Aku Warashi's page

Organized Play Member. 516 posts (9,158 including aliases). No reviews. No lists. No wishlists. 3 Organized Play characters. 16 aliases.


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I'll also add later the name of the stuff you already discovered.


Stats: 3d6 ⇒ (5, 1, 2) = 8
Stats: 3d6 ⇒ (2, 3, 2) = 7
Stats: 3d6 ⇒ (1, 5, 4) = 10
Stats: 3d6 ⇒ (4, 6, 3) = 13
Stats: 3d6 ⇒ (1, 4, 4) = 9
Stats: 3d6 ⇒ (6, 1, 3) = 10

yep. Pt-buy for me as well.
I'll think of something and post it later.
Thanks for opportunity. :)


Dot


Vy Lai wrote:
Most of my characters are either level 10 or 11. Would you recommend I making level 1 characters?

Not really.

You should avoid creating alias for characters that are not into a game yet. While it’s good and fun to have an already prepared alias, most of the recruitment from games have rules of what the DM allow and don’t allow, and rarely will be the same as you used to create your hero.

To get started, I would recommend reading from the recruitment page, which are still recruiting players, find games that interest you, read the recruitment rules, create a concept/hero, and apply for it. Also, most of the games starts which post recruitments here start at level 1.

Also, Welcome to Paizo Forums and have fun. :)


Bear with me, rawr!


/rant on

Really, really, I’m kinda very upset with this game at the moment.
No matter what I do, no matter what happens, there’s always some reason to complain, there’s always something that is not don’t please someone.

If I give time to players RP and decide things to themselves, the game dies and no one posts, as I have to keep asking for RP post and decisions;
If I decide to railroad the players to move the game, I get a lot of complaints that I shouldn’t have done that, this, that I should let the players decide things.

If I do something out of ‘normal’ to make the game feel unique, I get a lot of rule advocates telling me what I can and can’t do.

Botton line: do you want to play the game or not? Because I’m fed up with all the complaint and back talk for no reason at all.
From the last months, all we have been doing is discussing rules and rolling dices instead of creating a history and enjoying the game. Can we change that, please?

/rant off


So,just to entertain the conversation:

You are considering that Ripping Gaze is an automatic Area attack, when nothing in the attack description says that.


    Ripping Gaze (Su)
    5d6 slashing damage, 30 feet, Fortitude DC 18 negates. A creature that succeeds on its save is immune to that hound’s gaze for 24 hours. Damage caused by a ripping gaze can be defeated by damage reduction, but it bypasses DR/magic and slashing. The save DC is Charisma-based.

Unless explicit worded, assuming it’s an area attack is a ruling you did as DM, I choose to use as single attack.
Raising the damage, DC, and others things: Well, you guys are pretty beefy, and holed in a place with several minions/monsters to help. Do you want me to put easy targets, so by the end of the day you can complain it’s too easy? And that there’s no challenge into the game?

--

Anyways,

I change things, I’m still going to change things.
I don’t see an occasion where I overdid and tpked, or let the party to failure.

--

And since we came to this, I'll ask once more. bigger, and easier to read.

STOP METAGAMING!

You know, going into the website and looking the monster atributes to decide how you'll play is metagame.


I see no problem with matching his current ability


ElenionAncalima wrote:
Spoiler'd for off-topic, but contains warning for using the sheet

Off Topic:

I've been using this character sheet to design my characters.

That excel file is too big and it takes times to load entirely.
When Dming I usually like to create simple crunchs for the enemies, and using the one I mentioned before wasn't really working.

I'll be careful with the things you mentioned, and thank you for allowing me to use it. :)


Well

I ended up not being able to provide a good submission and reworking the character I had in mind for the game will take a lost more effort than I initially thought.

For that, I’m dropping out.

Best luck for you all, and have lots of funs!


Interested.

I have a character I would like to play, and it might be a fit for the game.
I'll read the player's guide and see how can I adapt/change the background to fit the campaign.


Complicated day at work.
I’ll update later today, in a few hours.


Complicated day at work.
I’ll update later today, in a few hours.


No, look at the map, Cedric is in melee range.
If you look at the modification history, he was farther than 10ft before moving.

You cannot take a 5ft step, cast spells and then move again.


I've never played Start Wars even tho I love the series.

I would need some time to get used to the game but I'm interested.
For expedience sake, if allowed, I would use the character from the player that just dropped out, while I get familiar enough with the rules to create a character for myself.

When it's done, we could remove the Jedi and then introduce my character.

What do you think about it?


Interested.

Sent a PM.


@All

Okay guys
Before it turns into an issue in the future, let me address something:

I like game with more of a narrative feeling to it. I like history.
I’ve been loving what I’ve seen so far. <3

Everyone knows that I’m biased when we are talking about optimizations and builds.
So as your GM I’ll say:
No more combos, ability nitpicking or optimizations.
What already exists I won’t interfere, nor ask for changes or say anything about it.

