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Dimity Posted - 15 Jun 2020 : 03:32:31
Finder Wyvernspur. We see his path to apotheosis in The Finder's Stone trilogy. Finder's Bane and Tymora's Luck show us how he behaves as a god and how he's changed (and not changed).

Besides, he can legitimately be called "God of Jumping the Shark". What's not to love?
30   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Rymac Posted - 03 Jul 2020 : 04:59:58
Shaundakul
Zeromaru X Posted - 03 Jul 2020 : 01:36:05
quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas


So, that's why you're so smart! Love me some red knight



I had forgotten she was one of your favorite gods.

What can I tell you? In my campaign she is an exarch of Bane (Achra), revered by the more goodly worshippers of this version of Bane. One of my players actually prayed to her when rolling dice while playing her warlord.
sleyvas Posted - 03 Jul 2020 : 00:17:58
quote:
Originally posted by Zeromaru X

Favorite FR deity as in "a deity that orifinates in the Realms" as opposed to "a deity from core/other setting that was adapted to the Realms"?

If so, I guess it would be the Red Knight. I like her so much that I ported her to my Nentir Vale campaign.

From adapted deities, my favorites are the dragon gods Bahamut and Tiamat.



So, that's why you're so smart! Love me some red knight
Zeromaru X Posted - 02 Jul 2020 : 15:43:46
Favorite FR deity as in "a deity that originates in the Realms" as opposed to "a deity from core/other setting that was adapted to the Realms"?

If so, I guess it would be the Red Knight. I like her so much that I ported her to my Nentir Vale campaign.

From adapted deities, my favorites are the dragon gods Bahamut and Tiamat.
Salius Kai Posted - 02 Jul 2020 : 08:03:00
Malar has always been a personal favorite of mine. I know he's evil, and if they were real I probably wouldn't worship him for that reason. But I love his "survival of the fittest" mindset.
Irennan Posted - 01 Jul 2020 : 15:50:48
quote:
Originally posted by CorellonsDevout

Yeah, Elaine Cunningham's work paints Eilistraee in a much better (and more accurate) light.

Where is this Q'arlynd thread?



http://forum.candlekeep.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=23333
Bladewind Posted - 01 Jul 2020 : 15:43:57
Team Good: Sehanine Moonbow, Solonor Thelandira, Oghma, Shaundakul, Sel#251;ne and Mystra

Team Neutral: Araushnee, Hoar, Tempus, Azuth and Helm

Team Evil: Auril, Lolth, Tchazzar, Selvetarm, Shar, Cyric and Talos
Seravin Posted - 01 Jul 2020 : 10:33:18
I just re-read prince of lies, and Mask is a very neat deity in that book.
CorellonsDevout Posted - 01 Jul 2020 : 04:30:38
Yeah, Elaine Cunningham's work paints Eilistraee in a much better (and more accurate) light.

Where is this Q'arlynd thread?
Irennan Posted - 01 Jul 2020 : 03:24:28
quote:
Originally posted by Delnyn

quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

Eilistraee

She chose to give up on all she could have wanted, face a path full of hardships that she had foreseen and that she feared, only out of love to her people. She found herself alone, fighting forces far greater than her. She suffered defeats, was wounded by the very people that she loved, was broken by grief and loss, and by seeing all that she had fought to build, destroyed.

Yet, as I read about her, the first thing that strikes me is that not only Eilistraee didn't steer from the path that she had chosen to walk for people, but that battling her wounds and sadness taught to see and nurture the beauty, or the potential for it, in everything--even where no one else would look: in the broken, in the abandoned, the forsaken, in the darkest places. As someone who has gone (and is still going through) depression, "melancholy" is a tough opponent, and I simply love that Eilistraee fights hers by striving to heal and create beauty, and by trying to look for chances to enjoy and share it at every opportunity. She continues to dance and sing; to heal, create, and to look for the joy that the world has to offer in all its aspects, even the most mundane--for life is too full of pain to let chances for laughter go to waste. She latches on to what can appear like small things--like creating music, cooking tasty food, being subtly impish/irreverent (she's often described like this), or making someone else happy--and to the act of sharing it with others. It's poignant IMO, because this is her anchor to go through all she had to endure; it's what she built herself on. Creating beauty and spreading this joy that she learned to find, reopening the eyes of her people (or of all those who suffer) to it, make them smile, is what gives her the strength to wake up every morning; she bets herself on the potential of all this, and on the fact that her people, after all, do want to be "seduced" by it. It's her identity at this point.

