Meet the Iconics: Crowe

Thursday, June 26, 2014


Illustration by Wayne Reynolds

Today we introduce the next of the new iconic characters from the Advanced Class Guide: Crowe the bloodrager. While the complete rules for making your own bloodrager characters will debut this August in the Advanced Class Guide, Crowe features in this year’s Free RPG Day adventure, Pathfinder Module: Risen from the Sands. Crowe will also be a playable character in the not-yet-announced Pathfinder Adventure Card Game set due for release in February 2015.

When Crowe was a young man waiting to depart on his first horse gathering, he had the same dream every night for five weeks. It always started and ended the same way. Each time the storm came. Each time the stampede thundered out of the canyon to the south. Each time his body was trampled to pulp before he woke up soaking with sweat.

Every night.

Crowe was born under an auspicious sign during a thunderstorm that scoured the Storval Plateau one burning autumn evening. After generations of uncertain prophecy by the tribe’s shamans, the holy ones were reluctant to predict much about the newborn aside from foretelling that he would one day become a significant force.

From a young age, Crowe was trained to be a perfect groom, and it was clear that in time he would become a good trainer. He learned from his mother and father, as well as from his aunts and uncles, for even among the animal-loving Shriikirri-Quah, his family had a way with horses. They even supplied many a burn-rider of the Sklar-Quah with their signature steeds, and foreigners came from miles around seeking to trade for the family’s fearless stallions.

Crowe’s father was known throughout the Storval Plateau for his skill at capturing and breaking wild horses, and his mother could read the face of nature as if it were her own child’s. Together, Crowe’s parents trained their horses, content with their lives. But their son was becoming unruly.

As a youth, Crowe often got into fights then claimed that he didn’t remember how the scraps had started. He would feel his heart beating against his ribs. He would hear the blood thrumming in his ears, and that would be the last thing he recalled. People in the tribe grew cautious around the boy. After far too many of these sorts of scuffles, his mother began asking him why he was so angry. Crowe claimed again that he didn’t remember, that the last thing he had heard before each fight broke out was the storm.

As Crowe grew stronger of frame, he learned the traditional ways of Shoanti warfare. He trained with the weapons of his ancestors and learned how to protect his people and their way of life. Crowe learned the klar, mastered the earthbreaker, and also studied the natural world and the ways of magic that his mother followed. Throughout his tutelage, he challenged his elders and was challenged by his not-so-infrequent gaps in memory. Some in the tribe thought this was simply an excuse for his misbehavior, and many blamed his parents for his violent outbursts.

Though Crowe was still considered to be too young for a long outing, his father decided that taking his son on his first horse gathering would teach the boy discipline. The herds would be funneling through the canyon in a matter of weeks, and Crowe’s father hoped to gather a few more horses, the most prized of which were the foals of Bright Star—a stallion that had eluded him for the past five years. Rounding up even one or two of the foals would be a major boon to his family’s stock.

Crowe, his father, and seven other men and women from the tribe traveled for three days. Horses are predictable beasts, and the Shoanti knew where the herd moved in the uplands. The herd would race through the canyon until it leveled out to a dry riverbed that cut through the blistered land. When the herd came through, the hunters would be ready with ropes and snares.

In order to test Crowe’s patience, his father sent the youth ahead to the canyon’s mouth. He wanted his boy to wait, to listen to hooves and snorts echoing down the canyon. He wanted him to throw the loop around a horse that he could call his own. He wanted Crowe to concentrate on his task and listen past the distraction of the storm.

Crowe crouched upon a flat umber rock, trembling with terror. All he could hear was the storm in the distance, a low, rolling rumble that thundered in his eardrums. He was sure what he heard was his fear, his rage. This was the canyon. This was the night he would die. Why couldn’t he just leave? Just walk away from it all?

Tradition.

The thunder beating in his ears changed. It wasn’t just internal; it was echoing through the canyon. The herd was coming. Crowe looked to the sky as dark clouds rolling in from the south obscured the setting sun. The others shouted orders and set up positions with their snares. Crowe scrambled back to his designated post as hundreds of horses filled the canyon, their hoofbeats driving a pounding echo off the canyon walls.

Then the storm broke. Thunder rumbled and crashed through the canyon and lightning bathed its rusty walls in flashes of white.

After the storm had passed, Crowe awoke to find his cousin sitting on his chest and slapping his face, claiming that he was to blame for the carnage spread all around him. More than a dozen horses lay dead, and half of the hunting party lay trampled in the riverbed. They said Crowe was to blame. They said there was no storm. They said he had done it.

Slick with blood, confused, and full of no uncertain amount of shame, he stumbled through the night. The dawn broke on Crowe’s new life—a life not burdened by tradition, a life that was numb to fear.