That’s all, thanks! <3


@All

Okay guys
Before it turns into an issue in the future, let me address something:

I like game with more of a narrative feeling to it. I like history.
I’ve been loving what I’ve seen so far. <3

Everyone knows that I’m biased when we are talking about optimizations and builds.
So as your GM I’ll say:
No more combos, ability nitpicking or optimizations.
What already exists I won’t interfere, nor ask for changes or say anything about it.

That’s all, thanks! <3


Lord Cedric Barca wrote:
Cedric is spending his 3 actions to lay low bringing secrecy back to "0". He is recommending Agrippa has them recover to raise survivability.

This is the mentality I want to change. Cedric doesn't have tree actions, the organization has.

A proper way would be this:

Cedric is spending 3 of the organization actions to lay low bringing secrecy back to "0".

This gives Agrippa the chance to say something about how the organization resources are being used.


dotting for insterest.


Here is my partial application for a LN oracle.

Class: Oracle
Role: Partial Healer/Party face/Battle controller
Race: Human

Backstory:

'Prod and pull,' the old woman was saying, 'It’s the way of the King, as like the gods themselves.' She leaned to one side and spat, then brought a soiled cloth to her wrinkled lips. 'Three husbands and two sons I saw off to war.'

The fishergirl's eyes shone as she watched the column of mounted soldiers thunder past, and she only half listened to the hag standing beside her. The girl's breath had risen to the pace of the magnificent horses. She felt her face burning, a flush that had nothing to do with the heat. The day was dying, the sun's red smear over the trees on her right, and the sea's sighing against her face had grown cool.

'That was in the days of the Choral,' the hag continued. 'Pharasma roast the bastard's soul on a spit. But look on, lass. The King scatters bones with the best of them. Heh, They started with his house, didn't they, now?'

The fishergirl nodded faintly. As befitted the lowborn, they waited by the roadside, the old woman burdened beneath a rough sack filled with turnips, the girl with a heavy basket balanced on her head. Every minute or so the old woman shifted the sack from one bony shoulder to the other.

With the riders crowding them on the road and the ditch behind them a steep drop to broken rocks, she had no place to put down the sack.

'Scatters bones, I said. Bones of husbands, bones of sons, bones of wives and bones of daughters. All the same to them. All the same to the House Surtova.' The old woman spat a second time. 'Three husbands and two sons, ten coin apiece a year. Five of ten's fifty. Fifty coin a year's cold company, lass. Cold in winter, cold in bed.'

The fishergirl wiped dust from her forehead. Her bright eyes darted among the soldiers passing before her. The young men atop their highbacked saddles held expressions stern and fixed straight ahead. The few women who rode among them sat tall and somehow fiercer than the men. The sunset cast red glints from their helms, flashing so that the girl's eyes stung and her vision blurred.

'You're the fisherman's daughter,' the old woman said. 'I seen you afore on the road, and down on the strand. Seen you and your dad at market. Missing an arm, ain't he? More bones for their collection is likely, eh?' She made a chopping motion with one hand, then nodded. 'Mine's the first house on the track. I use the coin to buy candles. Five candles I burn every night, five candles to keep old Rigga company. It's a tired house, full of tired things and me one of them, lass. What you got in the basket there?'

Slowly the fishergirl realized that a question had been asked of her. She pulled her attention from the soldiers and smiled down at the old woman. 'I'm sorry,' she said, 'the horses are so loud.'

Rigga raised her voice. 'I asked what you got in your basket, lass?'

'Twine. Enough for three nets. We need to get one ready for tomorrow. Dadda lost his last one—something in the deep waters took it and a whole catch, too. Ilgrand Lender wants the money he loaned us and we need a catch tomorrow. A good one.' She smiled again and swept her gaze back to the soldiers. 'Isn't it wonderful?' she breathed.

Rigga's hand shot out and snagged the girl's thick black hair, yanked it hard.

The girl cried out. The basket on her head lurched, then slid down on to one shoulder. She grabbed frantically for it but it was too heavy. The basket struck the ground and split apart. 'Aaai!' the girl gasped, attempting to kneel. But Rigga pulled and snapped her head around.

'You listen to me, lass!' The old woman's sour breath hissed against the girl's face. ' Choral the usurper king has been grinding this land down for a hundred years, and now King Noleski does the same. You was born in it. I wasn't. When I was your age this was a country. We flew a banner and it was ours. We were free, lass.'

The girl was sickened by Rigga's breath. She squeezed shut her eyes.

'Mark this truth, child, else the Cloak of Lies blinds you for ever.'

Rigga's voice took on a droning cadence, and all at once the girl stiffened. Rigga, Riggalai the Seer, the wax-witch who trapped souls in candles and burned them. Souls devoured in flame—Rigga's words carried the chilling tone of prophecy. 'Mark this truth. I am the last to speak to you. You are the last to hear me. Thus are we linked, you and I, beyond all else.'

