mach1.9pants
Hero
Eie
WotC re-invents the modrons as transforming robots led by Optimus, the One and the Prime.I wonder what tomorrow will bring.
WotC re-invents the modrons as transforming robots led by Optimus, the One and the Prime.![]()
Obviously, one or more of the 4e designers has a boner for goth stereotypes and thinks it'll appeal to today's My Chemical Romance scenesters. They would've made the Shadar-Kai a PC race if they could.![]()
Uhm... sorry to nitpick, but there is no word like "hoar" in German. The word for "high" is "hoch" and for "heights" is "Höhen"!
Cheers, LT
Engling... you know, like in Engel, just a bit contracted! Erm... on a second thought, I will keep favouring Deva!Hochling? Hoehenling?
HOCHling! That's what I chose!Hochling? Hoehenling?
HOCHling! That's what I chose!
Curse my faulty memory chips!
Huh? They showed up in 1e's MM2 along with Solars and Planetars.Devas works for them. Old-school devas were just "tanar'ri-ized angels," anyway, so making those protector spirits of old actual Angels and giving these guys the name is a good thing.
I'm pronouncing it "hoh-ling". But anyway, it's now a moo point.Hochling is difficult to pronounce in English (How would you do it?), and it might sound "hockling", which more sounds like nightmare creature. I think Jürgen has a similar creature in the Arcana Wiki. The German world for nightmare "Alptraum" is related to "Alpdruck" and stands for some kind of demon/devil sitting on your chest, causing you to dream badly and making it harder to breathe. (Which is why if you wake up after a nightmare, you breathe heavily). It is also related to Alb -> Elb -> Elf. I suppose the various etymologies of these races is where Terry Pratchett took the image of his Discworld Elves which only look nice.
So, it might not be such a good idea after all.
Would anyone notice if you just said "Engel"? (g spoken like in "hague" not like in "generic").