Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster Project!

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Today, we are pleased to reveal the Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster Project, four new hardcover rulebooks that offer a fresh entry point to the Pathfinder Second Edition roleplaying game! The first two books, Pathfinder Player Core and Pathfinder GM Core, release this November, with Pathfinder Monster Core (March 2024) and Pathfinder Player Core 2 (July 2024) completing the remastered presentation of Pathfinder’s core rules. The new rulebooks are compatible with existing Pathfinder Second Edition products, incorporating comprehensive errata and rules updates as well as some of the best additions from later books into new, easy-to-access volumes with streamlined presentations inspired by years of player feedback.


Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster Project


This year saw a huge explosion of new Pathfinder players. Remastered books like Pathfinder Player Core and Pathfinder GM Core improve upon the presentation of our popular Pathfinder Second Edition rules, remixing four years of updates and refinements to make the game easier to learn and more fun to play.


Pathfinder Player Core Cover Mock


In time, the Pathfinder Player Core, Pathfinder GM Core, Pathfinder Monster Core, and Pathfinder Player Core 2 will replace the Pathfinder Core Rulebook, Gamemastery Guide, Bestiary, and Advanced Player’s Guide, which Paizo will not reprint once their current print runs expire. Existing Pathfinder players should be assured that the core rules system remains the same, and the overwhelming majority of the rules themselves will not change. Your existing books are still valid. The newly formatted books consolidate key information in a unified place—for example, Pathfinder Player Core will collect all the important rules for each of its featured classes in one volume rather than spreading out key information between the Core Rulebook and the Advanced Player’s Guide.

The new core rulebooks will also serve as a new foundation for our publishing partners, transitioning the game away from the Open Game License that caused so much controversy earlier this year to the more stable and reliable Open RPG Creative (ORC) license, which is currently being finalized with the help of hundreds of independent RPG publishers. This transition will result in a few minor modifications to the Pathfinder Second Edition system, notably the removal of alignment and a small number of nostalgic creatures, spells, and magic items exclusive to the OGL. These elements remain a part of the corpus of Pathfinder Second Edition rules for those who still want them, and are fully compatible with the new remastered rules, but will not appear in future Pathfinder releases.


Pathfinder GM Core mock cover


In the meantime, Pathfinder’s remaining projects and product schedule remain as-is and compatible with the newly remastered rules. This July’s Rage of Elements hardcover, along with the Lost Omens campaign setting books and our regular monthly Adventure Path volumes, continue as planned, as does the Pathfinder Society Organized Play campaign, which will incorporate the new rules as they become available.

Learn more with our FAQ here or read it below

Is this a new edition of Pathfinder?

No. The Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster Project does not change the fundamental core system design of Pathfinder. Small improvements and cosmetic changes appear throughout, but outside of a few minor changes in terminology, the changes are not anywhere substantive enough to be considered a new edition. We like Pathfinder Second Edition. You like Pathfinder Second Edition. This is a remastered version of the original, not a new version altogether.

Are my existing Pathfinder Second Edition books now obsolete?

No. With the exception of a few minor variations in terminology and a slightly different mix of monsters, spells, and magic items, the rules remain largely unchanged. A pre-Remaster stat block, spell, monster, or adventure should work with the remastered rules without any problems.

What does this mean for my digital content?

Paizo is working with its digital partners to integrate new system updates in the most seamless way possible. The new rules will be uploaded to Archives of Nethys as usual, and legacy content that does not appear in the remastered books will not disappear from online rules.

We will not be updating PDFs of legacy products with the updated rules.

Will the Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster books be part of my ongoing Pathfinder Rulebooks subscription?

Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster books will be included in ongoing Pathfinder Rulebooks subscriptions. We are currently working on a method whereby existing subscribers will have the opportunity to “opt out” of these volumes if they wish and will provide additional details as we get closer to the release of the first two volumes.

What impact will the Second Edition Remaster have on Pathfinder Society Organized Play?

We are working closely with our Organized Play team to seamlessly integrate new rules options in the upcoming books as those books are released, as normal. In the rare case of a conflict between a new book and legacy source, campaign management will provide clear advice with as little disruption as possible to player characters or the campaign itself.

Will there be more Remastered Core books to come? What about Monster Core 2 or Player Core 3?

It’s very likely that we will continue to update and remaster the Bestiaries in the future, but for now we’re focusing on the four announced books as well as Paizo’s regular schedule of Pathfinder releases. Publishing 100% new material remains Paizo’s primary focus, and we look forward to upcoming releases like Pathfinder Rage of Elements, the Lost Omens Tian Xia World Guide and Character Guide, our monthly Adventure Path installments, and other exciting projects we have yet to announce.

Will the new Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster books have Special Editions?

Yes. We are looking into various exciting print options for these books and will post more information soon.

Will the new Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster books have Pocket Editions?

Yes. Pocket editions of the new books will appear roughly three months following the hardcover releases.

Will these changes impact the Starfinder Roleplaying Game?

