Some 4th Edition Realms Changes
#21
Posted 14 November 2007 - 04:47 PM
Cyric's church is probably in decline, if it hasn't collapsed outright. I'd expect more Cyricists to go to other faiths, most likely including Bane, Mask, Shar, and maybe Velsharoon and Gargauth.
Bane definitely stands a fair amount to gain from the death of Mystra-she's one of the most powerful good deities in the Realms, and killing her removes a major obstacle from his plans. Most of the other evil deities would probably be rejoicing at Mystra's death for the same reason.
Selune and Azuth are the most likely candidates for the care of the Weave with Mystra dead-with Azuth MIA on the astral plane, I'd see Selune as being likely to take up the job, as well as Savras' portfolio. If so, Selune will definitely rise to the status of a greater power, and with Shar on the rise, it seems easy to imagine their war being more intense than usual. If not Selune, then there are some other possibilities-Oghma and Deneir aren't hard to imagine as potential applicants for the deity of magic. They're the only other obvious candidates, though-adding magic to the portfolio of any other deity would be a major change to that deity.
With Helm confirmed dead, I'd expect either Torm or Tyr to take his portfolio.
If Netheril is rising again, the Auranoch will probably be the center of it-putting Silverymoon, Evereska, and more in the direct shadow of the new power. Combined with the Spellplague and the kind of arcane power a new Netheril would almost certainly have... lots of possibilities, most of them ugly.
"The righteous need not cower before the drumbeat of human progress. Though the song of yesterday fades into the challenge of tomorrow, God still watches and judges us. Evil lurks in the datalinks as it lurked in the streets of yesterday, but it was never the streets that were evil." - Sister Miriam Godwinson, Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri
#22
Posted 14 November 2007 - 05:01 PM
And I still don't think, even with Shar's help, Cyric could have pulled this all off. Someone else is in on this too, but I can't imagine any of the other gods joining in on this. They don't seem to stand to gain too much from all of this.
I can certainly think of someone whose plans might culminate in something like this: the Triad falling apart, Cyric banished and his portfolio, if not precisely up for grabs, certainly a lot closer, Helm dead, Tyr grief-stricken, the realms in chaos, hundreds of thousands dead, certain mages possibly dead or at least reeling, and Shar probably facing consequences in her own right for her involvement in Mystra's death. Of course, this particular person would have to still be alive at this point (possible based on the mod outcome) and probably would need to have gained divinity to make it work (I wonder how Gargauth is doing these days....)
"Tyranny is a quiet thing at first, a prim and proper lady pursing her lips and shaking her head disapprovingly, asking, well what were you doing (wearing that dress, walking home at that hour, expressing those inappropriate thoughts) anyway? It's subtle and insidious, disguised as reasonable precautions which become more and more oppressive over time, until our lives are defined by the things we must avoid. She's easy enough to agree with, after all, she's only trying to help -- and yet she's one of the most dangerous influences we face, because if she prevails, it puts the raping, robbing, axe-wielding madmen of the world in complete control. Eventually they'll barely need to wield a thing, all they'll have to do is leer menacingly and we fall all over ourselves trying to placate them." -godlizard
#23
Posted 14 November 2007 - 06:12 PM
Magic works in other worlds, without a Weave. Basically the Weave is a GUI and now the mages of Faerun need to learn how to hack teh matrix oldskool style yo, fo shizzle. Given that some people were clever enough to survive the fall of Netheril, I wouldn't be surprised if they're the first to adapt to the new circumstances.What I really don't get. Netheril back? How? There is now little magic... netheril was a magic nation...
Not to mention, with Mystra and the Weave gone... does that mean Mystra's ban on 10th+ level magic is gone now? Probably a good thing Halaster is gone, in that case. Anyone else want to know what he'd do with a 12th-level spell?
YESPLZ! We've had a pansy Good one for a long time now, in with the evil!My guess would be /.../ Shar
EEEVIL! \m/_>_<_\m/
Eh, Shar is pretty damn powerful, and Cyric is pretty good at what he does. I'm not saying you're wrong, but I don't think it'd be impossible for them to succeed.And I still don't think, even with Shar's help, Cyric could have pulled this all off.
