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Also, why is every description of Imrik obsessed with mentioning that he is "the last of the line of Caledor Dragontamer" as if he is the only one descended from him still alive? Isn't Asarnil also descended from Caledor? Or are they just being poetic in their way of saying he's the youngest guy descended from Caledor?
We have no idea who Asarnil descends from, the only relative we know of is his dad who is said to have been a hero, but no other info on him.
 
Also, why is every description of Imrik obsessed with mentioning that he is "the last of the line of Caledor Dragontamer" as if he is the only one descended from him still alive? Isn't Asarnil also descended from Caledor? Or are they just being poetic in their way of saying he's the youngest guy descended from Caledor?
Maybe they're dunking on Asarnil getting disinherited?
 
Yeah, Mathilde's not quite a legendary enchanter... yet. On the other hand, she's got two special traits for it, almost the maximum teachable skill level—as I recall we just need Battlemagic, and then would have to experiment to get better?—and was a leading party in creating the mega-nuke weapon that vaporized half a Waaagh in a moment. If nothing else she probably learned some neat tricks from that. Plus she'll be studying Waystones—and basically anything even remotely related that she can get her hands on, which includes at least that awesome elf library—which are basically the biggest and baddest enchantment project ever. I wouldn't be surprised if she eventually figured out how to make stuff similar to the Staff of Volans.
mmm...

That said I'm pretty sure "leading" mostly in the sense of coming up with the idea and wrangling, we were quite out of our depths knowledge wise at the time.

However, I do think that enchantment, combined with our understanding of Dhar/Wind Herder could let us do some mighty fine enchanting work.

I admit I am also interested in seeing if we can prod info on wind transformation out of people who might know (like Cython.)

I'm also very interested in seeing what we can dig out of the big library.

Also interested in seeing if we can get access to some interesting books for the big library we are making.

Considering he has one of the most powerful artifacts in the Warhammer world crafted by Caledor Dragontamer, I would be surprised if he wasn't descended from Caledor.
And I would not be. Caledor was a prolific craftsman, that a family of seemingly very prominent dragon riders from Caledor would have something from him is not surprising. Maybe they earned it later, maybe it was given to them by the man himself.

Whatever the case is, he might be he might not be, but its not necessary.
 
I think I'm looking at the incorrect stat block then, because nothing I'm looking at shows that WS1 thing. No saves to prevent that from happening? That's bonkers. How the hell did Ulthuan let him leave with that on him?
Less bonkers than you think. A straight -1 to hitting him would actually be a better artefact on the tabletop.

She also wields Ghyran and Hysh on top of that with a skill on par with Archmage. Suffice to say that if an enemy isn't Chaos aligned, they will still find themselves staring into the eyes of Avatar of a Goddess that can smite them from existence without even really noticing they are there.

The blades are worthless in face of Everqueen sorcery.

EDIT:
The Everqueen does not fight in a conventional manner, and eschews weapons of all kinds, but she is no less dangerous for it. Her touch, so soothing to the pure-hearted, is anathema to those with even a taint of corruption in their hearts. The victim might not feel anything at first, but as the magic of her touch travels through his body, it grows more powerful, feeding off every black desire and cruel purpose.

The paragraph above is sourced to 8th edition HE armybook and nothing in it says the corruption has to be Chaosy either.
She does also carry some form of weapon because, like every other model, she carries a hand weapon.

Was Arsanil the prince of Caledor at the time? I know he fought off an Invasion that tried to land in Caledor, but I don't remember him being the actual prince

EDIT: Ignore me, im an idiot who opened the book and first word "Ex-Prince of Caledor"
Whether there even is a single more-important-than-other-Princes Prince of Caledor is an open question.

I'm using the wiki for this, so it might be wrong, but the wiki says Deathfang is a "Great Green Dragon" (green is just a color, not an indicator of anything). Great Dragons are one step below Emperor Dragons in the life cycle of Dragons, and I was under the assumption Star Dragons were Emperor Dragon equivalent.
In 5th edition different coloured dragons used different breath weapons, so it did matter.
 
I wonder what Cython might have to say about potential Ranald = Loec connection.
Possibly nothing, possibly somethinh very interesting.
And i am kinda nervous to ask considering where our info came from.
 
So, am I just operating on a false basis? I was under the impression that to be a Prince from the Kingdom of Caledor, you needed to be descended from...........Caledor. Apparently you can be a Dragon PRINCE, without being considered the royalty of Caledor? like you're just a noble, but you have the title of Prince? And you can be Prince of Caledor without being descended from the guy the Kingdom is named after? How does Elf nobility work?
 
