Panoramia nods. "Magic stuff," she explains to Eike, who nods. "Lunch would be a good start. Halflings consider a proper lunch to be a form of worship."
Eike brightens a little. "So does Shallya," she says.
"Well, there's a few differences between a Shallyan meal and an Esmereldan one, but there's enough agreement there to work with," Panoramia says, leading Eike in the direction of a nearby cluster of buildings.
Don't forget that Esmeralda also has a touch of protector given that she watches over the Moot IIRC.My gut instinct is that the other Daughter is Esmerelda.
Boney wrote either a big hint or a big coincidence back during Eike's Visit:
Which flew entirely under everyone's radar, because this was a couple turns before the Truth/Faith vote happened, and we found out Ranald even had daughters.
Just a totally unremarkable coincidence of two unrelated cults agreeing on the importance of lunch as a religious observance.
Don't forget that Esmeralda also has a touch of protector given that she watches over the Moot IIRC.
Then they were true to Games Workshop, who iirc have always tried to treat their Halflings as a joke at Tolkien's expense.I truly don't feel like the WFRP writers put even a morsel of the respect that Tolkien provided to the Hobbits when writing about Halflings.
if hes witch-hunting the witch hunter, then logically the lizard will have a better hat. And Lizards build primarily with stone.I don't get what you're trying to say, sorry 😅 Why would the sauruses wear stone witch-hunter hats?
It's not so much as Waystones in particular as it is that we already have an in with them, and have Halflings who we can say we're on good terms with who can vouch for us.I think the idea that is Esmeralda is kind of moot. Even if it is her it's not useful enough to ever use the coin on. After all we have no indication that the halflings have any lore about the stones. The fact that they have naturally fewer mages than humans also means it is all the less likely that any lore would have been passed though if it did exist.
I should clarify though, that I actually think things changed when Black Industries stopped publshing WFRP books. Towards the end of 2E's lifecycle, WFRP was picked up by Fantasy Flight Games from Black Industries, and they were the ones who made the last three books (Career Compendium, Thousand Thrones and Shades of Empire). It's very clear to me when reading those books that things took a different direction with this new publisher, and I still say that Shades of Empire is actually one of the more interesting and well written 2E books. It's also the book that introduced the Quinsberry Lodge, which is probably the most earnest take at an actually interesting concept involving Halflings in 2E.Then they were true to Games Workshop, who iirc have always tried to treat their Halflings as a joke at Tolkien's expense.
It's not so much as Waystones in particular as it is that we already have an in with them, and have Halflings who we can say we're on good terms with who can vouch for us.
Maybe we could spare a social action this turn to go check out the coin.Halflings are perfectly nice people who will generally trust one if you treat them fairly. I cannot think of many cases when we would need the trust of one so fast and so far that we would need to appeal to the Coin
Using social actions to reap practical benefit is a slippery slope that I'm not sure we want to get close to. It would make it even more of a battleground between people who just want to hang out with other people and people who want to maximise our action economy.Maybe we could spare a social action this turn to go check out the coin.
moot, lol
Boney's already shot this sort of thing down:Maybe we could spare a social action this turn to go check out the coin.
Actual answer: Social action votes are supposed to be based on what people would subjectively enjoy reading, and allowing it to be used to investigate something like this would set a precedent too far into a grey area for my liking.
They weren't actually described as twins:I'm not convinced on Esmeralda. For starters, the daughters seem to be twins, so it'd be odd if one was a halfling goddess but the other wasn't. Before we knew Haletha was one of them, I could have seen that, but not now, not unless the Halflings just happen to have an obscure protector-goddess of their own that is associated with the Hedgefolk or the Forest of Shadows.
They were both small, but children are small for a long time [citation needed], and could be non-twins. That said, I do agree that it would be really weird for one to be a halfling goddess and one not. I agree that Haleth and the Lady are the likeliest possibilities at this point.two small girls, one who heavily resembles Her father with a hint of Her mother, and the other Her mother with a hint of Her father.