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Races of the Mind: Elan
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<blockquote data-quote="Eldritch_Lord" data-source="post: 4448292" data-attributes="member: 52073"><p>Races of the Mind: Elan</p><p>Disclaimer—I received a free review copy and did not buy this product myself.</p><p></p><p>Races of the Mind: Elan is, as the name would imply, all about elans—their background, their culture, and their unique abilities. It is published by Dreamscarred Press and is up to their usual quality standards.</p><p></p><p>Appearance</p><p>The full-color cover depicts a stylized starburst design on a background of what appear to be scales of some sort, probably to represent the elans’ aberrant nature. Races of the Mind: Elan contains seven black-and-white illustrations; five of these are nicely sketched and quite good, but the two psionic monsters (which I will cover later) aren’t quite up to par, looking more like something out of the 1st edition Monster Manual. The 19 pages have a faux-medieval border and the tables are in the usual bicolor format typical of the 3.5 edition layout. I like the fact that Dreamscarred Press follows the Wizards of the Coast format—I’ve seen some third-party material with vastly different formats which only serve to distract from the material presented.</p><p></p><p>Flavor</p><p>Races of the Mind: Elan starts out with a short summary of what an elan is, presenting a few paragraphs of scenes from different elans’ points of view. The rest of the flavor portion of the work is laid out as follows:</p><p></p><p>• Elan Psychology, describing elan behavior and outlook on immortality;</p><p>• Elan Life, describing the transformation from human to elan;</p><p>• Society and Culture, describing elan cities, art, and philosophy;</p><p>• Language and Religion—self explanatory;</p><p>• History and Folklore, describing the First Elan; and</p><p>• Elan and Other Races, describing elan relations with both psionic and non-psionic races.</p><p></p><p>The analysis of life from an elan’s point of view is fascinating, as is the explanation of the elan transformation. The information presented is interesting and useful, and does not fall into the trap of stating the obvious. The descriptions of elan law and view of immortality are particularly intriguing.</p><p></p><p>Mechanics</p><p>The mechanics portion presents three new feats that expand on the elan racial abilities, as well as two sets of “racial specialty levels,” two prestige classes, one monster, and one template.</p><p></p><p>I felt the abilities gained by the specialty levels were somewhat bland, though well-balanced, except for the elan rogue’s ability to halve an opponent’s manifester/caster level instead of taking a sneak attack and the elan wilder’s ability to determine power points and save DCs as if he or she had no racial Charisma penalty. I’m not sure the other levels are worth taking, but these two might be. The prestige classes, on the other hand, were very appealing—the "estranged psyche" gains some immunities and abilities focusing on his or her insanity and new ability to drive others insane, and the "psion adroit" resembles the archmage, choosing from a menu of abilities—such as overcoming immunities and changing a power’s range—gained at the cost of permanently sacrificing power points. I would have to say that it is almost worth the cost to buy Races of the Mind: Elan for the prestige classes alone.</p><p></p><p>The Tormented One is a monster resulting from the human-to-elan transformational process being used on a nonhuman; it has a few psi-like abilities, but is otherwise a feral monster focused on melee combat. I’m not sure we needed yet another tank-type monster, but at least this has a few special abilities to distinguish it. “Unavailed” is a template, applicable to any human, which represents a failure in the transformation process. The main theme of the template seems to be draining power points, but although the templated creature is said to “gain” the power points rather than simply remove them from its target, it is never explained what use it might have for them, as it cannot innately manifest powers. Otherwise, the Unavailed is slightly above-average, with a good mix of abilities and flavor.</p><p></p><p>Overall Reactions</p><p>As I already stated, I predominantly liked the descriptions of elan life and the prestige classes. The specialty levels and monsters were well-balanced, though they felt like filler and I just don’t think they were different enough to merit inclusion in a campaign. Everything was well organized, with appropriate bookmarks. There were a few editing errors, such as including the wrong ability name in a table and a sentence or two where allthespaceswereleftoutanditwashardtoread, although hopefully these errors can be fixed.</p><p></p><p>If you are a fan of the elan and like tweaking the mechanics to give things more flavor and more customization, this product is for you. If you liked the Wizards of the Coast’s Races series and its insights into the various races, this product is for you. If you are a diehard psionics fan (and who isn’t?), this product is for you. If you are looking for the new and the different, you might be slightly—very slightly—disappointed.