Ashoka has committed to ruling by dhamma, moral order. Now he needs to turn that commitment into something that lasts. You are in the drafting sessions for what will become the Ashokan Rock Edicts, still readable 2,300 years later.
Part of
Ashoka: The War Within →
261 BCE. The Mauryan Empire is at its peak. You are a young advisor to the most powerful emperor in the ancient world, and he has just made a decision that will cost 100,000 lives. Navigate the Kalinga War, witness a king's transformation, and help shape the edicts that will be carved in stone for 2,300 years.
Skills you'll build
What happens in this story4 scenarios
Ashoka wants to rule by moral order. You're in the drafting room, turning conviction into stone — writing the words that will outlast the empire, if you can make them precise enough to survive 2,300 years.
What started with the edict just got more complicated. Now you need to transform moral injury into constructive action rather than paralysis — and the situation is shifting faster than your first approach can handle.
This is the moment you've been building toward. Choosing integrity when it costs you something you can't get back — except now the stakes are real and there's no rehearsal. What you do next matters.
You've faced the hardest part. Now turn what you've learned into something sustainable — a way to transform moral injury into constructive action rather than paralysis not just today, but every time this situation returns.
More stories in this course
View all →The Decision
261 BCE. Pataliputra, the Mauryan capital. Emperor Ashoka has called a war council. You are his youngest advisor, and you are about to be asked whether to invade Kalinga. The question is not whether the empire can win.
4 scenarios →The March
The army is on the road. The orders are given. You are marching with 400,000 soldiers toward the Kalinga border, watching decisions get made that cannot be unmade. Ethics under pressure means something different when the pressure is this real.
4 scenarios →The Field of Silence
The war is over. 100,000 people are dead, 150,000 displaced. The emperor walks through the aftermath and says nothing for three days. You walk beside him. What happens when the most powerful person in the world looks at what he has done and cannot look away?
4 scenarios →The Edict
Ashoka has committed to ruling by dhamma, moral order. Now he needs to turn that commitment into something that lasts. You are in the drafting sessions for what will become the Ashokan Rock Edicts, still readable 2,300 years later.
Start free →4 scenarios · 25 min · No account required to try
