Saturday, December 29, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Epilogue


And so, the campaign comes to a close. Ssevar'nac is able to negotiate with Ethedril (variety of speak with dead), and learns enough about the group to concoct a plan. It's determined that Cast & Marshal do not have a reasonable chance to survive an encounter with a prepared Golden Lord. In addition, the campaign has lasted sufficiently long for a change of pace to be desired, especially as we now have two new players who wish to join.

And so, we have the campaign world fade to black, and I shall begin preparations, including details concerning the rules as they're designed.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XX

They level up by this point, and are now level 9. 

After having taken the damage, they decide it prudent to turn around and instead head for the capital to heal up the vile damage, and just send Ethedril's cleric to the kobolds. This should take about four or five days, and they pass through a couple small towns with warm welcome. On the third day, they encounter a hamlet that's been holed up as if under siege, and find out they've been attacked by a horde of ninja over the last three days (two attacks thus far, three dead). 

Cast and escort travel to pick up the more isolated people who were trying to weather the assault in their cottages, and helps them suit up to leave by morning (~75 of 'em). When morning draws near, a score of Shadowed Hand genin charge, and 15 of the villagers are revealed to be chunnin in disguise in this attack. The party makes quick work of them, three rounds of Marshal's fast healing removing the marks made. Concerned of further treachery, Cast makes sure not a single villager has any weapons, and keeps his weapon readied at them. Once at the castle, the villagers are quarantined, and will be released after the party leaves. 

At the castle, they get some information concerning the name they were given on the person who hired the Shadowed Hand to kill them; Ssevar'nac the Golden Lord, Plague Father, Master of Shapes. He is a disgustingly wealthy lord of a node in the Blackened Grove, known for his mastery of shapeshifting, ability to birth monsters, and curse people into all manner of shapes, and is also known to shape corpses (fabricate level) for the Grove's war machine. They get directions and convince the Empress to loan them two hippogriffs so as to swiftly reach the node (with a buff from Chantico), as well as a handful of fireball flasks to deal with swarms. 

They travel long hours, but are a mere 10 miles from Ssevar'nac's castle when they make camp. In the middle of the night, Ethedril is awakened to the sound of an old man singing very off-key in some local dialect on a path that will go through the party; and hears him far enough away for Cast to put his armor on and ready a bow. When the old man sees the party, he barely has a chance to register their presence before Cast knocks an arrow and demands that he turn around and go the other way, stating that they are adventurers under siege. Old man, partially apologetically and partially crotchety, states he's just trying to reach a shrine that the party is on the way of; and if he could take his old knees and around far enough out to not be seen by either. Just the act of explaining nearly brings Cast into a rage (the insolence, near as I can tell), which Marshal manages to subdue him enough to not just slay the old man where he stands. 

The old man backtracks a bit and takes the long way around the party, mumbling with crotchety annoyance at them and hoping that Ssevar'nac that turns them into stoats. Ethedril can hear this from the distance, which sorta surprises Cast that the old man knows of Ssevar'nac, tempting him to go and kill the obvious spy; Ethedril instead follows the old man to the shrine, which is dedicated to Kiransal. When the old man enters, Ethedril overhears him making confessions, which for Kiransal means confessing of every sin visited upon you; and money is exchanged for karmic vengeance, the party having been mentioned. The priestess inside exits the shrine to deliver the money and prayers to the greater church, who Ethedril sees to be a harpy. 

Following the harpy, Ethedril goes awhile without being seen, but is eventually spotted. The harpy asks a question, getting a snarky answer with a hint of danger, so she sings her Captivating Song and Ethedril rolls a natural 1. And so, our drow is lead directly into the Ssevar'nac's estate, and brought before one of the accountants under the guard of two trolls. The harpy is paid and leaves, while the accountant questions Ethedril for a name and reason for being around. Ethedril delays for a short bit, then flies forward to cut the accountant down and attempts to batter a wall down to escape; but is grappled and rended unto death by the two trolls (reach is a powerful thing when you don't otherwise have the edge). 

After four hours, Cast and Marshal decide to search for Ethedril, following the old man's tracks. They come upon the shrine with the old man outside and partially on his way away, where Cast demands to know what happened to his travelling companion. The old man states he hasn't a clue (Sense Motive checks state he's telling the truth) but does a short cackle at the idea, which is the last straw for Cast who charges and kills; revealing that the old man was an Obake, a lesser type of human-turned-oni with a bee hive in their hunch (minor shapeshifting hides this). 

Marshal enters the shrine to ask the priestess for information, eventually being convinced to pay a small tithing (4gp), where she tells them she will call upon divine wisdom from Kiransal to lead them. She asks for them to follow, where they mount up and do so; Cast tries a few times with his helm of telepathy to start reading her mind, eventually getting through the Will save and finding out that she's leading them to the primary counting house instead of the ancillary because there were two of them. 

At the central counting house, there are half a dozen dire vultures in gilded cages with three well-groomed gnolls in fine clothing caretaking the entire room. The floor is covered with ivory white marble expertly cut, the floor otherwise being fairly bare aside from the back end where three japanese-like men in kimonos write notes and keep track of numbers with an abacus, while formian workers work behind them to physically move money at their demand. 

The three accountants, looking close enough to be brothers, ask for their names. They are told the full titles, and that the two are seeking Ethedril. Notes are passed to a formian worker, who wanders off with it, and the head accountant tells them to wait a moment for them to receive permission. After a couple minutes, the formian returns with a message, which the accountant reads and informs the party that they can simply enter the palace to speak with Ssevar'nac for further information. 

This does not sit well with Cast, who demands to know immediately where Ethedril is, which the accountants state that they cannot tell them. Cast begins walking towards them with the intent of blocking the back exit (which is 15' behind the accountants, the front door is on the opposite side over 75' away), where the gnolls move to keep him from getting too close to the accountants. Cast cuts down the gnoll, which sends the entire room into a flurry and a fight breaks out. The accountants prove to be expert unarmed combatants, pinning and disarming the two, but proving to be virtually incapable of scratching them (disguised Ogon no Oni from Creatures of Rokugan, 5000 koku on them). Once the first accountant is finally struck down, they surrender and beg to be spared, telling the two that Ethedril had been killed for slaying their brother and his corpse is with Ssevar'nac and is likely being interrogated. 

