
Dragonamedrake |

Well speaking of Gods.... in 3.5 all Gods where not created equal. There where lower rank deities that a normal level 20 party would have an easy time with(Imhotep was a level 20 Expert). Then there where deities that would auto hit/auto destroy anything with a lower divine rank then them... hense every being other than like 3 other gods.
So ... maybe.

aceDiamond |
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I think that something I heard from a screenwriter would be applicable here.
How do you kill a vampire?
One might think of plenty of ways. Sunlight, garlic, stake through the heart. But the thing is that vampires are works of fiction. Ergo, as a fiction writer, you can have a vampire die in your story any way you want to.
Same thing applies here. If you're the DM and you want your party to slay deities, you can make up some fluff or way to make that sort of thing work.

Cubic Prism |

Well, food for thought. Serenrae and Asmodeus are two of the oldest deities - Asmodeus being the oldest and most powerful (per the Book of the Damned 1) and they only could lock Rovagug up. I'd say no they can't. Another reason being is for story purposes. No credible threat to the players = a dull game.

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Cubid Prism, I would Equate the Book of Dammed to Infernal propaganda.
Is Asmodeus the most powerful god? Well if you ask him he will of course he will say yes.
I think aceDiamond has hit the proverbial nail on the head. If you the GM, and your players want a game where you can kill gods, Rovagug included, then you can.
In your home game you are free to do whatever you like. The Pathfinder Role Playing game was written with the intent of us player (GMs and Players) to make our own stories. If those stories include the death of Rovagug...well all that has to happen is for the GM to put it in the plot of the campaign he makes.
Well thats just my two cents.
I hope it helps.

captain yesterday |

The text for Mythics says loads along the lines of unimaginable power and effortless might, comparable to gods themselves. Is this just flavour or could a campaign involving deities alongside PCs really work now?
Whatever, I'll just come out and say it: Any way of defeating Rovagug? xD
Doesn't hurt to try:) let us know how it turns out:)

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The simple answer is, no.
Paizo has repeatedly stated that they will not stat the deities themselves, ala the age-old saying: if it has stats, we can kill it.
They don't /want/ to deal with that scenario. I wouldn't.
You're putting words in the mouth of the text that are not there. It talks about heroes becoming mightier than any other beings on the planet, but that means utterly nothing compared to the power of the gods.
From the intro:
Even with such great power, mythic characters are not invulnerable, just more able to deal with the dangers of the world around them. If a mythic character dies, her loss is a great tragedy to the world, as the light of one of its true champions has been extinguished. This is what makes a mythic story exciting: these heroes might fall, just as nonmythic heroes might succumb to lesser threats. And when they do succeed, their victory often comes at a high cost, and usually leaves them scarred.
At the end of the day, you can run whatever fight you want to run. No one will stop you. However, if you want to build a god whose stats are legitimate and scale appropriately to the options presented in the core Paizo material, your adventures will effectively never be high enough level to deal with them.
Now if you want to de-power them and make them something killable by lesser beings, sure, go for it; just be aware that it's NOT the intent of Mythic Adventures to do so.MA gives you the tools and flavor necessary to create the stories of the people who will define the history and destiny of a planet ala the Whispering Tyrant and Iomadae (pre-ascension); not how to create murder-hobos powerful enough to kill the gods. You're thinking too small.

idilippy |

From what I understand in Golarion, no they cannot. In other settings or in homebrew though it would of course depend on how your world's gods have their stats and abilities defined. I've never run god-slaying adventurers in any edition and don't see myself doing it in the future but there are stats for 3.5e gods in the deities and demigods book Gandel spoke of and the Legendary Levels books from Little Red Goblin Games do a version of Epic for Pathfinder. They have deity stats and ways of making deities in their Deific Bestiary book. I haven't checked it out myself since I have no interest in it but if you do you should give them a look or talk with people who have used that material before.

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I'm pretty sure I read at some point that while you weren't at god slaying level, you were at demigod slaying and demon prince slaying levels. Honestly I like the idea of killing gods, mostly because it would be such an insane level of challenge. Some people want to kill gods because it's cool, others like myself want the ULTIMATE challenge.
But right now it seems like you're not meant to storm Olympus just yet...maybe if you're a wizard though...

