Pathfinder Society Scenario #8-20: Torrent's Last Will (PFRPG) PDF

4.40/5 (based on 7 ratings)

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A Pathfinder Society Scenario designed for levels 7-11.

On the Plane of Water, familiar sights grow on impossible scales, from monumental swaths of kelp to utterly titanic sea creatures. The Society has traced a powerful relic to a tremendous shell adrift within a miles-wide swarm of giant jellyfish, and with the help of new allies, the PCs might recover it. They had best beware, though, for the Plane of Water is home to sahuagin and worse that are not eager to welcome intruders.

Content in Torrent's Last Will also contributes directly to the ongoing storyline of the Dark Archive faction.

Written by Cole Kronewitter.

Note: This product is part of the Pathfinder Society Scenario Subscription.

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4.40/5 (based on 7 ratings)

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Patience is a Virtue

4/5

NO SPOILERS

I played Torrent's Last Will recently with my half-orc paladin, Trokkus, via play-by-post. The scenario is a sequel to # 8-19 (Treacherous Waves), and although playing that one first isn't required, I'd definitely recommend it as they flow together quite naturally. I enjoyed Torrent's Last Will, but it's definitely a scenario on the long and complicated side, and probably not the right choice for beginners.

I should call out the interior artwork, which is great.

SPOILERS!:

The backstory to Torrent's Last Will is interesting, but also really dense and complicated, with a dozen proper nouns and lots of to-ing and fro-ing. I'm not saying it's 1990s X-Men complicated, but I'm still not going to try to summarise it here. Suffice it to say, on the Elemental Plane of Water, there's an ancient temple carved out of a giant nautilus shell, and that shell contains an artifact that the Pathfinder Society would like to get its greedy little hands on. The mission briefer is pretty cool: an undine Pathfinder named Zahra. In Vialesk (a city on the plane), Zahra explains that the Pathfinder Society has learned about the temple and artifact but that a bloodthirsty band of sahuagin led by a Baron Zemdar have taken up residence there and need to be ousted so the Society can explore the location. Zahra has assembled an expedition to help ferry the PCs to the temple (as it's a three-week swim!) with the help of a local brine dragon named Razethka. But what neither Zahra nor the PCs know at this point is that Razethka can't be trusted, and secretly wants the temple for himself!

The entirety of the scenario takes place underwater, but PCs aren't left to their own devices. They're provided with daily renewals of water breathing, transportation (strapped to the back of sharks!), and can even borrow underwater-specific weapons from the Vialesk city guard. There's definitely a bit of hand-holding going on here, though some builds may still struggle. I do like the scenario's concise and helpful summary of how underwater combat works, even if fighting in three dimensions is still complex.

The lengthy journey to the temple is hand-waved, with the first encounter occurring when the expedition arrives. The PCs need to overcome Baron Zemdar and several other sahuagin who have sallied forth to do battle in the middle of the Lambent Bloom, a miles-wild field of jellyfish. The battle here isn't a simple one: in addition to the complexity of underwater combat rules, there's a tide effect that pulls PCs multiple squares in one round before pushing them away in the next, and the jellyfish squares can poison PCs, requiring multiple saves in a round. The players and the GM need to be patient, as this won't be an encounter that's over quickly. However, the added mechanics create some fun situations.

The rest of the scenario takes place in the Great Shell, as the PCs explore its ten chambers room-by-room. Monster encounters include coral golems and a bizarre humanoid comprised of a swarm of eels (a galvo). The scenario expects do-gooder PCs (as opposed to the more mercenary inclinations of early PFS), and there are lots of little rituals and other tasks PCs can perform to cleanse various chambers of evil (and haunts). The group accumulate "Judgment Points" for these acts, and these points tie into the reaction of a angelic being called a monadic deva that has been charged with protecting the artifact contained with the temple: a crystal decanter called The Breath of Lysianassa. I may be making this all sound kind of random, but that's only because I'm moving relatively quickly: there's plenty of backstory to support and enrich all of this.

