DreamChaser
Explorer
AbeTheGnome said:I designed it this way on purpose, of course. The fewer worshippers a god has, the less powerful it is. The less powerful it is, the fewer powers it can grant, and the less popular it is. It makes a lot of sense to me, balance aside. If someone wanted to play a priest of a lesser god, it would most likely be for fluffy RP reasons, which is great. Although some lesser gods may grant access to awesome domains that no greater god does. In general, I see a lot of people playing paladins of lesser gods instead of priests.
So, lesser gods have dedicated knightly orders but few clergy?
IMO, this system would have pretty well guaranteed that all gods would be "average" goods. Here's why.
Weaker gods have fewer followers and thus less power. They can attract fewer because of this lower power. This means that they will become even weaker eventually dying out...
Unless, they can steal followers away from other deities. Which is exactly what would happen. Religious PR campaigns (commonly called missions and holy wars) would result in many sects dying out as their followers are obliterated or by simple attrition. Greater gods would find some of their followers fall away to the fringe, which reduces their power and enhances the power of the other gods. Even if the greater gods manage to destroy all the followers of all the lesser gods, they would only find that they are now more equal with their peers.
In this system, every demigod that vanishes helps another demigod become a lesser god, because in the long run the greater gods are in the most precarious position. Over the millennia, the gods would have entered a state of dynamic equilibrium where there overall power would ebb and flow with the trends of the mortal world but overall the would remain in balance.
Essentially it becomes an issue of divine economics.
In a pantheon where the levels of godhood are based upon concept (for example the God of the Sun being a greater god while a god of a particular forest is only a demigod), this is not an issue; gods do not have power based upon the number of followers but they have followers based upon the scope of their power.
DC