The Godsrain Prophecies Part Ten

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Despite my apprehension at reading about the deaths of so many of Golarion’s gods and my continuing belief that these Godsrain Prophecies cannot be taken at their word, I still feel a bit wistful about reaching the end of my analysis. While it is certainly possible that there are other prophecies in this vein, this is the last that I will read before delivering the collection to my Lady.

I am not sure why I feel so hesitant to put this work aside. Of course, there is something satisfying about feeling like you are a part of important research, even if the experience of it is less than pleasant. (I think here of those who have documented the beliefs of faiths that are somewhat more difficult to understand, as in To Scream Is Divine: My Year at a Nidalese Temple and its somewhat more uneven follow-up, Kuthite Lullabies.) Beyond that, though, I believe I will miss the gods themselves—or at least the insights into them that these texts have given me, even when I don’t believe a word that I am reading.

After reviewing the entirety of the Godsrain Prophecies, I am confident in one thing and one thing only: that the author has been made privy, whether through prophecy or otherwise, to the fact that one of Golarion’s gods will die. The preoccupation with the subject of a dead god, accuracy of some of the smaller details, and feeling of anticipation throughout are compelling evidence in favor of my theory. With all the contradictions and confusions in the text, though, I do not believe that the author knows which god, how they die, or why.

Unfortunately, this is where my certainty ends, as there are several different reasons why the author may have taken this information and used it to create the prophecies. It is possible that they feared what might happen and wrote these prophecies as a warning, attempting to prevent the dangers they dreamed up. It is also possible that they hope the death will be a destabilizing event, and that they intended for these prophecies to weaken faith and trust in the gods, making them easier to abandon in the aftermath of a catastrophe. There is no way to know, as I will admit to my Lady; I hope that in her wisdom, she can discern the truth.

If nothing else, as with all futures, only time will tell.

–Yivali




The “Death” of Rovagug

The chant starts as a whisper—an idle piece of pillow talk on nights Sarenrae cannot sleep, her fingertips gone marching on the canvas that is Shelyn’s back, her hands casting surging shadows onto Desna’s resting arm. She weaves a tale of how to win the battle that she hungers for, imagining alliances that span across the Great Beyond and speaking life to victory until the passion of her dream becomes a shared ambition. All three lovers make mention of it, idly, to those who share their interests, pitched in a tone and timbre meant to echo in the listener’s chest. The message drums with nostalgia tinged with rage and thirst for justice long delayed, and it is passed along from ear to ear until it finally circles back, a call to action with the deadly urgency of war.

Imprisonment is not enough. Rovagug must die.

There are more gods now than there were when Rovagug was sealed away, and many sign up for the quest to kill the Great Destroyer, to stand alongside Abadar and Gozreh and Calistria. Some do so to show their mettle, some to gather bragging rights, and some to reassure themselves that if there is something to gain, they won’t leave empty-handed. Sarenrae worries, privately, that many do not understand the danger they’ve signed up for, but she takes the names and notes the skills and hands the roles out all the same—rear guard to those who fear but fight, support for those who dwell in hope, melee for those who want to feel the blood beneath their fingers.

At first, it seems too easy. Asmodeus unlocks the seal that leads into the Dead Vault and gods pour through in something like a line. Wrackworms turn from feasting on the Rough Beast’s flesh to face them, but fall to sword and spell and scythe as if they were an afterthought, slicking the ground around themselves with remnants of their dying. After the cheers and murmurs fade, a gnawing silence fills the air, thick and dank and hungry, and for a moment, no one moves, a huddled mass of godhood waiting for something to happen.

Then Rovagug is everywhere—suddenly, impossibly. Rending, clawing, tearing open, shoveling exalted flesh into his waiting mouths. Apsu’s wing is torn asunder. Hei Feng’s feathers fall like rain. Grandmother Spider holds her own, her arms a whirling blur of blades, but watches as Thamir falls still, body crushed beneath a claw, and Hanspur drowns a second time, awash in his own blood. But Rovagug, despite his power, cannot overcome them all, and soon the tide of battle changes, rattling the prison’s walls as gods press their advantages, slamming his body side to side—an endless, rhythmic dying.

With each impact on the Dead Vault’s walls, Golarion is shaken. Buildings tumble into streets. Rivers shift to find new banks. Old trees flatten forests. Volcanoes long thought dormant, from Taldor to the Five Kings Mountains, spit dense ash into the sky, blanketing the life around them and blocking out the sun. The Eye of Abendego expands twofold, turning the Mwangi Expanse into newly Sodden Lands. When Rovagug is finally still, Sarenrae standing by his head with her arms held high in victory, the gods emerge from the Dead Vault to find a world that thinks the end has come.

