This weekend we’re going to try finish up the many-times-postponed birthday game of D&D that my eldest prepared for my middle child. And, yes, it’s nearly a month late, but ... well, shit happens. After getting postponed due to sickness, unpreparedness, and all around general grumpiness, I ended up having to postpone due to fallout from my big work project, which I finally pushed to production on Monday. So we started on Friday, but we started late, and now we’re finishing today, so, TL;DR: you get no proper post again this week.
But, in order to have something to put up, I thought perhaps I’d tell you about some of characters for this game. We’re doing a sort of Gothic horror game, though it seems so far like it’s less Ravenloft and more Castle Amber (if you speak D&D, you’ll get what I mean). My middle child opted for a flesh golem moster hunter barbaria
My youngest, on the other hand, came to play with a creepy-as-fuck concept. Silvin is a young man with no eyes (he wears bandages over where they should be) who wears dark, baggy, nondescript clothes ... including gloves, which cover the fact that he has eyeballs in his palms. So he has to take his gloves off if he wants to see, but on the other hand he can move through the world just fine as a blind person. He can’t speak, but he can communicate telepathically. He is a bard of the college of whispers, which gives him access to powers like Psychic Blades, Words of Terror, and Mantle of Whispers. As if that weren’t enough, he’s a feat machine, having taken Telepathic, Telekinetic, Shadow-Touched, and Gift of the Gem Dragon, which latter is just more ways to push people around with your mind. Aside from Words of Terror, he can cast cause fear, fear, danse macabre, dissonant whispers, phantasmal force, and phantasmal killer, which is a hell of a lot of ways to be a scary dude; when it comes to “look into my eyes” type shit, there’s the aforementioned Mantle of Whispers, plus even more spells: enthrall, confusion, unearthly chorus, Tasha’s hideous laughter, mental prison, crown of stars, and synaptic static. And I haven’t even listed all the spells he knows ... did I mention we’re 14th level for this one-shot? It’s crazy.
For myself, I resurrected an old character of mine that I had for a previous one-shot (also Gothic horror, and possible also for a birhday game). She was only 7th level, but it was easy enough to bring her up to 14th. She’s a rogue inquisitive and also a warlock of the Raven Queen (pact of the blade). I built her to be a mystery-solver who can also hold her own in a fight. She’s a lavender-skinned tiefling; I found this image on the Internet drawn by Bright Bird Art:
So she looks pretty much like that, except that her staff is actually illusory, so she can stab you with it (she summons her pact weapon, a scimitar, so that it’s inside the illusion of the staff), and she has a raven on her shoulder which doesn’t look quite real. In terms of feats, she is Perceptive and Mobile; in terms of eldritch invocations, she wears her Armor of Shadows, and can summon a Cloak of Flies when she needs to be really scary; in terms of spells, she can also mess with your mind too: via puppet, ego whip, or Raulothim’s psychic lance. Her expertises are in acrobatics, stealth, investigation, and perception; in battle she likes to cast spiritual weapon in the form of a person-sized raven and then either eldritch blast from afar, or get into the mix using Mobile, her improved pact weapon, and sneak attack. In social situations, she’s pretty darn good at persuasion and deception, but she’s not afraid to break out that cloak of flies, which can do poison damage if you stand too close, and, if you don’t, there’s always infestation to send those little buggers out up to 30 feet away.
So that’s our primary party (my eldest’s partner is playing a helpful druid, but he’s really closer to an NPC), and we’re exploring a vampire’s castle and seeking out and destroying various loose, undead organs. We got the stomach and the liver so far, but I’ve a feeling there’s a lot more to go. Wish us luck!
Great description and information on their characters! I wasn't really sure what was going on in the dining room those two nights but it sounded like you guys were really engaged and having fun. I especially enjoyed listening to P's engagement in the adventure. Thanks for introducing our kids to dnd! It's so fun to watch them take what you started them with and grow their passion, interest, and skill for the dnd lifestyle!
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