Adam Daigle
Developer

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Tags: Bloodrager Iconics Meet the Iconics Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Wayne Reynolds
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Silver Crusade

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On the run, but WOO SHOANTI ICONIC. (and Hawk Clan at that!) Nice, tragic set up. :)

Also, I love that his big berserk fit seemed(?) more driven by fear than anger.


6 people marked this as a favorite.
Gorbacz wrote:
So, when are we going to see female nipples for a change?

When Mammy Graul does her next photo shoot.


I was hoping for two Iconics today to catch up but damn that's plenty.


I realize I may be starting to sound contrary, but I'm still not impressed; he reminds me too much of Bruce Banner. It's nicely executed, but the premise isn't much. His "armor" doesn't help, he looks more like he's heavily bandaged or wearing athletic protection than anything else. Quinn definitely remains my favorite.


Doesn't the Earthbreaker deal bludgeoning damage? Did someone explain that to WAR?


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Tels wrote:
Doesn't the Earthbreaker deal bludgeoning damage? Did someone explain that to WAR?

"The crude metal of this massive hammer’s head ends in multiple blunt spikes that channel the momentum of a powerful swing."

Sounds like he read the description, but missed the "blunt spikes." It might just be a brand new Earthbreaker that just had it spikes added, eventually blunting as its used to McMurder Crowe's foes.

Though even with blunt spikes, I would still think the weapon would do bludgeoning and piercing damage. Oh well.


Tels wrote:
Doesn't the Earthbreaker deal bludgeoning damage? Did someone explain that to WAR?

What? That beautiful hunk of a Metal can totally deal bludgeon damage by smashing people with the runic face. The tusks on the sides are just there for decoration.


Leo_Negri wrote:
Lilith wrote:
Dustin Ashe wrote:
And is it normal for a berserker to have no memory of her rage?
Blackout angry is a thing.
Yes it is, unfortunately, just wondering why his eyes are white and not red. Blackout rage, and berserking are usually accompanied by the BURSTING of the surface capillaries on the eyes, coloring the sclera. Usually a portion of the blood also seeps into the vitreous humour (eyeball jelly) tinging everything with a reddish tint, hence "so angry I'm seeing red."

Because he's Raiden with Roid Rage?

Grand Lodge

Dannorn wrote:
Leo_Negri wrote:
Lilith wrote:
Dustin Ashe wrote:
And is it normal for a berserker to have no memory of her rage?
Blackout angry is a thing.
Yes it is, unfortunately, just wondering why his eyes are white and not red. Blackout rage, and berserking are usually accompanied by the BURSTING of the surface capillaries on the eyes, coloring the sclera. Usually a portion of the blood also seeps into the vitreous humour (eyeball jelly) tinging everything with a reddish tint, hence "so angry I'm seeing red."
Because he's Raiden with Roid Rage?

No way!! He doesn't even look scottish!


Not bad, but not as interesting as the last couple have been.


Not bad. I'm interested.


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Maccabee wrote:
Dannorn wrote:
Leo_Negri wrote:
Yes it is, unfortunately, just wondering why his eyes are white and not red. Blackout rage, and berserking are usually accompanied by the BURSTING of the surface capillaries on the eyes, coloring the sclera. Usually a portion of the blood also seeps into the vitreous humour (eyeball jelly) tinging everything with a reddish tint, hence "so angry I'm seeing red."
Because he's Raiden with Roid Rage?
No way!! He doesn't even look scottish!

He frequently flies into fits of rage he has no recollection of accompanied by a thunderous pounding in his head, he's Scottish. (Apologies to any actual Scottish people just playing with the stereotype)

Grand Lodge RPG Superstar 2012 Top 32

8 people marked this as a favorite.
Ferocious Fighter wrote:
I was hoping for two Iconics today

Today's second iconic is that earthbreaker.


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Being Scottish I can say this is completely wrong and almost offensive. If anything I fly in to fits of indifference and that's why I can't be completely offended. Curse you indifference...eventually.

Silver Crusade

3 people marked this as a favorite.

Y'know, considering how hardcore Shoanti rites of passage are, it's a wonder these freakouts don't happen more often...

Jiggy wrote:
Today's second iconic is that earthbreaker.

Speaking of...

I love that the earthbreaker he's using is long-handled. :) It's always bugged me a bit that they seldom showed up in art like they always looked like in my head; they seemed to drawn more often with short handles that made them look like big mallets or meat tenderizers, which never really worked for the visuals that came to mind when imagining the weapon in motion. So I'm really happy to see the "iconic" earthbreaker closer to my personal favorite depiction of the weapon(and one of my favorite pieces of Shoanti art too). :)


Jiggy wrote:
Ferocious Fighter wrote:
I was hoping for two Iconics today
Today's second iconic is that earthbreaker.

Well in that case I might actually just use an Iconic.


