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jordanz
Senior Scribe
  
556 Posts |
Posted - 17 Aug 2009 : 16:19:39
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HI guys. I just read the last "Undead" Novel- missed the first two. Szass Tam alludes to an arrangement with Bane? What was the arrangement exactly? Was it for a power boost? I knew Tam was powerful but after what I read in this book it seemed like he could challenge Larloch himself. Is he a quasi diety of some sort now ?
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Edited by - jordanz on 17 Aug 2009 16:24:38
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skychrome
Senior Scribe
  
713 Posts |
Posted - 17 Aug 2009 : 20:00:27
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Well, Bane did indeed provide him some extraordinary powers for a limited time, but more important than that is as far as I perceived it, that Szass Tam was one of the few who -due to this deal- was able to use magic when the Spellplague recently hit Faerun and magic users died or where unable to make their spells work. |
"You make an intriguing offer, one that is very tempting. It would seem that I have little alternative than to answer thusly: DISINTEGRATE!" Vaarsuvius, Order of the Stick 625 |
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LordManshoon
Acolyte
USA
12 Posts |
Posted - 18 Aug 2009 : 21:57:34
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In addition to what Skychrome said, I also believe the pact in effect granted Szass Tam the support of Bane's church in Thay. He'd probably use this as a buffer against the other churches, most notably Kossuth's, with which he had been butting heads, as well as his other foes. |
Mastering myriad magics since Ed was young |
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sparhawk42
Learned Scribe
 
104 Posts |
Posted - 19 Aug 2009 : 02:09:40
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Of course the down side to all this, if I understand correctly, is that after 1000 years he has to give up his soul right? |
You never fail until you stop trying. |
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The Simbul
Learned Scribe
 
173 Posts |
Posted - 19 Aug 2009 : 06:37:05
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Szass Tam made a pact with Bane to gain the following boons:
* All the knowledge a Greater Deity like Bane would have had regarding "the nature of magic as it exists today" (i.e. after Mystra's fall) * The ability to locate and identify even the tiniest remnants of a corpse within the realm, even those that had decomposed so extensively to have been indistinguishable from the soil. * The amplification of his ability to communicate telepathically with his allies and underlings, and of his ability to project images of himself anywhere.
These boons enabled him to adapt to the changes in the shattered Weave much more quickly than his contemporaries. More importantly they allowed him to telepathically imbue this knowledge into the minds of all of his underlings in the school of necromancy, thus giving his armies dvantage over the Zulkirs. Simultaneously it enabled him to call forth a far greater army of undead than he otherwise would have been able to, since even the smallest remnant of a decomposed corpse could have been located and transformed into some form of creature or spirit.
In return he promised to make Bane the sole deity worshiped in Thay, and that after enjoying the fruits of his victory for 1,000 years Bane could claim his soul for whatever purpose he wished.
Lastly, while these powers are mostly "gone" there is little reason to not allow him to have them in a given campaign. They all represent off-stage story related abilities that have little to do with combat, and thus it would not be unbalancing for him to continue to wield them. |
Edited by - The Simbul on 19 Aug 2009 06:43:23 |
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Jakk
Great Reader
    
