I like how they can't obviously make it set in Golarion (Pathfinder setting) but it is absolutely a Pathfinder game. The cleric is a cleric of Sarenraethe Dawnflower, eventually a character becomes a Mortal Usher (Pathfinder prestige class, but the abilities and theming match up so close!)
Show is pretty fun. Thought I'd hate it but like, it was alright.
It was, if I recall, a Pathfinder campaign that turned to 5th edition after 5e came out. That's why some characters are broken, like the ranger having an effectively useless bear companion, or the rogue with boots of haste being utterly overpowered: they ported the characters over without knowing the quirks of 5e
I never listened to the podcast. I just saw "goddess of healing, the sun, and redemption, called The Dawnflower" (Sarenrae's nickname and domains) and "creepy agent of the neutral goddess of death and fate who has crow-themed abilities and a cloak that lets you fly" (which is what a Mortal Usher of Pharasma is/does). At least that much is very Pathfinder.
I like how they can't obviously make it set in Golarion (Pathfinder setting) but it is absolutely a Pathfinder game. The cleric is a cleric of
Sarenraethe Dawnflower, eventually a character becomes a Mortal Usher (Pathfinder prestige class, but the abilities and theming match up so close!)Show is pretty fun. Thought I'd hate it but like, it was alright.
Isn't it a custom DND game though? Like these guys were under threat 2 years ago when Wizards did rhe OGL bullshit.
It was, if I recall, a Pathfinder campaign that turned to 5th edition after 5e came out. That's why some characters are broken, like the ranger having an effectively useless bear companion, or the rogue with boots of haste being utterly overpowered: they ported the characters over without knowing the quirks of 5e
I never listened to the podcast. I just saw "goddess of healing, the sun, and redemption, called The Dawnflower" (Sarenrae's nickname and domains) and "creepy agent of the neutral goddess of death and fate who has crow-themed abilities and a cloak that lets you fly" (which is what a Mortal Usher of Pharasma is/does). At least that much is very Pathfinder.