Rigga's fingers snagged tighter in the girl's hair. 'Across the stolen lands the Lord’s will drive their knife into virgin soil. The blood now will comes in a tide and it'll sweep you under, child, if you're not careful. They'll put a sword in your hand, they'll give you a fine horse, and they'll send you across those lands. But a shadow will embrace your soul. Now, listen! Bury this deep! Rigga will preserve you because we are linked, you and I. But it is all I can do, understand? Look to the Lord spawned in Darkness; his is the hand that shall free you, though he'll know it not—'

'What's this?' a voice bellowed.

Rigga swung to face the road. An outrider had slowed his mount. The Seer released the girl's hair.

The girl staggered back a step. A rock on the road's edge turned underfoot and she fell. When she looked up the outrider had trotted past.

Another thundered up in his wake.

'Leave the pretty one alone, hag,' this one growled, and as he rode by he leaned in his saddle and swung an open, gauntleted hand. The ironscaled glove cracked against Rigga's head, spinning her around. She toppled.

The fishergirl screamed as Rigga landed heavily across her thighs. A bead of crimson spit spattered her face. Whimpering the girl pushed herself back across the gravel, then used her feet to shove away Rigga's body. She climbed to her knees.

Something within Rigga's prophecy seemed lodged in the girl's head, heavy as a stone and hidden from light. She found she could not retrieve a single word the Seer had said. She reached out and grasped Rigga's woollen shawl. Carefully, she rolled the old woman over. Blood covered one side of Rigga's head, running down behind the ear. More blood smeared her lined chin and stained her mouth. The eyes stared sightlessly.

The fishergirl pulled back, unable to catch her breath. Desperate, she looked about. The column of soldiers had passed, leaving nothing but dust and the distant tremble of hoofs. Rigga's bag of turnips had spilled on to the road. Among the trampled vegetables lay five tallow candles.

The girl managed a ragged lungful of dusty air. Wiping her nose, she looked to her own basket.

'Never mind the candles,' she mumbled, in a thick, odd voice. 'They're gone, aren't they, now? just a scattering of bones. Never mind.' She crawled towards the bundles of twine that had fallen from the breached basket, and when she spoke again her voice was young, normal. 'We need the twine. We'll work all night and get one ready. Dadda's waiting. He's right at the door, he's looking up the track, he's waiting to see me.’

She stopped, a shiver running through her. The sun's light was almost gone. An unseasonal chill bled from the shadows, which now flowed like water across the road.

'Here it comes, then,' the girl grated softly, in a voice that wasn't her own.

A soft-gloved hand fell on her shoulder. She ducked down, cowering. 'Easy, girl,' said a man's voice. 'It's over. Nothing to be done for her now.'

The fishergirl looked up. A man swathed in black leaned over her, his face obscured beneath a hood's shadow. 'But he hit her,' the girl said, in child's voice. 'And we have nets to tie, me and Dadda—'

'Let's get you on your feet,' the man said, moving his long-fingered hands down under her arms. He straightened, lifting her effortlessly. Her sandalled feet dangled in the air before he set her down.

Now she saw a second man, shorter, also clothed in black. This one stood on the road and was turned away, his gaze in the direction the soldiers had gone. He spoke, his voice reed-thin. 'Wasn't much of a life,' he said, not turning to face her. 'A minor talent, long since dried up the Gift. Oh, she might have managed one more, but we'll never know will we?'

The fishergirl stumbled over to Rigga's bag and picked up a candle. She straightened, her eyes suddenly hard, then deliberately spat on to the road.

The shorter man's head snapped towards her. Within the hood seemed the shadows played alone.

The girl shrank back a step. 'It was a good life,' she whispered. 'She had these candles, you see. Five of them. Five for—'

'Necromancy,' the short man cut in.

The taller man, still at her side, said softly, 'I see them, child. I understand what they mean.'

The other man snorted. 'The witch harboured five frail, weak souls. Nothing grand.' He cocked his head. 'I can hear them now. Calling for her.'

Tears filled the girl's eyes. A wordless anguish seemed to well up from that black stone in her mind. She wiped her cheeks. 'Where did you come from?' she asked abruptly. 'We didn't see you on the road.'

The man beside her half turned to the gravel track. 'On the other side,' he said, a smile in his tone. 'Waiting, just like you.'

The other giggled. 'On the other side indeed.' He faced down the road again and raised his arms.

The girl drew in a sharp breath as darkness descended. A loud, tearing sound filled the air for a second, then the darkness dissipated and the girl's eyes widened.

Seven massive Hounds now sat around the man in the road. The eyes of these beasts glowed yellow, and all were turned in the same direction as the man himself.

She heard him hiss, 'Eager, are we? Then go.' Silently, the Hounds bolted down the road.

Their master turned and said to the man beside her, 'Something to gnaw on the King’s mind.' He giggled again.

'Must you complicate things?' the other answered wearily.

The short man stiffened. 'They are within sight of the column.'

He cocked his head. From up the road came the scream of horses.

He sighed. 'You've reached a decision, Cotillion?'

The other grunted amusedly. 'Using my name, Ammanas, means you've just decided for me. We can hardly leave her here now, can we?'

'Of course we can, old friend. just not breathing.'

