Pathfinder Player Companion: Faiths & Philosophies (PFRPG)

3.50/5 (based on 4 ratings)
Pathfinder Player Companion: Faiths & Philosophies (PFRPG)
Show Description For:
Non-Mint

Add Print Edition $12.99 $6.49

Add PDF $9.99

Non-Mint Unavailable

Facebook Twitter Email

There’s more to faith than simply choosing a god. In the Pathfinder campaign setting, dozens of different religions, traditions, and philosophies war for people’s hearts and minds—sometimes with reasoned arguments, and sometimes with bloodied swords. Whether as a servant of a powerful deity, a devotee of a world-shaping philosophy, or a zealous atheist, it’s time to claim the power of your convictions with this guide to devotion—religious or otherwise.

Beliefs are nothing without champions. With Pathfinder Player Companion: Faiths & Philosophies, characters of every class can make their convictions work for them. Inside this book, you’ll find:

  • Detailed overviews of Golarion’s more esoteric spiritual traditions, from druidism and atheism to juju and pantheism, all with new rules to customize your character’s mechanics, from the arcane healer bard archetype to the juju oracle mystery.
  • New honor point systems for groups like the righteous Knights of Ozem, the mercantile Prophets of Kalistrade, and the terrifying Red Mantis assassins.
  • A new system of meditation feats to help characters of any class unleash their greatest potential in battle.
  • New traits tied to your character’s spiritual and philosophical views.
  • Information on codes of honor, false and deceased gods, monasticism, religious schisms, and philosophies for all manner of irreligious characters!
  • New inquisitions to help purge nonbelievers, druid domains to help you draw power from your totem spirit, feats to help atheists defy the gods, spells and magic items usable by characters of any class and philosophy, and more!

Written by Savannah Broadway, Paris Crenshaw, Neall Raemonn Price, David Ross, Owen K.C. Stephens, and James L. Sutter.
Cover Art by Ben Wootten.

This Pathfinder Player Companion is intended for use with the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, but can easily be incorporated into any fantasy world. Each monthly 32-page Pathfinder Player Companion contains several player-focused articles exploring the volume’s theme as well as short articles with innovative new rules for all types of characters, as well as traits to better anchor the player to the campaign.

ISBN-13: 978-1-60125-543-3

Other Resources: This product is also available on the following platforms:

Hero Lab Online
Fantasy Grounds Virtual Tabletop
Archives of Nethys

Product Availability

Print Edition:

Available now

Ships from our warehouse in 11 to 20 business days.

PDF:

Fulfilled immediately.

Non-Mint:

Unavailable

This product is non-mint. Refunds are not available for non-mint products. The standard version of this product can be found here.

Are there errors or omissions in this product information? Got corrections? Let us know at store@paizo.com.

PZO9436


See Also:

Average product rating:

3.50/5 (based on 4 ratings)

Sign in to create or edit a product review.

Fills a neglected niche

4/5

Read my full review at Of Dice and Pen.

I’m really glad that a book like this exists as I often wish Pathfinder Player Companion and Pathfinder Campaign Setting volumes would include just a little bit more of what daily life is like in the world. I do wish Faiths & Philosophies could go into quite a bit more detail, in fact. It offers a tantalizing glimpse at the belief structures of the world, but since a lot of space has to be devoted to new traits, feats, archetypes, and more, it can really do nothing more than brush the surface of these things. Nonetheless, it does provide just enough information to inspire players designing characters and gamemasters designing campaigns. For that, if nothing else, it’s well worth it. And some of those new mechanical options are quite interesting.


Deity: NONE

4/5

All right, the old character creation question: which god does the PC worship? Usually, the answer is BOOZE AND SEX, sorry, Cayden Cailean. But sometimes, the answer is ...

... one of the many choices presented in this book. Atheism, theism, pantheism, totemism, philosophy, false gods, schismatic sects ... the list is long, and everything gets a little loving.

The diversity is this book strength, but also a weakness - it's very likely that you'll use just a small part of it. While other Companion books are broadly useful to anybody invested in one particular topic, this one is somewhat all over the place due to its' nature.