Which leads to the other part of the character that makes me like her so much--her interaction with the drow. Setting aside her role as a nurturing mother, and the paractical help that she gives the to thrive in a hostile world, to her, the drow are the result of lifelong abuse and neglect from those who should have loved them the most. She knows and feels that, because she's chosen to be one of them, to share their fate. And for that, she also sees the part of them that was silenced by hatred and strife, their potential. Her way of awakening it and healing the abuse is (aside from taking the role of the nurturing mother they never had) to lure the drow out of their prison, to seduce them to embark on a journey to see and marvel at what life actually can be--in short, empowering them to find and pursue beauty in their own life, in the way it best fulfills them. It can't be differently for Eilistraee, because of what I said above--she knows how that abuse feels, and latching onto that beauty, creating it for herself like for others, is what she herself did to rise from her own grief and to rebuild herself; it's only logical that she feels that it can help the drow do the same and be reborn.

As for other gods I enjoy, there's Shaundakul, Selune, Mask, Vhaeraun. Mystra too, because of her intimate connection with the Weave, which is unlike any other deity of magic, but she needs to be left the hell alone for a long time. I'd add deities like Oghma and Sune too, but they're quite standard deities of knowldege and love, so they don't strike me as particularly interesting in that regard. Shelyn from PF is a better characterized deity of love than Sune is, for example, IMHO.



I was less than impressed in her portrayal and the portrayal of her worshippers in the Lady Penitent suite of books. The books utterly disregarded the points you illustrated and made her come across as merely less-cruel-than-Lolth. my two coppers. Others may vehemently disagree.



Perfectly agreed with you. Lady Penitent has Eilistraeans as no longer good, but merely self-righteous in being violent, warlike, crass, uncompassionate, abusive, *extremely* misandrist, while calling themselves "good". OTOH, it is apocrypha, and as we discussed in the Q'arlynd thread, as confirmed by other FR authors, it was written with the explicit intention of grossly smearing Eilistraee, to get people to dislike her before getting rid of her for 4e. WotC just wanted their sweet sweet "inherently evil race+few special snowflakes" and what they did with Ryld (with his bloody rampage killing innocent humans to make him less likable before killing him), they tried to do with the Eilistraeans. It's only the Smedman/Athans couple to do this, tho and ALL their stuff re: drow has been retconned into oblivion where it belongs. Elaine's portrayal is FAR different, and Eilistraee's interaction with Liriel paints Eilistraee in her true role.
Delnyn Posted - 01 Jul 2020 : 03:04:32
If Faerun gods were real, I would choose Deneir as my patron deity. As a RL mathematician, I deal with symbols and glyphs extensively. On Friday late afternoons, I would invoke Llira as I head to the bar for Miller Time.
Delnyn Posted - 01 Jul 2020 : 02:58:56
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

Eilistraee

She chose to give up on all she could have wanted, face a path full of hardships that she had foreseen and that she feared, only out of love to her people. She found herself alone, fighting forces far greater than her. She suffered defeats, was wounded by the very people that she loved, was broken by grief and loss, and by seeing all that she had fought to build, destroyed.

Yet, as I read about her, the first thing that strikes me is that not only Eilistraee didn't steer from the path that she had chosen to walk for people, but that battling her wounds and sadness taught to see and nurture the beauty, or the potential for it, in everything--even where no one else would look: in the broken, in the abandoned, the forsaken, in the darkest places. As someone who has gone (and is still going through) depression, "melancholy" is a tough opponent, and I simply love that Eilistraee fights hers by striving to heal and create beauty, and by trying to look for chances to enjoy and share it at every opportunity. She continues to dance and sing; to heal, create, and to look for the joy that the world has to offer in all its aspects, even the most mundane--for life is too full of pain to let chances for laughter go to waste. She latches on to what can appear like small things--like creating music, cooking tasty food, being subtly impish/irreverent (she's often described like this), or making someone else happy--and to the act of sharing it with others. It's poignant IMO, because this is her anchor to go through all she had to endure; it's what she built herself on. Creating beauty and spreading this joy that she learned to find, reopening the eyes of her people (or of all those who suffer) to it, make them smile, is what gives her the strength to wake up every morning; she bets herself on the potential of all this, and on the fact that her people, after all, do want to be "seduced" by it. It's her identity at this point.

Which leads to the other part of the character that makes me like her so much--her interaction with the drow. Setting aside her role as a nurturing mother, and the paractical help that she gives the to thrive in a hostile world, to her, the drow are the result of lifelong abuse and neglect from those who should have loved them the most. She knows and feels that, because she's chosen to be one of them, to share their fate. And for that, she also sees the part of them that was silenced by hatred and strife, their potential. Her way of awakening it and healing the abuse is (aside from taking the role of the nurturing mother they never had) to lure the drow out of their prison, to seduce them to embark on a journey to see and marvel at what life actually can be--in short, empowering them to find and pursue beauty in their own life, in the way it best fulfills them. It can't be differently for Eilistraee, because of what I said above--she knows how that abuse feels, and latching onto that beauty, creating it for herself like for others, is what she herself did to rise from her own grief and to rebuild herself; it's only logical that she feels that it can help the drow do the same and be reborn.