Cast is tempted to slay the two anyway, though there exists the chance he would use the suggestion power in his telepathy helm, demanding the Ogon no Oni to both give up his money bag and to forgo any incoming saving throw (will immediately kill the oni if he doesn't forgo). But we end the session and debate there for next time, likely in two weeks because Cynic's coming down and wants a one-shot (aWoD).

Friday, December 21, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XIX

Our player for Plank finally returns to his home. And thus, the game has returned to three once more. The game also got started late because one player slept in and got enthralled playing Dragon Age on his computer, that and when conversation began he got bored and drove off quickly for food (very common behavior for him). 

After a day of holing up in their room in town for nearly 24 hours to await their meeting with the Shadowed Hand (avoiding the townspeople like crazy), the shadows in their room coalesce into a figure to inform them to go north to the dojo for the meeting. At about noon, they reach the place, and they enter the area that looks much like the Plane of Shadow. They can see the building built into the bottom of the cliff, and the front gate to the grounds is guarded by a pair of orc vampires. The guards open the gate slowly into impenetrable mist, request that the party wait a moment for the path to be shown, in which a gust of wind from the other side of the fog parts the way so the party can swiftly walk across and into the building. 

Inside is a dark room with interior paper walls, the largest one being a long table with cushions all around. At the head of table is Shadowtongue (two ninja guards behind him), and on each side of the table are individuals that Shadowtongue introduces as representatives of two other ninja guilds to witnesses to the proceedings. One is a ghoul-like bugbear named Jabb, who leads the Barghest's Maw. The other is a human with a deathly blue flame coming from his eyes, wearing samurai armor made of stone, representing the Scratch. Shadowtongue introduces himself as a negotiator for the Shadowed Hand itself. 

Talk about what the party wants is laid out, the contract to be ripped up under threat of violence, the contract to be nulled by a competing offer, or the name of the individual who bought the contract. Negotiation is slow at first because the player for Cast doesn't like the idea of giving the Shadowed Hand anything; 2000gp is his initial limit for buying out the contract (basic magic items are generally worth that, and Cast himself pulls in ~8k a month from taxes). Eventually, Ethedril brings up the idea of giving up the wizard tower they obtained back in the Valley of the White Dragon, with the extra bit that Ethedril will inform her kobold followers to put it back in place (and repaired). This would be in exchange for the name of the person who hired the Shadowed Hand. One Diplomacy check later, and things work out. 

Shadowtongue tells them they must wait until tomorrow to leave due to the nature of how they entered the place, and provides the party access to the guest wing. He promises that they will not make any attempt on their lives until nightfall the next day (giving them half a day's travel of seperation from the base), as part of a general pact of hospitality that comes with a ninja negotiation. Inside the guest wing, they are offered a wide selection of food and women and are told they can ask for any other diversion for the day. They all forgo any pleasures, Cast specifically asking for a white room for him to sit and ignore everything in, though Ethedril tries out the food and discovers that it's illusory (30% real because it's a shadow illusion). The next day, they suit up and leave for the Valley of the White Dragon to inform the kobolds to undo what they've done to the tower so far. 

They push themselves to the limit of fatigue to avoid getting ambushed in camp right at nightfall, delaying it until about 4am, where half an hour into their rest they are interrupted by a wall of fire forming on them, dealing vile damage (yay Carnage domain). Marshal manages to spot something above the party, nearly 200' above them with wings flapping utterly silently, while releasing a bird to begin diving towards the party. While Marshal and Cast jump out of the fire, Ethedril charges upward to chop the bird in half mid-flight, discovering that it was a very simple conjuration that holds a scrap of real paper. At the winged creature's turn, with a flap it seems to fold itself into the night and disappear (Ethedril cannot sense it). The message tells the party that while they are not yet at the level for his full attention, they are worth a visit to soften them up for the rest of the guild, and it is signed from the Crow.

Friday, December 14, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: XVIII

Once Plank returns, the party suits up and heads for the NE in search of the base for the Shadowed Hand, in unclaimed territory where none travel. After about a week, they eventually pick up signs that indicate frequently traveled yet well-hidden paths. Following it, they come upon a village built to be as inconspicuous to any but those who practically walk straight in. 

From afar, they see that the village is populated by humans, hobgoblins, and a minority of orcs of the Red Fang Tribe. It's a little past noon, so they decide to camp just out of sight and wait until noon. Once night rolls in, a very small bonfire is made and the party hears a song coming from near it; spoken in the Shadow dialect of Primal, telling a tale that the party is familiar with that involves the Empress and an ex-lover. It's a tale that likens their relationship between night and day, and how their separation creates the cycle as it is known. During this song, Cast and Plank receive something akin to a sending within their minds reminding them of their fate and to accept a swift death; though Plank received an additional message offering quarter if he came to their side (Bard's Siren Call, resisted). Readying their weapons for an imminent attack, none come, and the party eventually sleeps. 

That morning, some hunters from the village are coming close to the party's camp, and the sound of Cast trying to put his armor on gets their attention. Concerned, one of the three hunters heads back to the village while the other two head towards the party (only seeing Cast and Marshal, the rest too well-hidden); wondering why unwelcome strangers are in the middle of nowhere. Cast declares that they come seeking information (never more specific than that) and they can't promise that they won't enter the village because of certain information they await. Eventually the third hunter returns and confers with the other two out of sight and from some distance, though Ethedril listens in with supernatural ears. They are worried about these vague and noncommittal adventurers, and decide to warn the elder of their presence. One of them returns, leaving the other two to watch the party, as well as a screecher arrow to warn the village if they're going hostile. 

