Li Shenron
Legend
OTOH you can still use a Lich with less class levels.
Goblyns Hoard said:GSHamster - I don't think they'd take the time to listen to the lich in the first place to set them up with going after the child... or trust it to be telling the truth. And if I'm going to introduce a villain like this I definitely want him to encounter the party - otherwise I don't get the fun of playing him.
Goblyns Hoard said:Stormborn - That's a good idea - kinf of what I was hoping for (avoids the need for a Lich by downgrading who uses the phylactery). I think I can go with that. My Gods don't really oppose each other in the classical sence (as none of them have any alignment - they are beyond 'earthly morality'). But there is certainly a god of Death - part of him is anti-undead but the other side is certainly in favour of it and would support this.
DOH! - a couple of adventures back they killed a half-demon Thrall of Orcus (BoVD) in an old Thanis Death Cult mountain temple. If I have him reappear now something's going to be up with it - and Thanis (God of Death, Reflection and Revenge) certainly has the power to send him back...
How to tie that in to the child though?
The child then is Kel's (the half-demon) own daughter... which makes it just an infant (cause he was fairly young himself - little more than a boy). It also means that the mother will be reluctant to let the party near it (It's a tiefling afterall and the mother is probably ashamed of that) to even find out that Kel is somehow clinging to life through it. Last time they just dumped his body down a shaft to dispose of it - when he first comes back they may try burning it in order to kill him, so I've got a few more sessions to build up to it.
Cheers for that Stormborn... and thanks to the rest of you for the ideas, I may try and twist some of those into it as well.
The Hoard
Goblyns Hoard said:Plus on top of that - do I still believe in what my God represents or do I need to think again about staying in her service?
This is absolutely the wrong answer. The ends never justify the means. Save the world at the cost of an innocent life, and you've damned yourself and the world together.reapersaurus said:1) It's not exactly a very compelling "moral dilemma".
It basically boils down to simply "is it better to sacrifice one innocent life than to allow a great Evil to live"?
Since every paladin would answer yes to this if it was THEIR innocent life that was being sacrificed, than they are a long way down the road to answering this questions already.
IMO, that's simple - kill the innocent if you have to.
This is not a moral conundrum. It's a Catch-22. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. The paladin is screwed no matter what decision he makes, no matter how he plays his hand.Goblyns Hoard said:Killing the child will piss off Fera - allowing the Lich to live will piss of Fera. Nice moral conundrum to play through and winner's on all sides in terms of game fun! The paladin can come up with good reasons for action or inaction, justify it to himself, and still end up on the wrong side of his goddess.
Lord Pendragon said:In my scenario, there are two right answers: the moral right answer, and the goddess' right answer. The paladin must weigh them and decide which is more important to him, then pay the consequences of that decision.
Huh. Somebody's going to have to tell all the governments that ever were, and it ain't gonna be me.Lord Pendragon said:This is absolutely the wrong answer. The ends never justify the means. Save the world at the cost of an innocent life, and you've damned yourself and the world together.