So, am I just operating on a false basis? I was under the impression that to be a Prince from the Kingdom of Caledor, you needed to be descended from...........Caledor. Apparently you can be a Dragon PRINCE, without being considered the royalty of Caledor? like you're just a noble, but you have the title of Prince? And you can be Prince of Caledor without being descended from the guy the Kingdom is named after? How does Elf nobility work?

I'm assuming "prince" is being used like a landed title, such as "duke" or "baron", rather than a royal title.

Edit: found a wiki article on the IRL use of "prince" as a generic title rather than a royal: Prince - Wikipedia
 
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I'm assuming "prince" is being used like a landed title, such as "duke" or "baron", rather than a royal title.

Edit: found a wiki article on the IRL use of "prince" as a generic title rather than a royal: Prince - Wikipedia
The ruler of my nation is an "Emir", which is arabic for Prince. I was taught as a kid that Emir=Prince. You have no idea how confusing it is to me to see Prince being used for non-royalty.
 
I'm using the wiki for this, so it might be wrong, but the wiki says Deathfang is a "Great Green Dragon" (green is just a color, not an indicator of anything). Great Dragons are one step below Emperor Dragons in the life cycle of Dragons, and I was under the assumption Star Dragons were Emperor Dragon equivalent.

Of course, I'm probably wrong on this account. I definitely think Deathfang deserves the label of Star Dragon. He's pretty strong.

Stat-wise Great=Star on tabletop, while Emperor is one tier higher and only available for epic Storm of Magic battles.

So, am I just operating on a false basis? I was under the impression that to be a Prince from the Kingdom of Caledor, you needed to be descended from...........Caledor. Apparently you can be a Dragon PRINCE, without being considered the royalty of Caledor? like you're just a noble, but you have the title of Prince? And you can be Prince of Caledor without being descended from the guy the Kingdom is named after? How does Elf nobility work?

Dragon Princes of Caledor are numerous enough to serve as an elite cavalry unit (presumably while their dragons are sleeping).
 
So, am I just operating on a false basis? I was under the impression that to be a Prince from the Kingdom of Caledor, you needed to be descended from...........Caledor. Apparently you can be a Dragon PRINCE, without being considered the royalty of Caledor? like you're just a noble, but you have the title of Prince? And you can be Prince of Caledor without being descended from the guy the Kingdom is named after? How does Elf nobility work?
Its a noble title, seemingly the highest before PK or EQ, but none of the elven kingdoms have a sole ruler, each have several princes and princesses.

In fact this is true IRL as well. Prince doesn't have to have anything to do with hereditary inheritance.

Meanwhile Dragon Prince is a term seemingly for the Knights of Caledor, since there's a lot of them I do not think that each has the same noble status as a prince, but in modernity maybe if you have a dragon you are treated like one there.

As for elven nobility, its complicated and varies at least a bit from kingdom to kingdom.
 
Less bonkers than you think. A straight -1 to hitting him would actually be a better artefact on the tabletop.
Umm, no. WS 1 hits anything above WS2 on 5+, and it's hit by everything on 3+.
asarnil has ws 7,which means ws 3 his him on 5+,and he hits ws 6 or lower on a 3+.

If you're having asarnil fight ws3 chaff, you'd be correct. But also wasting asarnil's power as a duelist.
Against ws 4 it functions as a - 1 to hit item.
Against Ws 7 (most combat Lords) it makes them hit you on 5+ and makes you hit on 3+, serving as a +1 to hit for you, -1 for them.
Against the rare ws 8+, it becomes even better, because it makes them hit on 5,instead of 3. I.e -2 to hit.
It's not great, but the only situation where a -1 to hit item is better is when fighting chaff, because it makes them hit on a 6+.
 
I'm using the wiki for this, so it might be wrong, but the wiki says Deathfang is a "Great Green Dragon" (green is just a color, not an indicator of anything). Great Dragons are one step below Emperor Dragons in the life cycle of Dragons, and I was under the assumption Star Dragons were Emperor Dragon equivalent.

Of course, I'm probably wrong on this account. I definitely think Deathfang deserves the label of Star Dragon. He's pretty strong.

