once you enter you will find the hall to your right with three decorated tombs of Bahadur Shah Zafar, Zinat Mahal (wife) & Raunaq Zamani (granddaughter). The walls around the hall are filled with photographs from the life of the emperor. There are only three known photos of the emperor one him lying on the bed and the other with his two sons and a British officer. Apart from photographs, the walls are filled with poetry written by the late emperor.

However, the original graves od Bahadur Shah Zafar are located at a chamber below this hall, and after taking few flights of stairs down you will reach the original tombs which were once lost in time and were discovered later. This basement level section has one grand tomb belonging to that of the last emperor of India Bahadur Shah Zafar.

Bahadur Shah Zafar had four official wives and Zeenat Mahal accompanied him to his exile in Burma. Zeenat Mahal had two sons from him they were Jawan Bakht and Jamshed Bakht. Both of these sons went with him to Burma and settled and died there. Jamshed Bakht had two sons Mirza Sikandar Bakht and Mirza Bedar Bakht. Mirza Bedar Bakht came back to Calcutta (Kolkata) and married Sultana Begum with who he had five daughters. Mirza Bedar Bakht used to make a living by sharpening knives and scissors. He used to live in a slum along with his wife, he died in the year 1980. His five daughters are Qamar Fatima and Raunaq, Tarannu, Tanvir, and Zeenat Mahal.

Most people tend to have cliched ideas about the role of women in the Mughal empire. The royal women were not cloistered away in zenanas. They lived separately, but were much respected; they were educated and had a voice of their own. The emperors often turned to them for guidance and advice.

Akbar asked his aunt to write the book as she had known and interacted with three Mughal emperors. Her book is not political unlike the other accounts of the time. It provides details of everyday life in the royal palace and is also an account of the empire as it was taking shape. The princess travelled, crossed the seas, was showered with gold and diamonds, and led an adventurous life.

Gulbadan was very fond of her father who spent a lot of time with his wives in Agra when he was not warring and expanding his empire. She does not talk about how stressful this situation of many women and many wives could have been. However, she mentions that Maham, the senior wife of Babur, and also her guardian mother, got agitated when other women moved in with them.

Mecca was a crowded city for everyone, rich and poor. The generosity of the Mughal royals towards the poor in the holy city knew no bounds. Gulbadan and her companions stayed on in Arabia for four years before they were literally asked to leave.

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