Meet the Iconics: Altronus

Monday, June 26, 2017

The countdown to Starfinder is on, and to celebrate, we're continuing to delve into the backstories of the iconic characters that appear in illustrations throughout the Starfinder line. Today we meet Altronus, the iconic solarian!

Illustration by Remko Troost

Altronus Barasul Dovenayan was born into House Holdare, a traditional and respected family on the kasatha generation-ship-turned-homeland Idari. The Holdare trace their lineage to Great Families already well respected when the Idari left Kasath for their centuries-long trip to the Pact Worlds, and have maintained strong connections with both the houses that rose to prominence on the ship while crew functions were paramount, and younger houses risen to prominence since the Idari became an enormous space station. Much of the influence of House Holdare comes from their renown for producing skilled adata—scholar-priests who oversee the removal and preservation of thin slices of the brains of deceased kasatha in technomagical temples called adats. Even in times when ships officers, pilots, and navigators find their social relevance waning, the adata remain highly respected in kasatha society.

The eldest living member of House Holdare, Barasul Naedarin Allar of Clan Allar, Keeper of Ten Million Thoughts and doyen of the ship's adata, took a special interest in Altronus shortly after his birth, though he was but a distant nephew to her. Of course the attention of so great a clan elder comes with more responsibility and expectation than comfort, and though Altronus was raised with significant prestige and resources as a youth, he was also pushed to begin adata training very early, his family even going so far as to name him after famous adata doyens.

While Altronus did not excel at his studies the way his family had hoped, neither did he do poorly, and most people chalked his merely adequate results up to his relative youth. In truth, Altronus was indeed an excellent scholar, simply one who had trouble focusing on a single topic for long. Inevitably, some interesting fact in his studies would pique his interest and draw his research off into unrelated sidetracks. This broad, self-directed education made him adept at making connections between disparate fields, yet earned him little love from traditionalist teachers who saw his scattered studies as a failure to focus and a deliberate rejection of tried-and-true scholarly practices.

Though his close family were dedicated worshipers of Talavet, the Storyteller deity, one of Altronus's more sympathetic teachers felt his wandering focus could be better brought into line with training in the philosophy of the Cycle, which teaches that existence is an endless, connected series of events as stars are born, die, and born again. Though the Cycle is the guiding philosophy of the solarians, contemplative warriors with a tradition stretching far back into the history of Kasath, it's also seen as a useful tool for training body and mind in preparation for the rigors of other vocations.

Altronus was accepted as a student into a prestigious cosmonastery on the Idari, and taught to focus his thoughts on the forces of the universe around him, to draw strength and guidance from the endless repetition of celestial creation and destruction. He took to the training immediately, and soon was among the most advanced students, most of whom sought not just to understand the lessons of the Cycle, but to embody them in the path of the solarian. Altronus, however, was still slated for a career as an adata. This preordained path didn't bother him—as he approached adulthood and the yearlong ritual walkabout of the Tempering, he was allowed to take on guard shifts at the ship's famed Sholar Adat. There he watched over rooms of stasis pods where adata connected to the Sensorium, the technomagical temple archive where flashes of memories from archived kasatha brains could be experienced, sorted, and analyzed. On rare occasions, he was even allowed to experience ancient Sensorium memories himself, and it was these glimpses of lives and secrets long lost that most drove Altronus to complete his studies and become a full adata.

During one of his last scheduled shifts as an adata student, Altronus was assigned to an inactive Sensorium access node—one rarely used, but like all Sensorium access points still important enough to be protected by force fields and a round-the-clock guard. Though most such shifts were uneventful, on that night Altronus was surprised by the appearance of a fully cloaked and apparently rushed senior adata, Remura Esolla Kaiban of Clan Senthen, flashing a warrant to allow unscheduled access to the memory of a recently deceased citizen. Thanks to his tendency to collect trivia, Altronus knew Remura was scheduled to be giving a lecture at the far end of the Idari. What, he wondered, could be of such great importance that the revered adat would end the lecture early, not to mention need an emergency Sensorium warrant?

Altronus knew he should mind his own business, but again curiosity overrode his training. Altronus contacted a friend at the far end of the ship, who informed him that not only had Adata Kaiban not left the lecture early—she was still on the stage.