Once noon rolls around, the village looks unchanged, so Cast decides and informs the two villagers that he's going to fly up on his hippogriff to just have a look around. The villagers warn against such, because their watch was not warned of him and would fire upon him; but would accept him if the villagers could spread the news. Not wanting to be delayed, he tells them that he'll weather the shots, understanding that the villagers can't prevent any harm coming to him. With a trot and flap, he begins flying upward, which convinces the villagers (who are seen to be worried) to fire their screecher arrow, which triggers Ethedril's readied action to charge and kill them before they can act; and does so. 

Cast sees a bit north of the village a spot of forest that's appreciably darker than the rest of the area, despite a lack of clouds above or the angle of the sun allowing the hill to normally create such shadow naturally. Dodging arrow fire deftly, he returns back to the party and informs them, a little disheartened at the sight of the villager's death. They suit up and begin moving around the village as fast as possible to get to the shadowed area. 

While moving, they begin to hear a sound akin to a tuning fork that fascinates Plank. Just as they break it, an unarmored elf with black eyes and tongue, wearing a ceremonial shield and an elven thinblade that he continually knocks onto something to continue its humming sound. Coming up from behind are eight silk-steel armor wearing ninjas (Ethedril hears six more out of sight that are slowly flanking the party). Introducing himself as Shadowtongue and representative of the village that the party attacked. Cast offers compensation for the villagers' death, but they must continue on their recon mission to a shadowed area to the north which he believes to be a base for the Shadowed Hand. Shadowtongue is disappointed, telling the party that there is a price for such knowledge, which is blood. 

Marshal is infuriated when he discovers that something's enhancing Shadowtongue's Countersong to counter abilities that require targets to be able to hear (such as many of Marshal's buffs, or even Cast's designate opponent). 

After a couple rounds of pain, all of the ninja are dead and Shadowtongue surrenders just before an attack is levied against him. He informs the party that the Shadowed Hand likely has an escape clause in their contract with the party (usually by ending up too expensive for the guild), but they'd have to have the leader of another ninja guild request a calling in order for any kind of safe negotiations to begin. As a favor, Shadowtongue tells the party he can make a few contacts to see if Marshal's request will count (he does command a dojo of trained ninjas, afterall), allowing the party to rest in the town for the day. 

With a warning as he walks away, he informs the party that should they cause any more death to the village, then they must fear the wrath of the Crow itself.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XVII

The party waits three days for Sarou to return from his fact-finding mission. He returns with a mention that he will need to get more poison. The 'escaped' ninja had laid low for two days before contacting his superiors, at which point Sarou followed the superior who would know more, only to discover that he was expecting to be followed and Marshal's cohort was ambushed. Fortunately, his training allowed him to escape with a fair number of them dead. After escaping, Sarou researched more on the fact one of the ninja in the ambush was an unusually pale orc that proved particularly resilient to Sarou's techniques. 

In his own research, he determined that it was very likely to have been a vampire orc, and the source of vampiric orcs is from the Red Fang Clan to the east (prior mention had been made of them). Culturally, Red Fang vampires are incredibly reluctant to ever be farther than three nights' travel from their clan, which hinted of at minimum an outpost near the wastelands about a week's travel east. 

After some discussion, the party decided a more solid lead would be to the dojo north of Naught Hill from their captured ninja. Thanks to Plank's plane shift and the royal maps, they were able to shift within 3 days travel of the dojo. They were interrupted by a pair of noble hill giants along the way (wore quality gear rather than random sticks), but convinced them that Imperials going through the land was for peaceful purposes and continued onward. 

The dojo was built into a plateau that was being strip mined very slowly by hand (literally) as a method of training for the humans there. It took a moment, because Cast was trying to speak first and he doesn't know Giantish, but one of them knew the Imperial tongue. Only those sufficiently enlightened in their ways could actually receive training or wisdom of any kind from the He Who Supports the Firmament (head of the dojo). One of the higher ranking monks (titled Bellower, who spoke softly and squeakily) informed them that there existed two 'quick' ways of wisdom in their ways. 

Our first method was to show that could be an immovable object, by staying true against the force of Shifting Glacier, a Jotun (half-giant stats) monk with the Juggernaut feat. After Cast was almost casually bull-rushed, they opted for the very dangerous second test, to prove themselves (individually or as a whole) as an unstoppable force. This test was to utterly defeat a stone golem without receiving a single point of damage, which the party agreed to. An unknown entity from behind a gauze curtain in the dojo seems to stare with glowing eyes, causing nearby debris & slag to rise and become a stone golem (concentration duration, close range). Thanks to Cast's ability to fight defensively and his Draw Fire ability, this was done readily enough. 

Speaking with He Who Supports the Firmament, who is a Stone Giant Elder (switch transmute for the golem ability and increase by one or two HD), he informs of a group of recruiters attempting to encourage his disciples to "act like the rolling avalanche rather than the shifting earthquake". After learning of Firmament's displeasure of this practice, he suspected they recruited students who had left the dojo. As a favor, Firmament told the party that he would speak with gravestones of the recruiting ninja about their clan. The next morning, they were informed that this ninja clan was called the Shadowed Hand, and had four five fingers throughout the land, and one of these fingers lay on the border of the Empire of the Sun and the eastern wastelands. Also, this finger could only be seen under the light of the noon sun. 

Bidding farewell, the party did the plane shift trick to get within three days of Cast's castle to recoup, and had Sarou do a fact-finding mission on what they've learned thus far. 

Were this dojo to actually be veiled except under a noon sun, would imply a shadow well and very likely a node along such a theme. This made such an outpost quite likely the clan's HQ and guarded by shadows due to the node's theme. Considering the danger, they decide to rest for a week or so and call in some magic items to be constructed for themselves (since Cast will go in with his sun plate instead of adamantine carapace). 