As they're on their way out of the temple, the brine dragon Razethka springs his ambush, aided by some tough sahuagin and sharks. I personally have an awesome memory of the encounter, because my PC turned out to be the only melee combatant in the group and had to stand toe-to-toe with a brine dragon as the other PCs buffed and healed him--it was epic, and and great redemption for Trokkus after a terrible performance against an umbral dragon in a previous scenario. But looking at the encounter objectively, there's a real issue with the map. The spiralling nature of the Great Shell looks really neat, but it makes the encounter a nightmare to run as there are loads of grid squares that are truncated (curving walls are the bane of grid-based combat). The narrow hallways, weird coral walls (you can sort of see through them and maybe destroy them), and uncertain "ceiling" heights (in a three-dimensional environment) make for a really clunky encounter--especially with so many foes present. Although I really enjoyed the encounter, it took us ages to resolve. In other words: don't try to cram this scenario into a fixed convention slot!

I do want to give a quick bit of praise for how the scenario handles the hostages that Razethka has taken and brought to the scene of the battle. The scenario is fair but pulls no punches, allowing them (including Zahra) to be killed if the PCs don't act quickly enough. I hate "plot invulnerability", so this was a good choice.

All in all, Torrent's Last Will is a solid scenario, best played on a long weekend afternoon with an experienced group that's in no hurry to finish.


Exciting and brutal: can you survive the perils of the seas?

5/5

The Plane of Water is an interesting place to venture to. The abundance of water will have an impact on combat, but it also offers unique environmental effects and locations in general. This scenario makes good use of the location. The mechanics have an impact on combat, but also helps players prepare for this.

You are basically tasked to go to a giant shell and do the standard pathfinder routine of explore, document and loot while being respectful. That last portion is very important and you will require not only some specific skills, but also some spells to make the most of the situation. We were lucky we had the right combination of skills, spells and classes present when we made our way through this exciting scenario. Exciting is an understatement. The variety of challenges and encounters was really well-balanced and everyone felt like they were contributing in a major way.

And then there’s the final encounter. Now that was a very scary and challenging fight. I was warned beforehand that a TPK was possible and I can see why. That baddie doesn’t pull punches, is hard to hit and packs a huge punch. Our main damage-dealer, a bloodrager, got a single hit in before he got taken down. Our alchemist, who already struggled because we were underwater, ended up needing a Raise Dead. Meanwhile the rest of us struggled to defeat this fiend. Let’s just say that a cleric, utility sorcerer and summoner aren’t the best at doing a bunch of damage. Luckily my eidolon with very high AC was able to distract the thing and chip away at its health slowly.

I’ve not felt this challenged in a scenario in a long time. The storyline was great and I really liked how the skill-checks within this unique dungeon felt meaningful and fun. I actually feel like we really made an impact. Combat was brutal at times and I definitely can see players struggle and die. I highly recommend this scenario and I can assure you that it can be done. You can overcome the perils of the seas. Question is, are you brave enough to try?


5/5


Underwater combar and plenty of challenge

5/5

I enjoyed being given time to prepare for the challenges of underwater exploration and combat, using all of the resources a party of smart, wealthy, and powerful Pathfinder's can muster. There were some definite scares in here, and I really felt like we were on the Plane of Water. Very fun, and with a flavorful boon!


Enjoyable adventure

4/5

I played this recently and will be running it in a couple of weeks. This felt far more like a 7-11 from the adventure location to the nature of the task (and it doesn't hand hold you through it) to the opposition you face.

Thoroughly enjoyed playing it at high tier, looks like I will be running it low tier. I think I will be rougher at low tier given the more limited resources for acquiring a long duration swim speed.

The module also had stuff for multiple different player types, there was planning, uncovering old knowledge, a bit of diplomacy and some potentially quite tough combat encounters.

Overall would definitely recommend checking it out.


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Community & Digital Content Director

Announced for May release!

Paizo Employee Pathfinder Society Lead Developer

Maps for #8–20:

This scenario has only a custom map. It also benefits from having Pathfinder Flip-Mat: Basic Terrain Multi-Pack (the watery blue side).

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