Liber Sodalitas: Scions of the Holy Triad

HalWhitewyrm

First Post
Eschewing the idea of a fractured pantheon in which each deity stands on its own, the Scions of the Holy Triad, a group of warrior-priests venerating equally the gods of War, Fortune and Protection, seek to return to a golden age when the gods were worshipped in unison and their strengths combined for the betterment of the mortal realm. Though a young group in the land, the Scions have made an impact, drawing to their ranks a community of like-minded individuals bent on uniting the worship of the gods, as well as the enmity of those opposed to their goals.

Liber Sodalitas: Scions of the Holy Triad is a 16-page PDF (15 pages of content plus OGL) detailing a drop-in organization for your d20 Fantasy game, complete with history, tenets, organizational structures, ways of joining, and ready-to-use NPCs. It also includes a new prestige class—the Triad Scion—a new feat, a new exotic weapon, three new domains and four new spells, including two spell variants.

Written by: Daniel M. Perez
Artwork by: Danilo Moretti
 
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Scions has some big ideas, but not enough play.

by Chris Sims, a.k.a. Khur

Initiative Round
Scions of the Holy Triad is Highmoon Media Productions’ latest PDF release in the Liber Sodalitas line. A two-color publication, Scions of the Holy Triad weighs in at 16 pages (counting the OGL). Daniel M. Perez wrote it. The PDF retails for $3.00.

Highmoon’s production quality remains high compared to many others in the industry, especially in the PDF market. This time, however, much of the art comes from Mongoose’s Character Portrait: Fantasy Heroes and Character Portrait: Fantasy Heroines PDFs. Such images just aren’t as fitting as custom art and not as cohesive as the use of one artist. The usual indexing found in Highmoon’s PDFs is also missing from this offering.

Scions of the Holy Triad details an organization of the same name. Founded by a sagely priest, whose goal was unity among former divine allies, the Scions are a religious movement. Detailed are the group’s origins, history, and growth. Game material, besides the exposition necessary to work the Scions into your game, includes details on a monastic order, the leaders of the Scions, a typical Scion knight, a new prestige class, a new feat, and a few new domains and spells.

The domains are nice, despite some awkwardness in the granted power of the Holy domain, where it’s unclear how the cleric’s alignment applies to the spells selected, and the fact the “Holy” domain is available to evil characters. But the triad scion prestige class, a 5-level pseudo-paladin, is the highlight of the crunchy bits. It is better balanced and more widely useful than Highmoon’s unsighted (from Liber Sodalitas: The Blind Path). However, its most powerful ability, to give divine abilities to others, is wonky and the prose is interspersed with the undefined (and non-core) “divine” bonus.

[minor rant]Another use of the divine hinders Scions of the Holy Triad, namely the use of Greek god monikers. Years of misrepresentation in fantasy media have diluted the Greek mythology so much that it cannot be relied upon to create any one coherent picture without specific definitions. Scions of the Holy Triad has no such clarity. Unfortunately, Scions can’t fit into a campaign strictly modeled on the Classical Age and its legends either, because its own assumptions, lack of “Greek-ness,” and skewed versions of the deities rule out such a possibility. Generic divinities would have served better.[/minor rant] :p

Critical Hit
Despite the minor “Greek” hitch, the book’s (so-called) fluff is worthy of some praise. History and development of a schism religion are interesting, from its heretical roots to flight to avoid persecution. More detail specific to this subject, such as the form and seeming of relationships with established religions, would have been welcome. But the taste given here is enough to give an idea of where the Scions fit within traditional D&D churches—that is, one deity per church. If you have no idea how a heretical theory might form into a cult from an established religion, Scions of the Holy Triad serves as an example.

Critical Fumble
Mechanically, Scions of the Holy Triad is far from flawless. The only NPC fully detailed in the publication is the average triad scion knight, and this NPC’s ability scores are better than the elite array could hope to offer. Other problems vary from an exotic weapon attacking multiple targets with one throw, that one throw still counting as a full-attack to that same weapon being just too good for an item without magic enhancement.

