Drizzil?

I'm not sure if she is Fey enough to have a court, since she is mechanically more Dragon.

And she grows as an Oracle, which is also not something most Fey will value due to their dislike of gods.

That would something to ask @DragonParadox and the character IC about.

Well, fluff wise Oracles can be unwitting or unwilling recipients of Divine power so...

Meraxxes would perform this function hundreds, nay, thousands times better.

And that's not even considering if we would want Legions to have a deity of their own.
Secular state, after all.

Isnt this an argument for rehabbing the Lady of Spears? We'd want Meraxes to have competition as a soldier God instead of defacto becoming the official Legion Goddess.
 
[X] Have a nice little chat with Crimson Lotus
-[X] Buffs as per Goldfish, using the Sirine's Grace variant.
-[X] Go into this as if it as a play that will be written on the fly. The cell is a stage, every word spoken a script, and with the knowledge gained from his interrogation, you can write a play that sees him not only dance to your tune, but do so willingly and with joy.
-[X] Script Outline:
--[X] Seat him in a cell, chained to a chair at a table. When Viserys enters, he sends all guards outside the room and opens the chains with a spells, proclaiming them unnecessary. // There are multiple layers to this showmanship. On the one hand, it's a straight power-play. Crimson Lotus is well and truly the weaker party here, so fearing and restraining him is utterly pointless. The second layer is that it gives him symbolically some measure of agency. He is still our unwilling guest, but he is free to act within the boundaries we give him. This is a psychological thing for humans, but for a fey, it means the difference between a willing oath and one made under duress. Lastly, it sets a clean stage, restricting this to two actors with little in regards to diversions, meaning that this is a direct battle of wits and titanic social skills.
--[X] Ask him clearly if he knows why he is here. Focus on the reason why we would object not only to his indirect dealings with Baator, but also his coercion of mortals into de-facto slavery. // Setting the focus of the scene and establishing the roles. We are the reasonable authority figure, he is the criminal.
--[X] As he has already shown a willful blindness to a mortals desire for a free will, he will most certainly object to the interpretation that he enslaved anyone. Adjust the following to fit the particulars of his answer: "What else would you call it then? They were made to swear oaths they never wanted, forced upon them by capricious fate and no fault of their own. Forever bound to the whims of another, no say in their own path, their wants and needs an afterthought at best. This may seem strange to you, but this is what we call slavery." Pause here. "But maybe you know this far too well..." // We know that he is an ambitious one and his acting out is precisely the result of that ambition being stalled by his oaths and the rigid structure of the Court of Stars. Furthermore, he abandoned his previous court to escape it's ever changing nature that would have subsumed him. So he basically is our default recruit. Ambitious. Arrogant. Self-serving. We have achieved marvelous results with these base materials. For him though, all of this is far more absolute then for a human. His oaths constrict him and getting the necessary Traitorous Underling narrative going to rise the ranks would be difficult. Here though we offer him a plot hook to get out of his situation. The rebel that throws off the shackles of oppression. It is one of those roles with tremendous potential and one he played to some degree in the past. A sweet offer and given freely at that.
--[X] Bridge section in which he has room to state his motivations while we nudge him along to the freedom narrative that is our preferred outcome. Wrap it up by clearly stating that you can now see why he acted the way he did and that he is not the cruel monster some might see him as. None the less, you can't let his actions slide. He will face trial, either in your court or that of the Court of Stars, depending on how negotiations go. Then end teasingly with: "Unless..." // Shaping his narrative more into a preferable route for us. This is not a process where we force a new narrative upon him, we just give him a lead and aid him redefining himself. He can block all of this by simply not playing along, instead opting for a Haughty Fey narrative or Loyal Servant Of the Court line, but given everything we learned about him, he will pounce on the chance we are offering here.