Cotillion looked down on the girl. 'No,' he said quietly, she’ll do.'

The fishergirl bit her lip. Still clutching Rigga's candle, she took another step back, her wide eyes darting from one man to the other.

'Pity,' Ammanas said.

Cotillion seemed to nod, then he cleared his throat and said, 'It'll take time.'

An amused note entered Ammanas's reply. 'And have we time? True vengeance needs the slow, careful stalking of the victim. Have you forgotten the pain they once delivered us? The Brevoy’s back will be against the wall. They might not fall without our intervention. Where would be the satisfaction in that?'

Cotillion's response was cool and dry. 'You've always underestimated them. Hence our present circumstances… No.' He gestured at the fishergirl. 'We'll need this one. The Swordlord’s raised the ire of Moon's Spawn, and that's a hornet's nest if ever there was one. The timing is perfect.'

Faintly, above the screaming horses, came the shrieks of men and women, a sound that pierced the girl's heart. Her eyes darted to Rigga's motionless form on the roadside, then back to Ammanas, who now approached her. She thought to run but her legs had weakened to a helpless trembling. He came close and seemed to study her, even though the shadows within his hood remained impenetrable.

'A fishergirl?' he asked, in a kindly tone.

She nodded.

'Have you a name?'

'Enough!' Cotillion growled. 'She's not some mouse under your paw, Ammanas. Besides, I've chosen her and I will choose her name as well.'

Ammanas stepped back. 'Pity,' he said again.

The girl raised imploring hands. 'Please,' she begged Cotillion, 'I've done nothing! My father's a poor man, but he'll pay you all he can. He needs me, and the twine—he's waiting right now!' She felt herself go wet between her legs and quickly sat down on the ground. 'I've done nothing!' Shame rose through her and she put her hands in her lap.

'Please.'

'I've no choice any more, child,' Cotillion said. 'After all, you know our names.'

'I've never heard them before!' the girl cried.

The man sighed. "With what's happening up the road right now, well, you'd be questioned. Unpleasantly. There are those who know our names.'

'You see, lass,' Ammanas added, suppressing a giggle, 'we're not supposed to be here. There are names, and then there are names.' He swung to Cotillion and said, in a chilling voice, 'Her father must be dealt with. My Hounds?'

'No,' Cotillion said. 'He lives.'

'Then how?'

'I suspect,' Cotillion said, 'greed will suffice, once the slate is wiped clean.' Sarcasm filled his next words. 'I'm sure you can manage the sorcery in that, can't you?'

Ammanas giggled. 'Beware of shadows bearing gifts.'

Cotillion faced the girl again. He lifted his arms out to the sides. The shadows that held his features in darkness now flowed out around his body.

Ammanas spoke, and to the girl his words seemed to come from a great distance. 'She's ideal. They could never track her down, could never even so much as guess.' He raised his voice. 'It's not so bad a thing, lass, to be the pawn of a god.'

'Prod and pull,' the fishergirl said quickly.

Cotillion hesitated at her strange comment, then he shrugged. The shadows whirled out to engulf the girl. With their cold touch her mind fell away, down into darkness. Her last fleeting sensation was of the soft wax of the candle in her right hand, and how it seemed to well up between the fingers of her clenched fist

Character Introduction:

It was the eighth day of recruiting and Staff Sergeant Aragan sat blearyeyed behind his desk as yet another whelp was prodded forward by the corporal. They'd had some luck here in West Pool. Fishing's best in the backwaters, West Pool 's Captain had said. All they get around here is stories. Stories don't make you bleed. Stories don't make you go hungry, don't give you sore feet. When you're young and smelling of pigshit and convinced there ain't a weapon in all the damn world that's going to hurt you, all stories do is make you want to be part of them.

The old woman was right. As usual. These people had been under the boot so long they actually liked it. Well, Aragan thought, the education begins here.

It had been a bad day, with the local captain roaring off with three companies and leaving not one solid rumour in their wake about what was going on. And if that wasn't bad enough, the Lord's Inquisitor arrived from Restov not ten minutes later, using one of those eerie magical Gates to get here. Though he'd never seen her, just her name on the hot, dry wind was enough to give him the shakes. Mage killer, the scorpion in the Lord’s pocket.

Aragan scowled down at the writing tablet and waited until the corporal cleared his throat. Then he looked up.

The recruit standing before him took the staff sergeant aback. He opened his mouth, on his tongue a lashing tirade designed to send the young ones scampering. A second later he shut it again, the words unspoken. West Pool 's Captain had made her instructions abundantly clear: if they had two arms, two legs and a head, take them. The campaign was a mess. Fresh bodies were needed.
He grinned at the girl. She matched the Captain's description perfectly.

Still. 'All right, lass, you understand you're in line to join the Restov Marines, right?'

The girl nodded, her gaze steady and cool and fixed on Aragan.