All in all, a great thing to have on your bookshelf if you're aware of it's highly situational usefulness.


I'm not sure I get it

2/5

As much as it does seem to hit the mark, it likewise seems to not just as often. Perhaps Philosophies of the Unfaithful might have been a more appropriate name, as that's what it mostly seems to hit up on.

I see that Paizo also couldn't resisted focusing on the Bard as one of the big four classes covered, but this time I really just don't get it. Why would they focus on Bards, or Monks for that matter, in a book specifically about religions (and anti-religions) and philosophical/spiritual orders?

Typical of many of the Player's Guides, it tends me leave me feeling "that's it?", wishing that certain areas where expanded more, particularly beyond the already published material or flavor, but just not going far enough into the subject. Less Player's Guide material and more almost a brief summary of multiple topics. F&P goes along the same route, retreading Razmiran and Rahadoum without going too much further into other "atheists". I kind of felt the Feats in the particular section are pretty heavy handed. Not entirely sure it's a good idea to undermine some classes main features so strongly. SR 11+ Level for 2 Feats, even if only against Divine and most Outsiders is kind of ridiculous, A feat that can make a Cleric or Paladin doubt themselves and maybe force them to actively Save from even spells they cast on themselves, likewise not cool. Back to Evil getting the good toys.

We have a PFS legal Juju thing, but it's pretty watered down, kind of a Oracle flavored to be a druid/shaman, or a Voodoo analogue.

I'm curious about the point or intent of the centerfold portion. It seems to me an attempt to mock some real world sorts of things, except well in game, it's pretty much entirely correct. Bubblers and Liespinners (Razmiran, most non-divine healing and "cures", and similar things are generally very evil, or at best neutral). There's exceptions, but they generally ARE uncommon exceptions. Atheists and Deniers pretty much are ignorant and blind, but also notably intentionally "bad guys" in the setting (Rahadoum and Razmiran obviously, but the Whispering Way and the River Kingdoms as well).

Spells and Items, in my opinion where kind of "meh". I wished for some more info on Pantheonism, especially the much needed mechanics for it for non-Oracles divine characters, as well as a look at some new, not rehashed Faiths and Philosophies, and religious schisms.


Good but not wonderful

4/5

Faiths and Pantheons does a good job of accomplishing what it set out to do. It is a good mix of fluff and crunch. Most of the material is new and it makes a great deal of sense to reprint the bits that I've seen before.

The book is primarily aimed at enriching the backgrounds of those characters for whom religion or philosophy is a major focus (including those characters who dislike or despise the Gods). The book will be useful if you have a particular concept in mind and want to know where you might come from. It is useful if you want to know how the rest of the world tends to view your character. It is useful in giving mechanical suggestions on how to build a character.

Mechanically, the book has lots of new material and some reprinted material (lots of traits I`ve seen before). The material is usually very flavorful and is the usual mix of mechanically weak and mechanically sound options. None are overpowered which I personally think to be a VERY good thing.

Mechanically, my favourite by far is the Juju Oracle Mystery. While similar to the older one it has been altered somewhat in a good way. This one is even legal in PFS. I`m definitely going to be creating one of these for my next character

But there are a lot of other options that I`d at least consider using, especially with a new character. And some of the background fluff will be applied to existing characters to make them a little richer and a little better tied to the world.

I`d like to give this 3.5 stars. The Juju Oracle causes me to raise that to 4 stars.


151 to 175 of 175 << first < prev | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | next > last >>

To me, Atheism in Golarion means you don't deny the gods' existence, you just don't think they're at all reliable or worth it.


James Sutter wrote:

While we could spin a beautiful web of metaphysical arguments trying to rationalize... the fact is that this we messed up. Somehow, all of us involved in the product thought that pantheism meant belief in a pantheon (damn you, Greek roots!). After all, if you look up "pantheism" on the internet, you find things like Hinduism, which clearly have many gods...

So yeah--turns out, we're game designers interested in religion, but not experts. Polytheism (or something else entirely) would have been the correct term. Apologies to all the theologists out there!

Fair enough. Thanks for the response.

