It’s happened to every Game Master. You spend hours setting up the perfect encounter, your players are out for blood, the swords are drawn—and then you realize that you’ve forgotten to build statistics for the enemy characters. Or perhaps your players go left when you expect them to go right, leaving you without any encounters prepared.
Such problems are a thing of the past with the NPC Codex. Inside this tome, you’ll find hundreds of ready-made stat blocks for nonplayer characters of every level, from a lowly forest poacher to the most majestic knight or ancient spellcaster. Whether you’re planning out future adventures or throwing together encounters right at the table, this book does the work so you can focus on playing the game.
Pathfinder RPG NPC Codex is a must-have companion volume to the Pathfinder RPG Core Rulebook and Pathfinder RPG Bestiary. This imaginative tabletop game builds on more than 10 years of system development and open playtests featuring more than 50,000 gamers to create a cutting-edge RPG experience that brings the all-time best-selling set of fantasy rules into the new millennium.
The 320-page Pathfinder RPG NPC Codex includes:
Statistics for more than 300 characters, including at least one for every level of every class in the Pathfinder RPG Core Rulebook.
Tactical suggestions for every character, ensuring that you get the most out of each individual’s gear and abilities in a fight.
Tons of flavorful names and backgrounds to give characters personality, plus ideas for using them in both combat and roleplaying situations.
Statistics for characters with lower-powered NPC classes to help populate your world with ordinary people, as well as characters with specialized prestige classes.
Animal companion statistics for druids and rangers, from level 1 through level 20.
Multiple versions of each Pathfinder iconic character, perfect for pregenerated player characters.
Encounter groups for conveniently crafting battles on the fly.
AND MUCH, MUCH MORE!
Authors: Jesse Benner, Jason Bulmahn, Adam Daigle, Alex Greenshields, Rob McCreary, Mark Moreland, Jason Nelson, Stephen Radney-MacFarland, Patrick Renie, Sean K Reynolds, and Russ Taylor
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Correct... this focuses pretty much entirely on NPCs made with Core Rulebook only options.
Unless we get an NPC Codex II using APG, UltM, and UltC, I am NOT a happy subscriber over this. I thought Paizo had moved on from the WotC school of "release a great big rules book and never mention its contents again".
Edit: Could we at least get stat treatments for the Iconics from the other base classes, if nothing else?
so is it safe to pressume the High Queen of Stab is going to be in this book Mr. Jacobs?
If you mean me... yup. As mentioned in the blurb above...
The Blurb Above wrote:
The famous “iconic characters” of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game also come alive with statistics at various levels of development, providing ready-to-use player characters for any occasion.
If you're referring to someone ELSE as the High Queen of Stab, well... someone needs a stabbin!
Correct... this focuses pretty much entirely on NPCs made with Core Rulebook only options.
Unless we get an NPC Codex II using APG, UltM, and UltC, I am NOT a happy subscriber over this. I thought Paizo had moved on from the WotC school of "release a great big rules book and never mention its contents again".
They do a good job of keeping a variety of options presented in the hardcoers present in their other products, Adventure Paths especially, so I wouldn't be worried too much. For one of these books though, I couldn't really imagine needed a second one: the core base classes tend to be a bit more general, and I'd rather have 20 NPCs of any core class than APG classes.
Also keep in mind that the reason this was a problem in 3.5 was because certain player classes (ones like Shugenja) didn't receive any extra options than presented in their book of origin as the line of products went on. Since this is just a book about NPCs, players who decide to take a less common vocation such as Inquisitor don't need to worry about lack of continued options or anything. Just that they're maybe less likely to show up as an NPC.
I have no interest in this product at all. If I want NPCs I tend to make them myself and besides I have multiple books from Paizo that have NPC stats in them. Would have much prefered a Bestairy 4 for the last hardcover of the year.
I'm not super excited about this book, There are plenty of NPCs in the Game Master's Guide. But that might change if certain NPCs were included, NPCs like Ameiko Kajitsu, Shalelu, and Laori. Especially Laori.
I'm not super excited about this book, There are plenty of NPCs in the Game Master's Guide. But that might change if certain NPCs were included, NPCs like Ameiko Kajitsu, Shalelu, and Laori. Especially Laori.
I wouldn't count on it. Those are distinctively Golarion characters, and this is a distinctively world-neutral book.
That being said, I think this is a great idea for the hardcover line, and I look forward to receiving it. :-)
Unless we get an NPC Codex II using APG, UltM, and UltC, I am NOT a happy subscriber over this.
If it takes us 320 pages to cover the Core Rulebook classes plus the iconics, it's easy enough to see that if we added the 10 core classes from the other three books, this book would have to be close to 600 pages.
There are many reasons why (apart from the Core Rulebook) we won't be doing books that big, including postage costs and retail price sensitivity.
As for an NPC Codex II? I'm sure we'll be looking at how well this one sells.