Edited by vilkacis, 14 November 2007 - 06:14 PM.
The Slithering Menace | Rupert the dye merchant | Lion Warrior kit | Werewarrior kit | The Portable Hole | Sarevok's True Power | High Level ABILITIES
#24
Posted 14 November 2007 - 06:19 PM
Eh, Shar is pretty damn powerful, and Cyric is pretty good at what he does. I'm not saying you're wrong, but I don't think it'd be impossible for them to succeed.
Guess so. I just always figured the gods were near-unstoppable in their home planes. Then again, stranger stuff has happened in the Realms. Couldn't have been easy, though.
Magic works in other worlds, without a Weave. Basically the Weave is a GUI and now the mages of Faerun need to learn how to hack teh matrix oldskool style yo, fo shizzle. Given that some people were clever enough to survive the fall of Netheril, I wouldn't be surprised if they're the first to adapt to the new circumstances.
I wouldn't be surprised if the survivors of Netheril didn't bother with the Weave at all after the Fall. I imagine they'd spent time figuring out how to do magic without the Weave, refined it all this time, and waited for the right time to strike. Cyric, Shar, and whoever else just gave them their opening.
And I second Larloch for the new deity of magic!
Edited by VIIIofSwords, 14 November 2007 - 06:25 PM.
"I used to dislike the idea of an unfair universe. Then I got to thinking: what if we did deserve all the awful things that happened to us, and didn't deserve any of the good? Suddenly, I found myself taking comfort in the thought of an inherently hostile and unfair universe."
VIII of Swords - my general, anything-goes blog
#25
Posted 14 November 2007 - 06:37 PM
"Tyranny is a quiet thing at first, a prim and proper lady pursing her lips and shaking her head disapprovingly, asking, well what were you doing (wearing that dress, walking home at that hour, expressing those inappropriate thoughts) anyway? It's subtle and insidious, disguised as reasonable precautions which become more and more oppressive over time, until our lives are defined by the things we must avoid. She's easy enough to agree with, after all, she's only trying to help -- and yet she's one of the most dangerous influences we face, because if she prevails, it puts the raping, robbing, axe-wielding madmen of the world in complete control. Eventually they'll barely need to wield a thing, all they'll have to do is leer menacingly and we fall all over ourselves trying to placate them." -godlizard
#26
Posted 14 November 2007 - 06:41 PM
"The righteous need not cower before the drumbeat of human progress. Though the song of yesterday fades into the challenge of tomorrow, God still watches and judges us. Evil lurks in the datalinks as it lurked in the streets of yesterday, but it was never the streets that were evil." - Sister Miriam Godwinson, Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri
#27
Posted 14 November 2007 - 06:47 PM
Pretty much, but a greater god is near unstoppable anywhere, and Shar&Cyric's portfolios are excellently suited to the job. With Cyric's "murder, lies, deception and illusion" and Shar's "forgetfulness and unrevealed secret", and they'll never see it coming.Guess so. I just always figured the gods were near-unstoppable in their home planes.
But no, I don't expect it was easy.
That would be pretty awesome, actually. I have no idea how non-Weave magic works in Faerun, though.I wouldn't be surprised if the survivors of Netheril didn't bother with the Weave at all after the Fall. I imagine they'd spent time figuring out how to do magic without the Weave, refined it all this time, and waited for the right time to strike. Cyric, Shar, and whoever else just gave them their opening.
Good. That means you get to live.And I second Larloch for the new deity of magic!
Well, it works for clerics, and last thing I heard was that mages in the Dragonlance draw power from different sources based on alignment, so it'd definitely work. And actually, given that the god of magic is going to be pretty much the most powerful deity except Ao (and iirc, only barely less powerful than Ao, if Greenwood is to be believed, which I guess he is), it might even be a good idea to spread it a bit thinner. I'm guessing it'd prevent something similar from happening again, too, unless all the mage-gods got offed at the same time. Ao might make an exception this time, in the interest of not having to clean up a similar mess in the near future.Any thoughts on my idea of multiple deities responsible for magic rather than one over-arching being?
