A webcomic about swords and sorcery and subways
The vibes are... something

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A webcomic about swords and sorcery and subways
The vibes are... something

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
So, I've been poking at Kingmaker scenes for a bit with Jocelyn, and one thing I had wanted to poke at was the idea of Valerie being with a paladin and what a paladin might realize talking to her, as well as the two comparing their experiences. Been sitting on it for a while, and I thought I'd share it since I don't think I'll use it in what I'm currently working on.
Set partway through Act I, meant to be an adaptation of a part of the conversations you can have with Valerie at the trading post.
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Valerie was quite thankful that she had taken up a watch posting that morning, as it meant that this conversation was to be had in relative privacy. This could end quite poorly, and she did not need Linzi gossiping with Svetlana or Amiri about this. Especially given the bard was, as with so many of their lackadaisical kind, another devotee of worthless Shelyn.
"You mentioned that you had trained with the Order of the Eternal Rose," Jocelyn asked after pleasantries as both women looked southwards, towards the Stolen Lands proper. "Were you training as one of Shelyn's paladins, or as a lay-squire like I first was?"
Valerie raised an eyebrow at the tidbit hinted at, but put that aside for now. "My father gave me to Shelyn's service at six, believing my beauty to be her divine blessing. That I was destined to serve the Eternal Rose, and if I wished to do as a warrior it would be as one of her paladins." She scoffed. "You can see how that went."
@ghostwise you’re right it totally slipped my mind to show the display of light bc in game I was just hitting dialogue options. and tbh it would’ve just been like aang showing the air bending toy. except Lann is upset bc xoryth didnt show chief sull but yeah they’ll show the prelate for manipulative reasons.
Welp, the Archives of Nethys lost their partnership with Paizo. This means they're taking down the legacy PRD, which was my preferred site for years! Expect a lot more broken links in the reruns, which I will try to remember to fix.
It's a tragic and unfortunate sign of how things might be changing at Paizo, but before anyone here raises their torches and pitchforks at the company, I suggest reading this for some context about why it's happening.
There's millions of dollars in physical property being held in legal limbo right now due to the collapse of their former distributor, Diamond Comics, which is causing a terrible ripple effect through everyone Diamond Comics had contracts with. There's going to be some belt-tightening at Paizo, and there probably will be for quite some time until the situation with Diamond resolves.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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My brain randomly latched onto Lycanthropes recently, and it occurred to me; I can't recall Paizo mentioning the origins of them at any point, which doesn't feel right. Do you know of any? and if so, what it was? or at least what book it was in?
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No, you're right. Nowhere actually talks about their origins in absolutes, not even Blood of the Moon, the book that's ALL ABOUT them. The closest we get to a concrete answer is Jezelda's article in Book of the Damned, where she's credited as the first werewolf... a fact that's debated and denied in-universe, by her own minions. Her article in the BotD frustratingly taunts me with "the original source of lycanthropy has long fascinated scholars and philosophers, for it is an affliction that has plagued civilization from the very beginning" before launching into "yeah not even Jezelda's faith considers her the first one." I suppose it does make her unique when among her peers Kabriri "The First Ghoul" Gnawingone and Zura "The First Vampire" Vampqueen (who is also only debatably the first vampire, but she openly claims to be).
I think the most tantalizing hint to the origins of therianthropy is actually in 2e's Howl of the Wild, snuck in via two sentences on page 194: "It could be the curse exists on its own, to be filtered through any type of beast. Or it began as a curse for one animal, and some influence of other animal magic caused the malady to splinter to other species."
The implications there are fascinating and more than a little horrifying; that the curse spreads almost like a prion disease. leaping from species to species until it makes its way into a host who expresses the symptoms obviously and violently. It's easy for someone (me) to come to the conclusion that there may be swaths of Golarion's wildlife who are infected by this transformative illness, but humanity largely doesn't notice because the rabid transformed animals either keep to the wilds or are slain in the dead of night before anyone got a good look at what they actually were.
There's a nonzero chance that werewolves WERE the first therianthropes, but they spread the curse to other creatures via nonfatal bites (or into scavengers consuming their corpses), who went on to create their own variants of the polymorphic curse in anything they bit or anything that bit them.
There's no solid origin, though I'm willing to bet druids had something to do with it. The fact that therianthropy has existed since the beginning of recorded history is certainly something to think about! Researching an answer for it made my brain spin up a horrifying theory, so hopefully you may be able to make your own equally terrifying conclusions!
Ambient dialogues in the Lawful Good version of Tuskdale in Pathfinder: Kingmaker! Includes a crowd shot and the dialogue box (trimming out generic people greeting the player character). All of them are also transcribed under the "Read More". Most of them are just 'Citizen', so I've identified them where I could. They are also written to loop, so finding the exact start and end can be a little confusing. Took my best shot at it, though.
First, we've got a priestess acting inquisitorially with a pub owner (the only one I was able to screenshot clean to boot without some random citizen or guard coming in to hail), and it seems the Outer Rifts have been sniffing around. That, or some murderhobos just came back from Treasures of the Midnight Isles and chose this tavern to play cards at.
Second, we have a band of adventurers off to deal with some bandits. After being properly identified, of course. Don't want to be mistaken for other murderhobos adventurers, right?
Third, we have a dwarven paladin of Iomedae, a veteran of the Mendevian Crusades, telling a story and inspiring a future paladin. Definitely the most complicated of them, and one that feels like it's one that'd only happen later once we have established Tuskdale properly rather than the barony just being founded.
And lastly, we have a father-son discussion where the ex-brigand father is disappointed that his son followed in his footsteps and also did some brigandage (without even wearing a brigandine, tsk tsk, proper PPE kiddo...). Another one that feels like it's really meant for after we've become well established, though also one I have a hard time identifying where it was meant to start and end before looping.
(So, what is your baron(ess)' verdict on the crime and plea brought before them?)
i think it's funny when a character is almost exclusively referred to by their last name by other people and this carries over into their internal monologue when someone writes from their pov. not even on a first name basis with herself
A webcomic about swords and sorcery and subways
Touchy feely