The recruiter's expression tightened. Damn, she can't be more than twelve or thirteen. If this was my daughter…

What's got her eyes looking so bloody old? The last time he'd seen anything like them had been outside Gronzi Forest, on Sagava—he'd been marching through farmland hit by five years' drought and a war twice as long. Those old eyes were brought by hunger, or death. He scowled. 'What's your name, girl?'

'Am I in, then?' she asked quietly.

Aragan nodded, a sudden headache pounding against the inside of his skull. 'You'll get your assignment in a week's time, unless you got a preference.'

'Stolen lands campaign,' the girl answered immediately. 'Under the command of General Dujek Onearm. Onearm's Host.'

Aragan blinked. 'I'll make a note,' he said softly. 'Your name, soldier?'

'Sorry. My name is Sorry.'

Aragan jotted the name down on his tablet. 'Dismissed, soldier. The corporal will tell you where to go.' He looked up as she was near the door. 'And wash all that mud off your feet.' Aragan continued writing for a moment, then stopped. It hadn't rained in weeks. And the mud around here was half-way between green and grey, not dark red. He tossed down the stylus and massaged his temples. Well, at least the headache's fading.

==//==

High General Dujek marched back to Jack's side, his hard expression softened slightly with relief. From the trapdoor, voices rose in argument. 'They've arrived,' Dujek said. 'Giving your new recruit an earful about something—and don't tell me what because I don't want to know.'

Jack's momentary relief was shattered by what he only now realized was the secret hope that Sorry had deserted. So his men had found her after all, or she had found them. Either way, his veterans did not sound happy to see her. He couldn't blame them. Had she tried to kill Hubert? That seemed to be the suspicion of Ben and Alam.

Alam was doing most of the bellowing, putting more into his role as corporal than was warranted, and Dujek's searching glance at Jack was enough to push him towards the trap-door. He came to the edge and glared down into the room below. Everyone was there, standing in a menacing circle around Sorry, who leaned against the ladder as if bored by the whole proceedings.

'Quiet!' Jack roared down. 'Check your supplies and get up here, now!' He watched them scamper, then gave a satisfied nod and returned to where the High General waited.

Dujek was rubbing the stump of his left arm, frowning distractedly.

'Damn this weather,' he muttered.

'A healer could ease that,' Jack said.

'Not necessary,' Dujek replied. 'I'm just getting old.' He scratched his jaw. 'All of your heavy supplies have been delivered to the drop point. Ready to move, Sergeant?'

Jack eyed the ridged saddles on the horses, then nodded sharply.

They watched as the squad members emerged from the square doorway, each wearing a raincape and burdened with a heavy pack. Some were engaged in a whispering argument, casting a glare back at the barbarian who'd trodden on their heels. The barbarian had attached his entire collection of charms, trinkets and trophies to various parts of his burly body, looking like a bedecked leadwood tree during the Kanese of the Scorpions. The recruit, Sorry waiting at the horses. Her satchel was no bigger than a bedroll, and the raincape she wore was more like a cloak—not standard issue—reaching down to her ankles. She'd raised the hood. Despite the dawn's burgeoning light her face remained in shadow. This is all I have left. Jack sighed.

Dujek asked quietly, 'How is she doing, Sergeant?'

'Still breathing,' Jack replied stonily.

The High General slowly shook his head. 'So damn young these days . . .'

A memory returned to Jack as he considered Dujek's words.

On a brief attachment to the 5th, away from the siege at Pale, in the midst of the Sageva Campaign, Sorry had joined them from the new troops arriving at Nathilog. He'd watched her put a knife to three local mercenaries they'd taken prisoner in Greydog—ostensibly to glean information but, he recalled with a shudder, it had been nothing like that. Not an act of expedience. He had stared aghast, horrified, as Sorry set to work on their loins. He remembered meeting Alam's gaze, and the desperate gesture that sent the black man surging forward, knives bared. Alam had pushed past Sorry and with three quick motions had laid open the men's throats. And then came the moment that still twisted Jack's heart. In their last, frothing words, the mercenaries had blessed Alam.

Sorry had merely sheathed her weapon, then walked away.

Though the woman had been with the squad for two years, still his men called her a recruit, and they would probably do so until the day they died. There was a meaning there, and Jack understood it well. Recruits were not brothers. The stripping away of that label was an earned thing, a recognition brought by deeds. Sorry was a recruit because the thought of having her inextricably enfolded within the army burned like a hot knife in the throat of everyone in his squad. And that was something to which the sergeant himself was not immune.

As all of this flashed through Jack's thoughts, his usually impassive expression failed him. In his head, he replied: Young? No, you can forgive the young, you can answer their simple needs, and you can look in their eyes and find enough there that is recognizable. But her?

No. Best to avoid those eyes, in which there was nothing that was young—nothing at all.

'Let's get you moving, to Restov.' Dujek growled. 'Mount everyone up.' Without turning to Jack, the general said ”She may be ideal for the stolen lands. The Sword Lords are funding adventurers.”

The High General turned to say a few last words to the sergeant, but what he saw in Jack's face killed those words in his throat.