The Slithering Menace | Rupert the dye merchant | Lion Warrior kit | Werewarrior kit | The Portable Hole | Sarevok's True Power | High Level ABILITIES
#28
Posted 14 November 2007 - 06:48 PM
The craziest way to go about this would probably be to assign one god with the appropriate portfolio a school of magic. That way, no single deity controls all that power and, if they re-establish the Weave, you'd have to worry about multiple gods tending to it.
That would be pretty awesome, actually. I have no idea how non-Weave magic works in Faerun, though.
No idea here, either, but there are probably ideas floating out there on how this can be done. A friend said that, if magic in FR can be made out like the Force from Star Wars, non-Weave magic might be interpreted as subtly influencing it, rather than outright controlling it.
Edited by VIIIofSwords, 14 November 2007 - 06:53 PM.
"I used to dislike the idea of an unfair universe. Then I got to thinking: what if we did deserve all the awful things that happened to us, and didn't deserve any of the good? Suddenly, I found myself taking comfort in the thought of an inherently hostile and unfair universe."
VIII of Swords - my general, anything-goes blog
#29
Posted 14 November 2007 - 07:11 PM
Agreed, it would be unlikely for more than one being to be in charge of all magic. However, magic in a setting like this does tend to be over-arching. I do think the aspects of magic need to be divided among different gods, but again, Ao is unlikely to allow that.
The craziest way to go about this would probably be to assign one god with the appropriate portfolio a school of magic. That way, no single deity controls all that power and, if they re-establish the Weave, you'd have to worry about multiple gods tending to it.
Of course, with the Weave gone, it might cease to make sense to even approach magic as a singular thing that one god could control.
No idea here, either, but there are probably ideas floating out there on how this can be done. A friend said that, if magic in FR can be made out like the Force from Star Wars, non-Weave magic might be interpreted as subtly influencing it, rather than outright controlling it.
I suspect non-weave magic would be much less "ritualized" (prescribed material and somatic and verbal components and so on) and more of a personal approach type thing...
Edited by Azkyroth, 14 November 2007 - 07:14 PM.
"Tyranny is a quiet thing at first, a prim and proper lady pursing her lips and shaking her head disapprovingly, asking, well what were you doing (wearing that dress, walking home at that hour, expressing those inappropriate thoughts) anyway? It's subtle and insidious, disguised as reasonable precautions which become more and more oppressive over time, until our lives are defined by the things we must avoid. She's easy enough to agree with, after all, she's only trying to help -- and yet she's one of the most dangerous influences we face, because if she prevails, it puts the raping, robbing, axe-wielding madmen of the world in complete control. Eventually they'll barely need to wield a thing, all they'll have to do is leer menacingly and we fall all over ourselves trying to placate them." -godlizard
#30
Posted 14 November 2007 - 07:22 PM
Of course, with the Weave gone, it might cease to make sense to even approach magic as a singular thing that one god could control.
True, but leaving magic uncontrolled might lead to a catastrophe similar to Karsus' Folly all over again. It probably isn't likely now, but given time, some mage is going to have the right combination of raw talent and utter stupidity to try something like that.
Now I have this notion of what the Realms would be like if Ao decided to do away with arcane spellcasting entirely. I mean, he's had what, 3 goddesses of magic die on him? If I were him, I'd start thinking it just wasn't worth the trouble anymore.
People should probably be glad I'm not Ao.
Edited by VIIIofSwords, 14 November 2007 - 07:27 PM.
"I used to dislike the idea of an unfair universe. Then I got to thinking: what if we did deserve all the awful things that happened to us, and didn't deserve any of the good? Suddenly, I found myself taking comfort in the thought of an inherently hostile and unfair universe."