--[X] Offer him a bargain. There will be no trial in a court for him, but a trial in our service. For 7 years, he will swear himself to us, then he is free to go. Either to rejoin his old court or do something else, that will be up to him. // The core of the offer. He pays us with 7 years of service "for his transgressions" and in return, he gets his freedom afterwards. As someone who has chaffed for millennia under his current master, we might as well tell him that he can do whatever he wants in a week.
--[X] No matter if he agrees immediately or wants to know his duties, spin the following tale. You believe that there needs not to be strife between Fey and mortal, but that it will require effort and understanding to create peace instead. You can sway the mortal side, eradicating prejudices and standing up for the Fey against fanatics and madmen, but to reach the Fey, you need help. Many more are there in the Court of Stars who chaff under the chains binding them, willing to take out their frustrations on mortal, or hurting them not from malice, but simple obliviousness. Crimson Lotus task would it be to seek out those who are straining under their current positions. Tell them that we would take their service gladly if they are willing to live side by side with humans, giving them the freedom from their shackles that they crave. Obviously, the higher ups of the Court of Stars should not be made aware of this, lest they tighten the vice and cause more harm and suffering to cling to their power. It is not the power of the Fey we seek in this, but to ease tensions and give those like Crimson Lotus a way out before they do truly heinous things. // And this is basically it. We start a recruitment drive among the dissatisfied parts of the Court of Stars. They will obviously not like it, but going against the narrative we are setting up her is dangerous and thorny for them. They would have to cut back on the allowable terms for bargains with mortals to shut us out and we are preemptively attaching the image of cruel masters tightening the collars of their slaves to any resistance they offer. At the same time, we exploit existing dissatisfaction and disunity in the Court of Stars with this.
--[X] Detailed list of potential counter-attacks by the Court of Stars and how these have been mitigated or prevented:
---[X] "Fey can't swear fealty to mortals." - This is a false, as both Doran and soon Oberyn have oathsworn Fey minions, and any attempts to curtail the ability of Fey to bargain their fealty would cause problems with their own Rainbow Guard for the Tyrells. If they actually try this narrative, their whole infiltration operation goes poof.
---[X] "This isn't about Freedom, it's just about power." - This is a bit more thorny for us, but we have enough leverage to weather this attack. There are a bunch of freed slaves in Essos after all, so by giving all of this a slavery spin, we can use that narrative weight accrued against attempts to frame this as a power-play.
---[X] "This is an act of war." - This one is hard to spin for the Fey, as we would not attack anyone. Not entirely impossible, but if they want to sell this narrative, they would neat to react to it as if it was a an act of war and that would create a situation where the person with the better spin-control wins. As we already have the anti-slavery spin on the story, we can turn their act into unprovoked attacks, play the bodies of the courts against the leadership and wrap this whole mess up by murdering 7+1 Fey lords.
---[X] "Fey and mortals can't live together." - Part of the narrative they tried to push during the talks on the Redwyne ships was that it's good and proper that there is a Fey lord for Fey matters and a monkey lord for monkey matters. This one is very shaky to employ against us due to the number of Fey in our service. Especially Moonsong making a spectacle of herself in front of most of Essos is undermining this by her very existence as our oathsworn vassal and captain of a mostly mortal crew. The other Fey in the Golden Fields area will help fortifying us further against this.