Recommendation Letter:

Memorandum for the Swordlords

Subject: Stolen Lands

1. I am privileged to write in support of one of our members, Corporal Sorry. Corporal Sorry was assigned to our campaign and has worked here for almost two years. During that time I have witnessed her tremendous growth and development. This development came not only in the area of combat arms, but in maturity and character as well.

2. Corporal Sorry arrived here as a trainee, eager to make her mark and expecting to make quick progress through the ranks. At first, she had difficulty accepting her place as a young, less experienced Soldier and resented the efforts of her superiors to further her training. But eventually, she learned the valuable trait of humility and enjoyed the opportunity to learn from her older peers and supervisors.

3. She quickly learned to manage her time, work in group situations under strict deadlines, and to recognize the importance of a strong work ethic, persistence, and integrity. She has become the most valuable and dependable member of our section and is a role model for newly assigned Soldiers.

4. I recommend Corporal Sorry to explore the Stolen Lands program with absolute confidence. She has made me proud, as her friend and supervisor, and I am sure will continue to do so as she grows in your care and beyond.

High General Dujek Onearm

I'll work in the character sheet and post it later today or tomorrow.


I've often though about this. D&D based games such as Neverwinter, Baldur's Gate, while being really good games, they aren't loyal to the d20 system itself. There are several modifications made, which for me makes the game lose a part of it's charm.

So, if you have the opportunity, what would you have or don't have in a d20 based computer game?


Well.
It went surprisingly well, all things considered.

My father, which was already at the hospital for some months passed away yesterday.
I have mixed feelings; I’m sad because he left, but I’m also happy because he isn’t suffering anymore.
That and the accident has been taking a toll on my mental and physical health. If you guys remember it’s the second motorbike accident in the last few months.

I was anticipating some problems with the insurance company, which thankfully never happened. The ceremony is done, the man is finally resting.

Thanks for your support and patience.

-Macézar

:O yep, that’s my name.


Well.
It went surprisingly well, all things considered.

My father, which was already at the hospital for some months passed away yesterday.
I have mixed feelings; I’m sad because he left, but I’m also happy because he isn’t suffering anymore.
That and the accident has been taking a toll on my mental and physical health. If you guys remember it’s the second motorbike accident in the last few months.

I was anticipating some problems with the insurance company, which thankfully never happened. The ceremony is done, the man is finally resting.

Thanks for your support and patience.

-Macézar

:O yep, that’s my name.


Well.
It went surprisingly well, all things considered.

My father, which was already at the hospital for some months passed away yesterday.
I have mixed feelings; I’m sad because he left, but I’m also happy because he isn’t suffering anymore.
That and the accident has been taking a toll on my mental and physical health. If you guys remember it’s the second motorbike accident in the last few months.

I was anticipating some problems with the insurance company, which thankfully never happened. The ceremony is done, the man is finally resting.

Thanks for your support and patience.

-Macézar

:O yep, that’s my name.


Well.
It went surprisingly well, all things considered.

My father, which was already at the hospital for some months, passed away yesterday.
I have mixed feelings; I’m sad because he left, but I’m also happy because he isn’t suffering anymore. That and the accident has been taking a toll on my mental and physical health. If you guys remember it’s the second motorbike accident in the last few months.

I was anticipating some problems with the insurance company, which thankfully never happened. The ceremony is done, the man is finally resting.

Thanks for your support and patience.

-Macézar

:O yep, that’s my name.


Okay.
I know this novella has been going on for quite a long time now.
I’m facing some issues which I don’t really feel like burdening you guys with. For now, I’ll be taking a time away from the boards until I can settle things, couple of days, week at maximum.

I apologize for the inconvenience once again :(


Okay.
I know this novella has been going on for quite a long time now.
I’m facing some issues which I don’t really feel like burdening you guys with. For now, I’ll be taking a time away from the boards until I can settle things, couple of days, week at maximum.

I apologize for the inconvenience once again :(


Okay.
I know this novella has been going on for quite a long time now.
I’m facing some issues which I don’t really feel like burdening you guys with. For now, I’ll be taking a time away from the boards until I can settle things, couple of days, week at maximum.

I apologize for the inconvenience once again :(


Okay.
I know this novella has been going on for quite a long time now.
I’m facing some issues which I don’t really feel like burdening you guys with. For now, I’ll be taking a time away from the boards until I can settle things, couple of days, week at maximum.

I apologize for the inconvenience once again :(


Okay.
I know this novella has been going on for quite a long time now.

I’m facing some issues which I don’t really feel like burdening you guys with. For now, I’ll be taking a time away from the boards until I can settle things, couple of days, week at maximum.

I apologize for the inconvenience once again :(


ELDRED CROFTER wrote:
Did I kill the witch? Did Cedric with his heavy crit drop his foe?

Mabbe...? :D


@Dresden Files

Yeah! I noticed even before you said anything!
I've read all of em!

I don't know the other tho. I'll give it a try.


@Lil

Don't forget that the money, as displayed there, don't take into account the amount guys will expend to refit the place for living and for security.

Traps are expensive as hell, and I think Argan wants to build/reform some of them.