VIII of Swords - my general, anything-goes blog
#31
Posted 14 November 2007 - 07:34 PM
"Tyranny is a quiet thing at first, a prim and proper lady pursing her lips and shaking her head disapprovingly, asking, well what were you doing (wearing that dress, walking home at that hour, expressing those inappropriate thoughts) anyway? It's subtle and insidious, disguised as reasonable precautions which become more and more oppressive over time, until our lives are defined by the things we must avoid. She's easy enough to agree with, after all, she's only trying to help -- and yet she's one of the most dangerous influences we face, because if she prevails, it puts the raping, robbing, axe-wielding madmen of the world in complete control. Eventually they'll barely need to wield a thing, all they'll have to do is leer menacingly and we fall all over ourselves trying to placate them." -godlizard
#32
Posted 14 November 2007 - 07:40 PM
"I used to dislike the idea of an unfair universe. Then I got to thinking: what if we did deserve all the awful things that happened to us, and didn't deserve any of the good? Suddenly, I found myself taking comfort in the thought of an inherently hostile and unfair universe."
VIII of Swords - my general, anything-goes blog
#33
Posted 14 November 2007 - 07:52 PM
Oh, and whoever mentioned Garagos as being in Tempus' court in 4E-not very likely. Garagos and Tempus are mortal enemies. I'd see Tempus' court, as it were, being Red Knight, Valkur, Uthgar, and not sure who (if anyone) else.
Other possible courts:
Oghma's Court
Deneir, Gond, Milil
Tyr's Court
Ilmater, Torm, Nobanion, Tymora (since they're lovers now)
Silvanus' Court
Mielikki, Eldath, Shiallia, Gwaeron Windstrom
Selune's Court
Lurue, Shaundakul, Finder Wyvernspur, possibly Waukeen
Sune's Court
Lliira, Sharess, Siamorphe, possibly Waukeen
Bane's Court
Talona, Loviatar, Gargauth
Talos' Court
Auril, Malar, Umberlee
Shar's Court
Mask, Beshaba
Oddball deities:
Garagos: No clue where he'd fit in, unless he finally slips into CE, in which case he might end up with Talos and company, representing war and battle-lust as an element of nature.
Hoar: Depends on who wins the battle for his nature-Tyr or Shar.
Lathander and Chauntea: Both greater deities, but I can't see either one submitting to another's court. They might form their own court of sorts without lesser deities.
Kelemvor: Served by Jergal, but basically the same situation as Lathander and Chauntea-a greater deity whom, with the death of Mystra, has no true allies save Jergal, who's simply a fading demipower and might not exist in 4E.
Elemental Lords: Akadi, Grumbar, Kossuth, and Istishia have probably survived just fine on the elemental planes.
Speculation: Lathander, Chauntea, and Kelemvor might form a council of sorts, independent of the courts and the internal squabbling thereof-possibly the chief arbitrators between the good/neutral deities.
"The righteous need not cower before the drumbeat of human progress. Though the song of yesterday fades into the challenge of tomorrow, God still watches and judges us. Evil lurks in the datalinks as it lurked in the streets of yesterday, but it was never the streets that were evil." - Sister Miriam Godwinson, Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri
#34
Posted 14 November 2007 - 08:45 PM
And on another thought. How are clerics being affected, or is clerical magic not going to be affected?
"She was a fire, and I had no doubt that she had already done her share of burning." - Lord Firael Algathrin
"Most assume that all the followers of Lathander are great morning people. They're very wrong." - Tanek of Cloakwood
we are all adults playing a fantasy together, - cmorgan
#35
Posted 14 November 2007 - 09:44 PM
There's been some speculation among D&Ders around the Philippines that Divine magic might take a hit, at least if the rumors of Intermediate and Lesser Powers losing a bit of their power are true. Not sure where that information came from, though. I suspect that if the whole magic system is to be overhauled, clerics would be affected as well.
Edited by VIIIofSwords, 14 November 2007 - 09:44 PM.