While resting, in the dead of night, numerous ninja from the Shadowed Hand attacked the party. One of their high elites (level 4 Samurai) managed to get into Cast's bedchamber without being heard (even after one-shotting the guards), and the surprise round + normal round, Cast was sent into the negatives. Thinking quick, Gina used her skill-based fascinate/suggestions to convince him that he'll bleed out and to leave her in her grief (which works). The rest of the party was similarly ambushed, but they were attacked by 'regular' elites (similar to the Barghest Maw regular ninja); three elites on Marshal, two on Plank and Ethedril each. With less skilled assaults, the rest of the party survived and repelled the attacks readily. Ethedril in particular managed to hear the ninja before they even got within melee, but pretended to remain asleep and killed all three the moment before they made their melee attacks. 

This convinced Cast to rearrange the bedchamber arrangement so that any stealthers would have to go by Ethedril's room to reach any of the other party's, and to use the higher level followers for the guard patrols.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Gravity: A Heavy Subject

Looking through the various Monster Manuals, the creature with the greatest lifting capacity is the Tarrasque, who can stagger around with a blue whale in its arms. While bench-pressing a blue whale is epic, it's not terribly impressive at level 20.

A tangential problem is the rules for falling objects. Thanks to shrink item, you can deal 3d6 every two levels by using rocks in the countryside, and the damage triples when wall of iron comes online. Some DMs will 'solve' this by removing shrink item, which we all know to be short-sighted at best.

To fix both, we need to nerf gravity.

As it stands, one of the major ways to fix dropping things on people is to not have falling object damage be a linear relation to weight. The simplest method would to base it off the improvised weapon rules.

Once you get 20+ Strength, you stop caring about encumbrance from your active adventuring gear. At 19, you can wear full plate, a tower shield, a bastard sword, a longbow w/quiver, and have room to spare without broaching medium load. Keeping in tradition of prior D&D editions (assuming 18/XX = 19), we can make 20+ the minimum to qualify for an alternate carrying capacity.

Super Strength & Super-Size Meals
There are many elements that go into damage dealt by objects falling from the sky. However, falling debris is just an attack on your person by physics, and attacks are already abstracted heavily in lieu of the staggering array of variables to account for. Therefore, we seek to better abstract the rules with the goal of play-ability in the genre of heroic fantasy. 

Size categories are an excellent way to increase damage in a system that already uses it for its weapons. Let's get started with a few new definitions
    Absolute size is the basic size category of the object, generally determined by the length of its longest dimension
    Abstract weight is to very roughly describe how heavy it is, also described in terms of size categories
As a baseline, something like a chair has the same absolute size and abstract weight. Various traits make the abstract weight differ from its absolute size
  • Fills most of the volume of its size, such as a crate (+1)
  • Stone or similar density (+1)
  • Metal or similar density (+2)
  • Thin and barely fills volume, such as a club or stick (-1)
  • Noticeably less dense than wood, such as cloth (-1)
  • Hollow shell (-1)
These things are cumulative, so a solid 3' cube of steel is Small in size and Huge in weight, while a to-scale plush Gundam is Gargantuan in size and Huge in weight (my napkin says this isn't that far from the truth). 

The base damage is 2d6 for Large size weight, following the rules for weapon scaling from there (1d6 for Small, 1d8 for Medium, etc). 

When an object falls onto someone, it deals damage based on its abstract weight and the distance fallen. Every 10' fallen increases its size category for damage by one, and deals one size category less than normal if it falls less than 10'. The except is for objects of Medium weight or less. Every category smaller than Large doubles the increment it must fall to deal damage (20' for Medium, 40' for Small, 80' for Tiny). This damage increase ceases after 200', so a Tiny object can only ever deal 1d6 from falling, even if dropped from a skyscraper. 

Lifting with your legs
The carrying capacity rules largely work, so long as you don't try to recreate something with super strength. The Strength necessary to recreate the likes of Superman (77 to lift a 747 over his head) would synergize with the rest of the system into some kind of fanfic supervillain. 

In order to recreate said individuals with extreme powerlifting techniques while preventing their fists from turning into miniature spheres of annihilation, we need to pull them off the chart into something more narrative. 

The super strength quality changes carrying capacity to instead be based off of abstract weight and level. The character's max load is equal to his own size in weight, increased by one category per 3 character levels (rounded up); so a 7th level strong man can lift an object of Gargantuan weight over his head. A light load is anything at least a full size category smaller than your max load in weight, and you can push/drag an object 5' as a full-round action if it's one size category larger than your max load. 

You can use any object that's a light load as an improvised weapon. If it's absolute size is equal to or larger than you, than it's always a two-handed weapon. If the object is roughly club shaped, then it can used as melee weapon with a reach equal to its absolute size, but you do not threaten with it. 
The weapon deals base damage as if its abstract weight were equal to the character's light load (can swing it faster/harder if less than, so it equals out).

If an object is too bulky to count as a club, it can still be used as an area attack from range or melee. It covers an area equal on its absolute size, the damage subject to a Reflex save for half damage (DC 10 + 1/2 level + Str modifier)

The range increment of the weapon is 10' for every size category smaller than the character's max load. The character makes a normal attack roll against any one target in the area of the attack, automatically dealing normal damage if he hits. Even if he misses, the target and everything in the area of the object must make a Reflex save for half damage (DC 10+1/2 level+Str mod).

Girdles and Power Lifters
A magic item that boosts strength should retain relevance, as should attempts by players who will undoubtedly attempt to increase their size once they obtain super strength; the method of which I leave to the reader as an exercise. As a rule of thumb, any item that boosts the user's super strength shouldn't boost it by more than one size per four levels.

Friday, November 30, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XVI

We have a temporary player, who will be playing an 'aasimar' genie (marid) named Plank. I forgot to copy down his character, so his stats won't appear until next week after I see him again. 

After Cast discovered that there was a permanent deeper darkness in the cave during his initial scouting attempt, he flew back to inform the party, where they all waited until after Urorae finishes animating the skeleton. At which point, the entire party suits up and heads over, but Ethedril's followers/cohort/dragon skeleton will wait at the entrance due to possible dangers if they enter it with the party. 

