Editing Prestige Class: Bladebond

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These oaths are not trivial, and prospective bladebond who attempt to enter the prestige class with broad oaths or ones deliberately easy to fulfill find themselves spurned and cannot join the class at all, even if they meet the other requirements.
 
These oaths are not trivial, and prospective bladebond who attempt to enter the prestige class with broad oaths or ones deliberately easy to fulfill find themselves spurned and cannot join the class at all, even if they meet the other requirements.
  
A bladebond who breaks his oath, for whatever reason, loses access to his bladebond special abilities and must atone to get them back and continue advancing in the bladebond class. A bladebond must also strictly adhere to his alignment. A bladebond who intentionally and seriously violates his alignment also breaks faith and endures the same negative effects.
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A bladebond who breaks his oath, for whatever reason, loses access to his bladebond special abilities and must receive an atonement spell from a cleric or druid of his alignment ro get them back and continue advancing in the bladebond class. A bladebond must also strictly adhere to his alignment. A bladebond who intentionally and seriously violates his alignment also breaks faith and endures the same negative effects.
  
 
This dual requirement can pose a serious conundrum at times. If a lawful good bladebond swears service to a lord who then orders the bladebond to commit an evil act, the bladebond is caught between his oath and his alignment. He must violate one to fulfill the other, and either way he needs to atone. If the bladebond chooses his alignment, he can break his oath, gain atonement, and swear a new oath (often one relating to “correcting” his former lord). He can then advance as a bladebond again. If the bladebond chooses his lord, he changes alignment and must gain atonement from, in this case, an evil cleric.
 
This dual requirement can pose a serious conundrum at times. If a lawful good bladebond swears service to a lord who then orders the bladebond to commit an evil act, the bladebond is caught between his oath and his alignment. He must violate one to fulfill the other, and either way he needs to atone. If the bladebond chooses his alignment, he can break his oath, gain atonement, and swear a new oath (often one relating to “correcting” his former lord). He can then advance as a bladebond again. If the bladebond chooses his lord, he changes alignment and must gain atonement from, in this case, an evil cleric.

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