Not yet.

How can I learn more about the Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster books?

To learn more about the Remaster books, check out our live stream chat about the announcement happening later today on Twitch. Beyond that, we’ll be making a handful of additional announcements in the coming days and weeks to showcase more about this exciting project, culminating in your first full look at the project during PaizoCon (May 26th–29th)!

More Paizo Blog.
Tags: Paizo Pathfinder Pathfinder Remaster Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Pathfinder Second Edition
1,451 to 1,500 of 1,704 << first < prev | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | next > last >>

5 people marked this as a favorite.

I think you should have to choose which personality matrix you use, between astrology, Meyers-Brigg, alignment, the new Beliefs rules, or a collection of meme alignment charts like the sandwich thing. Roll for it, then roll from the list you picked.


4 people marked this as a favorite.

There's a significant space between "5 scales, 16 categories" and "freeform". The whole point of RPGs is to have GMs interpretation fill the area where the situation isn't quantified by hard rules. If you feel like you need detailed rules for everything, well, there are a couple of ultra-simulationist systems out there, but fair warning, they're enjoyed by a very small, and rather specific, slice of the fanbase.


Pathfinder Rulebook Subscriber
GM DarkLightHitomi wrote:
That is starting to sound like the obligation system from the latest star wars system. You get benefits by accepting debts, responsibilities, etc.

I do not see how Edicts/Anathema's, given what we have been told, sounds anything like obligation.

Obligation is a purely narrative component of your character where each players takes a complication to their characters life (debt for your ship, favors owed to a gangster, poor moisture farmer family you send money to) and each session the GM rolls on a table of each players obligations to determine which one will attempt to negatively impact the session they are about play. You only gain the benefit of extra XP or money by taking ADDITIONAL Obligation.

Edicts/Anathema's is presented as a loose replacement for alignment that more closely resembles Virtues and Vices from WoD/CoD


4 people marked this as a favorite.

For what it's worth, I don't think I want a mechanical incentive for Beliefs. That's just not the kind of system PF2 is, and I don't think it would fit well here. Hero Points should remain a "gain one per hour"/GM discretion mechanic, and giving people an extra skill would just punish people who can't think of anything yet and encourage shallow, unenthusiastic beliefs. An extra Lore skill related to the Edict/Anathema might work, I suppose? At least there it offers a prompt. Maybe not a good prompt, though.

Community and Social Media Specialist

2 people marked this as a favorite.

Removed some harassment and quotes.


What is the plan in regards to Sin Magic and Runelords, as it is thematically closely tied to 7 of the 8 schools.


5 people marked this as a favorite.
moosher12 wrote:
What is the plan in regards to Sin Magic and Runelords, as it is thematically closely tied to 7 of the 8 schools.

Those will still be types of magic, but now they won't be tied down to those seven schools. Gluttony can focus on gluttony, rather than shoe-horning in irrelevant parts of necromancy.


QuidEst wrote:
Those will still be types of magic, but now they won't be tied down to those seven schools. Gluttony can focus on gluttony, rather than shoe-horning in irrelevant parts of necromancy.

I suppose that makes sense. Thank you for the answer.

Community and Social Media Specialist

Removed a bunch of off topic stuff. Those are threads that need to be spun off into their own topics.


2 people marked this as a favorite.
Temperans wrote:

Yeah its really not that difficult:

Good wants to help everyone and is self-less.
Neutral will not go out of their way to help or hurt someone.
Evil wants to hurt everyone else and is selfish.

Lawful wants things to be orderly and organized.
Neutral won't blindly follow laws but will not go out of their way to break them.
Chaotic wants things to be chaotic and free.

Someone having an anathema/edict of "always carries their clan dagger" tells me nothing about how the character behaves. It does tell me that they won't just give away their dagger. Someone "hunting the enemy of their people" does not tell me how they will act outside of being very patriotic or vengeful.

Alignment isn't just about the "why" but also the "how".

can help to remember the saying: "the roads to Hell are paved with good intentions"


^Yeah, now just imagine where the roads paved with evil intentions go . . . .


UnArcaneElection wrote:
^Yeah, now just imagine where the roads paved with evil intentions go . . . .

Assuming that alignment must always be logically balanced and mirrored left/right and down/up, clearly that road must go to Heaven, provided there is no law-chaos skew.

Liberty's Edge

UnArcaneElection wrote:
^Yeah, now just imagine where the roads paved with evil intentions go . . . .

Actually there were not enough of those to make more than barely discernable paths. They usually end up in the same place but they are outnumbered by the good ones aforementioned.


10 people marked this as a favorite.

I'd rather walk down the roads paved with pavement. Intentions make a notoriously poor building material.

1 to 50 of 1,704 << first < prev | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | next > last >>
Community / Forums / Pathfinder / Pathfinder Second Edition / General Discussion / Paizo Blog: Pathfinder Second Edition Remaster Project! All Messageboards

Want to post a reply? Sign in.