BigCoffee |

I'd say a god might not be kill-able, ever. However the party of mythics weakening a god for say, another god to land a killing blow. That however might be doable. Kill a god's heralds, servants, wreck his plane, tiny tiny things to tip the scale in favor of *insert other god*
Rule it as you will, but lvl 20th/mythic 10 characters are way out of the godslayer league. Maybe if they master out 2-3 classes, along with full on mythic tiers, *then* I'd see them good on the task. But then, just go take the starstone test, become gods yourself and work from it there.

MMCJawa |

if we are going to go with canon Golarion and official rules, without DM specifically tailoring some way to "depower" Rovagug, than no. Mythic tiers get a normal PC up to about CR 25, so within the range of taking out Demigods. "Full" gods are past CR 30, and Rovagug is probably on the upper end of that scale, whatever that scale is.
The only way to take out Rovagug would thus necessitate the DM creating some sort of storyline or artifact that would depower Rovagug to CR 30ish, or a storyline where PCs help a god take Rovagug down.

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Yeah, no. Even the actual gods have a really hard time killing other gods in Golarion, someone imbued with a mere fraction of godlike power probably doesn't stand a chance. It's one of the main reasons the Aroden thing was so frightening: in a world where even lesser gods who were actually attacked and "killed" by other gods still manage to survive (see Ydersius, who's surviving as nothing more than a skull right now), having a very powerful god completely disappear without any reason at all is scary as hell.
But on the other hand, could you fight and even hurt a god? Absolutely. You could help drive them back into their timeless prison or weaken them so they can no longer carry out their dark plan or something. You should probably expect to be erased from existence in the process, of course, but that's the cost of being an enormously powerful hero.

Daethor |

Psyren wrote:We also weren't supposed to get more base classes, so make of that what you will.Rovagug is essentially the Snarl... so no.
In any event, Paizo have said they have no interest in statting the Golarion deities. The most we might get are some heralds or avatars to fight.
Where was that said?

The Block Knight |

Mortal NPCs have killed deities before...in Golarion...so why not a PC?
To be clear, mortal NPCs in Golarion have injured and/or permanently wounded deities (with help), but there are no accounts of any mortal slaying a full-scale deity.
There have been circumstances where a Mythic mortal has killed a Demigod but never a full-scale deity.

Scavion |

Whale_Cancer wrote:Where was that said?Psyren wrote:We also weren't supposed to get more base classes, so make of that what you will.Rovagug is essentially the Snarl... so no.
In any event, Paizo have said they have no interest in statting the Golarion deities. The most we might get are some heralds or avatars to fight.
"Now announcing the Advanced Class Guide!"

Daethor |

Daethor wrote:"Now announcing the Advanced Class Guide!"Whale_Cancer wrote:Where was that said?Psyren wrote:We also weren't supposed to get more base classes, so make of that what you will.Rovagug is essentially the Snarl... so no.
In any event, Paizo have said they have no interest in statting the Golarion deities. The most we might get are some heralds or avatars to fight.
No, I'm aware of the Advanced Class Guide. I'm curious as to where it was apparently said that there would be no more base classes.

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Well, food for thought. Serenrae and Asmodeus are two of the oldest deities - Asmodeus being the oldest and most powerful (per the Book of the Damned 1) and they only could lock Rovagug up. I'd say no they can't. Another reason being is for story purposes. No credible threat to the players = a dull game.
Oldest doesn't necessarily translate to most powerful.

Sissyl |
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Killing Rovagug? Destroying destruction? Ending the End? Nah. It is not just a matter of being strong enough to kill him. Nor is the problem that you can't find him. The most serious problem you would face is that Rovagug is the concept of destruction itself. That is why the collected gods could/did not destroy him: They both COULD not, because destruction is a timeless concept, and WOULD not, because creation requires destruction. So they locked him away.
If you do want to work Rovagug into a story, however, you have more options. Say... During the battle with Rovagug, Sarenrae lost something. A part of a divine portfolio, an artifact, whatever. Rovagug took this with him to the core of the world. Now Sarenrae wants it back, now that there are brave enough heroes to climb into Rovagug's prison and fetch it. So, these heroes, at the very pinnacle of their power, need to sneak through the caverns of the prison, quickly before Rovagug awakes from their presence, find the Thingie, and get out, all the while battling various horrible spawn of Rovagug that reacted more quickly to their invasion. This way, they will even get to see Rovagug... which may not be such a brilliant idea after all.

