Nail said:Well, if all of that material at once doesn't scare you off, nothin' will. I'm done fer today.....
Monday, I'll post the druids animal companion ceremony. It's cool....and provides an unexpected result!
pogre said:My kinda' gaming - enjoyed reading your tale. Hope your school year is going well too.![]()
SpaceBaby Industries said:... On the other hand, a picture book showing the ingredients and general preparation tasks for any number of reptiles and tunnel dwelling creatures would be a best seller for the hungry Battlerager in the field.
From the journal of Rowan, Druid of Eaglesford
After a bit of walking, Tieran noticed a goblin up ahead in the forest. The goblin did not seem to see us. It climbed into a blind in a tree. As it climbed into the tree, Tieran shot two magic missiles into it. At the same time, a bucket of ash fell from the tree, followed by goblin laughter. The goblin fell to the ground and it took several moments for his cohorts to realize that he had been killed.
Taking our opportunity to sneak up on them for a change we began to move toward the tree, Thaile silently melting into the forest, the rest of us.....well, significantly less quietly. As we began to move forward, we heard a goblin scream, they had apparently realized that the first goblin was dead. We continued moving toward the confrontation, using what cover we could.
Lissia picked one of the goblins off from the tree with her crossbow. The other archers were shooting and also trying to find a good position to shoot from. Asmathias, my new snake companion, left me and began to climb the goblin’s tree.
Then I made my big mistake of the day and let loose with a swarm of bats on the goblins in the tree. It did take a few of them out, but I forgot that once the swarm was there, I had no control over where it went. So, after the goblin who had survived the initial swarm attack fled, the swarm turned and attacked Asmathias and Kytum-up.
In the end, we killed the fleeing goblins, and drove off the swarm.
As we moved, slowly and carefully, using what cover we could so that we would not be ambushed again, Garrett saw another goblin. This one was bent over picking up firewood. Garrett charged and killed him before noticing the second goblin’s backside sticking out from the other side of the tree, also picking up sticks. Riva charged, but did not get to him in time. Fortunately Bavic, Garret’s riding dog, was able to bite and kill it before it escaped.
We continued to move on, very alert to possible danger. When we neared the top of the forested hill we could see parts of two towers. One looked relatively intact, the other had toppled, taking a large chunk out of the intact one. There were no battlements between the two front towers. As we moved closer and could see better, we could see a large debris field where the fallen tower had, well, fallen. Some pieces were very large, with windows still visible in the fallen pieces. The other tower rose about 40 feet into the sky, its top and roof gone.
I released Asmathias to seek. He came back after a little bit and let us know that there were goblins (or something, he doesn’t actually talk to me) but there were some sort of beings near the ruined tower.
We moved closer to the towers, still staying as much out of sight as we could. Luckily there was a lot of shrubbery for us to hide in. We saw a group of four goblins playing dice, noticed another goblin who seemed to be taking a nap under some debris. None of them noticed us.
As we moved closer, we also noticed that behind some shrubs there was a hole in the wall. Riva looked at it and marveled at the smooth cut of it, the sheer workmanship of this smoothly cut tunnel into the thick wall of the tower. The tunnel, he said, was very old, not recent. When Garrett and he checked it out, they also found that it was blocked, by debris which appeared to have also been carefully placed to block this entrance.
We inched around the tower. I’m kind of surprised how quiet we were able to be, especially Riva in his armor. We passed around the base of the intact tower - the chunk taken out by the other tower’s collapse had not gone all the way through the wall. These walls were obviously very thick indeed. It must have been quite a stronghold in it’s time. The courtyard also must have been quite magnificent in its time. The five towers surrounded a roughly circular courtyard. In the courtyard was a pit, mostly filled in and kind of crescent shaped. Two stairways led up to a platform. At about the center of the platform was the doorway to the center tower. That central tower was the main one, I’d guess....it was over 100 feet tall, even with it’s top knocked off! The other two towers, to the left and right of the center were in about the same shape as the first intact one we were skirting.
The dicing goblins were the first to notice us. Lissia picked one off right away! The others were also taken out by our archers. Of course, there were others, we heard them, but did not see them at first, then we realized that they had been hiding in the debris field where there was a lot of cover.
I used a spell to snare them in a web of briars. I feel somehow though, that the spell upset the balance of nature. I doubt that I shall be able to use that spell again. Still, it did buy us some time and helped us immensely at the time, since only one of the goblins was able to escape it. I know that I was glad of that because those goblins had nearly killed Tieran and me before.
(DM’s note: I’ve since changed the spell, Briar’s Web, to have a 20 foot radius, and do only 1d4 damage, rather than 40 ft radius and 1d4+level damage. I discuss those changes here . Rowan’s welcome to use the modified spell whenever she deems appropriate.)
Some other goblins ran away, but there were also archers in the tower we were skirting. Lissia was brought down very quickly, though Thaile healed her back up. Kytum-up was hit by a sleep spell and decided to take a little nap in the courtyard. We were all trying to get to the doorway that would lead us to the old Kobold lair.
We fought some of the goblin’s wolves too. They charged us out of some cover off to one side, and did significant damage Thaile and Tieran. From the tower, I was hit by some kind of explosive jelly stuff that burned and kept burning for a little bit. Finally, after a while, we managed to kill the remaining goblins on the ground and make it to the tower door without losing anyone.
Even in this second tower, we can hear the curses of the goblins still up in the first one. We might have to take care of them.....
Nail said:.....Even as you run into the tower, leaving the goblin screams and insults behind you, you can’t help but notice the work and the strength in the stone of this tower. Its solidity is a palpable feeling, a quality that seeps into the cool air you breathe and the damp earth you tread.
You glance around as the rest of the party catches up to you. The stones that make this tower are massive, grey, and fine-grained, not like the local rock. It must have been quarried in the mountains -- each block perhaps 7 or 8 feet on a side -- then dragged here, rolled here, lifted here....the stones almost sweat themselves with the exertion of their quarriers and masons. Then each was shaped and chiseled, to fit one into another, almost like a gigantic jigsaw puzzle! Each stone carefully carved to fit exactly on top of the stones below and to its side ... you’re not sure that even the point of a freshly honed dagger would fit between the blocks. No mortar holds these rocks together - only their weight and exact fit.
You are nearly staggered with the thought of it: nothing that you have ever seen compares! No magic, no craft, no strength, no skill that you know of would have made this construction easy. The shear labor of the task is almost too much to grasp!
And the age......the age of these rocks cries out to you. The stone has worn well -- exceptionally well -- but you can see where a bit has flaked off here, or a few grains have worn away there....... You are no expert, but these blocks must have been laid well before your grandfather’s grandfather’s grandfather. How could you not have heard of the craftsmanship of this place, or the people that built it? Why do not dwarven apprentice stone masons make this a required pilgrimage, to see those great things of the past that they should aspire to? Dwarven craft or no, this is a place that should be revered for its flawless, amazing, brilliant workmanship! ....And yet, you’ve never heard any of that from the dwarves you know. It’s just always been "Alderslook, that empty ruin on yonder hill", and nothing more.
Nail said:A note to Riva's player, after Riva had dashed into one of the towers of Alderslook:

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.