Walking up to the limits of the darkness, Marshal stares it down until it's suppressed for a short time, showing them that 40' into the cave is a concave wall filled with skulls; all facing the spot immediately in front of a 10' square door that has the Arcanis words for 'Beware' and 'Trespass and Die' inscribed upon it. Once the darkness returns, Cast walks forward and gropes around for the door to open it and take the trap, and shrugs off the phantasmal killer thrown at him twice; once for opening the door, again for smashing it down to make sure it doesn't close behind him. 

Inside is a 20' wide tunnel going deep underground, eventually splitting into three paths, the leftmost one with barely noticeable lights flickering and Ethedril hears light breathing down it. Going down that path, they find an abandoned 'open-courtyard' kobold warren, with but a single kobold in leather armor who asks for the party's business. When told that the white dragon is dead and they demand his hoard, the kobold curses them and declares that their lord's vengeance shall continue even in death; at which point, an animated and magically treated huge stone dragon wearing mechanus armor rises out of the courtyard and begins the offensive (it's got inscribed runes for magic slam). Cast goes on the defensive and hurls Draw Fire on it while the rest of the party slugs away at it for a good six rounds. While fighting, the kobold goes down the one other tunnel in the area and causes a cave-in so the party can't follow after it or the rest of the escaped warren. 

Turning back, they go down the middle path, finding a massive vault-like door inscribed with the Arcanis words "All that glitters". Marshal figures out the question and states 'door' in the same language, which causes the entire thing to open, revealing a fairly sizeable ceremonial dance hall. Ephemeral music fills the air, never-melting ice crystal chandelier hang, and the walls hang a score of elaborate paintings of various wizards the party aren't terribly familiar with; including an empty frame with a design similar to the nearly-complete copper tower. 

After extensive searching, the party finds some things, but not much due to the lack of any member of the party even possessing a single rank in Search. Everything is extensively gilded and very well designed. Even the center of the room features a rather large decorative circle with a pair of embedded dragon footprints (Hollywood style) filled in with never melting ice. They do find a supply closet filled with goblets, serving trays, wines, etc. They also find a brass bottle with a wax seal and words in Primal (eventually translated as "In Asar's name I bind thee"). Not finding anything else, they strip the place of everything of value; the furniture, the paintings, the goblets/trays, the bottle, the chandeliers, and even pry out the ice-made footprint casts in the center of the floor (informed to be surprisingly easy). 

While going up-tunnel, they hear the sets of three footsteps coming towards them, but they take the one tunnel the party hadn't explored yet instead of the center one. Shortly, they hear blood-curdling screams of agony in Infernal & explosions, followed by silence. Dropping their stuff momentarily, they run for the source, and see bits of barbazu scattered everywhere in the room except where the large pile of gold and gems lay. They toss a rock, see nothing happen, followed by a length of rope which is dissolved when they try to pull it back. Then Marshal uses dispelling glare and waits four rounds, then tries again (rolling poorly this time), at which point one of the black gems sparks and attempts to use violent thrust telekinesis to pull him towards the pile, but he makes the save. Ethedril then flies over the pile, staying as close to the ceiling as possible, and cuts out a large chunk of stone from above to have it fall onto it; this knocks around some of the coins, revealing a shell with runes on it, but the coins roll back over it as several gems sparkle again; firinglightning bolt & flame strike at Ethedril, who simply parries it. Not sure of what else to do, they leave for the entrance. 

They dump their accumulated loot with Ethedril's followers, with the command to begin constructing a wicker basket like thing so the dragon's ribcage can be used for carrying. Urorae analyzes the bottle, and determines that it contains a creature of some sort, and it is potentially a major magic item (at least a moderate) as it should ensure that the inhabitant will serve the owner of the bottle. Because he doesn't know which node it is connected to, let alone whether the node has been redirected or waned, he cannot guarantee that the item functions and will actually control whatever is released. 

Figuring they can kill whatever comes out if uncontrolled and hostile, or get a servant they can sell for a shiny profit, they open the bottle. Which releases an amnesiac marid by the name of Plank, who wishes to follow the party to get a sense of what the world is about. 

This is swiftly followed by a nearby ice puddle shimmering in reflection and four identical mirrored creatures rise up from it, asking for information as to the party's presence. The party states why they're here (talked to dragon, got in a fight, searching for loot), to which the creatures respond with acceptance and declare that any loot they have yet to claim still falls under 'finders keepers' rules (in so many words). The party doesn't mind, and as they speak, one of the four sinks back into the reflection. In a quid pro quo, the party asks for their identity. The three creatures tell them that they are natives of Mirror Peak, subjects to the King of Three Shadows, and seek treasure as well. After informing the party, the fourth returns holding a rather large tome and informs its compatriots that the library was found, but the hoard remains unaccessible. 

This causes another disturbance in the reflection, alarming the creatures as a robed figure appears (stays on the reflection side) calls them back. Immediately after the creatures sink back into the reflection, the robed figure looks at the party and informs them that twice now they have seen him and lived, but they shall not survive a third encounter. With that, it fades away. Because I'm not the best person at voices, I simply told the party that the figure's speech pattern was much like the one they heard back when Cali escaped; he was going down a hall with a robed figure who was chastising him for some unmentioned slight, and when the party tried to catch them, the figure grasped Cali by the arm and the two teleported away. I just now noticed that scene wasn't in the old session notes, which is odd, because it was fairly important. 

Meanwhile, Cast is eager to return home. After some time with a map of what they know, they properly explain to Plank where they need to go for his plane shift to work. Since they can't bring Ethedril's followers, Ethedril leaves standing orders to them to desconstruct the copper wizard tower and relocate it at the home village in the woods, reminding them of what she's willing to do if they disobey and run off (that wizard and the dragon were killed almost solely for granting sanctuary to a handful of them). 

This cuts travel time to a week after a short sojourn through the elemental plane (description coming soon in setting), though they did miss on the first attempt to the Prime and landed on a tiny island in the middle of the sea (~300 miles south of Cast's castle); which they took as an opportunity to rest for awhile, since they figured nothing would know where they were at that instance. 

