James McMurray
First Post
Unless they make some major changes between this version and print, the only thing they share in common with 3e's Invoker is the name. There's no possession or pacts with ancient beings.
It doesn't really say that at all. It says that most worship just one god, but they realize that the rest of the pantheon is worthy of respect. And that all divine beings are worthy of that respect, regardless of how much their views differ from that of their god.They do not worship a single god, they worship all the gods. They might send more prayers towards one (and it's usually one of the ancient ones or Io), but they know and respect the power of all gods.
Umm, that's the Binder. I don't remember an Invoker class in a book before.Unless they make some major changes between this version and print, the only thing they share in common with 3e's Invoker is the name. There's no possession or pacts with ancient beings.
Evoker. Using Evocations.Wasn't Invoker just a specialist wizard in 3x?
So what is an invoker story-wise? How is it different from a Cleric aside from being a controller instead of a leader? Do invokers worship gods like a cleric, or do they simply (as the name implies) invoke various spirits? How does the preview define an invoker?