Ultimately, all of this is a PR battle and we have the nicer propaganda machinery and the Social Skills: Yes.
 
[X] Have a nice little chat with Crimson Lotus
-[X] Buffs as per Goldfish, using the Sirine's Grace variant.
-[X] Go into this as if it as a play that will be written on the fly. The cell is a stage, every word spoken a script, and with the knowledge gained from his interrogation, you can write a play that sees him not only dance to your tune, but do so willingly and with joy.
-[X] Script Outline:
--[X] Seat him in a cell, chained to a chair at a table. When Viserys enters, he sends all guards outside the room and opens the chains with a spells, proclaiming them unnecessary. // There are multiple layers to this showmanship. On the one hand, it's a straight power-play. Crimson Lotus is well and truly the weaker party here, so fearing and restraining him is utterly pointless. The second layer is that it gives him symbolically some measure of agency. He is still our unwilling guest, but he is free to act within the boundaries we give him. This is a psychological thing for humans, but for a fey, it means the difference between a willing oath and one made under duress. Lastly, it sets a clean stage, restricting this to two actors with little in regards to diversions, meaning that this is a direct battle of wits and titanic social skills.
--[X] Ask him clearly if he knows why he is here. Focus on the reason why we would object not only to his indirect dealings with Baator, but also his coercion of mortals into de-facto slavery. // Setting the focus of the scene and establishing the roles. We are the reasonable authority figure, he is the criminal.
--[X] As he has already shown a willful blindness to a mortals desire for a free will, he will most certainly object to the interpretation that he enslaved anyone. Adjust the following to fit the particulars of his answer: "What else would you call it then? They were made to swear oaths they never wanted, forced upon them by capricious fate and no fault of their own. Forever bound to the whims of another, no say in their own path, their wants and needs an afterthought at best. This may seem strange to you, but this is what we call slavery." Pause here. "But maybe you know this far too well..." // We know that he is an ambitious one and his acting out is precisely the result of that ambition being stalled by his oaths and the rigid structure of the Court of Stars. Furthermore, he abandoned his previous court to escape it's ever changing nature that would have subsumed him. So he basically is our default recruit. Ambitious. Arrogant. Self-serving. We have achieved marvelous results with these base materials. For him though, all of this is far more absolute then for a human. His oaths constrict him and getting the necessary Traitorous Underling narrative going to rise the ranks would be difficult. Here though we offer him a plot hook to get out of his situation. The rebel that throws off the shackles of oppression. It is one of those roles with tremendous potential and one he played to some degree in the past. A sweet offer and given freely at that.
--[X] Bridge section in which he has room to state his motivations while we nudge him along to the freedom narrative that is our preferred outcome. Wrap it up by clearly stating that you can now see why he acted the way he did and that he is not the cruel monster some might see him as. None the less, you can't let his actions slide. He will face trial, either in your court or that of the Court of Stars, depending on how negotiations go. Then end teasingly with: "Unless..." // Shaping his narrative more into a preferable route for us. This is not a process where we force a new narrative upon him, we just give him a lead and aid him redefining himself. He can block all of this by simply not playing along, instead opting for a Haughty Fey narrative or Loyal Servant Of the Court line, but given everything we learned about him, he will pounce on the chance we are offering here.
--[X] Offer him a bargain. There will be no trial in a court for him, but a trial in our service. For 7 years, he will swear himself to us, then he is free to go. Either to rejoin his old court or do something else, that will be up to him. // The core of the offer. He pays us with 7 years of service "for his transgressions" and in return, he gets his freedom afterwards. As someone who has chaffed for millennia under his current master, we might as well tell him that he can do whatever he wants in a week.
--[X] No matter if he agrees immediately or wants to know his duties, spin the following tale. You believe that there needs not to be strife between Fey and mortal, but that it will require effort and understanding to create peace instead. You can sway the mortal side, eradicating prejudices and standing up for the Fey against fanatics and madmen, but to reach the Fey, you need help. Many more are there in the Court of Stars who chaff under the chains binding them, willing to take out their frustrations on mortal, or hurting them not from malice, but simple obliviousness. Crimson Lotus task would it be to seek out those who are straining under their current positions. Tell them that we would take their service gladly if they are willing to live side by side with humans, giving them the freedom from their shackles that they crave. Obviously, the higher ups of the Court of Stars should not be made aware of this, lest they tighten the vice and cause more harm and suffering to cling to their power. It is not the power of the Fey we seek in this, but to ease tensions and give those like Crimson Lotus a way out before they do truly heinous things. // And this is basically it. We start a recruitment drive among the dissatisfied parts of the Court of Stars. They will obviously not like it, but going against the narrative we are setting up her is dangerous and thorny for them. They would have to cut back on the allowable terms for bargains with mortals to shut us out and we are preemptively attaching the image of cruel masters tightening the collars of their slaves to any resistance they offer. At the same time, we exploit existing dissatisfaction and disunity in the Court of Stars with this.
--[X] Detailed list of potential counter-attacks by the Court of Stars and how these have been mitigated or prevented:
---[X] "Fey can't swear fealty to mortals." - This is a false, as both Doran and soon Oberyn have oathsworn Fey minions, and any attempts to curtail the ability of Fey to bargain their fealty would cause problems with their own Rainbow Guard for the Tyrells. If they actually try this narrative, their whole infiltration operation goes poof.
---[X] "This isn't about Freedom, it's just about power." - This is a bit more thorny for us, but we have enough leverage to weather this attack. There are a bunch of freed slaves in Essos after all, so by giving all of this a slavery spin, we can use that narrative weight accrued against attempts to frame this as a power-play.
---[X] "This is an act of war." - This one is hard to spin for the Fey, as we would not attack anyone. Not entirely impossible, but if they want to sell this narrative, they would neat to react to it as if it was a an act of war and that would create a situation where the person with the better spin-control wins. As we already have the anti-slavery spin on the story, we can turn their act into unprovoked attacks, play the bodies of the courts against the leadership and wrap this whole mess up by murdering 7+1 Fey lords.
---[X] "Fey and mortals can't live together." - Part of the narrative they tried to push during the talks on the Redwyne ships was that it's good and proper that there is a Fey lord for Fey matters and a monkey lord for monkey matters. This one is very shaky to employ against us due to the number of Fey in our service. Especially Moonsong making a spectacle of herself in front of most of Essos is undermining this by her very existence as our oathsworn vassal and captain of a mostly mortal crew. The other Fey in the Golden Fields area will help fortifying us further against this.