Canada
2165 Posts |
Posted - 19 Aug 2009 : 07:20:58
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quote: Originally posted by The Simbul
Szass Tam made a pact with Bane to gain the following boons:
* All the knowledge a Greater Deity like Bane would have had regarding "the nature of magic as it exists today" (i.e. after Mystra's fall) * The ability to locate and identify even the tiniest remnants of a corpse within the realm, even those that had decomposed so extensively to have been indistinguishable from the soil. * The amplification of his ability to communicate telepathically with his allies and underlings, and of his ability to project images of himself anywhere.
These boons enabled him to adapt to the changes in the shattered Weave much more quickly than his contemporaries. More importantly they allowed him to telepathically imbue this knowledge into the minds of all of his underlings in the school of necromancy, thus giving his armies dvantage over the Zulkirs. Simultaneously it enabled him to call forth a far greater army of undead than he otherwise would have been able to, since even the smallest remnant of a decomposed corpse could have been located and transformed into some form of creature or spirit.
In return he promised to make Bane the sole deity worshiped in Thay, and that after enjoying the fruits of his victory for 1,000 years Bane could claim his soul for whatever purpose he wished.
Lastly, while these powers are mostly "gone" there is little reason to not allow him to have them in a given campaign. They all represent off-stage story related abilities that have little to do with combat, and thus it would not be unbalancing for him to continue to wield them.
I like this... and Szass has 1,000 years to figure out how to save himself, which is entirely within the realm of possibility for someone like him. No, I have no plans for a 1,000 year time jump in my Realms... I don't have time to extend the Roll of Years that far.  |
Playing in the Realms since the Old Grey Box (1987)... and *still* having fun with material published before 2008, despite the NDA'd lore.
If it's comparable in power with non-magical abilities, it's not magic. |
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The Simbul
Learned Scribe
 
173 Posts |
Posted - 19 Aug 2009 : 07:53:35
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While he has 906 years left he takes nothing for granted, and even after his defeat he renews his efforts--a sentiment illustrated in the Epilogue.
Moreover, a complete cover-to-cover reading of the lore in the Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide, and a basic understanding of geometry and Toril's geography pretty much foreshadows his likely next move, against whom, and the alliances or rivalries (temporary or otherwise) he might need to make along the way.
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Edited by - The Simbul on 19 Aug 2009 07:58:01 |
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jordanz
Senior Scribe
  
556 Posts |
Posted - 20 Aug 2009 : 03:27:44
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quote: Originally posted by Jakk
quote: Originally posted by The Simbul
Szass Tam made a pact with Bane to gain the following boons:
* All the knowledge a Greater Deity like Bane would have had regarding "the nature of magic as it exists today" (i.e. after Mystra's fall) * The ability to locate and identify even the tiniest remnants of a corpse within the realm, even those that had decomposed so extensively to have been indistinguishable from the soil. * The amplification of his ability to communicate telepathically with his allies and underlings, and of his ability to project images of himself anywhere.
These boons enabled him to adapt to the changes in the shattered Weave much more quickly than his contemporaries. More importantly they allowed him to telepathically imbue this knowledge into the minds of all of his underlings in the school of necromancy, thus giving his armies dvantage over the Zulkirs. Simultaneously it enabled him to call forth a far greater army of undead than he otherwise would have been able to, since even the smallest remnant of a decomposed corpse could have been located and transformed into some form of creature or spirit.
In return he promised to make Bane the sole deity worshiped in Thay, and that after enjoying the fruits of his victory for 1,000 years Bane could claim his soul for whatever purpose he wished.
Lastly, while these powers are mostly "gone" there is little reason to not allow him to have them in a given campaign. They all represent off-stage story related abilities that have little to do with combat, and thus it would not be unbalancing for him to continue to wield them.
I like this... and Szass has 1,000 years to figure out how to save himself, which is entirely within the realm of possibility for someone like him. No, I have no plans for a 1,000 year time jump in my Realms... I don't have time to extend the Roll of Years that far. 
Apparently he believes that becoming a divine being will save him. It would be funny if it didn't. Still if Vecna and the like were able to acheive divinty, I wouldn't bet against Szass doing the same.. |
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Jakk
Great Reader
    
Canada
2165 Posts |
Posted - 21 Aug 2009 : 03:54:01
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quote: Originally posted by jordanz
Apparently he believes that becoming a divine being will save him. It would be funny if it didn't. Still if Vecna and the like were able to acheive divinty, I wouldn't bet against Szass doing the same..
Nor would I... and it would be good for the Realms; he'd be way more interesting than Velsharoon as a Realmsian lich-god, and he might even be a cooler god of the dead than Myrkul was... and I brought Myrkul back in my Realms. Of course, if Larloch decided that job was something he wanted, we'd have a heck of a fight to watch... and I'm not sure who'd come out on top.  |
Playing in the Realms since the Old Grey Box (1987)... and *still* having fun with material published before 2008, despite the NDA'd lore.
If it's comparable in power with non-magical abilities, it's not magic. |
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The Simbul
Learned Scribe
 