At the castle, capital of Crystalis, they discover that the area had been attacked by ninja. Amongst the fallen were the royal triage expert (some healing focused adept), the castle interrogator, and several of the guards that had been guarding the former Queen and Gina. Fortunately, the castle did have Marshal's entire dojo relocated there (Sarou and all), Gina could take care of herself, as was Tenoc; who if you recall, is still the head of a noble house, and is attempting to get back into politics by hanging around the castle. There were five highly trained ninja that attacked from hiding within the castle, and two score lesser trained ninja came in from over the outer walls (which is where Tenoc had his fun, as he's since advanced to 5th level); only one ninja survived, mostly, and is held in the dungeon below for the party to handle. 

Cast double checks every guard that watches the prisoner, as well as the personal guard of the family, by using his helm of telepathy as well has having them remove their armor to ensure that they aren't ninja in disguise; and then the interrogation begins. Marshal is the primary talker, but Ethedril is in the room as well to nick him with his sword while they talk, Plank joins to squirt him continuously, and Cast glowers behind him to use his helm of telepathy, who had Gina accompany them for additional intimidating support. When the ninja made the first Will save against the effect while Marshal yelled at him, Cast joined in and demanded that the ninja stop resisting and forgo all saving throws, knocking him into unconsciousness when he balks and having Marshal awaken him with healing. While he's getting brought back to consciousness, Cast reapplies detect thoughts and finally gets a hold in, and reiterates his demand in the ninja's mind when he comes to. 

It's at this point, I get frustrated with one of the flaws of interrogation in D&D. Every single time, you get the entire party swarming and groping their prisoner, usually resulting in three or four people using aid another on the primary interrogator; and even if you don't allow aid another, you still result in them doing it anyway 'for moral support'. And unless you have a paladin around, it almost always breaks down into more torture than interrogation. As a result, I have a house rule to introduce... 

Limits of Interrogation: Using intimidate to get information cannot receive aid another benefits. Use of torture or other sensory overloads, shorten the time to perform the check to a round at the cost of information limit. If the victim would not give the information to a good friend, then he will either resist all further torture or break and confess/believe anything the party wants, regardless of actual validity. 

Once faced with this, the party leaves and waits a day to decide what to do, at which point Plank goes down alone to use Diplomacy (gets a 33). He learns that the ninja was trained in a dojo two days north of Naught Hill, and was recruited by the guild along with four others who joined in the attack. The ninja doesn't have a rendezvous point any longer, because the guild will have assumed him to be KIA by this point. 

After conferring with Sarou (aka, my suggestion), they get a poison that will make the victim paralyzed, barely conscious, and easily suggestible, which they secretly apply to the ninja in one last torture session; so that the ninja will think that the party thinks him to be dead and toss him onto the trash just outside the castle, where the poison will wear off and he will believe his escape to be good fortune. This will give the best chance of a safe meetup with his guild, so Sarou will stalk the ninja to see who he meets with while the party plans their sojourn to the dojo north of Naught Hill.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XV

New Character
Ethedril Killyl: Drow Samurai: Exiled from a failed coup in her Underdark city, she conquered a kobold settlement at the surface, incurring the life debt of a svirfneblin priest and his disciples to aid in her exiled lordship. Cursing the sun's brightness, she has the priest banish her sight so that it can no longer bother her. Now, she hopes to further expand her dominion, and will attach her company to the next band of powerful people in hopes of discovering new areas to dominate.


Session Proper
They use speak with dead to discover that Tow does not wish to return from the dead, so they bury his body and distribute his equipment amongst themselves. There is some concern over the ninja attacks, but after consulting with Sarou, they realize their is little to do right now besides wait and defend themselves. And so, Cast and Marshal mount up and go north to the valley of the white dragon to determine whether the rumours of a tall dwarf dressed in white is the same one that bought the contract on the barbazu army from months ago. 

After almost three weeks, they eventually enter kobold territory, where they are waylaid by kobolds demanding an expensive toll before they can pass through alive. They refuse to pay the toll and laugh at the pitiful damage thrown their way, where Cast calmly walks around the troll skeletons (taking the AoOs for no damage) and up to the leader, grapple lifts him, and then uses his Knight's Challenge ability. By this point, Ethedril hears and enters the fray, admonishing the kobolds for so obviously getting in over their heads. After some conversation, she asks to join the party so as to get in favor with the Empire of the Sun; also wanting to join them into the white dragon valley because some of her kobolds disappeared into the area. 

From Tow's prior reconnaissance, they know the following about the valley: it is mostly human and the land is technically under the 'control' of three separate kingdoms, but its distance and poverty make it not worth the effort to fight over each other for it, especially with the dragon living in the area. The dragon itself will occasionally eat a villager, its speaker (the tall dwarf) acting as a herald and forward scout to the people. A peculiar feature is that once or twice a generation, a wizard decides to call kip in the valley and enlists the local kobold population to assist in constructing a tower. No wizard reuses a former tower, so the land is scattered with abandoned towers in varying states of disrepair. Currently, a new tower was being built and nearing completion. 

Once there, they head directly for the white dragon's cave, having Marshal yell into it to speak with the dragon. At which point, the dwarven herald steps out of the darkness. They state to know if he orchestrated the devil army upon the kingdom of Crystalis (Cast's kingdom), to which the dwarf states that neither he nor his draconic master have ever cared about their kingdom. The party then asked about the wizard tower in the valley, to which the dwarf flippantly states that what the wizards do in the valley are of little concern to him; to which he bids them farewell and good luck in tracking the barbazu down (they never stated what the devils were). 

At the nearly finished wizard's tower, several urd placing the finishing touches on the roof of the five-story copper edifice, the party demands the apparently sentient door to let them speak with the master of the tower and return Ethedril's kobolds. There is some resistance from the door, and they begin to pull out their weapons to chop down the door while Ethedril yells out that if her kobolds will be taken she will take some of his and starts shooting at the urd. An urd is severely injured and the door is heavily dented before lightning forms out of the ground for a floating wizard to appear in storming glory. Ethedril demands for her stolen kobolds to be returned, at which point the wizard arrogantly declares that he doesn't steal like some petty thief but simply makes his desires known and 'lesser mortals seek to appease his divine will'. 