As for other gods I enjoy, there's Shaundakul, Selune, Mask, Vhaeraun. Mystra too, because of her intimate connection with the Weave, which is unlike any other deity of magic, but she needs to be left the hell alone for a long time. I'd add deities like Oghma and Sune too, but they're quite standard deities of knowldege and love, so they don't strike me as particularly interesting in that regard. Shelyn from PF is a better characterized deity of love than Sune is, for example, IMHO.



I was less than impressed in her portrayal and the portrayal of her worshippers in the Lady Penitent suite of books. The books utterly disregarded the points you illustrated and made her come across as merely less-cruel-than-Lolth. my two coppers. Others may vehemently disagree.
CorellonsDevout Posted - 28 Jun 2020 : 21:09:58
The deities of the Realms are among my favorite aspects of the Realms. Yes, they can be petty and overbearing at times, but overall I love them, and their active presence in the Realms.

As for my favorite, well, you can probably tell that by my scribe name lol. Corellon Larethian, patron god of the elves. I also just love the Seldarine as a whole. Even Shevarash, despite his extreme dogma, I find fascinating.

Outside the elven pantheon, my top favorites are: Eilistraee and Vhaeraun, Lathander, Mask, and Ilmater.
lordhobie Posted - 24 Jun 2020 : 22:30:37
Tempus without a doubt.

Lord Hobie
Wooly Rupert Posted - 22 Jun 2020 : 17:13:57
quote:
Originally posted by Bracho Bugental

Oh, and don’t forget Pathfinder’s Eldest – Count Ranalc, The Lantern King, The Lost Prince, Magdh, Ng the Hooded, or the trans-temporal Shyka the Many – awesome and very easy to incorporate into your own campaign.




I love the whole First World concept, though if porting it to the Realms I'd respin it as being part or all of Faerie, mixing in the Faeries book by Bastion Press, as well, and ignoring everything that has ever been said about the feywild.
Bracho Bugental Posted - 22 Jun 2020 : 17:05:15
My favourites:

Ghaunadaur – for his (its?) ‘elder evil’ vibe, alien and incomprehensible;
Gargauth – for the endless possibilities for plots and intrigues on planar scale, and being so elegantly evil;
Shaundakul – for being the embodiment of adventuring (‘Let your footsteps fall where none have tread.’)

Talking about non-Realmsian deities, I have to agree with Wooly – Cayden Cailean is awesome. And I really love the amazing concept of Gods of Lankhmar – feared rather than worshipped mummified ancestors who ‘live’ in their temple, but leave it from time to time to battle threats to Lankhmar or, more often, perceived threats to their position as the city’s preeminent religion. Oh, and don’t forget Pathfinder’s Eldest – Count Ranalc, The Lantern King, The Lost Prince, Magdh, Ng the Hooded, or the trans-temporal Shyka the Many – awesome and very easy to incorporate into your own campaign.
Portella Posted - 22 Jun 2020 : 14:28:26
mine has been auril for quite sometime which is good with the rime of the frostmaiden coming in
George Krashos Posted - 22 Jun 2020 : 11:51:14
Always had a thing for Clangeddin and I think that Ilmater has lots of nuance and possibilities.

-- George Krashos
Theodore Posted - 22 Jun 2020 : 11:30:53
This is a strange mix but my three chief deities are Eilistraee, Lathander and Moradin in that order.
Diffan Posted - 19 Jun 2020 : 22:47:12
Favorite human deity: I'd have to say Torm, the True ever since I read the Tantras novel. His battle with Bane over the city was pretty awesome. A runner up would probably the The Traid (Tyr, Torm, Ilmater [shout out to Bahamut too during Tyr's absence]). I've always sort of liked the Triadic Knight - one who espouses all the tenets of these faiths into one.

Non-human deity: I'd say Corellon Larethian, deity of the Elves.
Seravin Posted - 17 Jun 2020 : 10:03:13
Shoot, forgot my non-human dieties!

Labelas Enoreth has been my fave since the FR comic book, I really loved how he was depicted in avatar form and the fight with Clangeddin. Brutal. Also god of immortality and time, neat portfolio.
Seethyr Posted - 17 Jun 2020 : 03:53:55
Hands down for me it is Nobanion. Nobanion is Aslan and Aslan has major allusions to Christ and Christianity which appeals to me personally. His depiction in the Reaver was cool, but mildly disappointing. I would certainly love to play a wemic paladin of his in the old school holy crusader trope of paladins from earlier editions.
Ayrik Posted - 16 Jun 2020 : 23:42:49
Talos, Gruumsh, and Tiamat are indeed awesome. Though I'd never want to worship them, nor live in a world where they are worshipped.
Barastir Posted - 16 Jun 2020 : 14:47:07
Lathander. Also like Tyr, Solonor (and the Seldarine), and some of the less humanoid gods (Remnis, Bahamut) but those are not properly Realmsian.

