And so Amrelath gets attacked by undead Abery in the Plane of Fire
Alas, not quite that surprising.
And so Amrelath gets attacked by undead Abery in the Plane of Fire
DragonParadox: "FUCK, WHO STOLE MY NOTES?!"
I did not make this encounter or anything near it.Are all your encounters designed to produce Dread Wraiths now? Look I know that's pound for pound an efficient way to utilize HD, but it seems a bit silly that the faction characterized for wights is instead making an army of wraiths even if OOC that seems like a better army to have. Especially since as you pointed out that's just a bullshit way to magic up an army of high CR gribblies with no resource investment. At least sending five wyrmwraiths to die under our guns and PCs was a definite reflection of resources invested into a fight. Now they can't mass produce Dreadwraiths with five Wyrmwraiths.
If they can just dig around the pantry for a wraith factory in any given area we have basically already lost the entirety of the Far North. Mance and his people should be dead right now, and we have an army of 100,000~ wraiths INC. right now in the middle of summer.
Unless it's an Other Champion though, they have a HD limit.I did not make this encounter or anything near it.
I just mean that stuff like the Wyrms, or simply a caster with Create Greater Undead and a high CL can create powerful Undead from regular materials.
Not for Create Undead.
Blight druids represent!
So long as it doesn't have enough time to turn it into a ghost ship, we should be able to recover from it. This time she's armed with some Ghost Touch shells though, @DragonParadox. At least enough for a few salvos.The Moonsong's about to have a rematch that is even worse-stacked against her than the previous one, then.
Mythic Rank if she gets out of that with crew/ship intact?
The Moonsong's about to have a rematch that is even worse-stacked against her than the previous one, then.
Mythic Rank if she gets out of that with crew/ship intact?
We are currently three layers deep into meaningless side-quests, with signs pointing towards either taking a dip into the fourth layer or Rina getting her missing class feature out of a deus ex machina.It doesn't seem like people are interested overly much in either the giants or the girl's family.
The first is... well, I take the blame for it being slow and in a non-ideal place, but it was sensible to do at this particular time IC.
The girl is a random encounter turned to plot hook turned to more random encounters in span of few chapters.
Makes sense IC, not really interesting or engaging otherwise.
I can see the giants, if barely, being a "meaningless side-quest". I thjnk we should've just moved them with no interruptions, but, dice is dice apparently.We are currently three layers deep into meaningless side-quests
As far as the overall plot moves, the Thenns were already a meaningless side-quest. The outcome would not affect the general strategic situation to a significant degree and it was wholly optional from the start.I can see the giants, if barely, being a "meaningless side-quest". I thjnk we should've just moved them with no interruptions, but, dice is dice apparently.
My opinion on the Not!Random Encounter-girl is known.
But what's the first later, here?
The Evacuation of Thenns was kinda an important event, built up to for a few months at the very least, if not... perfectly coherently all the while?
Time even moves slower the deeper you go... you are on to something... 🤔
I think it was rather important.It was much more interesting and better integrated into the overall plot, but it could still easily have been trimmed from the narrative.
Could have hit the same narrative notes with a visit at the wall or bailing out a Night Watch group or something. I agree that the Thenns had meaning, but not one that was intrinsic to them.I think it was rather important.
Not in itself, the Thenn don't matter, but in VIserys putting his money where his mouth is.
We have been making a lot of arguments based on the idea of "everyone stands together against Winter/Void/various foes of all mankind", so now investing time, effort and valuable material like the Moonchasers into securing a few Wildlings is living up to that propaganda, making our promises sound more real for the next round of talks.
And reaffirming his characterization about keeping his word where it matters.
Edit: that the Thenn aren't materially worth it supports the point, rather than opposing it.
True I guess.Could have hit the same narrative notes with a visit at the wall or bailing out a Night Watch group or something. I agree that the Thenns had meaning, but not one that was intrinsic to them.
It's like... hm... the trials in the first Harry Potter book. They served two functions. The first is to show off the importance of the three main characters by pandering to their skills and the second is to whittle down the party for the final showdown.
The exact nature of the trials is irrelevant. They are a plot device without intrinsic meaning. You could replace them with any other trial without impacting the plot, as long as the new cog fits into the machine.