Sir Rekkart Cole

Beringer Paradox's page

3 posts. Alias of L33Fish.


Full Name

Beringer Paradox

Race

Human

Classes/Levels

Warrior 1/Oracle 1

Gender

Male

Size

Medium

Age

23

Special Abilities

Roll twice for initiative.

Alignment

Neutral Good

Deity

None

Languages

Common

Occupation

Soldier

Homepage URL

http://www.myth-weavers.com/sheetview.php?sheetid=958570

Strength 18
Dexterity 14
Constitution 12
Intelligence 10
Wisdom 8
Charisma 16

About Beringer Paradox

Beringer the Blind
Male Neutral Good Human Warrior 1/Oracle 1, Level 2, Init +8 (roll twice), HP 20/20, Speed 20
AC 18, Touch 12, Flat-footed 16, CMD 17, Fort +3, Ref +2, Will +1, CMB +5, Base Attack Bonus 1
Trip Horsechopper +5 (+7 Trip) (1d10+6, 20x3)
Cold Iron Warhammer +5 (1d8+4, 20x3)
Nonleathal Sap +5 (1d6+4, 20x2)
Chakrams +3 (1d8+4, 20x2)
Four-Mirror Armor (+6 Armor, +2 Dex)
Abilities Str 18, Dex 14, Con 12, Int 10, Wis 8, Cha 16
Condition None

Personality:
Kind and generous to the point where it seems as if he's trying to prove something, Beringer is friendly to all who he interacts with and quite openly atheistic.

Backstory:
Driven from his home village by superstitious villagers after the local priest was unable to cure his deteriorating vision, Beringer took refuge in an nearby town where he took on work as a mercenary, seeking to prove that he could help people without religion. Ironically, a mysterious, unknown deity saw his struggles and decided to grant him the power to cast spells. Was it a trickster god who delighted in the irony of an atheist wielding divine power, a good god who saw the opportunity to enact goodness on the mortal plane and maybe eventually get a convert, or was it yet another mysterious force beyond mortal comprehension? We may never know.

Goals:
Low Goals: Become a paragon of goodness without any religious pretenses, proving by example that religion is unnecessary for morality.
Med Goals: Discover the source of his divine powers. Perhaps found a republic of like-minded people in which religion is not given special treatment and people are free to choose what they worship within the limits of the law (no sacrifice of sentient races for example).
High Goals: Achieve equal status and power with the existing gods, granting power and guidance to those nonreligious people who wish to improve the world around them. Ultimately establish a relative level of equality between worshipers and non-worshipers both in life and in afterlife.