Enter the Land of Shadows!

Friday, April 13, 2018

Between the devil-bound nation of Cheliax and the storied realm of Varisia festers a land enveloped in gloom, where 10,000 years of obeisance to a fell god have warped the people and landscape into shadowy horrors beyond recognition.

Welcome, then, to Nidal.

In Pathfinder Campaign Setting: Nidal, Land of Shadows, we draw back the curtain for the first time on this theocracy dedicated to Zon-Kuthon, god of darkness and pain.

The book includes a stunningly detailed look into Nidalese history and daily life, both in the nation's oppressive cities and in rural villages, where keeping the appearance of absolute dedication to the Kuthite religion is a matter of life and death. This book also reveals new details about how, 10,000 years ago, Nidal's leaders made the pact that placed the nation in eternal servitude to the evil Midnight Lord. A gazetteer of the entire land, detailed threats in the gloom, and a shudder-inducing bestiary round out this book's offerings.

There's a lot to be proud of in this book, and foremost on that list for me are the absolutely stellar authors on this project.

I'm so pleased to say that all of the lore and gazetteer information in Nidal, Land of Shadows was written by Liane Merciel, the author who brought you the incredible novels Nightglass and Nightblade. Those novels provided bone-chilling glimpses into the stark wickedness of Kuthite life, and Liane did an incredible job building those details into a rich, nuanced, and horrific world for Game Masters and players to explore. Some of the most memorable creatures and set pieces from the novels—Joyful Things, anyone?—are now fully integrated into the Pathfinder RPG.

Continuing the list of first-rate authors, the book's foreboding adventure sites were written by none other than Lyz Liddell, a Paizo editor who is as conscientious and thoughtful a writer as she is incisive and affecting. Lyz did a great job creating and expanding locations that range from an underground hub of Desnan resistance to a stronghold of rogue kytons to a certain tower where a tapestry of living flesh is not the most horrifying thing inside.

In the book's bestiary, our author list continues to shine. For this stark task, we pulled on board Ron Lundeen and Mark Moreland, two of Paizo's own developers. Mark's work, in truly fine form, includes the monster write-up for the Joyful Thing mentioned above, and I think it turned out spectacularly creepy and atmospheric. Additionally, I'm so pleased to say that Ron, whose new monsters in this book include a gristly new kyton, joined our team in the office shortly after completing this assignment—one of many reasons why this book is quite special.

There's so much to say about Nidal, Land of Shadows that I'm going to leave further discussion of it for another blog. For now, take a look at this beautiful opening piece from the second chapter!

Illustration by Federico Musetti

Amanda Hamon Kunz
Development Coordinator

More Paizo Blog.
Tags: Federico Musetti Pathfinder Campaign Setting

Wow.. that image is stunning! Really looking forward to reading this one! :D

Contributor

I've always wanted to know more about Nidal, definitely picking this up in the near future!

Silver Crusade

Nice!

Scarab Sages

1 person marked this as a favorite.

Friday the 13th is perfect timing for this entry.


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Excellent choice in getting Liane to write the lore. Those novels were a terrific introduction to Nidal and it will no doubt help the consistency/vision of the nation to have that continuity.

I'm also looking forward to seeing Lyz's creative work. No doubt I've already read some but 'who did what' isn't always so obvious from the outside (so kudos for showing us a glimpse behind the curtain, Amanda!)

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Adventure Path Subscriber

Looking forward to this! Wondering if the Joyful Ones are going to be a template...

Grand Lodge

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Steve Geddes wrote:
I'm also looking forward to seeing Lyz's creative work. No doubt I've already read some but 'who did what' isn't always so obvious from the outside (so kudos for showing us a glimpse behind the curtain, Amanda!)

Hey, thanks, Steve! I hope you enjoy it—I certainly had a blast putting it together. Nidal is one of my favorite places in the setting, and Liane was fantastic to work with. (Really, all the best ideas are hers!)

The Exchange

What a beautiful image. Nidal is my favorite Golarion country and Liane one of my favorite Pathfinder tales writers. So I'm really happy that she did write the lore for this book and I really expect this book to even surpass the awesomeness that was the latest Qadira book (my third favorite Golarion country, second still being Varisia).


It'sLyz wrote:
Steve Geddes wrote:
I'm also looking forward to seeing Lyz's creative work. No doubt I've already read some but 'who did what' isn't always so obvious from the outside (so kudos for showing us a glimpse behind the curtain, Amanda!)
Hey, thanks, Steve! I hope you enjoy it—I certainly had a blast putting it together. Nidal is one of my favorite places in the setting, and Liane was fantastic to work with. (Really, all the best ideas are hers!)

I don’t want to get off on the wrong foot and start arguing with you immediately, but I heard you speak at Paizocon; I’m willing to bet you contributed a fair slab of great ideas too. :)


4 people marked this as a favorite.

There should be a word for: “the feeling when one writes to an editor and chooses to use a semicolon”.

Paizo Employee Franchise Manager

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Steve Geddes wrote:
There should be a word for: “the feeling when one writes to an editor and chooses to use a semicolon”.

The term you're looking for is "existential dread"


Nidal... why'd it have to be Nidal?

Shudder


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Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

Just finished Nightglass fantastic book and I am looking forwards to read more of this land


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plassteel wrote:
Just finished Nightglass fantastic book and I am looking forwards to read more of this land

The sequel, Nightblade, is equally good.

Silver Crusade

1 person marked this as a favorite.
Steve Geddes wrote:
plassteel wrote:
Just finished Nightglass fantastic book and I am looking forwards to read more of this land
The sequel, Nightblade, is equally good.

Can vouch for both, they're awesome.

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