That'll lower the overall money for each member of the party.


Interested as well.

Most likely playing a shaman.

I'll post a basic concept/crunch in some hours.


Hey,

I'm still not giving up, even tho I'll inactivate this thread.

I'll work on the history and happenings some more and then, open a new thread and invite other ppl.

I'll keep you guys updated, for any change.
Thanks for your patience.


Niles,

what about this crunch? If it's okay, I'll create the profile and update it there.

Link


Okay, don't worry. Let me see what I can get on this side. I'll invite a friend, I think.


Niles, what's our deadline?


@Andrei

You didn't noticed but... Hey, Aku here.

Also, GM Niles is Agrippa. :)


@Zayne.

No worries. Thanks for your time.

@Mela/Briccone

It’s been proving more challenging than I expected to run a homebrew game.
I own you guys for not being able to keep things up.
Anyway, things I need to know: Want to try it once more?


Hey, thanks for having me.

What do you think about the character I proposed?

Bec:

My full name is Becarus Delaurentis Corbin, but everybody calls me Bec. I’m a simple farm boy in a six-foot-six-inch, 250-pound frame! I’m not the sharpest tool in the shed, and I lack basic social skills and etiquette. But what I lack I make up for in brute strength and endurance. If there is heavy labor or a menial task to be done, I’m the man. Tasks that require finesse and dexterity, on the other hand, aren't my forte; I often break tools with my gnarled, powerful hands. Such duties are best left to others. Papa once asked me to shear a sheep, and the poor creature needed to be put down shortly thereafter! Ever since, I shy away from such delicate creatures.

Shortly after my 18th birthday, I joined the local militia. I enjoy taking orders, and have no desire to climb the ranks of leadership. Although not very skilled at wielding many weapons besides my spear, I make up for formal training with the strength of a bull. The militia taught me the basics of wearing and caring for armor, but I disdain most forms of armor. They are always tight in the chest and arms, and downright uncomfortable.

I’m boisterous, but prefer to use short sentences and simple words. Other folks often confuse me with fancy words and such. Often I feign understanding, and do my own thing anyway, One flex of a powerful arm, and they tend to leave me be. I’m naïve and trusting, and quite shy around pretty women.


Ouch, I did! Several days later, I think! Or I thought I did.


So, Niles, how this sounds?

My full name is Becarus Delaurentis Corbin, but everybody calls me Bec. I’m a simple farm boy in a six-foot-six-inch, 250-pound frame! I’m not the sharpest tool in the shed, and I lack basic social skills and etiquette. But what I lack I make up for in brute strength and endurance. If there is heavy labor or a menial task to be done, I’m the man. Tasks that require finesse and dexterity, on the other hand, aren't my forte; I often break tools with my gnarled, powerful hands. Such duties are best left to others. Papa once asked me to shear a sheep, and the poor creature needed to be put down shortly thereafter! Ever since, I shy away from such delicate creatures.

Shortly after my 18th birthday, I joined the local militia. I enjoy taking orders, and have no desire to climb the ranks of leadership. Although not very skilled at wielding many weapons besides my spear, I make up for formal training with the strength of a bull. The militia taught me the basics of wearing and caring for armor, but I disdain most forms of armor. They are always tight in the chest and arms, and downright uncomfortable.

I’m boisterous, but prefer to use short sentences and simple words. Other folks often confuse me with fancy words and such. Often I feign understanding, and do my own thing anyway, One flex of a powerful arm, and they tend to leave me be. I’m naïve and trusting, and quite shy around pretty women.

Edit: The background is from Dungeon Crawl Classics #0: Legends are Made, not Born, however I found it really cool and wanted to give it a try.


Humm

1st: 4d6 - 1 ⇒ (1, 3, 2, 2) - 1 = 7
2nd: 4d6 - 5 ⇒ (6, 6, 6, 5) - 5 = 18
3rd: 4d6 - 1 ⇒ (4, 3, 1, 5) - 1 = 12
4th: 4d6 - 3 ⇒ (3, 5, 3, 5) - 3 = 13
5th: 4d6 - 1 ⇒ (5, 1, 4, 1) - 1 = 10
6th: 4d6 - 1 ⇒ (1, 4, 4, 3) - 1 = 11

Haha, one good roll and them bleh! :D

I'll think of something.


While super interested in the game, I'm bowing out.

I’m somewhat bogged down with other things and I’ll not have time to complete my submission at the stipulated date.

Thanks for the opportunity DM.


While I'm still thinking about a concept, I've been trying to flesh out the character personality and history.

At this point, I all have is some backstory explaining why he is at Absalom, and some about his earlier life.

Backstory:
A sword for hire, mercenary, outlaw, of course none knew about the last bit or they wouldn’t have hired him to join the expedition to rescue the slaves. Only there were no more adults, just starving children.
Deed was done; they should arrive at Absalom the day after the next day.

Shortnose took the blood-stained shirt and pushed it beneath the collar of the leather yoke, stuffing it across the width of his collar bones where his skin had been worn away and things were looking raw. Someone had brought him the shirt, sopping wet and warm, but all that blood didn’t bother him much – he was already adding to it.