Ultimately, all of this is a PR battle and we have the nicer propaganda machinery and the Social Skills: Yes.
Indignant Fey: "You don't care about freedom!

Viserys, THE DRAGON REBORN: "Um. Hello? Breaker of Chains over here. Bane of Slavers. Slayer of Tyrants."

Embarrassed Fey: "...it was worth a shot?"
 
So those Truespeech Propaganda Pamphlets are going to be doing a lot of work then.

So much leverage in such a tiny package.
Indeed. Beside spreading the narrative we want, I want to include a few... fables? Basically our alternative to the comic section. They would tell about Fey, the kind we deem acceptable, about how to spot Devil cultists, about the spheres and so on and so forth.

Let's see how their knights and castles fare against state controlled mass media.
 
Indeed. Beside spreading the narrative we want, I want to include a few... fables? Basically our alternative to the comic section. They would tell about Fey, the kind we deem acceptable, about how to spot Devil cultists, about the spheres and so on and so forth.

Let's see how their knights and castles fare against state controlled mass media.

Would you look at that? It is a recipe for revolution. Should we start spreading was propaganda and how to wage guerrilla war books also?
 
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Spread baguette :D

More seriously, Fey don't need lessons on how to wage guerrilla wars. They'd probably be insulted, actually. Except for the bulabars, those people are just weird even by Fey standards.

I was more talking about the people who would read these texts and propaganda. Anything to make Westeros even more painful to rule for Robert and Jon will make me happy.
 
Advanced Tattoo Guardian
Size/Type:
Medium Construct
Hit Dice: 12d10+20 (86 HP)
Initiative: +12
Speed: 30 ft., Fly 20 ft.(Perfect)
Armor Class: 22 (+6 Dex, +6 natural), Touch 16, Flat-Footed 16
Base Attack: +9
Attack: Ink Blade +15 melee (1d6+4)
Full Attack: 2 Ink Blades +15 melee (1d6+4)
Space/Reach: 5 ft./10 ft.
Special Qualities: Construct Traits, DR 5/Adamantine, Fast Healing 5, Darkvision 60 ft., Low-light Vision, Bodyguard, Fluid Form, Hypervigilant, Worn Form
Saves: Fort +4, Ref +14, Will +7
Abilities: Str 18, Dex 22, Con --, Int 6, Wis 16, Cha 16
Skills: Open Lock 12+6
Feats: Combat Reflexes, Extended Reach, Improved InitiativeB​, Lightning Reflexes, Weapon Finesse
Alignment: True Neutral

Bodyguard (Su): Whenever the Tattoo Guardian's wearer takes damage, half of the damage is transferred to the Guardian (as the Shield Other spell). This cannot reduce the Tattoo Guardian below one Hit Point, unless doing so would save the wearer's life. Additionally, the Tattoo Guardian gains a +2 bonus on Attack and Damage rolls against any creatures that damaged its wearer in the previous round.