toxicpie |

Cubic Prism wrote:Well, food for thought. Serenrae and Asmodeus are two of the oldest deities - Asmodeus being the oldest and most powerful (per the Book of the Damned 1) and they only could lock Rovagug up. I'd say no they can't. Another reason being is for story purposes. No credible threat to the players = a dull game.But surely the credible threat is defeating Rovagug itself? There's an incentive to triumph (no more evil ever... Kinda) and a real risk of dying in the fight. After Rovagug is defeated, the campaign would end, and any other campaign doesn't have to take it as canon.

Lemartes |

Cubic Prism wrote:Well, food for thought. Serenrae and Asmodeus are two of the oldest deities - Asmodeus being the oldest and most powerful (per the Book of the Damned 1) and they only could lock Rovagug up. I'd say no they can't. Another reason being is for story purposes. No credible threat to the players = a dull game.Oldest doesn't necessarily translate to most powerful.
Pretty sure Pharasma is the oldest, futher she is probably one of the most powerful.

Daethor |

Cubic Prism wrote:Well, food for thought. Serenrae and Asmodeus are two of the oldest deities - Asmodeus being the oldest and most powerful (per the Book of the Damned 1) and they only could lock Rovagug up. I'd say no they can't. Another reason being is for story purposes. No credible threat to the players = a dull game.Oldest doesn't necessarily translate to most powerful.
No, but I believe that James Jacobs has stated that older deities do tend to be more powerful than new ones in Golarion. It's not a one-to-one correlation, but it is a general trend.

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Killing Rovagug? Destroying destruction? Ending the End? Nah. It is not just a matter of being strong enough to kill him. Nor is the problem that you can't find him. The most serious problem you would face is that Rovagug is the concept of destruction itself. That is why the collected gods could/did not destroy him: They both COULD not, because destruction is a timeless concept, and WOULD not, because creation requires destruction. So they locked him away.
I'm not totally up on lore (it is a cool explanation, but is it established canon?), but could his portfolio fall to another deity? Or could killing him release what was actually imprisoned all those aeons ago (what they actually imprisoned being overwhelming destruction forced into a divine form)?

Darkflame |

it realy depends on the gods I have read some discussion that gods could start out to be like lvl 30 but they go up to lvl 100 so it depends to the gods
oh and its just an estimate in comparison to their power not a real lvl
i think iomedae would be one of those lower tiered gods afther she gained god status she might not realy have gained lvl's we dont know on the other hand all the followers might be getting the XP for her lets consider she was lvl 20 when she did the trial.

Ravingdork |

Ravingdork wrote:Maybe if they were epic AND mythic.
Maybe.
Raving Dork just made a house rule!
*waits for the cracks of doom to appear*
lol. Everybody makes house rules. It's just a matter of degree.

Marthkus |

LazarX wrote:lol. Everybody makes house rules. It's just a matter of degree.Ravingdork wrote:Maybe if they were epic AND mythic.
Maybe.
Raving Dork just made a house rule!
*waits for the cracks of doom to appear*
Enjoying the game tends to be a houserule depending on who you ask.

captain yesterday |

LazarX wrote:lol. Everybody makes house rules. It's just a matter of degree.Ravingdork wrote:Maybe if they were epic AND mythic.
Maybe.
Raving Dork just made a house rule!
*waits for the cracks of doom to appear*
i never have, people enjoy my games well enough without me pulling house rules out of thin air whenever it suits me :)

Ravingdork |
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Ravingdork wrote:i never have, people enjoy my games well enough without me pulling house rules out of thin air whenever it suits me :)LazarX wrote:lol. Everybody makes house rules. It's just a matter of degree.Ravingdork wrote:Maybe if they were epic AND mythic.
Maybe.
Raving Dork just made a house rule!
*waits for the cracks of doom to appear*
Seeing as the rulebook isn't an absolutely clear 10,000 page legal tome, you are making a house rule somewhere, even if you don't realize it.