gideonpepys
Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
Real life has caught up with one of our players who is soon moving from London to Berlin, leaving me with an interesting decision about what to do with his character.
During our group's last game, the rest of the characters were buried under a Weight of Stone (see the Continuing Adventures of Korrigan & Co.), but El Perro was not with them.
If only the session had been a day later (meaning I that I would have known the player was leaving), I would have had Leone Quital use a captured El Perro as a bargaining chip (instead of Lynn Kindleton) and then kill him. Now that fantastic opportunity has been missed, I was considering the following:
He has been captured and taken the Macbannin Manor (along with Wolfgang) where his sympathies with the Panoply and other revolutionary ideologies mean that he is offered a role within the Obscurati.
This would mean his return as a 'villain' later in the campaign.
Would that be something the Obscurati might do, or is he - a 4th level character - far too small a fish for them to bother with?
I am simply trying to avoid his departure seeming too workaday.
During our group's last game, the rest of the characters were buried under a Weight of Stone (see the Continuing Adventures of Korrigan & Co.), but El Perro was not with them.
If only the session had been a day later (meaning I that I would have known the player was leaving), I would have had Leone Quital use a captured El Perro as a bargaining chip (instead of Lynn Kindleton) and then kill him. Now that fantastic opportunity has been missed, I was considering the following:
He has been captured and taken the Macbannin Manor (along with Wolfgang) where his sympathies with the Panoply and other revolutionary ideologies mean that he is offered a role within the Obscurati.
This would mean his return as a 'villain' later in the campaign.
Would that be something the Obscurati might do, or is he - a 4th level character - far too small a fish for them to bother with?
I am simply trying to avoid his departure seeming too workaday.