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Reminder to self: A file folder of outlines and character notes and half-written scenes is the equivalent of an artist’s sketchbook and holds just as much value to the creative process.
If a framed canvas isn’t the only worthwhile expression of visual art, then a fully edited and polished piece of significant length is not the only worthwhile expression of writing.
WIP Wednesday! A part of a worldbuilding rush that that recently bit me that I'm making a one or two shot out of.
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N. Gin deflated with a nod. "Far different from what we used to do, yes. You remember, master? The open road before us, the purr of our rides, the rush as we ignited the nitro-fuel to leap off ramps!" He paused. "The bruises on our keisters as we landed. Or when Amberley caught us."
"The sacrifices we make for speed," Neo noted with faux-lamentation, though he could not help but smile fondly. "If only Amberley could see us now! 'What a useless skill', she said! 'You'll never do any evil on a kart', she said! Ha! We'll see who laughs last!"
"She did not appreciate us testing our mechanical genius against the road!" He shook his robotic right hand indignantly. "You will see, master: our love of speed will see us through this. Those bandicoots are mere imitators!"
"And who did they imitate?" Neo genuinely lamented this time, shaking his head. "Their creator, of course. It seems no matter where I turn, I see past failures staring back at me. Thwarting me. Opposing me."
N. Gin paused, the still-biological half of his mouth frowning as he looked at his right hand, before he spoke. "Had the Vortex worked, would you have regretted it?"
"Of course not!" Neo snapped back. "I remember when that blasted bandicoot was my pride and joy, the minion I would make my general! Showing Crash how to drive a kart was like father-son bonding, and I haven't even done that with my daugh- er, niece!"
Had he not created the bandicoot? Or rather, taken him from a short, brutish life of grubbing for worms with his nose and nibbling leaves, and instead evolved him into something more. Shaped life with his own will and intellect, nurtured a talent for destruction and platform navigation with a steady supply of crate courses, and taught him other skills. Skills that the bandicoot had then turned against him, after the Cortex Vortex rejected him…
Arrest everyone involved.
Money saved: maybe a couple million dollars.
People killed: around three quarters of a million.
"Even now, our banner flies high!"
happy pride month ⚔️🌈
A webcomic about swords and sorcery and subways
Turnabout is—

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
One thing I had forgotten with Pathfinder: Kingmaker was how awkward Troll Trouble was as a main quest. Normally in Kingmaker, the best thing to do is whack the main quest as soon as your character can handle it in order to prevent the crisis from sapping your kingdom... except with Troll Trouble you want to wait around long enough for the phase to change for the Lone House, except it takes a while to happen which triggers the trolls damaging your kingdom in its most vulnerable stage and when its least equipped to fight back.
By contrast, the other quests you could focus on the main quest and get it dealt with having plenty of time to spare, and anything that you can do as a side quest is available immediately or as part of completing the main quest, meaning that you don't have to play sub-optimally to get the quests. This would give you plenty of time to work on managing to kingdom, without having to weigh whether you want to wait for events related to the main quest to focus on management or if you want to miss content to focus on the main quest.
... basically I had put my playthrough to a halt as I was overthinking it and decided I needed to step back for a while. Heh.
On a similar note, it made me realize that they also should have let us still have the full ninety days if we dealt with the Stag Lord early as a reward for being time efficient. It'd only be eight to nine weeks at most, enough time to get a few more level-ups in but still being limited by what resources are available and not that many problems/opportunities early on. It would also free up time for things like Sorrowflow or revisiting some of the tougher Act I encounter areas like the Tranquil River Bend.
Fellow Aivu fans, I felt like I should inform you that the official pathfinder stats for the Delight Dragon, the variant of dragon spawned from Elysium as of 2nd Edition, include some absolutely fantastic abilities
(1e had stats for a Havoc Dragon with much the same lore, but without the bonkers abilities)
... wait a second, Delight Dragons weaponized Calvinball with their Let's Play ability?!
(Also, I think Camellia Gwerm would particularly loathe Play Scape... where's the sound of wet crimson being drawn?)