| Frogsplosion |
what is the party member doing that is annoying? Have you tried discussing the matter with the player and the GM?
It's not so much what he's doing, but that he seems to think that he has free reign to reanimate everyone because he's playing the "white necromancer" http://www.d20pfsrd.com/classes/3rd-party-classes/kobold-press-open-design/ white-necromancer#TOC-White-Necromancy-Su-
and because everyone comes back with altered alignment and supposedly helpful to him that it just overrides character personality. My old curmudgeonly no-nonsense cleric of Erastil already dislikes him intensely in character, and if brought back as an intelligent undead he would probably start flinging Destruction and Blade Barrier spells at him until he died and then walked off to a temple of Erastil to undo the reanimation.
| Azten |
Initially your are helpful. Then you realize what's happened and are most definitely hostile. Tell him not to raise you as undead or you will take it as a sign of desecration and assault.
Of course, he might raise you as unintelligent undead after that, but going against your wishes in such a way might be an evil act and/or attract Pharasma's attention. She hates all undead, regardless of alignment or reason for creation.
| Dr Styx |
Skeletons: A skeleton can be created only from a mostly intact corpse or skeleton. The corpse must have bones. If a skeleton is made from a corpse, the flesh falls off the bones.
Zombies: A zombie can be created only from a mostly intact corpse. The corpse must be that of a creature with a physical anatomy.
Just have a Contingency spell cast on you that casts Disintegrate on you when your die.
| Azten |
isn't there a spell that prevents being raised up as an undead?
Sanctify Corpse isn't very useful in this case.
| Jeraa |
Animate Dead wrote:Just have a Contingency spell cast on you that casts Disintegrate on you when your die.Skeletons: A skeleton can be created only from a mostly intact corpse or skeleton. The corpse must have bones. If a skeleton is made from a corpse, the flesh falls off the bones.
Zombies: A zombie can be created only from a mostly intact corpse. The corpse must be that of a creature with a physical anatomy.
Only if you are 18th level or higher.
The spell to be brought into effect by the contingency must be one that affects your person and be of a spell level no higher than one-third your caster level (rounded down, maximum 6th level).
And at that point, the necromancer would be able to cast wish, which can restore a destroyed body that he could reanimate. So even that doesn't really work if the necromancer really wants to reanimate you (and doesn't care about the 25,000gp cost for wish).
| Joey Cote |
But if he is raising the corpse into undead against the wishes of the person involved, that would be an evil act, even if the spell isn't evil. A fireball isn't an evil spell, using it to burn down the house of innocent people is evil. Since this would be stealing your corpse and preventing it from being used as a vessel to return you to life.
Talk with the GM, if you can get him on your side and the necro turns your corpse into an undead, the GM can force an alignment shift to evil, and disqualify him for the class.