Also, nice word play in your final sentence. :) (For those who missed his joke, the proper word for a student of theology is theologian, not theologist.)


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Voltron64 wrote:
To me, Atheism in Golarion means you don't deny the gods' existence, you just don't think they're at all reliable or worth it.

And judging by this book, the developers agree with you. It outright says that in Golarion, atheism usually means that you believe that those referred to as "gods" are not worthy of the authority or reverence bestowed on them by others. They rarely doubt the existence of deities, they acknowledge that deities are powerful, but no more.


Quandary wrote:
I would guess that real-world historical religious concepts just don't apply in a world where "Gods" are just really powerful beings that hand out powers to loyal followers. "Belief" plays a minor role in Golarion Religion, existence of Gods is not controversial or in dispute by anybody, religion is more about allegiance and fealty. Your real-word definition of Pantheism is just provably un-true in Golarion, as Clerics can only receive powers from Deities, not concepts or the universe as a whole, so there just isn't an all-encompassing "God", not in the sense of "God" as that term is used in Golarion. People may have their theories of the world and universe as a whole, but they aren't going to conflate that up with "Gods" because "Gods" are specific, real beings. In other words, when the status of "Gods" differs from real world to Golarion, words based on constructions of "Gods"/theo- will function according to the context of "Gods" relevant for that world, not based on world where "Gods" has a wholly different relevance and context.

I've been thinking a lot about your post. First, let me get this out of the way: I agree that all of the facts support your view. There's no question that pantheonic polytheistic theology is the truth in Golarion.

The thing is, even though gods work differently in Golarion than on Earth, human beings are still human beings. As a species, we have a strong ability to believe things even if the facts don't support us (and, in fact, even if they contradict us). I don't want to start giving real world examples of this for fear of taking this thread off-topic, but if you can't think of any yourself you can either take my word for it or we can have an off-topic discussion someplace else. The "Fallen and False Deities" section of this book may be my favourite part of it, for this very reason. People persevere at believing weird stuff, even if there's plenty of evidence that their beliefs are incorrect. I think pantheism is a lot less weird on Golarion than a lot of things that have been proven true (in that context), and I think that as a belief system it could certainly have followers.

For example, a Golarion pantheist might say, "Of course I believe that Desna is God. And Abadar is God. And you are God, and I am God, and that tree is God, and that rock is God, and that ship is God." I'm not saying that this system of beliefs would be rewarded by access to the cleric class necessarily; I'm just saying that I can see people believing it regardless.


Dumb question time, does this book say anything about non-evil worshippers or worship of evil gods? For instance, do some people make offerings to Lamashtu to convince her to turn her monsters aside from their path when they travel, or maybe offer a chicken or the like to Urgathoa to ask her to not sicken them with plague, and so forth?


tbug wrote:

I've been thinking a lot about your post. First, let me get this out of the way: I agree that all of the facts support your view. There's no question that pantheonic polytheistic theology is the truth in Golarion.

I think pantheism is a lot less weird on Golarion than a lot of things that have been proven true (in that context), and I think that as a belief system it could certainly have followers... I'm not saying that this system of beliefs would be rewarded by access to the cleric class necessarily; I'm just saying that I can see people believing it regardless.

Great post, I had been wishing that I was clearer in my post that some sort of philosophy akin to 'realworld pantheism' is certainly wholly plausible within Golarion. I guess my stance on it was more that it is just a philosophy, not something which describes an actually unique relationship to Gods... And in a world where Gods are real, words constructed from God/Theo* might reasonably be used in a more objective manner to describe one's stance re: Gods in specific, rather than using God/Theo as a stand in for existential philosophical issues. Golarion Pantheist philosophy really has no need to be constrained to Deities or even the "Divine" per se, and probably isn't - see Kami, for example.