Immediately Altronus sounded an intruder alert, and rushed into the Sensorium access node to confront the false adata. To his surprise, Altronus discovered not a kasatha, but a small, sickly gray humanoid standing in a pile of robes and strange machinery, with long wires and humming crystals latched onto the Sensorium feed and hundreds of images flashing from the access node to the gray creature's alien devices. Altronus leapt to activate the Sensorium emergency disconnect, but the bulbous creature struck him with a taclash, ripping the pulsecaster from his grip, then shot him with a pistol that fired a searing green ray. Through the resulting haze of pain, Altronus managed to seal the access node's security force fields, trapping himself and the gray intruder inside.

With a shock, Altronus realized the severity of the situation. Any response to his alarm would take precious moments to arrive, and still more to disable the force field. Unarmed, Altronus had little chance of holding the intruder at bay. He had no way of healing the wound from the creature's pistol. For the first time in his life, Altronus truly confronted the fact that he was going to die. Like the stars themselves, he too would be extinguished, his body breaking down and eventually being reincorporated over millennia into new entities, new worlds, new stars. At last, he truly understood the Cycle. With his final moments, he reached out to the universe, embracing it.

And the universe answered.

Altronus was as surprised as the strange gray alien to find a long, shining golden blade suddenly sprouting from his lower right forearm. Yet he had seen enough of solarian training to recognize the blade of stellar energy for what it was, and leapt to put it to use, placing himself between the creature and the node's access panels. The two fought in grim silence, and though it was clear the gray invader was the more skilled, Altronus stood his ground, putting to use every scrap of training he'd gained. He didn't need to win—only buy time, keeping the creature from finishing its infiltration of the Sensorium until help arrived.

Blow after blow fell upon Altronus, and the pistol's strange green rays continued to singe and scale his flesh, but Altronus would not fall. His blade scored many fewer hits, and at times seemed to pass cleanly through his foe to no effect, but he pressed the attack as best he could. As he did, a fierce joy welled up in him, a sense of the rightness of the path that had led him to this moment. This cosmic contentment continued to expand until he had no choice but to release it, unleashing a burst of searing stellar flame in all direction.

At last, ship security arrived, using their command bypasses to deactivate the access node's force fields and dragging the half-dead Altronus from the fight. Yet upon seeing that it was outnumbered, the bulbous-headed alien didn't continue to fight, or attempt to escape. Rather, it paused to take stock of the situation, toggled a device on its arm—and detonated its own head like a bomb.

The security team secured the body and questioned Altronus. When several true adata arrived, they immediately attempted to preserve part of the horrid gray thing's exploded brain. While their efforts to pull meaning from the splatter were greatly hindered, two ideas were recovered. The first was that gray spies had deeply infiltrated the Pact Worlds. The second was that the time of something important called "Phase Three" was coming soon.

The Doyenate of the Idari was informed, and additional security added to Sensorium access nodes. While the matter of gray infiltrators was officially left open to investigation, with no more solid leads and no further incidents, official attention quickly turned elsewhere.

But Altronus couldn't let the issue lie.

Questions filled his mind. How thoroughly had grays infiltrated the Pact Worlds? Had they successfully infiltrated the Idari? What did this gray seek to learn from the Sensorium? Why had it sought to destroy its own brain when capture became inevitable? And, most importantly, what was Phase Three, and how soon would it arrive? Altronus tried to quiet his mind with further solarian training, but while his powers grew, his sense of calm did not.

As it came time for Altronus to begin his Tempering, he realized he could never accept a role as an adata while the mystery of the gray invader hung over him. He sought, and received, approval from his house doyen to abandon the path he had long trod, and informed his family that he was leaving the Idari. He had no firm idea of where he would go, nor how his investigation would advance, only a vow to chase down every strange occurrence that might mark a potential gray incursion within the Pact Worlds. While many of these events had other—sometimes equally strange—explanations, he found enough potential connections to the grays to support his growing suspicion that secret conspiracies indeed existed just out of sight. Still a rigorous scholar, he began to accept that he'd need to give more credence to outrageous claims and unlikely stories if he ever wanted to uncover the truth.

Now inarguably an adult, Altronus has nevertheless remained on his Tempering for much longer than the traditional year, and still sees himself as working to form the traditions that will guide him through his later life. He often signs on with freelancers and adventuring companies as a guard, scout, or researcher in order to support himself—especially if their activities align with his obsession—yet his primary goal always remains researching the shadowy web of plots he first glimpsed that night in the access node. Ironically, while he comes across to many kasatha as overly impetuous and offbeat, his natural kasatha love of traditions, his devotion to the Cycle, and his scholar's desire to monologue about admittedly unconventional research often causes members of other races to see him as an eccentric professor or addled conspiracy theorist. Any skepticism as to his usefulness, however, disappears in the first firefight, as Altronus launches himself into the fray and "lets the cosmos take control," slicing through hordes of enemies with terrifying calm.