173 Posts |
Posted - 21 Aug 2009 : 06:40:01
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The intended purpose of the ritual was not to transform himself into a deity. It's intended purpose was to annihilate all existence and allow the caster to re-shape the universe as they see fit, which--as stated in the Campaign Guide--would have elevated him above the gods..
..or at least in theory, since it still has yet to be successfully cast. |
Edited by - The Simbul on 21 Aug 2009 06:41:19 |
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Neil Bishop
Learned Scribe
 
Singapore
100 Posts |
Posted - 24 Aug 2009 : 08:05:04
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I think his next step will include releasing the elder evil, Pandorym, and wipe out all of Toril's deities and then enact his little ritual. |
Regards NXB |
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LordManshoon
Acolyte
USA
12 Posts |
Posted - 24 Aug 2009 : 21:35:58
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I really don't like how Bane came out looking in this pact. True, he had no way of knowing why Szass Tam would want a pact, but he should have been suspicious. Of course, personally, I don't think the two of them should have ever met face-to-face, especially in such a way that ST appears in the same ballpark power-wise as Bane, but that's just me. |
Mastering myriad magics since Ed was young |
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Noxica
Acolyte
23 Posts |
Posted - 17 Feb 2010 : 22:01:13
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quote: Originally posted by LordManshoon
I really don't like how Bane came out looking in this pact. True, he had no way of knowing why Szass Tam would want a pact, but he should have been suspicious. Of course, personally, I don't think the two of them should have ever met face-to-face, especially in such a way that ST appears in the same ballpark power-wise as Bane, but that's just me.
Well Bane very likely has an inkling of what Szass Tam is up to and really expects him to fail, (SPOILER: Szass Tam does actually fail his first chance at becoming the supreme ruler of the realms and now must conquer another country to try again.)
In return for Szass Tam's gamble, Bane gets an entire country to pledge their loyalty to him which is quite a power boost for him which he will very likely need for usurping Cyric. |
Edited by - Noxica on 17 Feb 2010 22:01:38 |
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Nicolai Withander
Master of Realmslore
   
Denmark
1093 Posts |
Posted - 21 Feb 2010 : 01:21:27
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What is larloch doing in all of this... As I remember Larloch is the only this that Szazz Tam fear... And for a good reason! Or Ioulaum, he would be able to give Szass a run for him money too! |
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sfdragon
Great Reader
    
2285 Posts |
Posted - 21 Feb 2010 : 03:10:15
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Larloch of Warlock's Crypt is NDA Ioulaum of Seventon is also NDA....... well thier plans are anyway, |
why is being a wizard like being a drow? both are likely to find a dagger in the back from a rival or one looking to further his own goals, fame and power
My FR fan fiction Magister's GAmbit http://steelfiredragon.deviantart.com/gallery/33539234 |
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Markustay
Realms Explorer extraordinaire
    
USA
15724 Posts |
Posted - 27 Feb 2013 : 13:55:40
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Once again, rezzing an old thread because I have a related question:
Where does Szass Tam live? 
I only just noticed about two minutes ago that there is a locale on the FRIA map that says "Szass Tam's Keep", and its NOT on Thaymount. 
I realize the FRIA is now two editions out-of-date - did he move? Was there ever a name for his old Keep? Did he take the keep of Nyressa Flass over after he killed her and took her place? |
"I have never in my life learned anything from any man who agreed with me" --- Dudley Field Malone
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Edited by - Markustay on 27 Feb 2013 13:56:23 |
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Dennis
Great Reader
    
