
The Court of the Golden Queen holds a secret that would rattle most people. That is to say Cthulu is gone now. A war between eldritch gods has taken place, and Cthulu lost and was slain by a being known to many as the king in yellow but what most dont know was that she was truly the queen in yellow.
Forced to take on a male persona fo ages the queen in yellow was released when somebody saw her for who she was at that moment.
So she was released to save the world and all worlds from the attack of Cthulu with her chains now gone.
So she sent her yellow signs into such small spaces that they filled the zeroes in the ones and zeros of fiberobtic digital code
Yellow signs allowed digital beings to travel backward in time and to other universes along with the now Golden queen herself.
Once she arrived, she found a time and place where Cthulu was young tiny and asleep at the bottom of the ocean, and she then grabbed the most hateful parts of his mind with her tendrils and riped those parts into shreds.
To this day, there are yellow signs smaller than photons, and that can only grant one or two people the power of the wish spell, and there are yellow signs as big as quasairs that insure that everyone in every adjacent galaxy has access to the prestidigitation cantrip.
But most rune workers who work with Golden signs only use the medium-sized ones that vary between the size of a thumb to the size of a hand
98% of what we think about the Golden Queen is wrong, but this is what we do know she saved many galaxies one day, and each of her Golden sigils carries with it a magical secret about divination, enchantment, abjuration, transmutation, and conjuration.
Should you be granted or painted with one of these similar or even all the ones from one school. You may find yourself with extra tiny eyes where those sigil marks are, and you might also find yourself becoming one of the most powerful far realm aberrations in your galaxy.
However, your galaxy might never know your name, just that a protective force is watching over them.

