Pathfinder Society Scenario #21: The Eternal Obelisk (OGL) PDF (Retired)

2.50/5 (based on 8 ratings)

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A Pathfinder Society Scenario designed for 5th to 9th level characters (Tiers: 5–6 and 8–9).

When the Pathfinder-obsessed daughter of one Qadira's most powerful trade princes goes missing trying to impress the Society, her father angrily demands the Pathfinders track her down or face expulsion from Katheer. Tracking the missing princess leads you to an underground complex filled with traps, tricks, and a creature so powerful, she's lived for a thousand years. Can you save the princess and uncover the power of the Eternal Obelisk?

Written by C. Robert Brown

This scenario is designed for play in Pathfinder Society Organized Play, but can easily be adapted for use with any world. This scenario is compliant with the Open Game License (OGL) and is suitable for use with the 3.5 edition of the world’s most popular fantasy roleplaying game.

This scenario was retired from Pathfinder Society Organized Play on May 24, 2010. After May 24, 2010, it will no longer be legal for Pathfinder Society Organized Play and will no longer be available in the Pathfinder Society Organized Play reporting system.

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This product has been retired.

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PZOPSS0021E


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Average product rating:

2.50/5 (based on 8 ratings)

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Decent four-hour dungeon crawl

3/5

I enjoyed this scenario as both a player and a GM. It doesn't provide a lot of room for roleplay or problem solving, both of which can add nice variation within a dungeon crawl, but the scenario succeeds at what it sets out to do. I enjoyed some of the tactical situations the scenario presented, including a battle in a maze and one in a forest of statues. The scenario includes one encounter which I believe was incredibly overpowered, a relic of the imbalance in the 3.5 CR system, but my group managed to avoid a certain TPK by roleplaying the encounter, thanks to a generous GM. All in all, this is an average scenario with room for improvement, but it's far from the worst of the scenarios thus far.


Eternal Boredom

1/5

I could just copypaste the review I gave for Trouble With Secrets. This is practically the same; a nonexistant plot, boring combats, and absolutely no roleplaying moments.

If you like mindless dungeon crawls, this is for you.


Foreshadow club and the power of box text

2/5

My first complaint is the foreshadowing. Holy cow it is beating you over the head by the time you are a quarter of the way through. Second complaint is all encounters start the same way no matter how many precautions are taken. Maybe I'm just sore because we chose not to finish it, but the ending seemed a forgone conclusion. Don't go without a well balance group well inside the level tiers (in fact play DOWN). Some of the faction goals are impossible without very powerful resources.


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Now available!

RPG Superstar 2009 Top 32

Does a gorgon turn people look upon her to stone because she is so "ugly" or because she is so beautiful? :)

Spoiler:
Remember "Medusa" is the proper name of an individual.

Silver Crusade

Lord Fyre wrote:

Does a gorgon turn people look upon her to stone because she is so "ugly" or because she is so beautiful? :)

** spoiler omitted **

I wholeheartedly support this being the PF standard for medusae/medusas/medusases/medusaseses. I've been running them like that more or less since Tony DiTerlizzi's medusa pic in the 2nd Edition Monstrous Manual.

I am curious if the bit about the "long-lived creature" relates to the cover girl though. I was just about to ask what lifespan people usually went with for them and other iconic monsters.(I have them living longer than elves at the very least)

Unfortunately "gorgon" has already been swiped by those metal-plated moo-cows. I like those critters, but damn do I wish there was a way to divorce them from that name to free it up. "True Gorgon" just sounds awkward.

RPG Superstar 2009 Top 32

Mikaze wrote:
Unfortunately "gorgon" has already been swiped by those metal-plated moo-cows. I like those critters, but damn do I wish there was a way to divorce them from that name to free it up. "True Gorgon" just sounds awkward.

Spoiler:
We could call the metal plated Bovines "Gorgonzola"? Or, do I petrify with my cheesiness?

Lord Fyre wrote:

Does a gorgon turn people look upon her to stone because she is so "ugly" or because she is so beautiful? :)

** spoiler omitted **

This is something I've pondered and sometimes debated quite a bit. Even with the likes of Nick Logue.

Greek mythology is not clear, because different authors in different time periods represented Medusa (specifically) differently. Hideous in some writings, still beautiful in others.

Clearly in the later versions of the myth are a morality tale, concerning sex in the temple (of the virgin goddess Athena). The curse is just that- a curse. A punishment. The issue that comes up with RPGs is that the curse becomes a 'super-power', or rather a weapon. The advent of male medusae only waters down the curse element even more (as I'll decribe below).

I can think of no more apt punishment than to be always alone, which the gorgon is. She can take no lover, or at least be appreciated in the sight of one. The curse alienates her, and makes her a prisoner of her own appearance. When you add a male counter-part to the RPG race, that curse aspect is pretty much removed.

Of course, the Pathfinder campaign setting side-steps this entire, as the gorgons (or medusae if you will) are a damned race descended from a union between Lamashtu and a great snake.. or so the campaign myth goes.

RPG Superstar 2009 Top 32

Watcher wrote:
Lord Fyre wrote:

Does a gorgon turn people look upon her to stone because she is so "ugly" or because she is so beautiful? :)

** spoiler omitted **

Clearly in the later versions of the myth are a morality tale, concerning being raped in the temple (of the virgin goddess Athena). The curse is just that- a curse. A punishment. The issue that comes up with RPGs is that the curse becomes a 'super-power', or rather a weapon. The advent of male medusae only waters down the curse element even more (as I'll decribe below).

[Fixed, and ...]

What was Poseidon's punshiment, b.t.w.?

Spoiler:
As if I didn't already know. (Namely none, as he was much more powerful then Athena.) :)


Lord Fyre wrote:
Watcher wrote:
Lord Fyre wrote:

Does a gorgon turn people look upon her to stone because she is so "ugly" or because she is so beautiful? :)

** spoiler omitted **

Clearly in the later versions of the myth are a morality tale, concerning being raped in the temple (of the virgin goddess Athena). The curse is just that- a curse. A punishment. The issue that comes up with RPGs is that the curse becomes a 'super-power', or rather a weapon. The advent of male medusae only waters down the curse element even more (as I'll decribe below).

[Fixed, and ...]

What was Poseidon's punshiment, b.t.w.?
** spoiler omitted **

Err yes.

I was aware, but skipped over the sexist politics for the sake brevity in my post. I suppose I shouldn't have, but you're quite right.

I suppose that is why I am somewhat sympathatic towards Medusa.

However, Golarion's background side-steps that with a different origin story altogether.


I think that that's the danger of having monsters from myth and legend in a role-playing game; the cool thing about Medusa in the stories is that she's just one lady who's cursed and becomes monstrous (whether physically or spiritually or whatever). If you have Medusa as a race of creatures it loses its edge. Having a medusa as a one off baddy that the PCs meet on a specific adventure is way cooler, otherwise it's a bit like calling all winged horses Pegasus. Oh, wait a minute...


Running this tonight. Woot!

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