"I used to dislike the idea of an unfair universe. Then I got to thinking: what if we did deserve all the awful things that happened to us, and didn't deserve any of the good? Suddenly, I found myself taking comfort in the thought of an inherently hostile and unfair universe."
VIII of Swords - my general, anything-goes blog
#36
Posted 14 November 2007 - 09:52 PM
Also, did Bane actually spring back to greater power status after his resurrection? That strikes me as distinctly odd given that most of his cult was split between Xvim and Cyric, and in 2E/3E the power of gods was based on their worshippers, as I recall...
"Tyranny is a quiet thing at first, a prim and proper lady pursing her lips and shaking her head disapprovingly, asking, well what were you doing (wearing that dress, walking home at that hour, expressing those inappropriate thoughts) anyway? It's subtle and insidious, disguised as reasonable precautions which become more and more oppressive over time, until our lives are defined by the things we must avoid. She's easy enough to agree with, after all, she's only trying to help -- and yet she's one of the most dangerous influences we face, because if she prevails, it puts the raping, robbing, axe-wielding madmen of the world in complete control. Eventually they'll barely need to wield a thing, all they'll have to do is leer menacingly and we fall all over ourselves trying to placate them." -godlizard
#37
Posted 14 November 2007 - 09:59 PM
"I used to dislike the idea of an unfair universe. Then I got to thinking: what if we did deserve all the awful things that happened to us, and didn't deserve any of the good? Suddenly, I found myself taking comfort in the thought of an inherently hostile and unfair universe."
VIII of Swords - my general, anything-goes blog
#38
Posted 14 November 2007 - 10:06 PM
Hoar might end up with Tempus if he's still LN, but I could easily see 4E making him make the big choice between good and evil. If he decided to remain seperate, though, he'd fit well with Tempus and Red Knight.
In the event the deity of magic position splits along alignment lines, Talos actually makes a strong case for the holder of the evil lord of magic-he represents the wild and destructive side of the world, and after the Spellplague could easily claim that magic falls under his portfolio.
On the other hand, we might see it split along another method-each school of magic goes to a seperate deity, possibly with the elemental lords claiming lordship over magic making use of their respective element.
"The righteous need not cower before the drumbeat of human progress. Though the song of yesterday fades into the challenge of tomorrow, God still watches and judges us. Evil lurks in the datalinks as it lurked in the streets of yesterday, but it was never the streets that were evil." - Sister Miriam Godwinson, Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri
#39
Posted 14 November 2007 - 10:21 PM
"Tyranny is a quiet thing at first, a prim and proper lady pursing her lips and shaking her head disapprovingly, asking, well what were you doing (wearing that dress, walking home at that hour, expressing those inappropriate thoughts) anyway? It's subtle and insidious, disguised as reasonable precautions which become more and more oppressive over time, until our lives are defined by the things we must avoid. She's easy enough to agree with, after all, she's only trying to help -- and yet she's one of the most dangerous influences we face, because if she prevails, it puts the raping, robbing, axe-wielding madmen of the world in complete control. Eventually they'll barely need to wield a thing, all they'll have to do is leer menacingly and we fall all over ourselves trying to placate them." -godlizard
#40
Posted 14 November 2007 - 10:32 PM
However, there are potential problems with the elemental lords-I've heard rumors that the elementals are basically being reshuffled into another type of demon/devil and so on-the planes as a whole seem to be getting simplified. We might be down to demons, devils, and elementals, with the yugoloths, obyriths, greater hags, and so on being left in the ashes of 2nd and 3rd editions. Thus, the elemental lords might turn evil or cease to exist altogether-Akadi's portfolio would likely be appropriated by Shandakul or Talos, Istishia's by Valkur or Umberlee, Kossuth's by Lathander, and Grumbar's by Silvanus.
"The righteous need not cower before the drumbeat of human progress. Though the song of yesterday fades into the challenge of tomorrow, God still watches and judges us. Evil lurks in the datalinks as it lurked in the streets of yesterday, but it was never the streets that were evil." - Sister Miriam Godwinson, Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri