...Man, it would have been very bittersweet to get the "Archive" option. No dwarves, but presumably ALL the books.
At the very least, it would be a new and interesting category of "Fire Dwarf".
"Phoenix Dwarves" perhaps?
I'm a little sad we're not in that timeline, to be honest, but "Khasr Dwarves" are just as interesting, if not outright stranger.
We've got two sets of Wood Elves, we could deal with two sets of Fire Dwarfs.If I did game out something to that effect I'd be at least mighty tempted to go with his Emperor of the Heavens portion as an excuse to use stars or thunder or something of that nature as the aesthetic to avoid that problem.
The Ancestor Gods are defined by the things they created for Dwarf civilization. Mining, metalworking, engineering, alcohol, ancestor worship, and so on. If the Dwarfs already had herding as a fully developed part of their society, they wouldn't need an Ancestor God to create it.With this context of the Old Gods all being closely associated with animals, the fact that there isn't an Ancestor God of Animal Husbandry/Ranching/etc becomes much more interesting. Since if such things were already heavily affiliated with the Old Gods they broke the Dawi away from, then either the Ancestor Gods didn't think the Dawi needed any guidance with that realm, or they consciously chose to distance themselves and the new culture they were creating with the Old Gods by not having one dedicated to it.
You will not be shocked to discover that if I had my way there would be one set of Wood Elves, since Asrai lore would never have them as such psychopaths that a second set of nature elves who can act normal was neededWe've got two sets of Wood Elves, we could deal with two sets of Fire Dwarfs.
that's not a price that's a cool reward, Borek."And I'll have a task from you in exchange, in service of my new career."
You consider that, and weigh the calibre of foe that a diplomat with a found axe might be seeking assistance with. "Very well."
aww you got me, but i suppose one fashionable killer with a magic blade can can help another.The silence stretches between you as you try to digest what he has told you. "Now," he says abruptly, "I'll have your assistance, that which you've already pledged to give, in crafting the hairstyle that is the uniform of my new profession."
You look at the bubbling pot of what you now know to be troll fat, and almost regret your impetuous curiosity.
Dwarves, or people that were once dwarves, living within Karak Dum. An interesting path in distant parallel with Hashut.Nor could I go down the path of the few Elders that still linger in Karag Dum, doing nothing but watching with hollow eyes and still tongues as their grandchildren go about their lives never knowing that their very souls have been reforged into weapons of spite against the Chaos Gods.
I'd love to read a fanfic telling that story
Ah, i mixed the two up in my head, of what each race calls themPseudo-minor thing, but that isn't what the Dwarves would be calling the War of Vengeance.
Fixed that for youTo such word, Thorgrim could only look down, as he gently placed away his bear. And opened the grand emergience cupboard, not opened since the war of Vengeance, and tenderily took out a small jar of Klatchian Coffee beansglass of water. "I'm too drunk for this" Were the only words spoken.
I would point out that of Boney's categories, "Besieged" was an active possibility, where Gor-Dum represents "Occupation", and the categorical implication is that Asuryan Dwarves would have been actively fighting an army outside the Karak. That's a *very different* ending state to the expedition than the one we got.
Mathilde's loyalty to the dwarves was kind of tested in the way she answered the Chamberlain when he was asking about the dwarves response to Marienburg getting mad about the canal, as well as exactly how much she would talk about the hidden faultlines in Dwarven society. But it wasn't much of test, and I can't remember anything more significant.It occurs to me that this particular division of loyalty has never actually been tested. I have to wonder if Mathilde would find herself far more reluctant to break her sword word than might be expected of a Grey Wizard.
You pause, trying to find the best way to tell him what he needs to know without speaking ill of those you live amongst.
"They've done quite well out of their partnership with Marienburg, and they're even less willing to give a straight answer than usual on the matter. So I put it to you - can the Dwarves be convinced to stop building the canal between the Aver and the Black Waters?"
Under the piercing gaze of the Chamberlain of the Seal, you consider your answer carefully.