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http://tawmis.com/kneurth/adventure-not ... nturers-52
... an ancient gold dragon -- with amazing strength, con, and charisma -- would be a great paladin. Plus great catchphrases. Smite bite and lay on claws!
... imagine an ancient gold dragon polymorph into a fly, and when someone tries to swat it, they can’t -- because it has 546 hit points and retains its hit points when it polymorphs.
PoEII is fun. Just... a little different than the original.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 7:05 am By the way, Pillars of Eternity 2 is on sale at GOG as part of the Black Friday sale. I'm minded to pick it up, seeing as I had so much fun with POE1.![]()
How so? The original was all "a conspiracy! Someone's taken your soul and you must find who and why!" etc.Tawmis wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 11:11 amPoEII is fun. Just... a little different than the original.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 7:05 am By the way, Pillars of Eternity 2 is on sale at GOG as part of the Black Friday sale. I'm minded to pick it up, seeing as I had so much fun with POE1.![]()
Well, ironically - I just introduced an Ancient Gold Dragon, who had taken a Human form and was a trainer of Monks. Party dug that surprise (I have two Monks in my monthly game). So I love dragons (of any kind) as an NPC as long as it's not over done.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 3:43 pm By the way, what do you think of a young gold dragon as a PC or NPC?
How so? The original was all "a conspiracy! Someone's taken your soul and you must find who and why!" etc.Tawmis wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 11:11 amPoEII is fun. Just... a little different than the original.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 7:05 am By the way, Pillars of Eternity 2 is on sale at GOG as part of the Black Friday sale. I'm minded to pick it up, seeing as I had so much fun with POE1.![]()
Obviously PoE2 has a different story, but how else is it different?
Unearthed Arcana is stuff that they're testing for new D&D 5e books.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Wed Nov 24, 2021 1:40 am Hmm. As for "Unearthed Arcana" ... Astral Elf? Autognome? Now all we need is a Planetary Dwarf. *shrug* Where are the humans?![]()
I think the big question you need to answer is - if they want to be left alone - why go underground?Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Wed Nov 24, 2021 1:36 am Here's my original idea: how about a story where locals - farmers and fighters - vanish, thus attracting the attention of bounty hunters? And it turns out that they are all working in underground caverns, farming the land and creating weapons?(So far, this is very Skyrim-ish -- but here's where it gets interesting).
The dragon is in disguise as an elderly monk who they are all very fond of and very protective of, and all they want to do is be left alone.
Of course, the bounty hunters smell a rat -- how can you farm underground? You have no sunlight (so things won't grow), no horses and no cows (so there's no manure with nutrients to enrich the soil). So the monk sheds the disguise and explains (as a dragon) that he gives them the manure they need.They don't need flint and tinder to light fires, because the dragon does this (very, very, VERY carefully).
During the day, some of the fighters go out to hunt and fish; one or two go to town and get bread, cheese and vegetables. The farmers farm and eventually produce all kinds of fresh veggies to sell at the local town.They just want to be left alone.
Of course, the bounty hunters think: woo-hoo, a dragon! He's worth a big bounty!But they're also very stupid.
Rather than slay them, the dragon reads their (very small) minds and casts illusion spells on them to stop the fighting and make them all come together with his "community".
Unfortunately, the bounty hunters are followed by even more of them. They fight, and some are slain ("what a waste" the dragon comments), but some get away with the story, and eventually the local warlord (or whatever passes for political authority) thinks: you know what? This is actually a boon. We've got a big old community living underground. Let's make a deal with the dragon: if you help defend us from brigands and such, we'll help you by legitimising you as part of our local community. And if the King (or his tax collectors) come around and tell you that you have to pay taxes and such, we'll all come together and tell them to push off.
The dragon thanks them for their interest and agrees - and has an idea!How about, if a fire happens, he and the local fishermen can help fight it? After all, the fishermen always have buckets of water, and the dragon can fly around and deliver the buckets where-ever they're needed. Now we have a fire-fighting squad!
That's as far as I got so far, but it needs a good antagonist or two. Maybe the King's tax-collectors are peeved at being told to push off, so the King sends a few knights and such to enforce collection. Or maybe a rival King sees that this community is doing well, and decides to invade and annex it -- or (more subtle) "persuade" them to join him. Now they're stuck between two rival kings!Who to support? Decisions, decisions ...
What do you think?![]()
This happens not because the farmers want to, but because the Dragon uses mind magic on them (one by one) while they sleep and draws them towards him.Tawmis wrote: ↑Wed Nov 24, 2021 11:19 amI think the big question you need to answer is - if they want to be left alone - why go underground?Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Wed Nov 24, 2021 1:36 am Here's my original idea: how about a story where locals - farmers and fighters - vanish, thus attracting the attention of bounty hunters? And it turns out that they are all working in underground caverns, farming the land and creating weapons?(So far, this is very Skyrim-ish -- but here's where it gets interesting).
The dragon is in disguise as an elderly monk who they are all very fond of and very protective of, and all they want to do is be left alone.
Of course, the bounty hunters smell a rat -- how can you farm underground? You have no sunlight (so things won't grow), no horses and no cows (so there's no manure with nutrients to enrich the soil). So the monk sheds the disguise and explains (as a dragon) that he gives them the manure they need.They don't need flint and tinder to light fires, because the dragon does this (very, very, VERY carefully).
During the day, some of the fighters go out to hunt and fish; one or two go to town and get bread, cheese and vegetables. The farmers farm and eventually produce all kinds of fresh veggies to sell at the local town.They just want to be left alone.
Of course, the bounty hunters think: woo-hoo, a dragon! He's worth a big bounty!But they're also very stupid.