What it comes down to is why do these words exist? To distinguish one concept from another, i.e. pantheism vs. monotheism. Real-world Monotheist worshippers are of course aware that other people worship other gods, they just choose not to worship them as well, i.e. they "believe" a different existential world-view, and/or DON'T believe other world-views, although this need not always be symmetrical (one culture/religion can include the God of another but with a different context). In Golarion, worship of different deities, either exclusively or as pantheons (which is rather common as a lay practice, even if Cleric powers must derive from just one Deity) just isn't so indicative of existential understandings of the universe, even if different schools of thought there may certainly exist. Of course, having real actual Gods handing out Divine Spells, and Pharasma sending souls on to another plane, means your common man's NEEDS are easily met by actual Gods, and abstract existential theories are just less relevant... And these philosophical questions in fact may even be ones that the Gods themselves are not sure of...

Liberty's Edge

1 person marked this as a favorite.
Starfinder Superscriber
tbug wrote:
James Sutter wrote:
Apologies to all the theologists out there!
Also, nice word play in your final sentence. :) (For those who missed his joke, the proper word for a student of theology is theologian, not theologist.)

Oh... I thought Apologies was the pun....

Silver Crusade

Eric Hinkle wrote:
Dumb question time, does this book say anything about non-evil worshippers or worship of evil gods? For instance, do some people make offerings to Lamashtu to convince her to turn her monsters aside from their path when they travel, or maybe offer a chicken or the like to Urgathoa to ask her to not sicken them with plague, and so forth?

I'd be interested in this, as well. But not so much the casual worshipers you describe, who kiss up to a god for short time in hopes of favors, but in terms of actual clerics, inquisitors, etc of evil gods, where the worshiper is neutral aligned. This type of thing is legal, and actually crops up in PFS, so I'd be curious about how it's supposed to work.

I don't know about anyone else, but I just have a hard time accepting a neutral worshiper of Rovagug or Lamashtu. Asmodeus, on the other hand, works well for LN patriotic Chelaxians.

Senior Editor/Fiction Editor

1 person marked this as a favorite.
rknop wrote:
tbug wrote:
James Sutter wrote:
Apologies to all the theologists out there!
Also, nice word play in your final sentence. :) (For those who missed his joke, the proper word for a student of theology is theologian, not theologist.)
Oh... I thought Apologies was the pun....

Half the work of being a writer is getting the reader to do the other half of your job for you. :D


James Sutter wrote:
Patrick Renie wrote:
ThatEvilGuy wrote:
Whoever wrote the Iomedaen religious propaganda pamphlet is my hero.
I believe you have the ever-talented and hilarious James Sutter to thank for that gem. :]
That was one of the most fun things I've written recently! Wes, Patrick, and I all got excited about doing what's essentially a Golarion version of a Chick Tract, and I'm really glad they let me write it. :D

I should have known that my hero was going to be a Frog.

Liberty's Edge

I just picked this up from my local gaming store and I am really curious about the numerous gods mentioned in the pantheons section. Any pointers on where more information on those individual gods can be found? The page mentions the Race Companions for Dwarven and Elven gods, but some of the other pantheons are likely more esoteric in their sources. I'm particularly interested in whether the Vudrani deities have been looked at in more detail in other products.


@Dungeonginger
The data on the gods is scattered across many books, but Pathfinder-Campaign-Setting-Inner-Sea-Gods-Hardcover collects the data into one book for the most part, though it's not released yet.

if you want the info now go here.

Liberty's Edge

Thanks!
It seems the Vudrani are merely mentioned somewhere in Pathfinder#9 Curse of the Crimson Throne. I didn't see any articles on them.
And I am quite interested for Inner Sea Gods to come out! I should probably let that be the next hardcopy Hardcover I order from the Friendly Local.

Silver Crusade

I looked over the thread here, didn't see an answer, but what "bird" is selectable for the Animal Ally feat?

Silver Crusade

Nevermind, found what I was looking for! :D

Dark Archive

Probably the 'bird (eagle/hawk/owl)' listing under the Druid companions list on Core book p. 53.


With regard to the earlier pantheism / polytheism issue, it wasn't much of an error. Frequently a religion with many gods, such as Hinduism, may regard them as aspects of a greater entity, sometimes ultimately all are one. This is a matter of level of analysis, meaning personal and daily versus theoretical and ultimate.
Some religions with no gods, such as Buddhism, may incorporate saints, which upon examination turn out to be earlier gods who converted to Buddhism. Gods can go downhill too. But they're still in the game.
Some religions with only one god, such as Catholicism, may have a multitude of saints which are prayed to, and which to a polytheist, look pretty much like gods. Monotheism may not be much from different from polytheism in practice.
Of course, the biggest dump is when the old daily gods get turned into devils and demons in a conquering or dominant religion's view of things.

