One of my characters is a barbarian/Forsaker coming from a tribe of people ruled over by druids. He knows quite a lot about the natural world, and is a dabbler in herbology, gardening, and poisons. Meaning he knows a little bit about what mushrooms and natural plants will make your head light, and which frogs one ought not to lick.
The other session I asked my DM about the presence of a vision quest in that society similar to the vision quests in Native American society, and he said, sure, not a problem.
So this is a two-part question:
When did native americans go on vision quests, for what purpose, and what were the conditions surrounding their, um, trip (where did they go, what did they take with them, how long did they stay... that sort of thing).
Secondly, what would you all do on your Vision Quest, if your DnD character were going on one? What kinds of revalations would you give your player if you were DMing it? What kinds of challenges exactly would an experience like this entail? If this were designed as a side quest similar to a paladin finding his holy avenger, what would the questor come away with besides a, heh, good trip?
Fire away!
The other session I asked my DM about the presence of a vision quest in that society similar to the vision quests in Native American society, and he said, sure, not a problem.
So this is a two-part question:
When did native americans go on vision quests, for what purpose, and what were the conditions surrounding their, um, trip (where did they go, what did they take with them, how long did they stay... that sort of thing).
Secondly, what would you all do on your Vision Quest, if your DnD character were going on one? What kinds of revalations would you give your player if you were DMing it? What kinds of challenges exactly would an experience like this entail? If this were designed as a side quest similar to a paladin finding his holy avenger, what would the questor come away with besides a, heh, good trip?
Fire away!