According to DP, we fought the pirates at roughly the halfway point between Apuku and Orinilu. I also think he said a couple weeks ago that they needed one more fight to level up, so they should be level 3 by the time we arrive.We are pretty close to Apuku by now. I wonder if we will get to level up our men then.
"They are like the storm, they are drawn to us the way we are drawn to the flash of lightning and the rumble of thunder," Inge speaks up in turn, sounding a lot more happy now that Antonio had agreed that you should not keep the spirit bound. "So er... close company maybe, it would not be safe, no more so that moving your hand though a flame."
Sounds like an interesting idea."They are like the storm, they are drawn to us the way we are drawn to the flash of lightning and the rumble of thunder," Inge speaks up in turn, sounding a lot more happy now that Antonio had agreed that you should not keep the spirit bound. "So er... close company maybe, it would not be safe, no more so that moving your hand though a flame."
You do not have as much healing as the spirit has abilities to throw lightning out of innocent curiosity to see how things twitch.
Control of any storms you might be hit by, but it comes with risk of life and limb from being poked with lighting in body and mind.
Try with a goat first. See how it thinks about actually murdering things. See if it can be reasoned with to not murder things for fun then.
@DragonParadox
Can we ask for advice on decyphering/learning the Wizard's spellbook for Esha and Zaia? Woul that be a bonus?
This is tempting, but nothing a bit of time shouldn't be able to manage just as well. Esha won't have anything to do for the next few weeks at least except study the spellbook, and Zaia won't be brewing potions and Alchemical stuff that entire time, either, though doing both should actually help him work towards becoming a true Alchemist anyway.I might do that, but OTOH, using the boon fully on the mages with no bonus for Antonio is not quite fair to him.
Eh, he'll have the biggest advantage of our connections if we make the journey north.
[X] Ask for advice on the dead mage's book and notes, to help Zaia and Esha advance their craft.
I don't have anything against Tom using a Bec de Corbin, but a Lucerne Hammer can do the same thing and has a slightly higher base damage, 1d12 vs 1d10.@Goldfish
Look at these jewels I found. Some look really interesting, but they have their own prequisites. In particular, I like the Crush Armor maneuver, because I want to make Tom into a sunder and polearm specialist with a bec de corvin.
Weapon Trick (Combat) – d20PFSRD
Considering the Elephant in the Room, maybe all the maneuvers should be able to be bought with a single feat? The same way we have Deft and Powerful Maneuvers.
I don't have anything against Tom using a Bec de Corbin, but a Lucerne Hammer can do the same thing and has a slightly higher base damage, 1d12 vs 1d10.
I don't have anything against Tom using a Bec de Corbin, but a Lucerne Hammer can do the same thing and has a slightly higher base damage, 1d12 vs 1d10.
I hadn't really thought much about Tom's build once he becomes a Fighter. As a 3rd level Fighter, he would have a total of five feats. Keeping Weapon Focus (Spears) and Pikeman's Training, that leaves three to work with. Powerful Maneuvers would be necessary for what you suggest, as would the Weapon Trick feat. That would leave one additional feat he could use to learn Deft Maneuvers or Improved Initiative.
Using a Bec de Corbin or Lucerne Hammer, along with Powerful Maneuvers, the Crush Armor weapon trick would require a DC 17 Fortitude save. That's a difficult save for most things we would be fighting, especially anything that would be wearing armor. The only problem is that when you're trying to Sunder something, you're not actually inflicting damage on your enemy, and I'm not sure inflicting the Fatigued condition on that enemy for 1 round is worth the feat investment. All that really amounts to is a -1 penalty to Attack bonus, damage bonus, and AC. What are your thoughts, @Artemis1992, @Snowfire?
If it was easier to inflict the Broken Condition on armor, it would be more attractive, but armor is actually pretty difficult to break in that manner without repeated Sunder attempts. Let's say an enemy is wearing Banded Bronze Mail, similar to what Roland uses. It has a +7 Armor bonus, meaning it's got 35 Hit Points. For mechanics purposes, we'll say Bronze has a similar Hardness as Steel, which is 10. The armor will ignore the first 10 points of damage because of its Hardness, so even assuming Tom does maximum weapon damage on a d12, adds his +1 Strength bonus, and Power Attacks for another +2, he would only inflict 5 points of damage on the armor. That same attack could have instead inflicted 15 points of damage on the enemy.