5th edition was before a lot of the metaphysics were nailed down. Back then, there was just one kind of dragon and they were just big flying lizards with breath weapons. Later canon introduced multiple different species of Dragons, some of them aligned with various Winds and able to cast spells, and made Caledorian Dragons much more distinct. The Wiki ignores things like 'logic' and 'context' and tries to mush everything together from 5th Edition in the early nineties to 4e this year, and it is very easy to be led astray by it.

Deathfang is described in the fluff as being one of the oldest of the Caledorian dragons and his stats are superior to that of the generic Star Dragon. Therefore logic would dictate he is a Star Dragon.
 
@Codex as an example, Tyrion is a prince but that's cause of his deeds and relationship with the everqueen, as opposed to the bloodline of Anaereon (which usually would be a big black mark against him being a prince since it means there's a chance he could become Phoenix King) further exemplified by the fact his brother is not a prince.
 
Er so all the dragon talk is fun and all but does anyone have thoughts on the library vote? It is surprisingly close with only one vote between the two options. Are those books worth the 4CF? I think that bringing the Imperial lore on Henges to the table is worth it as a show of competence, small though it may yet be.
 
Somehow, that makes the Higher Demon we fought at Karak Vlag scarier to me. It was holding off a legendary Elf Dragon Prince with a super powerful artifact, one of the most powerful Star Dragons of Caledor, the greatsword of Kragg the Grim wielded by a Master Ulgu Swordswoman, and being assaulted and counter spelled by half a dozen Wizards, including a Choir of Hysh casters.

That's insane.
 
Umm, no. WS 1 hits anything above WS2 on 5+, and it's hit by everything on 3+.
asarnil has ws 7,which means ws 3 his him on 5+,and he hits ws 6 or lower on a 3+.

If you're having asarnil fight ws3 chaff, you'd be correct. But also wasting asarnil's power as a duelist.
Against ws 4 it functions as a - 1 to hit item.
Against Ws 7 (most combat Lords) it makes them hit you on 5+ and makes you hit on 3+, serving as a +1 to hit for you, -1 for them.
Against the rare ws 8+, it becomes even better, because it makes them hit on 5,instead of 3. I.e -2 to hit.
It's not great, but the only situation where a -1 to hit item is better is when fighting chaff, because it makes them hit on a 6+.
Double checks own assumption

Ah. I know where I got confused. I associated the -1 with a particular magic item combination (Fencer's Blades + Glittering Scales). Still, the point that WS1 isn't all that bad on the tabletop stands.
 
Somehow, that makes the Higher Demon we fought at Karak Vlag scarier to me. It was holding off a legendary Elf Dragon Prince with a super powerful artifact, one of the most powerful Star Dragons of Caledor, the greatsword of Kragg the Grim wielded by a Master Ulgu Swordswoman, and being assaulted and counter spelled by half a dozen Wizards, including a Choir of Hysh casters.

That's insane.
Chaos, they cheat like nobodies business, what's new there?

Er so all the dragon talk is fun and all but does anyone have thoughts on the library vote? It is surprisingly close with only one vote between the two options. Are those books worth the 4CF? I think that bringing the Imperial lore on Henges to the table is worth it as a show of competence, small though it may yet be.
Eh, favour is for spendin

[X] The Eonir of Laurelorn: Esoteric Dwarven (150 gc), Beastmen: Extensive Imperial, Extensive and Antiquarian Dwarven (300 gc), Waystones and Henges: Esoteric Imperial (150 gc and 4 CF)
 
Changing my vote. Can't think of anything worth CF more than Waystones, don't know if we can convince someone else to discount/remove the cost either.

[X] The Eonir of Laurelorn: Esoteric Dwarven (150 gc), Beastmen: Extensive Imperial, Extensive and Antiquarian Dwarven (300 gc), Waystones and Henges: Esoteric Imperial (150 gc and 4 CF)
 
The ruler of my nation is an "Emir", which is arabic for Prince. I was taught as a kid that Emir=Prince. You have no idea how confusing it is to me to see Prince being used for non-royalty.

I'm British, so I fully understand that. Took a while for me to wrap my head around how princes are sometimes used in continental Europe. For example, the President of France is also the Co-Prince of Andorra, the two titles are always held side by side. The other Prince is the Bishop of Urgell. Neither title is inherited.

In the Holy Roman Empire, they had Elector Princes who elected an Emperor, but no kings (well, except for that one guy in Prussia). Thinking on it, I'm kinda surprised Wahammer never did a "King in Hochland" sort of thing. Or if they did, I never heard of it.

Edit: would help if I quoted the right message
 
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