The real reason is that Paizo knows that if they release a book that acknowledges the gunslinger class, the resulting nerdrage will consume the entire company and also a few other small businesses their HQ.
Correct... this focuses pretty much entirely on NPCs made with Core Rulebook only options.
Unless we get an NPC Codex II using APG, UltM, and UltC, I am NOT a happy subscriber over this. I thought Paizo had moved on from the WotC school of "release a great big rules book and never mention its contents again".
Edit: Could we at least get stat treatments for the Iconics from the other base classes, if nothing else?
To further expand on Vic's answer above.
If the NPC codex does well, we'll certainly consider doing another one. We absolutely will NOT exhaust all there is to say about NPC stats in this one book.
But the fact of the matter is that we have too may base classes to do them ALL in one book. Breaking that off at the Core (with 11 classes to fully represent) still gives us a sizable book, plus it also gives us a logical "break point" for that content.
I'm not sure yet which of the iconics will make it into the book—certainly the 11 core iconics. Not sure about beyond that.
Again... it's a matter of size and our capacity at this point to produce a book at that time that limits us to how many NPCs we put into it.
In any event, I suspect that anyone who's looked at any of our modules or adventure paths or campaign setting books or, heck, Ultimate Combat or Ultimate Magic, will realize we do NOT use a fire-and-forget philosophy on our books. We mention things like alchemists and magi and inquisitors and oracles and the like a LOT.
One NPC Codex that doesn't include them does not undo that fact.
I'm not super excited about this book, There are plenty of NPCs in the Game Master's Guide. But that might change if certain NPCs were included, NPCs like Ameiko Kajitsu, Shalelu, and Laori. Especially Laori.
The NPC Codex, like all of our rulebook line products, are world neutral. As a result, specific NPCs from Golarion (like Ameiko or Shalelu or Laori) will NOT be appearing in this book. They're generic NPCs (with the exception of the iconics) who GMs can use in the same way they use bestiaries (which contain generic monsters).
What mix of races should we expect to see? Will the class mixes only draw from the core rulebook races too, or will you go further afield?
The NPC Codex will stay firmly rooted in the core rules for its builds. The race mix will be pretty varied—humans will make up the most of the NPCs, but we're hoping to spread things around pretty well among all the core races.
Are these NPCs going to be along the lines of the Gamemastery NPCs- ie, filling "generic" roles, or are they individual NPCs with names, histories, etc. (sort of a Shady Dragon Inn writ large)?
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I'm not really excited about a book like this, as I have NPCs enough already and can easily make my own from my own numerous ideas. But I'm also sure Paizo will make the book worthwile.
Are these NPCs going to be along the lines of the Gamemastery NPCs- ie, filling "generic" roles, or are they individual NPCs with names, histories, etc. (sort of a Shady Dragon Inn writ large)?
More along the generic roles, I suspect. Again... world-neutral. We won't be inventing new locations to go along with these NPCs, any more than we do for new monsters like goblin dogs or boggards.
I must confess that I am mildly disappointed that this is for CRB options only. If this does well and there is an NPC Codex II, I would like to see archetypes and APG/UM/UC classes presented there. My wife was much more excited about this one than I was anyway.
EDIT: But, I am pleased that this product is being released. Paizo makes it easy for me to enjoy a more "lazy GM" style.
The NPC Codex will stay firmly rooted in the core rules for its builds. The race mix will be pretty varied—humans will make up the most of the NPCs, but we're hoping to spread things around pretty well among all the core races.
May I request a solid representation of gnomes.
The NPC Guide contained 1 gnome and he didn't even have a name. The rival guide contained 0 gnomes.
By contrast, those two books combined contained 2 apes (one "uplifted dire", the other "sentient").
Possible way to resolve the CRB vs. not issue: Odd-level characters use only CRB options, even-level characters pull in some archetypes and the like from other sources, maybe tossing in a samurai, ninja, and antipaladin (since those are really just big archetypes rather than new base classes). That way other books are represented without overwhelming the CRB stuff, and there's plenty of space open for NPC designs using non-CRB base classes.
What will the point buys be for the iconics in this book? 15, 20, 25?
The iconics will have 20 point buys, making them very easy to port over to Pathfinder Society. The plan is to use the stats presented in this book as the framework for expanded pregenerated characters with the requisite changes to their stats to fall in line with Society rules (like replacing Scribe Scroll with Spell Focus in Ezren's statblock, and bumping their hit points to match the number earned in organized play).
But the fact of the matter is that we have too may base classes to do them ALL in one book. Breaking that off at the Core (with 11 classes to fully represent) still gives us a sizable book, plus it also gives us a logical "break point" for that content.
Does this mean that the book won't have NPCs with NPC class levels? I was kind of hoping for more stat blocks of adepts, experts, etc.
But the fact of the matter is that we have too may base classes to do them ALL in one book. Breaking that off at the Core (with 11 classes to fully represent) still gives us a sizable book, plus it also gives us a logical "break point" for that content.
