

There were suddenly cries of anguish, bandits being thrown out windows, the sounds of chaos eruptted. Little did they know, they underestimated the wrath that Nature brought.
#Shatter dnd full#
Everyone made fun of him behind his back, making tentacle jokes at his expense.Įveryone thought the foolish Kenku was as good as dead as he shifted into his Monkey form and climbed the tower full of the dangerous pirate organization known as the River Dukes alone.

He only Wild Shaped into Monkeys and an Octopus that one time at sea. He talked like a Parrot, even going so far as to dye some of his feathers. Never give a NPC a voice you aren't willing to do for the entire campaign.Įveryone thought that the Kenku Druid was an idiot. It isn't like he had good stats.he was a child! In single combat with the orc chieftain who was 4 levels higher than him. No roll made against him was ever more than a 2. No roll that child ever made was below a 19. Now you have to understand that when I made the character to begin with I gave him a silly voice, so the urge to kill him so I didn't have to do the voice anymore was high.but I am nothing if not a stickler for the rules. The dwarf decided to adopt the boy and give him a proper dwarven name, and thus began the legend of Urist BloodTunnel. Literally the least thought I had ever put into a story hook, just enough to get them to go kill the orcs.

An unnamed orphan approached the dwarf player, and laid out a fairly basic sob story. I was attempting to get the players to go raid a orc camp as a sort of babbys first d&d session for some of the new players. The DM disapproved of this tactic in future games. Despite being hit by every attack in the solar system and weak to the most common element in the setting, he always made the toughness check so never took any damage other than scratches. didn't actually end up as bad as I expected. A black hole had a better chance of dodging an attack than he did. This means that both Parry and Dodge (melee and ranged defense) were 0, with a net negative after size. So in a fit of insanity, I put max ranks in toughness. that means that if the rank of the game was 12, I could have 6 toughness and 6 in my defenses, or 8 and 4, or 3 and 9 etc. Now, in this system, we could have a combined defense + toughness equal to the power rank of the game.

He was also the one with all of the charisma skills for some weird reason, which was hilarious since he was about as dense as cement. In one of our Megaman-themed Mutants and Masterminds, I played Crush Kodiac, a giant bear reploid whose powers were jumping really high, lifting heavy objects, and giving bear hugs. I don't know where the story is going, but there was definitely more to the warlock than just a happy-go-lucky idiot fascinated by everything in sight. His character has begun to act outright violent towards anyone that isn't in the party while acting like he isn't aware that outright murder is out of the norm. The latest thing that has happened is that (I believe) its begun to influence the warlock. Fairly recently we found a reference to his patron in history, referring to the entity as, "The Rift Lord." We asked around about it and everyone we asked was completely fucking mortified at the mention of it. The DM pulled him into a private chat, and when we finally got inside, the displacer beasts were in pieces and the warlock was unharmed. On one occasion, the warlock was locked in a room alone against 12 displacer beasts, with myself and our cleric attempting desperately to open the door to help him. Our party has seen it devour people on several occasions, as well as kill some seriously tough opponents to protect our warlock. We've always seen his patron as just this weird serpent thing that lives in his shadow, the most it would really do is speak simple sentences for a while, but now it seems to have grown in strength and is just straight up scary. Then we started learning more about his patron. At first we thought he was a complete joke character, as his entire personality was being completely fascinated by the simplest of technology (he literally spent ten minutes trying to get an NPC to explain to him the wonders of spoons). In the campaign I'm currently playing in, we have a player whose character is a Half-Drow, Half-Tiefling warlock playing some homebrew subclass. Well, maybe not exactly what you're asking, but related.