Aaron Scott 139 wrote:
Being Scottish I can say this is completely wrong and almost offensive. If anything I fly in to fits of indifference and that's why I can't be completely offended. Curse you indifference...eventually.

Meh.


Apathy Elemental wrote:
Aaron Scott 139 wrote:
Being Scottish I can say this is completely wrong and almost offensive. If anything I fly in to fits of indifference and that's why I can't be completely offended. Curse you indifference...eventually.
Meh.

Hey if you don't like it you should... oh forget it.


Aaron Scott 139 wrote:
Apathy Elemental wrote:
Aaron Scott 139 wrote:
Being Scottish I can say this is completely wrong and almost offensive. If anything I fly in to fits of indifference and that's why I can't be completely offended. Curse you indifference...eventually.
Meh.
Hey if you don't like it you should... oh forget it.

Kay.

Grand Lodge

Ferocious Fighter wrote:
I was hoping for two Iconics today to catch up but damn that's plenty.

As a serious response, it was noted previously that they 'jumped the gun' with one of the earlier releases, and are now on the intended schedule by having *air quotes* "skipped" a week, so that they finish up just before GenCon.

Someday I will get there.... someday.


Oh well alright then.


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Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

Does anybody else sail the good ship Croloch?


Yet another footless character.* With armour in all the wrong places. :(

* Actually, it looks like he has cloven feet in that picture.

The backstory is interesting. What was the precise sequence of events? Did he go amok from fear of his dreams, use his lightning-enhanced attack on the horses, which in turn caused the survivors to panic and trample half the hunting party?

And like others above, I was wondering why the Shoanti did not recognise Crowe's "condition".


Great story! Also, I think I'll call him Russel!

Silver Crusade

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Evan Tarlton wrote:
Does anybody else sail the good ship Croloch?

IT BEGINS


Mikaze wrote:
Evan Tarlton wrote:
Does anybody else sail the good ship Croloch?
IT BEGINS

Croloch for New Iconics OTP?


Bellona wrote:

Yet another footless character.* With armour in all the wrong places. :(

* Actually, it looks like he has cloven feet in that picture.

The backstory is interesting. What was the precise sequence of events? Did he go amok from fear of his dreams, use his lightning-enhanced attack on the horses, which in turn caused the survivors to panic and trample half the hunting party?

And like others above, I was wondering why the Shoanti did not recognise Crowe's "condition".

I think they did not recognize his condition because it is fundamentally different than Barbarians they are used to seeing. Instead of building himself up to a rage, or only blacking out when angry, Crowe just randomly beats people then "lies" about doing it.


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Mikaze wrote:
Evan Tarlton wrote:
Does anybody else sail the good ship Croloch?
IT BEGINS

Welp, looks like it's going to be totally Bara.

Silver Crusade

13 people marked this as a favorite.

Croloch:
So Crowe is still all torn up inside after what happened when he hooks up with this adventuring party to make his way off the Storval Plateau, and Oloch is one of the members. Crowe totally dislikes the guy because of typical Shoanti-orc racism and also because and because he resents how at peace the half-orc outwardly seems about his own violent nature. That and he can't help but notice how Oloch looks at him and turns his head away when Crowe spots him doing it, like he was baiting or challenging him or something. But Crowe shelves his misgivings as much as he can when Jirelle and Quinn make it clear that if they want in the group, they have to play nice.

Then they get into a nasty scrap with some monster or another and it sets off one of Crowe's blackout rages. He comes to and finds out the rest of the party is fine except Oloch, who nearly died in the process of non-lethally subduing the troubled young Shoanti. With Quinn and Jirelle making it clear that Crowe owes Oloch big time and his own new confusion over why the half-orc would help him, he slowly begins to question his own prejudices. And Oloch's motives. Especially when the half-orc goes right back to challenging him at every turn, testing Crowe's limits even as he keeps an eye out for the Shoanti's safety. Crowe eventually realizes he's also confused about exactly what he feels towards the half-orc.

The tension builds up slowly over time until it boils over one night, when what almost sparks a fight turns into something entirely different, revealing their mutual desires instead. Oloch's happy to have his suspicions confirmed. Crowe freaks out a bit. And what ensues is an awkward dance of push and pull as two young men with chips on their shoulders and something to prove try to sort out exactly what they are to each other now. And eventually both come to understand just how haunted the other is: Oloch and his doubts about his worth and purpose beyond violence being faced with someone he wants to protect, and Crowe with all his fear and shame nwo with someone who resolutely faces such things head on. And as they, sometimes unknowingly, help each other face their personal demons, they grow ever closer.

Also, Jirelle is a total yaoi fangirl and tries to play matchmaker the whole time. Quinn plays Team Dad and tries to get them to sort it out on their own.


