How appropriate, avatar and all.Numion said:I think this is great. A god for those who want to worship the real evil, not semi-evil, not quasi-evil, not the margarine of evil, not the diet-coke of evil. "Just one calorie. Not evil enough."
And if it causes public outrage, all the better for D&D.
William Ronald said:1.) As for Asmodeus ascending to the ranks of the deities, I imagine that in some ongoing worlds that started in 1st edition, he may have never left those ranks.
2.) One thing that I have noticed is that there is some talk of alternate sources of power for characters. So, in addition to divine, arcane, and psionic, we may have celestial or infernal power sources. (So, possibly an archdevil may be able to help supply a person with additional power for a price. Hmm, maybe it is time for a few DMs to re-read Faust.)
Numion said:I think this is great. A god for those who want to worship the real evil, not semi-evil, not quasi-evil, not the margarine of evil, not the diet-coke of evil. "Just one calorie. Not evil enough."
And if it causes public outrage, all the better for D&D.
fuindordm said:There's nothing wrong with a dark campaign and anti-heroes, but I for one would like to see less evil in the core rules. It sounds to me as if 4e is pushing for more, which I've never seen happen before and strikes me as odd.
fuindordm said:It sounds to me as if 4e is pushing for more, which I've never seen happen before and strikes me as odd.
Tieflings as a core race.Mouseferatu said:Where do you get that idea? Just because Asmodeus is a deity in this edition? Every edition has had evil gods. 3E had evil deities in the core rules. I'm not sure where the "pushing for more evil in the core" comes from.![]()
Plane Sailing said:Thanks for being careful to avoid extensive real-world religion discussion... may it continue long and profitably.