Not liking the attitude, the drow charges and chops the wizard in half with a kiai strike. Some of the wizard's guardians (three large air elementals) come out to harass the party, but are quickly routed. They then bust their way into the tower to loot the place, and speak with a pair of imps they find held inside. The imps claim to have been bound to the wizard after he began work so know nothing of his origins or other secrets on the tower, ask to be released along with a family heirloom (a hat), and leave peacefully. 

That night while they sleep in the tower, the dwarf from earlier teleports in after scrying a bit, and expresses displeasure at them killing the wizard (the party counters with his prior statement of apathy). Being magnanimous, he grimly informs them that their welcome has been worn short and they must leave the valley at once; where he walks out the door. With this ultimatum stated, they go back to sleep, wake up and wait until noon for more kobolds to arrive to the tower so they can find out where the rest are and Ethedril can drag her lost kobolds back. 

With a snap, the dwarf teleports back in a cold rage at their willful defiance. Ethedril states she wants her kobolds back and Cast's annoyed at how their long travel didn't get anything done, so the party unloads their arsenal. After several rounds and almost 500 damage (dwarf just standing there mocking them), they get realize that the dwarf has a resilient sphere and get Marshal to use a dispelling glare on it; where the dwarf counters by turning into a huge white dragon and the real fight begins. 

They finally kill it, plan to animate its corpse as a skeleton with Ethedril's cohort, and begin to head for the white dragon's cave.

Friday, November 9, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XIV

After some more searching, they come upon the discovery that the dungeon was used as a prison by the Red Saint rather than for him. They even find some historical records in an office, along with volumes of legal codices, that verify the history that the Red Saint was a priest of some kind that commanded celestials and spread his control over the land; his greatest threat being Lord Saral, the Master of Monsters, who was attempting to forge an independent kingdom in the woodlands where no humans called home (orcs, gnolls, elite trolls, etc). Armed with this, they grab every key they've found in the place and head for the room with the floating keyhole and the words "By my judgement, I imprison thee" written above. 

Their first key intones "Visum, scout for Lord Saral", at which point a Rast to phases in, panics, and attacks the party. Only two more keys actually give names and release creatures, a troll skirmisher for Saral and a forge fiend, who aren't as violent when released; confirming their prior history lesson about the Red Saint. At this point, they identify some of their loot and realize that one of the golden scepters can be used to open the gateway back to Cast's dungeon. Once they've escaped, they inform the fiend and troll that they're safe to leave the country as long as they do so safely. 

For the next month, they run the country and send Gina off for diplomatic negotiations, exporting national goods in exchange for magic items crafted by the Dwarven Nations. To make the delivery faster, Tow teleports next to Gina in the Dwarven Nations to make the pickup, only to discover that ninjas had hijacked the delivery. Tow is slain by the three ninja (level 3 warriors) before Gina can get rid of any, where she proceeds to grapple & lift one, then use suggestion on the other to attack the third. 

We leave it off at this point. Tune in next week, where we meet our latest character (the player likes to make characters, so he's choosing not to be raised)!

Friday, November 2, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XIII + 1/2

The session was run short due to scheduling and one of the players being sick, but refusing to sit it out while pushing to end the session quickly so we could drive him to get food from Jack-in-the-Box. 

They traveled a few more rooms, fought a couple advanced rust monsters who had gorged themselves on nail golems, found a map of the dungeon; which somehow exists on the faces of a cube without them being able to notice the curves, which got confusing when they found the room with three straight walls while the corners were still perpendicular. A few keys were found, as was a jar that spoke a name and relation to the Red Saint when the key was placed upon it. 

Oh, and they found a font filled to the brim with magic when opened (to the point it seriously amplified any magic cast near it) that was under some kind of warding magic. Staying close to it, they did their level best to dispel the wardings over the font; which I have no idea why, because I'd assume an abjuration over a stupidly potent well of magic would be something you want to keep around... 

They'll have the repercussions later.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Warriors of the Empire of the Sun: Session XIII

The Blackened Grove is reeling from their loss of a rather significant node, so the current situation between them and the Empire has dwindled back down to "annoying neighbors". The orcish horde from the east has lost a rather decent amount of army and a couple of their champions (another adventuring party behind the lines), so their offensive has been put on hold; that and their prior conquest of thirty miles inward was never actually undone, so they actually have some real land to use and keep themselves busy (the party forgot about this). 

Ultimately, things are looking stable enough for the party, so they're taking a bit of a break before jumping on their personal interests. After a couple weeks of rest, they eventually find a riddle pertaining to Azasaraj the Red Saint, the knowledge stored being about the Red Saint's Prison (unclear as to a prison used by or for the Red Saint). This riddle vexes them for a time, but they eventually solve and are presented with a set of blueprints. 

Unsure as to what the blueprints do, they dedicate the next month's coffers from Cast's kingdom towards constructing what it states; an elaborate and expensive room deep underground (they add it to the dungeon wing) filled with arcane circles and names of various celestials (Tow failed the Arcana check to figure it out). After this time is completed, they all enter the room and close the door behind them to complete the 'circuit'. This makes the entire place turn dark and one of the circles on the far wall turns into a passage leading down a set of glowing stairs. They head down. 

We now enter a dungeon, where they discover magic circles that emblazon symbols in Classic Celestial onto their flesh when touched; remember that their Common is Celestial, so they all recognize them as ultimately gibberish for the time. I'm figuring the language works in a manner not unlike Inuit (?), in that a word consists of multiple 'mini-words' and powerful suffixes/prefixes that change their meaning; a made up example would be 'Ta' has to do with the act of witnessing, but requires additional parts to tell you whether it's the 'ignoring' kind of witnessing, bystander witnessing, participant witnessing, second-hand retelling witnessing (w/confession connotations that need to be specified here), etc. 

