Incenjucar
Legend
It makes it post-horror.The souls have been messed with - many of the minor characters don't have one. By your own argument, that makes the setting more horrific, not less.
It makes it post-horror.The souls have been messed with - many of the minor characters don't have one. By your own argument, that makes the setting more horrific, not less.
Post Horror: The Stakes Strike BackIt makes it post-horror.
Just a reminder - the people without souls is in CoS, not VGR, no reason to suppose the phenomena is widespread beyond Barovia (unless the DM wants it to be).Magic Jar is historically a ghost signature ability. Arguably a person without a soul is more like a construct than a humanoid. Many kinds of undead are assumed to be formed from human souls, so Ravenloft should be one of the least-haunted places in the multiverse.
What bothers you about that? Do plants have souls? Does it matter?
Name a situation where it could possibly matter. A difference that makes no difference is no difference.
Just a reminder - the people without souls is in CoS, not VGR, no reason to suppose the phenomena is widespread beyond Barovia (unless the DM wants it to be).
The ghost possession ability isn't called Magic Jar in 5e, and no particular reason a ghost couldn't possess a souless body anyway - no opposition.
It's supposed to be personal. That's the nature of horror, and gothic horror in particular. A lot more innocent people die in Star Wars ANH than in any horror movie. It's the protagonists' lives and souls that matter in this genre.It is the overall situation. It just feels off. It creates a sense that nothing matters if the people are all just fabricating of Strand's will.
No.Does it still state this in the Barovia entry in VGR?
In that it first appeared in I6, sure. But CoS is just one of many Ravenloft products published over the years, no more reason to give it any more weight than any other. Apart from VGR perhaps, which as the most recent, is the most current.Also even if it is just Barovia I can see how people would take that explanation and apply it to other domains because Barovia is the original Ravenloft domain.
All of whom were presumably real people with souls in the fiction, just as much as Luke, Han and Leia. To outright say otherwise destroys, for me, the feeling that anything matters in the setting. If your PC doesn't care (and is incentivized not to care) if the bad guy slaughters a village so long as they don't get these particular one or two people, can they really call themselves "heroes"?It's supposed to be personal. That's the nature of horror, and gothic horror in particular. A lot more innocent people die in Star Wars ANH than in any horror movie. It's the protagonists' lives and souls that matter in this genre.