Speaking of magic, Scions of the Holy Triad has two new spells, along with some alternative uses for existing spells. The spells are poorly rendered, however, from nonstandard presentation (personal spells without a target [You] and with saving throws and spell resistance) to the wording in the aura of faith variant, which seems to turn a 1st-level spell (shield of faith) into an 8th-level one (shield of law). Further, both new spells are probably too high in level, and the final alternative seems to forget that unholy blight already exists as evil’s holy smite.

Accessory mechanical material needs more careful treatment than Scions of the Holy Triad offers.

Coup de Grace
Scions of the Holy Triad provides a viable example of a fantasy religious sect, a few useable domains, and a decent prestige class. But the other mechanics in the work are rough, lowering the playability as much as the mechanical rating. Overall value takes a hit from these mistakes, although this PDF is usable in a variety of manners, unlike its predecessors in the Liber Sodalitas line. The Scions are a noteworthy splinter group, and their rounded presentation is a promising direction for Liber Sodalitas. Now, if only the content could live up to the ideal.

Final Score: 3.4 :heh:

Scions of the Holy Triad is available at RPG Now.

This review originally appeared at d20 Magazine Rack.
 

Well-executed but not compelling

Liber Sodalitas: Scions of the Holy Triad is a 16-page PDF from Highmoon Media Productions. One page is dedicated the Open Gaming License. There is no index or table of contents. One is not really needed for such a short document, but would have been welcome.

The book describes an organization meant to be dropped into your campaign, and is part of a line of similar books.

I was quite favourably impressed by the production values. There were no glaring typos or other mistakes, the layout was attractive and easy to read. I've seen a number of the images in Mongoose Publishing products, but they did not detract in the slightest from the overall feel.

The organization in question, the Scions of the Holy Triad, is a religious order that believes in worshipping the gods of War, Fortune, and Protection as a single entity rather than as individuals.

Roughly a third of the book (5 pages) is devoted to detailing the history and background of the organization. It doubles as an example of how a heresy evolves into a viable offshoot of an established religion.

The next 5 pages cover the modern-day organization, including rules for joining and statting out four high-level NPCs (the current leaders, ranging from 14-18 level) and a "typical" member at sixth level (one level of the prestige class). They are well written but the high-level NPCs are not completely statted.

The remaining third covers the new mechanical rules. There is a new 5-level prestige class, the Triad Scion, a new feat, a new exotic weapon, and four new spells.

The new rules are the big weakness in this offering.

First there's the new feat (Triad Combat). For it to be effective, you need two allies who *also* have the feat to stay within 5 feet of you. Move apart for any reason and lose all benefits for the duration of the encounter. With Alertness and a high Dexterity in the prerequisites, it's just not worth giving up a feat slot for unless you really, really want to enter the prestige class.

Then there's the prestige class (Triad Scion). The bonuses are fairly weak given that you cannot take levels in the class until at least 6th level. The small selection of spells does not quite make up for it.

Last, we have the exotic weapon, the triskele. It is illustrated on the front page and appears to have been inspired by the movie "Krull" (or by the same original sources). It's a three-bladed star that can attack up to three targets at once and returns to the user when thrown. I find it a little overpowered as a non-magical weapon, but it could certainly be a cool signature weapon at higher levels.

A minor irritation is the insistence of the author on using the Greek pantheon throughout the text. It would have worked just as well (perhaps better) to simply use three generic gods. That said, the exact identity of the gods in question is pretty easy to ignore.

The four new spells and three new domains seem relatively balanced but aren't particularly flashy or interesting; two of the spells are just variants on existing spells to get around the alignment system.

Overall I have to say that while well-written and well-presented, I don't find the content particularly compelling. The weakness in the rules material is a deal-breaker for me, even at the low price point ($3.00 when I checked). However, I'd still be willing to consider other material from this publisher.
 

Hello, and thank you for the review. To address a few things very quickly:
I used the Greek pantheon because of how iconic (to borrow a word) they are; anyone will be able to substitute their own deities for the Greek ones because everyone knows very well what each Greek deity stands for. I thought about using generic ones, but I decided against it because I didn't want to create yet more deities (besides, then I would have gotten complaints because I didn't stat out the new deities :) ).

The Scions are very much a complete package; all the rules are meant to work with the group as a whole, and that was always the intention. Used as described in the text, they are quite formidable (as my players had the misfortune of finding out when they opposed a Scion Knight triad).

Hope you check out some of our other stuff!
 

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