Fluid Form (Su): A Tattoo Guardian does not provoke Attacks of Opportunity because of movement. It is immune to Critical Hits and Sneak Attacks, and it cannot be knocked Prone or Grappled.

Hypervigilant (Su): A Tattoo Guardian gains a +2 bonus on Initiative checks and Reflex saves, and it always acts on the surprise round.

Worn Form (Su): While being worn, a Tattoo Guardian occupies the same space as its wearer and moves with its wearer. In this state, the wearer and the Tattoo Guardian use the higher of the wearer's and the Tattoo Guardian's AC and saving throws, but the Tattoo Guardian loses access to its Fluid Form ability.

Tattoo Guardian Construction: An Advanced Tattoo Guardian must be inked by a skilled artist, with rare inks worth 2500 gp derived from one of several esoteric formulae.
CL 14th; Price 60,500 gp

CONSTRUCTION REQUIREMENTS:
Feats Craft Construct; Spells animate objects, fly, geas/quest, parchment swarm, shield other; Special creator must be caster level 14th; Skills Craft (calligraphy) or Craft (tattoo) DC 25; Cost 29,000 gp
 
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@Goldfish By chance have you forgotten about having Dany use her Hallow SLA to ward government buildings again..? :eyeroll:
I'm already trying to keep up with so much stuff... :oops:

And there are so many spreadsheets at work... :cry:

My brain is filling up... :confused:

We need to make a concerted effort beginning next month for Dany to place Hallow warding at important locations. It's an SLA she can use as a Standard Action 1/Day in her Half-Celestial form, so not something that requires actual time commitment. The only hurdle is how many days a month she wishes to use the Half-Celestial Form. Can you please take charge of that, @Crake? We just need to determine where to ward and what spell to attach to each Hallow zone.
@Goldfish, have you made the Bags of Greed yet?

Or the Ring of Mettle?
We've had the Bags of Greed for over a month now.

Not so much the Ring of Mettle, though. Didn't you want to research the base component to learn how to reproduce it?
 
We've had the Bags of Greed for over a month now.
Excellent!
Not so much the Ring of Mettle, though. Didn't you want to research the base component to learn how to reproduce it?
Thank god!

I just wanted to make sure is all. Let's please keep the original intact for a research action, it's far too useful a thing to learn to reproduce.

Maybe we can put Velwen on the task when the Thenns show up at Sorcerer's Deep?
 
I'm already trying to keep up with so much stuff... :oops:

And there are so many spreadsheets at work... :cry:

My brain is filling up... :confused:

We need to make a concerted effort beginning next month for Dany to place Hallow warding at important locations. It's an SLA she can use as a Standard Action 1/Day in her Half-Celestial form, so not something that requires actual time commitment. The only hurdle is how many days a month she wishes to use the Half-Celestial Form. Can you please take charge of that, @Crake? We just need to determine where to ward and what spell to attach to each Hallow zone.

We've had the Bags of Greed for over a month now.

Not so much the Ring of Mettle, though. Didn't you want to research the base component to learn how to reproduce it?
Let me know how many days I have to work with, and include this month too. She had time for it.
 
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@Goldfish, how do you explain the Advanced Tattoo Guardian intelligence?
Lifespark Gem plus the Advanced Template. Our Raven Constructs and Elemental Wyrmlings weren't supposed to be Intelligent, but they gained it as a side-effect of the Lifespark Gem. No reason a souped up Tattoo Guardian can't benefit from the same.
 
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