The wagon was heavy. Heavier now with children riding atop all the bundles of food. But for all their numbers, not as heavy as it should have been. That was because they were mostly starved down to bones. He didn’t like thinking about that. Back when he’d been a child he remembered hungry times, but every one of those times his da would come in with something for the runts, Shortnose the runtiest of them all. A scrap. Something to chew. And his ma, she’d go out with other mas and they’d be busy for a few days and nights and then she’d come back in, sometimes bruised, sometimes weeping, but she’d have money for the table, and that money turned into food. His da used to swear a lot those times she did that. But it was all down to feeding the runts. ‘My beautiful runts,’ his da liked saying. And then, years later, when the garrison had up and left town, suddenly Ma couldn’t get the money the way she used to, but she and Da were happier for all of that anyway.

Shortnose’s older brothers had all gone off by then, two of ’em to war and the other one to marry Widow Karas, who was ten years older than him and who Shortnose secretly loved with all his might, so it was probably a good thing he ran away when he did, since his brother wouldn’t have taken kindly to that trouble behind the barn with Karas drunk, or maybe not, and anyway it was all in good fun –

He noticed a boy walking beside him. Carrying a sack. His hands were bloody and he was licking them clean.
Brought me that shirt, did you? ‘Ain’t good, runt,’ he said. ‘Drinking blood.’

The boy frowned up at him, and went on with his licking until his hands were clean.

– and he’d heard later how one of his brothers got killed outside Nathilog and the other one came back with only one leg, and then the pensions came through and Ma and Da stopped having to struggle so, especially when Shortnose joined up himself and sent two-thirds of his pay back home; half of that went home to Da and Ma; the other third went to his brother and his wife, because he felt guilty about the baby and all.

Still, it wasn’t good being hungry so young, and starving was worst of all. His da used to say, ‘If ya can’t feed ’em, don’t have ’em. Caeden’s proud pole, it don’t take a genius to see that!’ It sure don’t, and that was why Shortnose kept paying for his runt, and he’d still be paying for it if it wasn’t for him being fired and made outlaw and deserter and all the other names the military came up with for not doing what they told you to do. By now, though, that runt would be old enough to work all on its own, so maybe his brother would have called off the bounty on his head. Maybe everything was all right by now, the dust settled and all.

It was nice to think so. But now he’d gone and fallen in love with Flashwit and Mayfly and wasn’t that silly, since there were two of them and only one of him.

Not that he saw that as a problem. But women could get funny about things like that. And lots of other things too, which was why they were so much trouble.

The hauler on his right stumbled. Shortnose reached down one-handed and lifted the woman back on to her feet. She gasped her thanks.

Now women. He could think about women all— ‘You’re Shortnose, aren’t ya?’

He glanced down at her. She was short, with big, strong-looking legs – now that was bad luck for her, wasn’t it? The one thing that made proper men drool turned out getting her yoked like a – like a – ‘Yah, that’s me.’

‘Been tryin to look, y’see?’

‘No.’

‘I heard you got the same ear bitten off twice.’

‘So?’

‘Well, er, how’s that possible?’

‘Don’t ask me. It was all Bredd’s fault.’

‘Bredd? Nefarias Bredd? You were fighting him?’

‘Might have been. Save your breath, sister. See this runt here? He ain’t saying a thing, cause he’s smart.’

‘It’s because he doesn’t understand Taldane.’

‘As good an excuse as any, I always say. Anyway, just keep pulling, and think about things you like to think about. To distract ya from all the bad stuff.’

‘What are you thinking about?’

‘Me? Women.’

‘Right,’ she said in a strangely cold tone. ‘So I guess I’ll think about handsome, clever men.’

He smiled down at her. ‘You don’t have to do that, lass – you got one walking right beside you.’

The boy went away and came back a short time later with some more cloth, which he gave to Shortnose so that he could stop his bleeding nose.

Like his da used to say, ‘There ain’t no figurin’ the ways of women.’ Too bad too. She was kinda pretty and, even better, she could swear the hide off a bison. Could there be a sexier combination? He didn’t think so.


Interested.

I'll think of something and post later today or tomorrow.


Dotting for interest.

Stats:

Str: 4d6 - 2 ⇒ (3, 4, 2, 6) - 2 = 13
Dex: 4d6 - 4 ⇒ (6, 4, 6, 5) - 4 = 17
Con: 4d6 - 1 ⇒ (5, 3, 1, 3) - 1 = 11
Int: 4d6 - 4 ⇒ (5, 6, 6, 4) - 4 = 17
Wis: 4d6 - 1 ⇒ (2, 4, 1, 5) - 1 = 11
Cha: 4d6 - 2 ⇒ (6, 4, 2, 6) - 2 = 16

Humm

I'll post a backstory and crunch tomorrow or sunday.


I’m finally free from university workload and I’ll resume a more consitent posting today/tomorrow.

I’m sorry for taking this long.

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