</p><p></p><p>Overall, I would give Races of the Mind: Elan four out of five stars for amazing flavor and prestige classes but slightly lackluster monster and class levels.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Eldritch_Lord, post: 4448292, member: 52073"] Races of the Mind: Elan Disclaimer—I received a free review copy and did not buy this product myself. Races of the Mind: Elan is, as the name would imply, all about elans—their background, their culture, and their unique abilities. It is published by Dreamscarred Press and is up to their usual quality standards. Appearance The full-color cover depicts a stylized starburst design on a background of what appear to be scales of some sort, probably to represent the elans’ aberrant nature. Races of the Mind: Elan contains seven black-and-white illustrations; five of these are nicely sketched and quite good, but the two psionic monsters (which I will cover later) aren’t quite up to par, looking more like something out of the 1st edition Monster Manual. The 19 pages have a faux-medieval border and the tables are in the usual bicolor format typical of the 3.5 edition layout. I like the fact that Dreamscarred Press follows the Wizards of the Coast format—I’ve seen some third-party material with vastly different formats which only serve to distract from the material presented. Flavor Races of the Mind: Elan starts out with a short summary of what an elan is, presenting a few paragraphs of scenes from different elans’ points of view. The rest of the flavor portion of the work is laid out as follows: • Elan Psychology, describing elan behavior and outlook on immortality; • Elan Life, describing the transformation from human to elan; • Society and Culture, describing elan cities, art, and philosophy; • Language and Religion—self explanatory; • History and Folklore, describing the First Elan; and • Elan and Other Races, describing elan relations with both psionic and non-psionic races. The analysis of life from an elan’s point of view is fascinating, as is the explanation of the elan transformation. The information presented is interesting and useful, and does not fall into the trap of stating the obvious. The descriptions of elan law and view of immortality are particularly intriguing. Mechanics The mechanics portion presents three new feats that expand on the elan racial abilities, as well as two sets of “racial specialty levels,” two prestige classes, one monster, and one template. I felt the abilities gained by the specialty levels were somewhat bland, though well-balanced, except for the elan rogue’s ability to halve an opponent’s manifester/caster level instead of taking a sneak attack and the elan wilder’s ability to determine power points and save DCs as if he or she had no racial Charisma penalty. I’m not sure the other levels are worth taking, but these two might be. The prestige classes, on the other hand, were very appealing—the "estranged psyche" gains some immunities and abilities focusing on his or her insanity and new ability to drive others insane, and the "psion adroit" resembles the archmage, choosing from a menu of abilities—such as overcoming immunities and changing a power’s range—gained at the cost of permanently sacrificing power points. I would have to say that it is almost worth the cost to buy Races of the Mind: Elan for the prestige classes alone. The Tormented One is a monster resulting from the human-to-elan transformational process being used on a nonhuman; it has a few psi-like abilities, but is otherwise a feral monster focused on melee combat. I’m not sure we needed yet another tank-type monster, but at least this has a few special abilities to distinguish it. “Unavailed” is a template, applicable to any human, which represents a failure in the transformation process. The main theme of the template seems to be draining power points, but although the templated creature is said to “gain” the power points rather than simply remove them from its target, it is never explained what use it might have for them, as it cannot innately manifest powers. Otherwise, the Unavailed is slightly above-average, with a good mix of abilities and flavor. Overall Reactions As I already stated, I predominantly liked the descriptions of elan life and the prestige classes. The specialty levels and monsters were well-balanced, though they felt like filler and I just don’t think they were different enough to merit inclusion in a campaign. Everything was well organized, with appropriate bookmarks. There were a few editing errors, such as including the wrong ability name in a table and a sentence or two where allthespaceswereleftoutanditwashardtoread, although hopefully these errors can be fixed. If you are a fan of the elan and like tweaking the mechanics to give things more flavor and more customization, this product is for you. If you liked the Wizards of the Coast’s Races series and its insights into the various races, this product is for you. If you are a diehard psionics fan (and who isn’t?), this product is for you. If you are looking for the new and the different, you might be slightly—very slightly—disappointed. Overall, I would give Races of the Mind: Elan four out of five stars for amazing flavor and prestige classes but slightly lackluster monster and class levels. [/QUOTE]
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