Does this mean that the book won't have NPCs with NPC class levels? I was kind of hoping for more stat blocks of adepts, experts, etc.
We're still paginating the book and figuring it out. If there's room, we'll put in some NPC class levels, but those will probably be the first things that get cut if we run out of room.
The iconics will have 20 point buys, making them very easy to port over to Pathfinder Society. The plan is to use the stats presented in this book as the framework for expanded pregenerated characters with the requisite changes to their stats to fall in line with Society rules (like replacing Scribe Scroll with Spell Focus in Ezren's statblock, and bumping their hit points to match the number earned in organized play).
So are the rest of the NPCs going to be 20 point buy or 15 point buy like other stat'd NPCs from other Paizo products? If they are 20, will the NPCs be PFS legal as well as the iconics? I'm just trying to get a good idea why I want to buy this book if only the pages of the iconics will be the only useful pages to me as a PFS player / GM.
The iconics will have 20 point buys, making them very easy to port over to Pathfinder Society. The plan is to use the stats presented in this book as the framework for expanded pregenerated characters with the requisite changes to their stats to fall in line with Society rules (like replacing Scribe Scroll with Spell Focus in Ezren's statblock, and bumping their hit points to match the number earned in organized play).
So are the rest of the NPCs going to be 20 point buy or 15 point buy like other stat'd NPCs from other Paizo products? If they are 20, will the NPCs be PFS legal as well as the iconics? I'm just trying to get a good idea why I want to buy this book if only the pages of the iconics will be the only useful pages to me as a PFS player / GM.
The rest of the NPCs will be standard point buy, just like all standard NPCs.
The book itself is, as with a bestiary, primarily a GM resource.
1: (and it's not tied specifically to this product but please bear with me) Are NPC stats in most Paizo products based around a 15 point buy?
2: More specific to this product, can someone from Paizo work with someone from Wolf Lair to see that somehow, someway, the stats for these NPCs end up as HeroLab files? I have no issue whatsoever paying extra for this. I understand that not everyone uses HeroLab (though IMO anyone who can, should) so these would definitely be a separate item from the core product.
The future of GM convenience is HeroLab, or something like it. A book loaded with NPC stats BEGS to end up in HeroLab files for mass consumption. There would be much GM rejoicing in the streets.
It already says "Pathfinder Roleplaying Game" at the start; putting "PFRPG" at the end would be redundant. (By the way, this is how the core line of Pathfinder RPG books have been listed on our site since the Alpha...)
Why can't the iconics be listed in a 64 page book instead? That way you could do the stats for non-Core classes as well. I'm fine with an NPC Codex, but I don't see how the iconics line up to be in this product, especially since their back stories are Golarion-specific (and this book is not).
Their back stories may be Golarion-specific but the iconics themselves aren't. They've been used extensively in the setting-neutral books and are as much iconics for the game itself as they are for the Pathfinder campaign setting.
Why can't the iconics be listed in a 64 page book instead? That way you could do the stats for non-Core classes as well. I'm fine with an NPC Codex, but I don't see how the iconics line up to be in this product, especially since their back stories are Golarion-specific (and this book is not).
1: The iconics won't take 64 pages. 2: As I mentioned before, the 10 non-Core Rulebook classes would take hundreds of pages.
Why can't the iconics be listed in a 64 page book instead? That way you could do the stats for non-Core classes as well. I'm fine with an NPC Codex, but I don't see how the iconics line up to be in this product, especially since their back stories are Golarion-specific (and this book is not).
There's no reason they can't, except for the fact that such a book isn't on the schedule. Since we've already ordered all the statblocks and art for this book, however, we wouldn't have content to replace them with if we took them out. Just because the NPC Codex isn't the book you describe doesn't mean we'll never do a book more in line with what you're asking for.
Why can't the iconics be listed in a 64 page book instead? That way you could do the stats for non-Core classes as well. I'm fine with an NPC Codex, but I don't see how the iconics line up to be in this product, especially since their back stories are Golarion-specific (and this book is not).
Considering their builds, it looks like those iconic pages are also reserved for "characters in a can" if you need a quick PC to play at a Pathfinder Society game or something. If that's their intention, I double that the space would go to adding the non-core classes; it would go to putting a quick-and-easy PC option set into the book.
I have reservations about an NPC codex that focuses primarily on the core classes through levels 1 to 20.
To qualify that, I don't mind that its just the core classes - but I do mind that archetypes aren't thrown into the mix. As a GM I want to see a large variety of builds and concepts - things that give flesh to ideas. Rather than 20 levels worth of core barbarian, I'd prefer 20 levels of varying barbarians (drunken rager, urban rager, savage, etc).
What isn't clear from the excerpt and the discussion to this point, is to what extent the NPC codex goes into ideas. There'll obviously be a lot of stat blocks - but will each stat block be accompanied not just by tactics and moral; but also a "person". Creative, fun, dangerous personalities to give fresh ideas to GMs are just as important as regional guides.