So I have a few pfs characters. I started playing pathfinder in the last couple weeks and I'm still learning. I have 3 sessions applied to one of my characters. The site says I can change that characters name until I post 10 times as him. Am I still allowed to change the characters name and keep the sessions applied to him? The pfs number is right for the individual character and everything. I haven't even decided what class I want the guy. I've just played as pregens the whole time.
I totally missed that day at monk training camp...
lol yeah I did. I've run into a new type of error in the book. It's written in first person and now sometimes the quotations aren't at the starting of dialogue, so you don't realize every time that it's said out loud. If the story wasn't good I would have trashed the hell out of the book and got a refund.
I have a question for you guys that have read any of the pathfinder tales books. Are they proofread? Like have you run into any with mistakes? I noticed maybe 1 or 2 in the previous 2 books but man....this new one is ridiculous. I'm reading a newer one called Bloodbound. It is full of grammatical errors and I'm not even a stickler for that. Stuff like "stilled prayed". It's a bunch of those kinds of things that are all over the book. Kinda feels like it was written on microsoft word and they just let word decide things, skipping an actual editor.
Disinterest washes over Crags face.
Crag comes back as if having been lost in thought for a while.
I been reading this pathfinder tales book called Liars Blade. lol it's pretty good half way through. I got it on amazon digitally for 11$ with the audio book that will play by itself or while you read if you want it to in the kindle app.
I am Crag Thunderfist. I was a sad wanderer when I first met your father. He witnessed me defend myself against some local thugs. He saw first hand the rage that had built up inside of me. I let it take control of my actions. He showed me the way to finding peace with my past. I studied his lectures every visit to the monastery over the years. I suppose he found common ground with me being one of the few that did not fit in with the people in that land, but I am grateful no matter the reason.
|