9933 Posts |
Posted - 27 Feb 2013 : 15:05:12
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quote: Originally posted by Markustay
Once again, rezzing an old thread because I have a related question:
Where does Szass Tam live? 
I only just noticed about two minutes ago that there is a locale on the FRIA map that says "Szass Tam's Keep", and its NOT on Thaymount. 
I realize the FRIA is now two editions out-of-date - did he move? Was there ever a name for his old Keep? Did he take the keep of Nyressa Flass over after he killed her and took her place?
He is in Thaymount. That's his seat of power.
Never heard of "Szass Tam's Keep." It's probably the new name for Keep of Sorrows, where he won one of the most crucial campaigns against the united zulkirs. |
Every beginning has an end. |
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_Jarlaxle_
Senior Scribe
  
Germany
584 Posts |
Posted - 27 Feb 2013 : 15:31:34
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Depends on how you define "live" for a lich who doesn't need to sleep or do any other stuff people usually do at the place they live.
So I would guess he has several places where he works and apearing in the capitol for all the official occasions
His main labs and storing facilities probably are in some very hidden places. |
Edited by - _Jarlaxle_ on 27 Feb 2013 15:33:00 |
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Barastir
Master of Realmslore
   
Brazil
1601 Posts |
Posted - 11 Mar 2013 : 16:41:00
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quote: Originally posted by Markustay I only just noticed about two minutes ago that there is a locale on the FRIA map that says "Szass Tam's Keep", and its NOT on Thaymount. 
Nice! And where is it, MT? |
"Goodness is not a natural state, but must be fought for to be attained and maintained. Lead by example. Let your deeds speak your intentions. Goodness radiated from the heart."
The Paladin's Virtues, excerpt from the "Quentin's Monograph" (by Ed Greenwood) |
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Ayrik
Great Reader
    
Canada
7989 Posts |
Posted - 11 Mar 2013 : 18:47:06
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quote: sparhawk42
Of course the down side to all this, if I understand correctly, is that after 1000 years he has to give up his soul right?
As discussed in this scroll, Szass Tam has gained access to godlike powers - and/or godlike amplifications to his existing powers - within his domain (of Thay) during this millennial period. Powers which, I think, could be roughly comparable to those of, say, Halaster within his own domain (of Undermountain).
Look how much Halaster has accomplished (and how far he's been able to influence the world beyond his domain) over the past 1,000 years. Although details differ, it might be argued that Halaster's original "divine power" source, along with whatever fate or cost it forecast upon his destiny, was (indeed, might still be) somehow delayed or countered or circumvented indefinitely, at least until the end of Halaster's days ...
Remember also that Szass Tam's ambitions basically amount to reformatting the cosmos, with himself installed as the primary (Re-)Creator of the World and Everything Else. Even if the magnitude of his cosmic renovation is confined to a smaller global subset - say, just the Prime, or just Realmspace, or just Toril, or even just Faerūn/Thay - he's probably gambling on being able to build a world in which Bane is conspicuously absent.
To me this indicates that Bane (who is still pretty great among the Greater Powers) must have some specific divine knowledge about Szass's ritual. That is, Bane must know that the ritual will certainly fail (or can certainly be made to fail) ... because as a lawful god he deals only with known rules and consequences, as an evil god he's likely to manipulate these to service his own ends, and as a tyrant-bully god he's all about domination and the strong/fast/smart exerting power over the weak/slow/foolish. Bane is not a god of gamblers, not a player of intrigues and plots and gambits, not even a god of ambitious self-advancement, he wouldn't be one to risk losing a superior position for a chance of gaining an even stronger superior position - and to me this indicates that the consequences of Szass's ritual must be known and must be limited or controllable, they aren't unfathomable mysteries even the semi-omniscient Faerūnian deities cannot penetrate. Of course, Bane is not infallable, but I very much doubt he would ever agree to any arrangement in which he fails to assert, maintain, or gain power - especially not an agreement where his obligations are so costly and the prize so ambiguously useful. Szass Tam has never enjoyed any special favour as a minion or adversary of Bane, so I don't see why possession of his soul would be such a vital offering.
Unless of course Bane needs to own Szass to gain Szass's knowledge of the ritual itself. I still think that a god of such absolute and authoritarian ideology wouldn't sacrifice or gamble divine power ... at least not unless the potential payoff was something as big as the cosmos itself. |
[/Ayrik] |
Edited by - Ayrik on 11 Mar 2013 21:30:57 |
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The Masked Mage
Great Reader
    
