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<Snipped quote by Abstract Proxy>

Wow.

You're fantastic at this. Absolutely approved. I love it.


Thanks!

I had a lot of fun writing the character sheet for Nemeia and hopefully it came across in how it turned out.

Will start plotting my post, but might be the weekend before I have time to execute it.

For Halloween I offer an updated character sheet, I probably wrote a bit too much, but that's the price I am currently demanding. The artwork used will almost certainly change as well, however, I am a notoriously slow chooser of images.

Edit: Updated - Rewrote some stuff, still working on history.

Edit: Edited some more.

Edited: Even more edits.

Sariel


Battle was as disgusting as Sariel remembered. Blood flying in the air. Blood covering the ground. The screams of the dying. The silence of the dead. It was all so tiresome. So bothersome. So unnecessary.

She remained well back. Letting the others do the cutting, the hacking, and the smashing. She was in no rush to act. Magic was never to be wasted. She had no interest in drawing unwelcome attention. She felt no compulsion to test her arcane grimoire against a steel weapon.

The enemy's attack was faltering. The dead now outnumbered the living. Still, the riders fought bravely. They seemed unwilling to retreat. Three of the eastern riders massed together, preparing a desperate flanking maneuver. The closeness between them suited the necromancer and she whispered old words.

Sariel raised her hand, sending lightening hurtling forth. A thundering cracking followed the fresh smell of a thunderstorm filled her delicate nose. Blue sparks enveloped a knight as he tried to wheel his horse around. He began to convulse, shaking as he crumbled off of his falling mount. Smoke rose from the his still shuddering form as the bolt blasted onwards striking knight that had heavy axe above his shoulder. He managed only a garbled prayer before he and his mount dropped to the ground in a smoldering heap. The third knight got little further before the cruel current of electricity struck her raised sword. Sariel watched impassively as lightening coursed through her steel weapon, down her right side, and then over her mount. Rider and mount toppled together.

The burnt knight struggled. Rising from beneath her dying horse in a pained lurch. She managed three steps towards Sariel before she stumbled, her sword tumbling from her hand as she fell down at the wizard's feet. Frowning, the necromancer stepped over the charred body, her nose wrinkling at the sickly sweet smell. Eyeing the battlefield, Sariel prepared another spell. She was not sure it would be needed. The tide had turned. The knights were dead, even if they did not yet know it.

She was not concerned with the living. She would speak to the dead afterwards. She would seek answers that way. The newly deceased were always more open to conversation...
She is ever the conversationalist, hopefully the horrors are not too bad. :P
Looks good to me!

A bit more streamlined than full TT rules, but still with some nice depth.
Nice posts! I am returned after another voyage and an annoying cold, will have something up in the next couple of days.
Sweet!

I was just holding back Sariel a bit as I wasn't sure how quickly we wanted to be blasting, lol.

So far so good on my end!
Worst case, just return to the scene of the crime.
Dylis

Dylis shivered at the mention of monsters. The Kharakhi Desert was bad enough without hungry monster lurking in the darkness.

She managed a smile. She couldn't tell much about the diary. She was no forger. Certainly not an archivist. The diary looked right though. It looked old. Seemed heavy enough. Worn enough for something written decades before her birth. She didn't want to handle it. She didn't need to touch it. Dropping or damaging it would be...unfortunate. She'd heard enough about Katelyn to suspect she'd have a temper.

Dylis sensed watchful eyes around them. Nothing untoward. Nothing violent. But more than she liked. They were a strange group, no doubt. Six strangers gathered in a tavern with no cards in hand and not so much as a dollar on the table. Still, there strange people were nothing new in the wilds. Everyone had a story. Everyone had a past they were running from or so it seemed.

"I'm not overly fond of monsters, least of all the hungry ones, I will happily avoid them all together. However, if you find me a lock, I will get you past it, whether you have the key or not," Dylis said, trying her best to sound confident.
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