Paizo Top Nav Branding
Welcome, guest! | Sign In | My Account | My Subscriptions | My Downloads | My Wishlists | Shopping Cart   Shopping Cart | Help/FAQ
Pathfinder Roleplaying Game   Pathfinder Adventure Path   Pathfinder Modules   Pathfinder Campaign Setting   Pathfinder Player Companion   Pathfinder Tales  
Search
Links
Shop
Recent Reviews

Bullet Points: 6 Godling Feats (PFRPG) PDF
***** by Endzeitgeist

Splinters of Faith 3: Culvert Operations (PFRPG)
***( )( ) by Endzeitgeist

Pathfinder Roleplaying Game: GameMastery Guide (OGL)
****( ) by corwyn blackthorne

Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Bestiary (OGL)
***** by corwyn blackthorne

Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Core Rulebook (OGL)
***** by corwyn blackthorne

   RSS Recent Posts
Pathfinder Adventure Path #30: The Twice-Damned Prince (Council of Thieves 6 of 6) (PFRPG)

Pathfinder Adventure Path #30: The Twice-Damned Prince (Council of Thieves 6 of 6) (PFRPG)
***( )( ) (based on 1 review)

5x5
Add Print Edition: $19.99
Add PDF: $13.99
Facebook Twitter Email
5x5 5x5

Chapter 6: "The Twice-Damned Prince"
by Brian Cortijo and James Jacobs

Their deception revealed and their plans waylaid, two deadly and Hell-touched siblings make a desperate final play for control of Westcrown. With the city in chaos and its leaders fled, few stand to defend the beleaguered people when the plots of fiends turn upon them. At the same time, the rulers of Cheliax launch their own ruthless plot to retake control. Can the PCs return order and shatter the Council of Thieves’ age-old stranglehold on Westcrown once and for all? Or will the former capital slide fully into the grip of a terrible new deviltry? It's up to the PCs to decide in the climax of the Council of Thieves Adventure Path!

    This volume of Pathfinder Adventure Path completes the Council of Thieves Adventure Path, and includes:
  • “The Twice-Damned Prince,” a Pathfinder RPG adventure for 11th-level characters, by Brian Cortijo and James Jacobs
  • Catastrophic new rules for running a variety of calamities, from fires to floods, by Darrin Drader
  • New revelations on Mammon, the avaricious archdevil of Erebus, by F. Wesley Schneider
  • Pathfinder Varian Jeggare and Radovan face down devilish plots and the laws of Cheliax itself in a gut-wrenching conclusion to the Pathfinder’s Journal, by Dave Gross
  • Five new monsters, by Adam Daigle, F. Wesley Schneider, and Neil Spicer

A Pathfinder Roleplaying Game adventure for characters of 11th to 13th level. The Council of Thieves Adventure Path is the first to take full advantage of the new Pathfinder Roleplaying Game rules, and works with both the Pathfinder RPG and the standard 3.5 fantasy RPG rules set.

Pathfinder Adventure Path is Paizo Publishing's monthly 96-page, perfect-bound, full-color softcover book printed on high-quality paper. It contains an in-depth Adventure Path scenario, stats for about a half-dozen new monsters, and several support articles meant to give Game Masters additional material to expand their campaign. Pathfinder Adventure Path volumes use the Open Game License and work with both the Pathfinder RPG and the standard 3.5 fantasy RPG rules set.

ISBN–13: 978-1-60125-226-5

Note: This product is part of the Pathfinder Adventure Path Subscription.

Product Availability
Print Edition:
    Usually ships from our warehouse in 2 to 6 business days.
PDF:
    Will be added to your downloads immediately upon purchase of PDF.

Are there errors or omissions in this product information? Got corrections? Let us know at webmaster@paizo.com.


PZO9030


See Also:


<< Pathfinder Adventure Path #29: Mother of Flies (Council of Thieves 5 of 6) (PFRPG) Pathfinder Adventure Path #31: Stolen Land (Kingmaker 1 of 6) (PFRPG) >>


Product Reviews (1)

Average product rating: ***( )( ) (based on 1 review)


***( )( )

Good but not great


This adventure had some definite strengths and weaknesses. One of its strong points was its non-linear flow: the GM is presented with a series of related events to run as he pleases and in no particular order. This allows for the adventure to develop in an organic manner, as opposed to forcing the PCs down a particular path. Also, the manner in which the party deals with these events usually has an impact later on, further adding to the realism. There are no dungeons per se in Twice-Damned Prince. This made me a bit leary at first, but the author pulls it off quite well.