After all the dead are mourned, no one agrees on what comes next. The aftermath grows tense and bitter, victory turned vicious. With Rovagug no threat to them, godly alliances feel heavier, a burden to be shrugged off or set down and ignored. How to rebuild a ruined land becomes the stuff of smaller wars—Abadar feuds with Erastil, Irori shuns Iomedae, Sarenrae feels the weight of blame hurled at her from every corner, and Norgorber sides with anyone who might advance his cause. But while they bicker here and now, the gods may yet unite again, as deep in Avistani soil, disturbed by distant tremors, the worst of Rovagug’s spawn have felt their prison falter and ready for destruction that would make their sire proud.

An array of 20 portraits depicting the gods of the Pathfinder setting. Asmodeus, Cayden Cailean, Desna, Erastil, Irori, Nethys, Pharasma, Rovagug, Urgathoa, and Zon-Kuthon’s portraits have been marked “safe.”

While imprisoned, Rovagug maintains the peace between the gods, but in his absence, what prevents war between the immortals?





That is certainly one way to end things. If I am being honest, the idea of Rovagug trapped within the bowels of Golarion has always made me a bit nervous, but it seems it may be better than the alternative! Which gives me one final idea as to why these prophecies exist—perhaps they argue against change and tell those who read them that, even for those gods whom you might fear or hate, the status quo is better than anything new that you might long for—a desperate version of a wish that, no matter what they have seen coming, it would be best for things to continue as they are. Sadly for the author, change, I believe, is inevitable. I hope only that we are ready and that we meet it, heads held high and wings outstretched, however and whenever it comes.


Don’t miss our exciting livestream on Tuesday, April 16 at 4:00 PM Pacific at twitch.tv/officialpaizo, where members of the Pathfinder team will announce who among the remaining deities is the unfortunate victim presaged in these prophecies. In addition to revealing which major deity is going to die in the War of Immortals event, we’ll also lay out the entire slate of War of Immortals tie-in products coming in the second half of 2024. Make your final predictions and join us in just under a week.

About the Author

Erin Roberts has been thrilled to be able to contribute a few small threads to the fabric of Golarion in the pages of books like Lost Omens Firebrands, Lost Omens Highhelm, and Lost Omens Travel Guide. In addition to her work for Paizo, she freelances across the TTRPG world (and was selected as a Diana Jones Award Emerging Designer Program Winner in 2023), has had fiction published in magazines including Asimov’s, Clarkesworld, and The Dark, and talks about writing every week on the Writing Excuses podcast. Catch up with her latest at linktr.ee/erinroberts.

More Paizo Blog.
Tags: The Godsrain Prophecies Pathfinder Pathfinder Remaster Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Web Fiction
251 to 269 of 269 << first < prev | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | next > last >>

So, is this an appropriate place to speculate about what'll be in the Godsrain Prophecies ebook?


2 people marked this as a favorite.

It's not the pick I'd have gone with, but it's also just a game. Yeesh.

Personally I'm interested to see what happens to Gorum's armor...it's one of the more iconic things about him and it seems like something along those lines could be a neat artifact.


4 people marked this as a favorite.

Saloc, The Minder of Immortals, is the psychopomp usher that handles dead gods and their cases in Pharasma's court.

Saloc is about to be VERY busy.


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Calliope5431 wrote:
Personally I'm interested to see what happens to Gorum's armor...it's one of the more iconic things about him and it seems like something along those lines could be a neat artifact.

I figure it'll end up sharded. Bits and pieces falling here and there...


6 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Vee8 wrote:

Saloc, The Minder of Immortals, is the psychopomp usher that handles dead gods and their cases in Pharasma's court.

Saloc is about to be VERY busy.

Saloc: "Ah, this is a pretty cushy gig, might get someone every couple of centuries, maybe a false alarm and... WTF!!!"


6 people marked this as a favorite.
Cole Deschain wrote:
Calliope5431 wrote:
Personally I'm interested to see what happens to Gorum's armor...it's one of the more iconic things about him and it seems like something along those lines could be a neat artifact.
I figure it'll end up sharded. Bits and pieces falling here and there...

I'm hoping that "gorumite" goes from meaning a worshiper of Gorum to the name the material his armor is made out of, and we can craft weapons and armor out of it.

Liberty's Edge

4 people marked this as a favorite.
Vee8 wrote:

Saloc, The Minder of Immortals, is the psychopomp usher that handles dead gods and their cases in Pharasma's court.

Saloc is about to be VERY busy.

A great job opportunity brought to us by Pharasma :

Have you always dreamed to play a crucial role in the fate of reality ? To have a say in the destiny of the powerful and mysterious ?

Join our dedicated deific judgement team. Great perks all around and Saloc is a terrific manager.

It is a time of opportunities in the Boneyard. Seize your chance and inform your friends and relations because we have jobs for them too. Our needs are great, with no end in sight.

Daemons need not apply.


2 people marked this as a favorite.
Earlier, I wrote:
Ice9004 wrote:
Going to make a last ditch guess and say Gorum as there haven't been any large scale wars in the Lost Omens setting since the start of 2e.