While travelling, they run into a human who seems mad to the point of insane gibbering, having declared himself, his mother, and his uncle to all be the Red Saint; all the while pacing his room and drawing stick figures with all the subtlety/skill of a child. The party's current theory is that he's the Red Saint and this is his prison. They also run into several semi-sentient constructs made of nails that seem to be designed to attack intruders, as well as signs that a rust monster may be around, which has Cast scared out of his gourd. A couple more tattoing circles are found, the magic seeming to be arcane in design, but detect magic shows the same kind of aura that you'd find coming out of anything done by a cleric (something I've added to the spell), which doesn't make any sense as even the clerics of the Boccob Expy don't use arcane sigils in their work. 

What's interesting is that the party wants almost the exact dimensions described to them for each room/hall they enter, but absolutely refuse to draw so much as a list of which turns they took. I warned them several times on this, so I'm letting them get lost on their own by this point.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

[3.5] Archivist


This is not a class that has sufficient abilities that go beyond level 9, and is thus going to stop here. Many of the abilities this class does get scales with character level, so taking another class afterward isn't going to suffer the multiclassing woes with it like you would experience with a regular spellcaster.



Archivist 
Books are the blessed chloroform of the mind...*whack* 

Alignment: Because an archivist reads and understands any viewpoints, many are neutral. 
Races: Because of their need for books, races that congregate around densely populated regions tend to hold dominance as archivists. For reasons archivists liken to seeing a cow become a burger chef, illumian archivists are shunned by all other archivists. 
Starting Gold: Refer to Book (1d12) of Virgil’s Aeneid. Choose three random lines, total the number of vowels in those lines, and multiply it by the number of proper nouns that appear in those same lines. 
Staring Age: As a ghostwise Halfling fighter. 
Hit Die: d6 
Base Attack Bonus: Medium 
Saving Throws: Good Fortitude, Poor Reflex, Good Will 
Class Skills: The archivist’s class skills (and the key ability for each skill) are Climb (Str), Concentration (Con), Decipher Script (Int), Knowledge (All) (Int), Profession (-), Search (Int), Sense Motive (Wis), Speak Language, Spellcraft (Int), Spot (Wis), Use Magic Device (Cha) 
Skill Points per Level: 4 + Intelligence bonus 
All of the following are class features of the archivist:
    1. Speed Reading, Can’t Put it Down (Shillelagh), Thrill of Discovery, Lore, Paper Magic
    2. Translator, Vox Imperium
    3. Syllable of Power, Copy Protection
    4. Enochian Binding
    5. Can’t Put it Down (Brambles), Mightier than the Pen
    6.
    7. Can’t Put it Down (Spikes)
    8. Symbolic Language
    9. True Lore
Weapon and Armor Proficiency: Archivists are proficient with all simple weapons. Archivists are proficient with light armor, but not with shields of any kind. 

Books Around the Globe: For purposes of mechanics, a full book is assumed to be 300 pages in length, taking the character 15 minutes to read. Spellbooks are special mechanics, where spell level counts as a full book for purposes of the archivist's book-activated abilities. As a result, a completely filled spellbook equates to 100 books. Because scrolls are condensed and leave out critical information, each whole spell counts as a book rather than each spell level. 

Speed Reading (Ex): Gained at 1st level. The archivist can read twenty times faster, including magical tomes to gain their benefits. For example, it only takes the archivist two and a half hours to read and gain the benefits of a manual of gainful exercise.
  • Normal: The normal scholar can read one page per minute with full retention, which means it takes the scholar 5 hours to read a book and the archivist 15 minutes.
Can't Put It Down (Su): Gained at 1st level. Any book an archivist has read is wielded and treated as a club subject to the shillelagh spell. At level 5, it gains the additional effects ofbrambles. At level 7, it gains the effects of spikes

Thrill of Discovery: Gained at 1st level. Every time an archivist finishes reading a book he hasn't previously read, he gains a number of temporary hit points equal to four per class level. 

Lore: Gained at 1st level. An archivist gains Skill Focus as a bonus feat for any knowledge skill he has at least one rank in. An archivist with Knowledge (history) or (local) is considered to know local knowledge & history of any area with a library, once the archivist spends at a cumulative total of eight hours reading books from the library. 

Paper Magic: Gained at 1st level. The Archivist is considered to have every spell on their spell list for purposes of activating scrolls, both arcane and divine. 

Vox Imperium (Sp): Gained at 2nd level. The archivist has learned what words people will listen to, and can use command at will, the save DC being 10 + ½ character level + Intelligence modifier. 

Translator (Su): Gained at 2nd level. The archivist is considered to be under the constant effects of comprehend languages

Copy Protection (Sp): Gained at 3rd level. The archivist can inscribe a sepia snake sigil or illusory script in any book that they have read. 

Word of Power (Sp): Gained at 3rd level. The archivist can speak any power word they have the spell text of in their hand, so long as the spell level does not equal or exceed their class level. 

Enochian Binding (Sp): Gained at 4th level. The archivist is constantly surrounded by a magic circle of every alignment. With a touch attack, a creature failing a Will save (DC 10 + 1/2 level + Int mod) is entangled & anchored to their position for 1 hour. 

Greater Lore (Ex): Gained at 5th level. An archivist gains the ability to understand magic items, as with the identify spell. 

Mightier than the Pen (Sp): Gained at 5th level. The archivist can cast the glyph of warding on any book or scroll that they have read. The archivist and the warded object are immune to the effects of the spell. When using the spell glyph option, they can use any harmful spell of 3rd level or lower that they have on hand. The spell uses the archivist’s class level & Intelligence modifier as the caster level and spellcasting ability respectively. 
At level 12, this ability upgrades to greater glyph of warding. It is common to set the triggering condition to when a creature is struck by the book as a weapon. 

Symbolic Language (Sp): Gained at 8th level. The archivist can write any symbol they have read before whose spell level does not exceed their class level plus two. 

True Lore (Ex): Gained at 9th level. An archivist can use their immense knowledge to gain the effect of the analyze dweomer or legend lore spells. This ability can be used at-will.