Now for the bad. While all of the adventure's events are solid and well presented, few of them struck me as particularly interesting. With the exception of the two main antagonists and a tiefling monk, I found the NPCs bland and uninspiring. For example, many of the enemies in this adventure are, not surprisingly, rogues. Why, then, did the author decide to make the vampiric Thesing a rogue as well? Why not a bard or sorcerer? It would fit his character thematically, and make for a much more interesting fight than yet another backstabbing thief-type.

Another annoyance came in the form of the fame point system. Specifically, Twice-Damned Prince adds a new type of "points" called popularity points, which must be tracked separately from fame points despite being very similar to them. This seemed unneccesarily complicated.

The article on the archdevil Mammon was fantastic, easily as good as Sean K Reynold's best Deities of Golarion articles. You even get a ready-made 20th-level high priest of Mammon who would make an excellent villain should the GM wish to continue this campaign. The bestiary has some intriguing high CR entries, though like past CoT bestiaries, the illustrations are mediocre. The Catastrophe article presents a great set of rules for running disasters such as floods and fires.

All in all, Twice-Damned Prince is a solid adventure that falls a bit short in flavor and comes with some great supporting articles. I'd give it 3.5 stars if I were able.


Messageboards

Numeria AP?, by Starglyte

Adventure Path Backmatter, by Boxhead

How long does it take to play through an Adventure Path, by Belle Mythix

The End of Eternity (GM Reference), by Jason Nelson

The Hungry Storm (GM Reference), by Jason Nelson

How many days travel from Restov to Oleg's Trading Post?, by Chernobyl

Anniversary Edition - How much non-Core content?, by HangarFlying

Dudemeister's KM3 VV - Additions and Changes, by DM_aka_Dudemeister

Combat Maps, by Haladir

Racing to Ruin (GM Reference), by admiral.ironbombs

Paizo Blog

Pathfinder Battles Preview: Familiar Faces,

RPG Superstar: Encounter Challenge Preview,

The Perfumer's Apprentice—Chapter Four: The Scent of Honeysuckle,

RPG Superstar: Round 3!,

Revenge of the FAQ Attack!,

Open Game License

Store Blog

Fifteen Men on a Dead Man's Chest!,

Things That Go Bump in the Night!,

To Sail the Starlit Sea!,

Pulling Down the Walls of Jericho!,

Yo-Ho-Ho, and a Bottle of Rum!,

Sign up for our weekly store newsletter

News

Top 16 Advance to Round 3 of RPG Superstar™,

Paizo Announces RPG Superstar™ 2012 Top 32,

Pathfinder Tales Hits #3 on Barnes & Noble Best Fantasy of 2011 List,

Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Now a Dynamite Comic Book!,

Paizo Launches RPG Superstar 2012,



©2002–2012 Paizo Publishing, LLC®. Need help? Email customer.service@paizo.com or call 425-250-0800 Monday–Friday, 10 AM–5 PM Pacific Time. View our privacy policy. Paizo Publishing, LLC, the Paizo golem logo, GameMastery, Pathfinder, Planet Stories, and Undefeated are registered trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC, and Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, Pathfinder Campaign Setting, Pathfinder Adventure PathPathfinder Player Companion, Pathfinder Modules, Pathfinder Tales, Pathfinder Society, Pathfinder Battles, PaizoCon, RPG Superstar, The Golem's Got It, Titanic Games, the Titanic logo, and the Planet Stories planet logo are trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC. Dungeons & Dragons, Dragon, Dungeon, and Polyhedron are registered trademarks of Wizards of the Coast, Inc., a subsidiary of Hasbro, Inc., and have been used by Paizo Publishing under license. Most product names are trademarks owned or used under license by the companies that publish those products; use of such names without mention of trademark status should not be construed as a challenge to such status.