You just reminded me that given that since some of the Godsrain Prophecies have resulted in that thing that the dead deity represented running out of control, Gorum would be the perfect candidate for kicking off a grand war by kicking off.

Called it.

And I can see the potential for (as others have posted above) the followers of Gorum to be the least distressed by Gorum's death (compared to the followers of any other slain deity, such as Aroden), especially since war obviously doesn't stop.


Pathfinder Lost Omens, Rulebook Subscriber
Leliel the 12th wrote:
Sibelius Eos Owm wrote:
CorvusMask wrote:
I'm fine with this if Gorum's church's reaction isn't despair or "time to find new god" but "Time for glorious final battle!" as they become empowered by god giblets raining down

I don't know. I think it would be okay if some Gorumites find the loss too great to bear. Certainly, a joining the righteous war to end all righteous wars would be the most fitting (and I mean, Aroden's church did that, too, at least those who were already within distance of the Worldwound), but it strikes me that Gorum's faith might have an inordinately high proportion of, "I have nothing and need nothing so long as I have a sword in my hand and Gorum to witness the glory of my next victory."

Losing something when you through you had nothing else to lose might fairly cause some BSoD, is what I'm saying--even if the general reaction of his followers is as you say.

I'd be fine too - I'm just focusing on the operative word of "some."

I'd prefer the majority just going "BLOOD FOR GORUM! VENGEANCE FOR THE FALLEN GOD!" and simply charge in the direction of his murderers, probably with new deific backing, because while Gorum was a jerk he was their jerk.

And...actually, brainwave. Having lost everything it was possible to lose and then some, suddenly finding yourself lost utterly, knowing someone specifically took something you loved from you...

I think I know why Arazni suddenly has a lot more prominence.

Ooooh, I wonder if we have a case like Kingfisher's Saint of Swords storyline, where a bunch of divine berserkers lose their god and have to control their own madness.


I'm just going to say, they revealed a living sword deity, and it looks oddly close to Gorum's sword....


4 people marked this as a favorite.
Pronate11 wrote:
I'm just going to say, they revealed a living sword deity, and it looks oddly close to Gorum's sword....

Gorum: (dies)

Gorum's Sword: (ascends to godhood from long association and godsblood)
Gorum's Sword: Revenge!
Arazni: Oh, hi there. Aren't you a cutie?


2 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Sanityfaerie wrote:
Pronate11 wrote:
I'm just going to say, they revealed a living sword deity, and it looks oddly close to Gorum's sword....

Gorum: (dies)

Gorum's Sword: (ascends to godhood from long association and godsblood)
Gorum's Sword: Revenge!
Arazni: Oh, hi there. Aren't you a cutie?

GS: "Sorry, dear, you're not my type. Unless you want to spec over to greatswords?"


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Wei Ji the Learner wrote:
Sanityfaerie wrote:
Pronate11 wrote:
I'm just going to say, they revealed a living sword deity, and it looks oddly close to Gorum's sword....

Gorum: (dies)

Gorum's Sword: (ascends to godhood from long association and godsblood)
Gorum's Sword: Revenge!
Arazni: Oh, hi there. Aren't you a cutie?

GS: "Sorry, dear, you're not my type. Unless you want to spec over to greatswords?"

Arazni: "I could be convinced."


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

Plenty of magical swords over the history of fantasy literature have reshaped themselves, and if there's an outright sword-deity, I'd be willing to bet it can embody all sorts of sharp and pointies.


Cole Deschain wrote:
Plenty of magical swords over the history of fantasy literature have reshaped themselves, and if there's an outright sword-deity, I'd be willing to bet it can embody all sorts of sharp and pointies.

Yeah... but I'm betting that Gorum's sword has pride. It's a deity in its own right, after all. It could... but it won't.

Liberty's Edge

Pronate11 wrote:
I'm just going to say, they revealed a living sword deity, and it looks oddly close to Gorum's sword....

Isn't Gorum's sword broken and its blade protruding from the forehead of Szuriel's mount ?


2 people marked this as a favorite.
The Raven Black wrote:
Pronate11 wrote:
I'm just going to say, they revealed a living sword deity, and it looks oddly close to Gorum's sword....
Isn't Gorum's sword broken and its blade protruding from the forehead of Szuriel's mount ?

Grace of the Flame, the Red Horse, has been depicted with a blade for a horn since at least as far back as 2017. It's possible this is a different blade, but I'm not sure how likely Gorum's giant great sword is for fitting on an extra large horse.

...

On that note, even if Zjar Tovan has no personal connection to Gorum, introducing a living weapon god of battle while killing the living armour god of battle is a pretty clever way for at least some of Gorum's followers to carry on through the fallout of the Godsrain.


I didn't know the Apocalypse Horses had names. That's cool.

251 to 269 of 269 << first < prev | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | next > last >>
Community / Forums / Pathfinder / Pathfinder Second Edition / General Discussion / Paizo Blog: The Godsrain Prophecies Part Ten All Messageboards

Want to post a reply? Sign in.