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

Will Paizo one day fix the pantheism/polytheism mistake? I already get headache from people using terms and/or philosophical concepts wrong, like how people commonly use nihilism incorrectly(they usually use it to refer to destructive psychopaths for some reason :P It just a belief in that things don't have inherent objective value.), but when there is whole section that keeps using one obvious mistake over and over... Yeah, I suppose it isn't THAT big deal since everyone knows it wrong now, but yeah, I have this nagging feeling back in my head screaming "WROOONG". Comes with being a huge geek I guess


Vic Wertz wrote:
Announced! Product image is a mockup, and will change prior to publication.

This is a good strategy.


CorvusMask wrote:
Will Paizo one day fix the pantheism/polytheism mistake? I already get headache from people using terms and/or philosophical concepts wrong, like how people commonly use nihilism incorrectly(they usually use it to refer to destructive psychopaths for some reason :P It just a belief in that things don't have inherent objective value.), but when there is whole section that keeps using one obvious mistake over and over... Yeah, I suppose it isn't THAT big deal since everyone knows it wrong now, but yeah, I have this nagging feeling back in my head screaming "WROOONG". Comes with being a huge geek I guess

Pantheism is the worship of all the gods in a pantheon, right?

Polytheism is the worship of many gods, but not necessarily all of them. The Hindus in India is a good example of both. Hinduism is polytheism, while the Grecco-Roman Religion is a great example of Pantheism.

Incidentally, the "Greeks" worshipped their Ancestors. Their pantheism is nothing more than Ancestor worship. It says so, in their records. :)

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
EltonJ wrote:
CorvusMask wrote:
Will Paizo one day fix the pantheism/polytheism mistake? I already get headache from people using terms and/or philosophical concepts wrong, like how people commonly use nihilism incorrectly(they usually use it to refer to destructive psychopaths for some reason :P It just a belief in that things don't have inherent objective value.), but when there is whole section that keeps using one obvious mistake over and over... Yeah, I suppose it isn't THAT big deal since everyone knows it wrong now, but yeah, I have this nagging feeling back in my head screaming "WROOONG". Comes with being a huge geek I guess

Pantheism is the worship of all the gods in a pantheon, right?

Polytheism is the worship of many gods, but not necessarily all of them. The Hindus in India is a good example of both. Hinduism is polytheism, while the Grecco-Roman Religion is a great example of Pantheism.

Incidentally, the "Greeks" worshipped their Ancestors. Their pantheism is nothing more than Ancestor worship. It says so, in their records. :)

Umm, no. "pan" doesn't come from pantheon, it comes from "all". pantheism means that EVERYTHING is in the universe is part of the god. Scratch that, more like everything in existance IS the god.

BTW, pantheon literally translated means "temple of all gods" :P Its name of particular temple in Rome

Grand Lodge

Michael Brock wrote:

As an FYI, in the next update to Additional Resources, the Vulture domain in Faiths & Philosophies will be changed from Agent of Rebirth to the following:

At 8th level, the druid can cast an extended air walk spell as a spell-like ability once per day.

Michael, I know it's been 4 years, but I noticed this post and couldn't help but notice there was no update to the resources page about this. Has this been changed?

Liberty's Edge

Mike is no longer the Organized Play Coordinator you should start a new thread in the PFS forums and maybe point back to his post here.

Grand Lodge

graywulfe wrote:

Mike is no longer the Organized Play Coordinator you should start a new thread in the PFS forums and maybe point back to his post here.

Ah, thanks for the heads-up.

Grand Lodge

moot point anyway, found where it was located, I was looking in the wrong document.

151 to 175 of 175 << first < prev | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | next > last >>
Community / Forums / Paizo / Product Discussion / Pathfinder Player Companion: Faiths & Philosophies (PFRPG) All Messageboards

Want to post a reply? Sign in.