Now if @DragonParadox ruled that Sundering armor in that manner also damaged the person wearing it, which would make sense but isn't really allowed by the rules of the game, it would be a somewhat different story. Still not sure if it wouldn't just be better to direct all of the damage to your enemy, though.
Thinking about it, I think I would go with Weapon Focus (Spears) and Pikeman's Training from his previous feats, then Deft Maneuvers, Improved Initiative, and maybe Weapon Trick (Haft Bash) to let him use whatever type of Polearm we settle on for him against enemies that get inside the weapon's reach, which isn't normally possible.
I actually did want to give you this weapon in the first weapon choice, but then I realized that it was not used until the 15th century and roland is from the early 13th century. So unfortunately I cannot justify you knowing what a Lucerne Hammer is IC.
It's not really a terrible choice, but it would take a heavy feat investment to really make it work, and part of the problem is that there are never going to be many iterative attacks in a P6 setting. Martial characters who reach 6th level and have a full BAB will be able to make two attacks per round, or three if they're Hasted or using a weapon with the Speed special ability. Where a high level Fighter with a bunch of iterative attacks could spend a round trashing an opponent's gear, that isn't possible here. And like that post says, it also trashes what could be your loot, too. There is also the issue that a lot of opponents aren't even going to be wearing armor because they're creatures of some sort.Holy hell. How can sunder be such a terrible choice to even exist? How come armor has so much HP then? I mean, armor has hardness and more HP than the average thug we are going to find.
My idea was to have someone with the Powerful Maneuvers feat that could help to shape the battlefield with the whole pushing and pulling foes from one place to another. There are complimentary feats to sundering to make it more interesting, but at our level it is pretty much wasting feats, but nevertheless I will link what I found:
r/Pathfinder_RPG - Is a sunder two-handed fighter a viable build?
Then maybe we go for a trip build? Or something that makes combat tactics a little more interesting?
It's not really a terrible choice, but it would take a heavy feat investment to really make it work, and part of the problem is that there are never going to be many iterative attacks in a P6 setting. Martial characters who reach 6th level and have a full BAB will be able to make two attacks per round, or three if they're Hasted or using a weapon with the Speed special ability. Where a high level Fighter with a bunch of iterative attacks could spend a round trashing an opponent's gear, that isn't possible here. And like that post says, it also trashes what could be your loot, too. There is also the issue that a lot of opponents aren't even going to be wearing armor because they're creatures of some sort.
Greater Sunder at least lets some damage go through successfully Sundered armor, but that's not available until 6th level at a minimum and it's still not all that great.
The great thing about using the EitR rules is that you don't have to really focus too deeply on a particular build to the exclusion of other stuff. Just picking up Deft Maneuvers gets you the effect of the Improved Trip, Improved Disarm, Improved Dirty Trick, Improved Feint, Improved Reposition, and Improved Steal feats. And Powerful Maneuvers gets you Improved Bull Rush, Improved Drag, Improved Overrun, and Improved Sunder. Two feats for a lot of good stuff, assuming you want both. Then when you get to 6th level, you can learn Greater Trip or Greater Sunder and be really good at something while still having all of the other maneuvers to use when the situation calls for them.
So instead of focusing on a Trip build, I would just say to learn Deft Maneuvers and call it a day for at least a few levels until other options become available. Speaking of, I actually want all of our melee people to learn that one at 3rd level, and Roland on his next level up, too.
@Goldfish
I'm not opposed to taking Powerful Maneuvers and having at least the option to use Sunder if it becomes useful.
Mostly because it includes Bull Rush, which can also be useful depending on the situation.
But as an aside to the maneuvers, I would be interested in making Tom a Two-Hand Weapon Fighter. Give him proficiency with a group of heavy weapons and let go of the Pikeman's training. We could use someone who can bring in the damage with a two-hander and we can most definitly use someone who can utilize a two-handed weapon if we loot one.
I'm seeing this less like ASWAH and more like a computer-game in regards to loot, we will get relativly random stuff and it's best to have a party-member who can use the magical loot, so having companions with different styles of fighting is valuable on that base alone.