Owen KC Stephens
Developer

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Tags: Altronus Iconics Meet the Iconics Remko Troost Solarians Starfinder
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Ouachitonian,

I can agree to disagree on this one. you see it one way and i see it another. i would still like to know from the game designers point of view what the rules elements are that decide between light and heavy and in the setting if there is a visual element that sets the two categories apart... if only there was someone on the team who could put together some kind of blog or newsletter on the design, philosophy and under the hood workings of a game like Starfinder...


I don't think the difference between light and heavy armour is the amount of protection provided and the amount of skill required to use.

Cosmetic effects are cosmetic only.


Fardragon wrote:

I don't think the difference between light and heavy armour is the amount of protection provided and the amount of skill required to use.

Cosmetic effects are cosmetic only.

For some reason i am having trouble parsing your comment. You do not think the divide between light and heavy armor is based on how difficult it is to use or the amount of defense it provides?

i have been assuming it will be a trade off between AC vs DEX mod and tiered by level as weapons are.

So just to spit ball a concept, when light armor at your tier caps out at +6 K/EAC and DEX +4 Heavy armor might be more of +8 K/EAC and DEX+2 and they would scale up so that maybe light maxes out at a +14 K/EAC with a +10 DEX mod and Heavy is +20 K/EAC with a +6 DEX mod.

Basically they keep enough distance between them that you either need DEX or you notice the difference assuming that you are comparing armors of equal level.

Or would you break the armors out by improvement slots? Heavy armors are heavy because they can support more mods and support systems?

i would also think that there would be strong cosmetic break outs for different gear. a laser rifle shouldn't look like an assault rifle and nether should look like a flame thrower even if all three deal 2D6 damage and count as long arms. likewise, to me, a light armor shouldnt resemble heavy armor so closely, it takes away its cool factor and makes it less interesting.


I don't think that Max Dex will go up to +10, because with what we've seen of stat gen and boosts, the absolute highest you can get any stat is 28 for a +9 mod (18 Char Gen Cap, +4 Leveling Boosts, +6 Enhancement)

The Exchange

Wicked cool. Pure energy blades.

Excellent backstory.

Really great stuff! Can't wait for the CRB to be released!


Shinigami02 wrote:
I don't think that Max Dex will go up to +10, because with what we've seen of stat gen and boosts, the absolute highest you can get any stat is 28 for a +9 mod (18 Char Gen Cap, +4 Leveling Boosts, +6 Enhancement)

True, i didnt mean those as actual projections, just illustrating that even if armor scales i am expecting higher DEX on light armors and higher default AC on heavy, basically at any tier the heavy will grant better AC with lower investment of resources beyond proficiency.


Torbyne wrote:
Shinigami02 wrote:
I don't think that Max Dex will go up to +10, because with what we've seen of stat gen and boosts, the absolute highest you can get any stat is 28 for a +9 mod (18 Char Gen Cap, +4 Leveling Boosts, +6 Enhancement)
True, i didnt mean those as actual projections, just illustrating that even if armor scales i am expecting higher DEX on light armors and higher default AC on heavy, basically at any tier the heavy will grant better AC with lower investment of resources beyond proficiency.

you know that depends on mods in the armor


khadgar567 wrote:
Torbyne wrote:
Shinigami02 wrote:
I don't think that Max Dex will go up to +10, because with what we've seen of stat gen and boosts, the absolute highest you can get any stat is 28 for a +9 mod (18 Char Gen Cap, +4 Leveling Boosts, +6 Enhancement)
True, i didnt mean those as actual projections, just illustrating that even if armor scales i am expecting higher DEX on light armors and higher default AC on heavy, basically at any tier the heavy will grant better AC with lower investment of resources beyond proficiency.
you know that depends on mods in the armor

Yes, i am looking at default states for armors. i cant really state with any degree of confidence what armor mods will do. i would think that increasing DEX or AC would be basic mods. but if you can just slap a heavy plate mod onto you light armor, why is it light armor? i keep throwing out my ideas as examples but i still dont have a solid grasp of where the line is drawn between light and heavy. i suppose just allowing heavy to mount more mods could be the deciding point but that would be a little weird, kind of just making heavy better all around since you can get AC, DEX and support systems all in the same suit.


