Editing The Peoples and Nations of Scalgard
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
The edit can be undone.
Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
* '''DC 20''' - | * '''DC 20''' - | ||
* '''DC 25''' - ''Walking the Halls of Gold'' - The secret wheel that moves the Keepers of the Hoard and ensures the Plutarch's continued rule is a ritual of fiscal power. Hidden in the Estrian tax codes, secreted away in the Keepers' ledgers, is the formula to move, mystically, a whole person into the Plutarch's treasure vault. This transit does not come without cost, but the Keepers' job ensures that they are wealthy men. The trip, however, is one way; though a Keeper can walk past the many guards and out of the Hoard, the Plutarch is too greedy for a ritual to take anything away again. | * '''DC 25''' - ''Walking the Halls of Gold'' - The secret wheel that moves the Keepers of the Hoard and ensures the Plutarch's continued rule is a ritual of fiscal power. Hidden in the Estrian tax codes, secreted away in the Keepers' ledgers, is the formula to move, mystically, a whole person into the Plutarch's treasure vault. This transit does not come without cost, but the Keepers' job ensures that they are wealthy men. The trip, however, is one way; though a Keeper can walk past the many guards and out of the Hoard, the Plutarch is too greedy for a ritual to take anything away again. | ||
β | * '''DC 30''' - | + | * '''DC 30''' - ''The Plutarch's Face'' - The Plutarch's bloodline has run strong for a hundred years and more, and ruled Estria all that time. In truth, it is no line, but one blood - the Plutarchs are not father and son, but one man, alive for centuries. No, not a man... A Dragon! The last heir of The Dragonthe Plutarch has hid himself well and indulged his native greed, happy to remain undiscovered. A good thing, too, for the knowledge at his disposal must surely be vast and his power, if ever it had to be brought to bear, enough to strive with a god's. |