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I'm new too but I have been watching pathfinder from the outside for a couple years. I know they have a LOT of adventures, but not sure how many, and of course they do retire some from PFS play.
On the other hand, by the time you hit level 12 you've done 36 adventures, and then you're done. So they don't need all that many more than that in circulation at once, I think
| Enevhar Aldarion |
On the other hand, by the time you hit level 12 you've done 36 adventures, and then you're done. So they don't need all that many more than that in circulation at once, I think
Actually, it is 33 scenarios to reach level 12, since as soon as you hit 12th level the character is done, except for a 4-scenario 12th level retirement arc and any of the high level sanctioned modules you play through.
But anyway, even that is not always true now that the new season has started. You now have the option to use the slow track and receive half rewards from each scenario, letting you play twice as many with one character. Well, almost twice as many, since you cannot make the change except when hitting a new level and I do not think you can choose slow track at 1st level. So now you can play through 63 scenarios before reaching retirement at 12th level, 3 for normal track to reach 2nd level and then 60 for slow track to reach 12th level.
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There are roughly 80 scenario's and a handful of modules that you can run, so about 500 hours of game time. By the time you burn through those, another dozen will be out. Then you can GM them all over again for credit.
If you just got into PFS, this isn't a real concern for you.
Don't sweat it and just play your heart out. If you run out, feel free to hop back on this thread and tell me I was wrong. I like crow.
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GEEEEEH!!!
I WISH I HAD THIS PROBLEM!
*stuffs GM stars into a bag, beats a dead horse*
I'm actually on the other end of this problem. I'm running out of scenarios to run because my players keep dying. <_<
So i'm running out of scenarios to run and get GM credit.
I wish I had this problem. PCs manage to stay alive too often.