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Torbyne wrote:
Fardragon wrote:

I don't think the difference between light and heavy armour is the amount of protection provided and the amount of skill required to use.

Cosmetic effects are cosmetic only.

For some reason i am having trouble parsing your comment. You do not think the divide between light and heavy armor is based on how difficult it is to use or the amount of defense it provides?

i have been assuming it will be a trade off between AC vs DEX mod and tiered by level as weapons are.

So just to spit ball a concept, when light armor at your tier caps out at +6 K/EAC and DEX +4 Heavy armor might be more of +8 K/EAC and DEX+2 and they would scale up so that maybe light maxes out at a +14 K/EAC with a +10 DEX mod and Heavy is +20 K/EAC with a +6 DEX mod.

Basically they keep enough distance between them that you either need DEX or you notice the difference assuming that you are comparing armors of equal level.

Or would you break the armors out by improvement slots? Heavy armors are heavy because they can support more mods and support systems?

i would also think that there would be strong cosmetic break outs for different gear. a laser rifle shouldn't look like an assault rifle and nether should look like a flame thrower even if all three deal 2D6 damage and count as long arms. likewise, to me, a light armor shouldnt resemble heavy armor so closely, it takes away its cool factor and makes it less interesting.

Yeah, me too.

Marking exam papers has turned my brain to mush.


1 person marked this as a favorite.

I like it. I get to play a soulknife now. ^^


Theliah Strongarm wrote:
Wicked cool. Pure energy blades!

Which seems to do slashing damage by default, unless things have changed since the developer game in January.


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Fardragon wrote:
Torbyne wrote:
Fardragon wrote:

I don't think the difference between light and heavy armour is the amount of protection provided and the amount of skill required to use.

Cosmetic effects are cosmetic only.

For some reason i am having trouble parsing your comment. You do not think the divide between light and heavy armor is based on how difficult it is to use or the amount of defense it provides?

i have been assuming it will be a trade off between AC vs DEX mod and tiered by level as weapons are.

So just to spit ball a concept, when light armor at your tier caps out at +6 K/EAC and DEX +4 Heavy armor might be more of +8 K/EAC and DEX+2 and they would scale up so that maybe light maxes out at a +14 K/EAC with a +10 DEX mod and Heavy is +20 K/EAC with a +6 DEX mod.

Basically they keep enough distance between them that you either need DEX or you notice the difference assuming that you are comparing armors of equal level.

Or would you break the armors out by improvement slots? Heavy armors are heavy because they can support more mods and support systems?

i would also think that there would be strong cosmetic break outs for different gear. a laser rifle shouldn't look like an assault rifle and nether should look like a flame thrower even if all three deal 2D6 damage and count as long arms. likewise, to me, a light armor shouldnt resemble heavy armor so closely, it takes away its cool factor and makes it less interesting.

Yeah, me too.

Marking exam papers has turned my brain to mush.

That is fair though, studying for exams mushes student brains, doesnt it? Exams are just rough all around it seems.

Scarab Sages

Voss wrote:
Theliah Strongarm wrote:
Wicked cool. Pure energy blades!
Which seems to do slashing damage by default, unless things have changed since the developer game in January.

I think it does physical damage based on the type of weapon you manifest. The vesk solarion in the web Dm game had an energy gauntlet that was doing bludgeoning damage. I think there is an item or ability that would allow you to do fire against eac instead.


Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Imbicatus wrote:
Voss wrote:
Theliah Strongarm wrote:
Wicked cool. Pure energy blades!
Which seems to do slashing damage by default, unless things have changed since the developer game in January.
I think it does physical damage based on the type of weapon you manifest. The vesk solarion in the web Dm game had an energy gauntlet that was doing bludgeoning damage. I think there is an item or ability that would allow you to do fire against eac instead.

Since a Solarian's energy blade is analogous to a Monk's unarmed strike, it would make sense (to me, at least) for the solarian to gain the ability to switch or add attack types (such as fire, acid, etc.) as the solarian gains levels, similar to the way a Monk gains magic/lawful/adamantine qualities for his unarmed strike.