As for the bad guys, Malar (after I understood him better) and the Gods of Fury . In the same line above, Nomog-Geaya, Gruumsh and Tiamat.
sleyvas Posted - 16 Jun 2020 : 14:16:32
It was only after some soul searching that I came to realize mine. The Red Knight. Loves games of strategy. Loves tactics. In essence, she's be the one god who would sit down at the game table with me and just enjoy playing.

Now, from a DM's / storyline perspective, I love me some Leira, Velsharoon, Mystra, Lurue, and my personal Metahel Pantheon. For the next few days, Auril will be on my mind too.
The_Silversword Posted - 16 Jun 2020 : 09:17:31
I'm not sure I have a favorite, they all got their place yaknow? However I always wished they did more with Hoar/Assuran. And, I might get some flak for this, but I found myself rooting for Cyric in the Avatar series.
keftiu Posted - 16 Jun 2020 : 06:48:43
Ilmater. Always has been.

I was a sad kid.
Lord Karsus Posted - 15 Jun 2020 : 21:15:16
-Lathander
lookatroopa Posted - 15 Jun 2020 : 20:50:16
The Three Furies are definitely up there for me, with a preference towards Umberlee and Auril. Hope Umberlee gets her own adventure someday, to complement Malar's Something Wild and Auril's upcoming Rime of the Frostmaiden.
Irennan Posted - 15 Jun 2020 : 17:15:52
Eilistraee

She chose to give up on all she could have wanted, face a path full of hardships that she had foreseen and that she feared, only out of love to her people. She found herself alone, fighting forces far greater than her. She suffered defeats, was wounded by the very people that she loved, was broken by grief and loss, and by seeing all that she had fought to build, destroyed.

Yet, as I read about her, the first thing that strikes me is that not only Eilistraee didn't steer from the path that she had chosen to walk for people, but that battling her wounds and sadness taught to see and nurture the beauty, or the potential for it, in everything--even where no one else would look: in the broken, in the abandoned, the forsaken, in the darkest places. As someone who has gone (and is still going through) depression, "melancholy" is a tough opponent, and I simply love that Eilistraee fights hers by striving to heal and create beauty, and by trying to look for chances to enjoy and share it at every opportunity. She continues to dance and sing; to heal, create, and to look for the joy that the world has to offer in all its aspects, even the most mundane--for life is too full of pain to let chances for laughter go to waste. She latches on to what can appear like small things--like creating music, cooking tasty food, being subtly impish/irreverent (she's often described like this), or making someone else happy--and to the act of sharing it with others. It's poignant IMO, because this is her anchor to go through all she had to endure; it's what she built herself on. Creating beauty and spreading this joy that she learned to find, reopening the eyes of her people (or of all those who suffer) to it, make them smile, is what gives her the strength to wake up every morning; she bets herself on the potential of all this, and on the fact that her people, after all, do want to be "seduced" by it. It's her identity at this point.

Which leads to the other part of the character that makes me like her so much--her interaction with the drow. Setting aside her role as a nurturing mother, and the paractical help that she gives the to thrive in a hostile world, to her, the drow are the result of lifelong abuse and neglect from those who should have loved them the most. She knows and feels that, because she's chosen to be one of them, to share their fate. And for that, she also sees the part of them that was silenced by hatred and strife, their potential. Her way of awakening it and healing the abuse is (aside from taking the role of the nurturing mother they never had) to lure the drow out of their prison, to seduce them to embark on a journey to see and marvel at what life actually can be--in short, empowering them to find and pursue beauty in their own life, in the way it best fulfills them. It can't be differently for Eilistraee, because of what I said above--she knows how that abuse feels, and latching onto that beauty, creating it for herself like for others, is what she herself did to rise from her own grief and to rebuild herself; it's only logical that she feels that it can help the drow do the same and be reborn.

As for other gods I enjoy, there's Shaundakul, Selune, Mask, Vhaeraun. Mystra too, because of her intimate connection with the Weave, which is unlike any other deity of magic, but she needs to be left the hell alone for a long time. I'd add deities like Oghma and Sune too, but they're quite standard deities of knowldege and love, so they don't strike me as particularly interesting in that regard. Shelyn from PF is a better characterized deity of love than Sune is, for example, IMHO.

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