Hunger: curiosity.
Prime power: creation.
World: the Silver DawningThe parallel world of the Fey. It’s colorful. More, divided between the Seelie Scepter and Unseelie Throne.
The Fey, flighty and mercurial, often discover and build only to abandon. They are in part driven by an unnatural need to reclaim the magic stolen from them; all their power, from birth, is channeled until the Throne and Scepter, there to be distributed and wielded as needed to keep their People alive.
Alone among the Seven PeoplesThe Seven Peoples of the Earth are the seven identifying categories applied to most sentient beings in the world. More, they must seek magic outside of themselves, or starve; it is a skill learned to weave it from others, from emotion or intimacy, from applause or anguishment.
Many of the supernatural beings humans have seen as thieves of life or something else have become that way because the Fey claimed them: the ZārIranian Zār—Stolen Fey—ruled part of Persia called Anshan. More, the Xana, the Ciguapa, the Diwata and Anito, the Dökkálfar and Ljósálfar, the Huldra, the Sirens.
As Fey age, they lose the ability to process these stolen strands of power. Their bodies grow cool, and still; they become in time smooth, pale stone, without blemish, without life. When Fey reach the natural end of their lives, they leave behind them soulless statues of themselves, echoes of the beauty they once held.