Jimbles the Mediocre wrote:
Imbicatus wrote:
Voss wrote:
Theliah Strongarm wrote:
Wicked cool. Pure energy blades!
Which seems to do slashing damage by default, unless things have changed since the developer game in January.
I think it does physical damage based on the type of weapon you manifest. The vesk solarion in the web Dm game had an energy gauntlet that was doing bludgeoning damage. I think there is an item or ability that would allow you to do fire against eac instead.
Since a Solarian's energy blade is analogous to a Monk's unarmed strike, it would make sense (to me, at least) for the solarian to gain the ability to switch or add attack types (such as fire, acid, etc.) as the solarian gains levels, similar to the way a Monk gains magic/lawful/adamantine qualities for his unarmed strike.

Most classes seem to have an options bar where they can select the perks they want, its easy enough to imagine that Solarian get to choose two starting options, a physical manifestation type with comes with a physical damage type (S/B/P) and an energy type that they can switch too. so Altronus starts out with a slashing blade that can switch over to fire whereas the Ysoki from from a polar ice cap manifest a bludgeoning wrench that can do cold damage?

Liberty's Edge

1 person marked this as a favorite.

I really hope today's blog post is the Solarion class preview.


I'm hoping for Technomancer, but I'd be happy with either.


Paladinosaur wrote:
I really hope today's blog post is the Solarion class preview.

Since the Solarion Iconic was just revealed I would bet you a 1000 UPB's that the Solation preview will happen next.


2 people marked this as a favorite.

Owen KC Stephens said yesterday that it'll be the solarian blog either today or tomorrow. I just really want some new technomancer news.


2 people marked this as a favorite.

I just want it to be October already.


Don't'cha mean August?


Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
IonutRO wrote:
Don't'cha mean August?

Maybe he wants Alien Archives to go with it. I know I've been halfway tempted to delay until I get that myself...


Oh, I thought that was also coming out at Gencon...

Grand Lodge

1 person marked this as a favorite.

It's been a hectic week, but I finally got to read through Altronus's backstory here. Owen, you did a simply terrific job packing a whole bunch of world building in here.

Some of the stuff that I loved seeing: more on the culture of the Idari, the Kasatha Generation Ship, and the whole concept of the Adata, scientist/mage/priests whose sacred job is to study and preserve the memories of the dead... I am just geeking out over this so much.

Thanks to all the designers for putting so much thought and worldbuilding into these backstories. I will be sure to link to them when I run 1-00 Claim to Salvation in PBP. In fact, I may start linking to them now so that my players can start referencing them before play.

Each of these has been its own little GM, opening up portals in my brain to far off worlds. I love this!

Hugs,
Hmm


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Luthorne wrote:
IonutRO wrote:
Don't'cha mean August?
Maybe he wants Alien Archives to go with it. I know I've been halfway tempted to delay until I get that myself...

Well, that, two APs, Summer to end, and Halloween. It's hot in Texas y'all.

Scarab Sages Developer, Starfinder Team

IonutRO wrote:
Oh, I thought that was also coming out at Gencon...

I wish it could be! It's a decades-old problem when releasing an RPG with key info over multiple books. We need the time to produce later books, and the income stream doesn't do well if we delay everything until its all in the warehouse.

But two months isn't so very long, plus we have First Contact, plus you can use pathfinder monsters with fair ease.


Pathfinder Maps, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Maps, Starfinder Roleplaying Game, Starfinder Society Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber

About how many monsters will be available to Starfinder GMs to use if they start their campaigns before Alien Archive comes out?

Sovereign Court

3 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Starfinder Society Subscriber
David knott 242 wrote:

About how many monsters will be available to Starfinder GMs to use if they start their campaigns before Alien Archive comes out?

*checks Bestiaries 1 through 6*


Pathfinder Maps, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Maps, Starfinder Roleplaying Game, Starfinder Society Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber
KingOfAnything wrote:
David knott 242 wrote:

About how many monsters will be available to Starfinder GMs to use if they start their campaigns before Alien Archive comes out?

*checks Bestiaries 1 through 6*

So I guess that means that it is a matter of how clear the conversion instructions in the Starfinder core rulebook are. I was hoping to be able to avoid creating my own conversions that are likely to be contradicted in some noticeable way when Alien Archive comes out.

Sovereign Court

1 person marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Starfinder Society Subscriber

Considering that relative ease of monster conversion is a stated design goal of the system, I don't think you'll have many issues. Just give the orc a laser cannon and have at it!


Me personally I'm running the pfs scenarios from gencon for my group sporadically once it comes out to stall for the 2 books in October so they can get used to/ familiar with the system, then start running the AP a little behind. Work schedule allowing, of course.

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