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D&D 5E What happens if an aasimars god dies?

They go psychotic and turn into orcs, driven by pain and rage to wage war on all things beautiful or divine.

Uh... spoiler alert if you're in my campaign.
 

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Your question doesn't make any sense. Aasimars are the scions of celestials (angels), not gods. I suppose you could statistically represent Heracles' great-great-great-grandbaby as an aasimar, but it's not a core assumption of the race. As a GM, you could decide that's the case for you game, but then it's on you to fill in the blanks for other non-core questions.

Even assuming a celestial as a parent, the aasimar race is more of a recessive gene that semi-randomly manifests -- kinda like my daughter having blue eyes, even though mine are brown. It can (and usually does) skip generations and can pop up where no one even has a clue when it entered the bloodline or from which branch of the family tree.

That's actually how the sibling aasimar in my current game are being handled. It's a pseudo-Chinese setting where the various noble lines claim some sort of lineage with the Celestial Court. The PCs are heirs to a mercantile house that has ties, on both sides, to being younger children of this or that dynastic family. Apparently, someone was telling the truth, but no one knows who and it could have been 1,000 years since the last manifestation of the blood in this way (hard to tell what stories are true and what are self aggrandizement, at a certain point). To make things a bit more interesting, in my setting there aren't any real gods, in the D&D sense. There are just celestials of varying ranks and abilities; some of the highest, especially, are venerated in a semi-worshipful way, but they're mostly viewed as just the emperors of the Courts.

Once upon a time, tieflings were to fiends as aasimar are to celestials. I still use them that way, and downplay the overtly fiendish traits.
 

If they have always had the presence of their god in the back of their mind then they could have some kind of psychological shock. No longer do they hear the comforting voice of their divine ancestor, now where the words of divinity once spoke, there is only silence. Mechanically, there wouldn't be much difference, but the player could definitely play up a feeling of extreme loss over the death of their god, a void in their heart and soul which they long to fill with the presence of another god. It could lead to some cool roleplaying developments.
Hmm. Now I kind of want to make an aasimar fiend pact warlock. Maybe I will call him Islington.

Sent from my SM-G900P using EN World mobile app
 

If the question is really "if the celestial who gives the aasimar advice in dreams dies, what happens?", then I would take advantage of that to move plot--have a replacement celestial start giving dreams, but have a message that someone is hunting all the aasimar that got dreams from the dead celestial show up in the new dreams.....
 

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