USA
2420 Posts |
Posted - 11 Mar 2013 : 22:17:41
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quote: [i]Originally posted by Ayrik
I know nothing about these books. Haven't read them.
That said, I'd argue Bane's part in the Time of Troubles would seem to be a gamble to gain power and position. |
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Ayrik
Great Reader
    
Canada
7989 Posts |
Posted - 12 Mar 2013 : 17:24:45
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Bane's part in the Time of Troubles really amounts to precipitating the whole mess by stealing the boss's Tablets of MacGuffin. His actions during the Avatar Crisis, right up to his death in Tantras, seemed very reactionary and contrived: instead of showing any real initiative he basically just twirled his mustache and travelled around a lot for no apparent reason other than to always be a menacing villain briefly glimpsed on the distant horizon while the main "heroes" moved the story along.
I suppose I would accept that as a gamble for power ... if the Tablets of Fate served any actual purpose in the Realms beyond being a narrative device. Perhaps they are the ultimate literal deus ex artifact. |
[/Ayrik] |
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Dalor Darden
Great Reader
    
USA
4211 Posts |
Posted - 12 Mar 2013 : 17:29:40
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I used to like Tam...now he reminds me of Iuz
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The Old Grey Box and AD&D for me! |
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Dennis
Great Reader
    
9933 Posts |
Posted - 13 Mar 2013 : 13:31:37
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quote: Originally posted by Ayrik
Unless of course Bane needs to own Szass to gain Szass's knowledge of the ritual itself. I still think that a god of such absolute and authoritarian ideology wouldn't sacrifice or gamble divine power . . . at least not unless the potential payoff was something as big as the cosmos itself.
It's also possible that the answer is quite a simple one: that he had no time to waste discussing with Szass Tam the ritual and whatnot and getting out of the temporary but potent cage that Szass Tam put him in. Szass Tam summoned him shortly after the Spellplague, when all gods were directly affected, when mortal matters became last on their list of priorities. He also made it clear that while Bane would eventually break free, he still had to exert some (potentially considerable amount of) power to do so, and that it could take some time. Time and power, two things that a god can hardly waste. |
Every beginning has an end. |
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Markustay
Realms Explorer extraordinaire
    
USA
15724 Posts |
Posted - 13 Mar 2013 : 15:14:48
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quote: Originally posted by Barastir
Nice! And where is it, MT?
See links below.
quote: Originally posted by Dennis
quote: Originally posted by Markustay
Once again, rezzing an old thread because I have a related question:
Where does Szass Tam live? 
I only just noticed about two minutes ago that there is a locale on the FRIA map that says "Szass Tam's Keep", and its NOT on Thaymount. 
I realize the FRIA is now two editions out-of-date - did he move? Was there ever a name for his old Keep? Did he take the keep of Nyressa Flass over after he killed her and took her place?
He is in Thaymount. That's his seat of power.
Never heard of "Szass Tam's Keep." It's probably the new name for Keep of Sorrows, where he won one of the most crucial campaigns against the united zulkirs.
NOT possible.
The FRIA is VERY old, and hasn't been updated since the very beginning of 3e. Besides, the 3e Thay map shows the Keep of Sorrows and its not in the same place. You can see the placements on the FRIA map HERE - they are quite far apart (about 50 miles according to the FRIA scale).
Just for the sake of absolute clarity, all red lettering (except for 'Thay') is MINE, including the arrows. The Keep of Sorrows was not on the FRIA map - I placed that keep there, in accordance to where it is on the 3e (UE) map. Also, the Keep of Sorrows is on neither the 1e or 2e maps of Thay, but the River of Sorrows is clearly labeled on the 2e Spellbound map. Although the lore surrounding the Keep may be older then 3e, the actual placement of the keep is not illustrated until 3e (but the river it is on was).
My assumption here is that this was Szass Tam's original Keep, and perhaps the one he was operating out of in that short story. It may or may not be Nyressa's Flass's former keep (whom he killed to take her place). It may also be the one he was in during the events of Red Wizards, but I no longer own that novel to check. Anyone have it? Was there a map in it? (I don't recall one, but its location may have been described - most locales from the Harper series were added to the FRIA, where possible). |
"I have never in my life learned anything from any man who agreed with me" --- Dudley Field Malone
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Edited by - Markustay on 13 Mar 2013 15:21:32 |
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Dennis
Great Reader
    