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Mikaze wrote:
** spoiler omitted **...

Spoiler:

I asked James Jacobs about this.

Also, you are being summoned. We need to get the romance book made! ;)


Croloch:
The one problem I have with that is the fact that Oloch nonlethally subdued Crowe. Seems a bit OOC for the character that is basically CE in all but name.

And OOC is Serious Business.

Oh who am I kidding. It's s slashfic, carry on.


Croloch:
I imagine the awkwardness would heighten even more when Olochs big meaty hands start caressing the Crowes wounded body, channeling his healing magic into his muscles and soothing away his aches and pains.

Such big strong hands shouldn't be capable of evoking such tenderized pleasure...


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Croloch:
And then Crowe would look Oloch in the eyes... The beating heart, the thunder in his ears, reaching up to caress Oloch back... The softness of the half-orcs touch, the way their mouths get so tantalizingly close...


Mikaze wrote:
** spoiler omitted **...

Not a fan of yaoi because its normally handled like a train wreck. Thank you for handling it so well. The motivations for it made sense and I was happy to not get details worthy of fading to black (I prefer fade to black in all cases, no matter the content.)

Sovereign Court

1 person marked this as a favorite.

I've got to say this, be it artist's freedom or whatever...

This character has hooves. I really wish Wayne Reynolds would at some point draw characters with feet.


2 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Voltron64 wrote:
Mikaze wrote:
Evan Tarlton wrote:
Does anybody else sail the good ship Croloch?
IT BEGINS
Welp, looks like it's going to be totally Bara.

Given that we're basically talking about the union of two Brock Samsons... yes. Gloriously so. Gloriously.


3 people marked this as a favorite.

I wonder how people would react if the female iconics' threads were turned into lesbian slashfic. Anyone want to get on that particular social experiment?


Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Adam B. 135 wrote:
Mikaze wrote:
** spoiler omitted **...
Not a fan of yaoi because its normally handled like a train wreck. Thank you for handling it so well. The motivations for it made sense and I was happy to not get details worthy of fading to black (I prefer fade to black in all cases, no matter the content.)

Yeah, Mikaze's awesome. That's one reason why I'm looking forward to December's Belkzen book. And here I thought that the wait for August would be bad!

Also, for more Mikaze epicness....


Hmm, I can't say his backstory interests me much.

As a story, it's too "one note": storms make him crazy. Can't really feel a personality on him.

As an example character, it feels lacking because as great a plot device as blacking out without memory of what happened is, it's not too great for a player character because well player characters exist to be played by players. Either the GM has to take control of a player character at key movements, or the PC juggles 2 personalities and in character/out of character knowledge which is hard to recommend for a newcomer. It also doesn't really work when the other player characters aren't going to be experiencing them. I know its the Advanced Class Guide but...

PF has some nice backstorys for the iconics, but I got to say this one is lacking.


Ipslore the Red wrote:
I wonder how people would react if the female iconics' threads were turned into lesbian slashfic. Anyone want to get on that particular social experiment?

IIRC, the Pathfinder comics cross over into that territory at times. Particularly with Merisiel and Kyra.

I don't particularly care, personally. As long as it's treated well and doesn't cross certain lines, why be offended? It was even put in spoilers so you could freely ignore it, which means the only thing you have to complain about is something you had to make effort to even read.

Paizo Employee Developer

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An important distinction between the comics and slashfic is that in one of them we are the ones making the decisions on where to take our characters.

:)


1 person marked this as a favorite.

Pfft. You don't OWN characters, Mr. Daigle. Once you've released them to the public, they're everyone's.


Soluzar wrote:
Looking at his stats is says his bloodline is Elemental(Air). I think Stormborn would be a better fit if it were legal.

Where do you see his stats?

Dark Archive

Venziir wrote:
Soluzar wrote:
Looking at his stats is says his bloodline is Elemental(Air). I think Stormborn would be a better fit if it were legal.
Where do you see his stats?

Link for download


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And he did all that at first level. Also, when he uses his bloodrage the character has to leave the room while the GM takes over.

Sorta meh on this one. Great art though.


Feeling this one a bit more than Oloch, but Quinn is still far and away my favourite.


That's a very ...interesting backstory. I was curious as to why he worshipped Desna, but I can totally get it now. Seems he'd get along well with Amiri too.

I'm just noticing how many iconics are outcasts from their people and homes. Kudos to Paizo for keeping them so distinctive!

Croloch

Thoughts:
All the bara. All of it.

Dark Archive

1 person marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Adventure Path Subscriber

*quietly sets up a booth selling I am CroLOCHED T-shirts and waits*

Dark Archive

Crowe's pregen statblock shows his str jumping from 14 to 22(!) when raging. How's that work?


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That story evokes pretty much exactly the sort of party member I would never ever want to have around.

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