Someday, we will have to figure out the most complicated/involved critters we ever converted. These various Kavajans are definitely up there.
Most complicated as in how the final conversion turned out, or most complicated to figure out? Some of our critters were really hard to decide how to interpret and we spent a lot of time figuring out how to stat them up.
For example, the Tombheart took an awful long time to finish because we couldn't decide how its HD should match its associated Tomb Wardens, but the final monster isn't that complicated.
Indeed, I recall us abandoning a conversion because we couldn't get a handle on it in hard 3E rules terms, although I can't recall for sure what it was called. I vaguely remember it being some kind of man-eating stained glass window.
Anyway, I'm happy enough with March to War as you have it there.
Agreed, updating the
Resonance Working Draft.
Are we down to Sound of Death?
Yes, here's the original text:
Sound of Death: as long as the caprine keeps playing his heart-wrenching cacophony without being interrupted, all foes within 40' suffer damage equivalent to 10% of their total hit points per round (no save). It is a difficult and demanding dissonant tune tapping into the caprine's own life force, reducing his hit points 1d4 each round. If he does not play all ten rounds of the tune, the caprine permanently loses a point of Constitution. If he does complete it, the ethereal harmony is disturbed and no other abilities are therefore available until the caprine starts accumulating resonance once more.
That's the last of the Resonance powers, so the end is coming into sight! Hopefully the AC, skills, feats and background text won't take very long.
Oh, and there's a little work on the Caprines as Characters section to do.