9933 Posts |
Posted - 13 Mar 2013 : 15:26:44
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There's no Red Wizards novel. It's called Red Magic.
You're right about the keep. But I still believe he lives in Thaymount, or where he spends most of his time. That's where the "focus" of the original set of Dread Rings, anyway. And that's where he won his crowning victory over the united zulkirs. |
Every beginning has an end. |
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Markustay
Realms Explorer extraordinaire
    
USA
15724 Posts |
Posted - 14 Mar 2013 : 12:43:55
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quote: Originally posted by Dennis
There's no Red Wizards novel. It's called Red Magic.
You're right about the keep. But I still believe he lives in Thaymount, or where he spends most of his time. That's where the "focus" of the original set of Dread Rings, anyway. And that's where he won his crowning victory over the united zulkirs.
Yeah, I get that mixed up with the Conan novel Black Wizards. 
Years and years ago, either SPI or Avalon Hill (now both owned by Hasbro) had a game called Sorcerer (or maybe the plural version of that), and it was based on 'colors of magic', kinda like how MtG magic works. It was an an army/war game, but a lot of fun. My friends and I played it a lot.
Another great gem the WotC guys should dust-off and take a look at - I really like the premise of orders of wizardry based on colors. I have several groups of wizards based in and around the Old Empires using that concept.*
Anyhow, I agree he is definitely on Thaymount now, and probably has been since the very beginning of 3e, but when the setting 'started', he wasn't. I just find that interesting, and it also gives DMs (and authors) another possibility for an adventure site (presumably to 'uncover Szass Tam's secrets'). He may have something very cool still hidden there.
*EDIT: Found it - it was SPI. Just looking at that box makes me wax nostalgic. They really need to re-release that. |
"I have never in my life learned anything from any man who agreed with me" --- Dudley Field Malone
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Edited by - Markustay on 14 Mar 2013 12:46:48 |
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist
    