Rather than slay them, the dragon reads their (very small) minds and casts illusion spells on them to stop the fighting and make them all come together with his "community".
Unfortunately, the bounty hunters are followed by even more of them. They fight, and some are slain ("what a waste" the dragon comments), but some get away with the story, and eventually the local warlord (or whatever passes for political authority) thinks: you know what? This is actually a boon. We've got a big old community living underground. Let's make a deal with the dragon: if you help defend us from brigands and such, we'll help you by legitimising you as part of our local community. And if the King (or his tax collectors) come around and tell you that you have to pay taxes and such, we'll all come together and tell them to push off.
The dragon thanks them for their interest and agrees - and has an idea!How about, if a fire happens, he and the local fishermen can help fight it? After all, the fishermen always have buckets of water, and the dragon can fly around and deliver the buckets where-ever they're needed. Now we have a fire-fighting squad!
That's as far as I got so far, but it needs a good antagonist or two. Maybe the King's tax-collectors are peeved at being told to push off, so the King sends a few knights and such to enforce collection. Or maybe a rival King sees that this community is doing well, and decides to invade and annex it -- or (more subtle) "persuade" them to join him. Now they're stuck between two rival kings!Who to support? Decisions, decisions ...
What do you think?![]()
Because this clearly draws (unwanted) attention.
Especially if people are still going to the market to buy and sell.
There should be a reason these farmers want to go underground.
Well, that's what I mean... if the people are mind controlled, why does he need to promise them anything?Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Wed Nov 24, 2021 3:37 pm This happens not because the farmers want to, but because the Dragon uses mind magic on them (one by one) while they sleep and draws them towards him.
He does this because he is old, and alone, and bored with being alone for so many years. He wants company, but every time he approaches mortals, it's either "DRAGON! Slay the fiend!!!" or "Aaaaaaahh! Run for your lives!!!"Sigh. Why can't people stay and talk to him? It's very depressing.
Now he has a little community to call his own. In return, he promises to help defend them against soldiers and bounty-hunters, and people of that sort.
I don't know if I'll pursue this. After all, who's my protagonist? What does he/she learn, and how? What problems does he/she face on the way there? Who is/are the antagonist(s)? At the moment, this is just an idea in stasis. *shrug*
Is my protagonist the Dragon? If so, what Life Lesson(TM) does he learn from all this?Maybe, at first, he summons humans to him because he wants company - and then he learns about human society, and how he can become part of it and defend it. And the antagonists could be bounty-hunters (who are easily dealt with), and kings (not so easy to deal with).
How does that sound?![]()
Mind-control doesn't last forever, does it? It goes away after a few hours, or a day at most. But then he has to make a deal with them, right? Otherwise they'd definitely be angry and might even turn hostile.
My idea is that the Dragon would only seek out loners, not family people. That gives them fewer options and fewer places to turn.
Hmm ... my idea never was that the Dragon would lure an entire town underground.
Hmm, I didn't think of that before (i.e. some evil force that's hunting dragons). My dragon is simply a wanderer who's tired of being alone all the time.Tawmis wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 12:56 am So maybe establish some evil force, who is hunting dragons? So that's why the dragon is doing this - to create a hiding place.
But the people become sympathetic to the dragon, because he's one of the few remaining, and lonely.
And that the threat of evil is greater than the threat of the dragon.
Maaaybe. Then again, the dragon takes care to only mind-control "loners" who aren't welcome in "civilized lands" (think Aragorn in Bree, or Túrin Turambar in the Silmarillion). Why would any "civilized" folks believe them?Tawmis wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 12:56 am This can create some people who'd forgive the dragon for mind control and others who wouldn't - so some dynamic there.
Someone who betrays the dragon - tells the evil forces - see the evil forces enslave the people of the town - the betrayer, as always regrets their choice - and now has to undo it.
It lasts as long as you need the story for it to last.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 5:04 amMind-control doesn't last forever, does it? It goes away after a few hours, or a day at most. But then he has to make a deal with them, right? Otherwise they'd definitely be angry and might even turn hostile.
So ... like a pimp hiring runaways?Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 5:04 amMy idea is that the Dragon would only seek out loners, not family people. That gives them fewer options and fewer places to turn.
Could even be the force that's hunted down other dragons. Although that gets close to The Last Dragon.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 5:04 amHmm, I didn't think of that before (i.e. some evil force that's hunting dragons). My dragon is simply a wanderer who's tired of being alone all the time.Tawmis wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 12:56 am So maybe establish some evil force, who is hunting dragons? So that's why the dragon is doing this - to create a hiding place.
But the people become sympathetic to the dragon, because he's one of the few remaining, and lonely.
And that the threat of evil is greater than the threat of the dragon.Maybe the "evil force" that's hunting dragons is a local king/warlord. He is raising taxes to hire mercenaries for dragon-hunting, and the mercenaries have a bad attitude towards the peasants. ("Your king hired us, you bunch of dirt-scratchers! You want to complain? Go see the king! Ha ha!" *SLAP* etc.)
Thanks! The Two Headed Dog comes into play the next session (which has already happened, I am just way behind on my notes)Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Thu Nov 25, 2021 5:04 am =====================
As for the D&D Game notes ...
- I love "Behold! The Ability of MS Paint!"
- Hmm ... when you mentioned deadly "frogs", I thought of Slaads. I'm disappointed now
- Trees moving closer? Are these Ents (or the D&D equivalent)?
- "The party decides that camping near the lake may be a bad idea..." Yes, because the trees could squash them and the grungs could poison them.
- The canine something that scares Galiena looks like a two-headed wolf or dog.
Nicely done there, Tawm. Thanks![]()