USA
12020 Posts |
Posted - 14 Mar 2013 : 16:42:47
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quote: Originally posted by Ayrik
quote: sparhawk42
Of course the down side to all this, if I understand correctly, is that after 1000 years he has to give up his soul right?
As discussed in this scroll, Szass Tam has gained access to godlike powers - and/or godlike amplifications to his existing powers - within his domain (of Thay) during this millennial period. Powers which, I think, could be roughly comparable to those of, say, Halaster within his own domain (of Undermountain).
Look how much Halaster has accomplished (and how far he's been able to influence the world beyond his domain) over the past 1,000 years. Although details differ, it might be argued that Halaster's original "divine power" source, along with whatever fate or cost it forecast upon his destiny, was (indeed, might still be) somehow delayed or countered or circumvented indefinitely, at least until the end of Halaster's days ...
Remember also that Szass Tam's ambitions basically amount to reformatting the cosmos, with himself installed as the primary (Re-)Creator of the World and Everything Else. Even if the magnitude of his cosmic renovation is confined to a smaller global subset - say, just the Prime, or just Realmspace, or just Toril, or even just Faerūn/Thay - he's probably gambling on being able to build a world in which Bane is conspicuously absent.
To me this indicates that Bane (who is still pretty great among the Greater Powers) must have some specific divine knowledge about Szass's ritual. That is, Bane must know that the ritual will certainly fail (or can certainly be made to fail) ... because as a lawful god he deals only with known rules and consequences, as an evil god he's likely to manipulate these to service his own ends, and as a tyrant-bully god he's all about domination and the strong/fast/smart exerting power over the weak/slow/foolish. Bane is not a god of gamblers, not a player of intrigues and plots and gambits, not even a god of ambitious self-advancement, he wouldn't be one to risk losing a superior position for a chance of gaining an even stronger superior position - and to me this indicates that the consequences of Szass's ritual must be known and must be limited or controllable, they aren't unfathomable mysteries even the semi-omniscient Faerūnian deities cannot penetrate. Of course, Bane is not infallable, but I very much doubt he would ever agree to any arrangement in which he fails to assert, maintain, or gain power - especially not an agreement where his obligations are so costly and the prize so ambiguously useful. Szass Tam has never enjoyed any special favour as a minion or adversary of Bane, so I don't see why possession of his soul would be such a vital offering.
Unless of course Bane needs to own Szass to gain Szass's knowledge of the ritual itself. I still think that a god of such absolute and authoritarian ideology wouldn't sacrifice or gamble divine power ... at least not unless the potential payoff was something as big as the cosmos itself.
Basically, I look at what's happened with Szass Tam and I'm pretty much inclined to believe at this point that the man's just gone insane. Let's also acknowledge something... he said he developed a ritual to remake the universe. Nothing says he was correct. Everyone just went "oh poopy, what if he's right?" and attacked him. Also, lets also acknowledge that Tam's under the effects of a cursed artifact given him by Larloch (the Death Moon Orb). That's most likely why he entirely screwed over all his plans for Thay. He's just gone totally nuts and unfortunately he's not become reckless enough yet to be taken out. Hell, this may have been WHY Larloch gave him the death moon orb.
Curse: The alignment of user of the orb eventually shifts to chaotic evil. It also compels its user to greater and greater acts of evil, until the user is infamous as a monster of complete wickedness and cruelty. Such individuals invariably perish in some fashion unless, like Tam and Larloch, they continue on as undead creatures and don#146;t care what anyone else thinks of them.
Mod edit: Language, please. |
Alavairthae, may your skill prevail
Phillip aka Sleyvas |
Edited by - Wooly Rupert on 14 Mar 2013 18:09:00 |
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Dennis
Great Reader
    
9933 Posts |
Posted - 15 Mar 2013 : 15:56:37
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One immortal archmage once said, "Contrary to common belief, we're not mad. We're simply misunderstood. And I've long ago stopped caring about what others think of me, save one man." |
Every beginning has an end. |
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Firestorm
Senior Scribe
  
Canada
826 Posts |
Posted - 30 Mar 2013 : 17:03:46
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quote: Originally posted by Nicolai Withander
What is larloch doing in all of this... As I remember Larloch is the only this that Szazz Tam fear... And for a good reason! Or Ioulaum, he would be able to give Szass a run for him money too!
Larloch apparently has some sort of grand scheme going on. Either to bring himself back, or otherwise.
We learned in the Elminster novels that he created the blueflame items and he was mentioned grimly by the Simbul and Elminster |
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Arcanus
Senior Scribe
  
485 Posts |
Posted - 31 Mar 2013 : 13:39:04
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It seems highly unlikely to me that any god would aid a mortal who was trying to destroy the universe if said god thought that there was the remotest chance of the mortal succeeding.
The whole plot of this grand spell is ridiculous. I could understand a spell to change nearby lands or replace a god but remake the universe? C'mon, that's far too big a goal. We already have one Ao and that's quite enough thank you. |
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