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Chebucto Regional Softball Club

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  3. Tales From the Tables ep.52: Lady Mage of Waterdeep, part 2
A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.

Tales From the Tables ep.52: Lady Mage of Waterdeep, part 2

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  • D doodlepoodle@ttrpg.network
    Hear ye, hear ye! Tales From the Tables is back with episode 52: Lady Mage of Waterdeep, part 2. Apologies, not very meme-y this time, still submitting for the sake of completion and popular demand 🙂 Our intrepid adventurers befriend Laeral Silverhand, and get to know the fames Lady Mage of Waterdeep from a different, personal side. It's very much a Laeral special, lovingly consulted with the man, the legend, Ed Greenwood. It saddens me that so many D&D players only know Laeral superficially, if at all. "Ruler of Waterdeep" "Oh, she's a powerful wizard and very old, isn't she?" And that's about the extend of most players' knowledge... She's a truly fascinating character who's walked Faerun for over 7 centuries, with beautiful, oft heart-wrenching stories to tell. I do hope my little hints at but a handful of events from her past will encourage a few people to at least read up about her on the Forgotten Realms Wiki, or better yet, reach for the many amazing books by Ed Greenwood or Steven E. Schend.
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    archpawn@lemmy.world
    wrote last edited by
    #6
    How common is using Clone to live forever? The spell is cheap enough that even poor people can afford the material components (so long as they don't mind a squalid lifestyle), but I'm guessing there's not enough casters for everyone.
    ? AhdokA 2 Replies Last reply
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    • D doodlepoodle@ttrpg.network
      Hear ye, hear ye! Tales From the Tables is back with episode 52: Lady Mage of Waterdeep, part 2. Apologies, not very meme-y this time, still submitting for the sake of completion and popular demand 🙂 Our intrepid adventurers befriend Laeral Silverhand, and get to know the fames Lady Mage of Waterdeep from a different, personal side. It's very much a Laeral special, lovingly consulted with the man, the legend, Ed Greenwood. It saddens me that so many D&D players only know Laeral superficially, if at all. "Ruler of Waterdeep" "Oh, she's a powerful wizard and very old, isn't she?" And that's about the extend of most players' knowledge... She's a truly fascinating character who's walked Faerun for over 7 centuries, with beautiful, oft heart-wrenching stories to tell. I do hope my little hints at but a handful of events from her past will encourage a few people to at least read up about her on the Forgotten Realms Wiki, or better yet, reach for the many amazing books by Ed Greenwood or Steven E. Schend.
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      T This user is from outside of this forum
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      thegreatdarkness@ttrpg.network
      wrote last edited by
      #7
      Actually well written Lawful Good characters getting along is so rare 🙂
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      • A archpawn@lemmy.world
        Once you're a high enough level you can cast Plane Shift and visit. Arguably, you can just use Sending. It can contact other planes, but I'm not sure if their soul in the afterlife technically qualifies as the same creature.
        AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
        AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
        Ahdok
        wrote last edited by
        #8
        It's actually a significant issue in Waterdeep's setting that she *can't* just planeshift and visit Khelben, because of where his soul is. (It's not somewhere you can planeshift to...)
        D 1 Reply Last reply
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        • D doodlepoodle@ttrpg.network
          Hear ye, hear ye! Tales From the Tables is back with episode 52: Lady Mage of Waterdeep, part 2. Apologies, not very meme-y this time, still submitting for the sake of completion and popular demand 🙂 Our intrepid adventurers befriend Laeral Silverhand, and get to know the fames Lady Mage of Waterdeep from a different, personal side. It's very much a Laeral special, lovingly consulted with the man, the legend, Ed Greenwood. It saddens me that so many D&D players only know Laeral superficially, if at all. "Ruler of Waterdeep" "Oh, she's a powerful wizard and very old, isn't she?" And that's about the extend of most players' knowledge... She's a truly fascinating character who's walked Faerun for over 7 centuries, with beautiful, oft heart-wrenching stories to tell. I do hope my little hints at but a handful of events from her past will encourage a few people to at least read up about her on the Forgotten Realms Wiki, or better yet, reach for the many amazing books by Ed Greenwood or Steven E. Schend.
          Link Preview Image
          AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
          AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
          Ahdok
          wrote last edited by
          #9
          Your Laeral is very similar to the way I run Laeral in my games, which is lovely. I think she's a good character, the tragic "I live forever" schtick works well on a genuinely good, intellegent, competent leader type. I do always feel that she makes friends with the PCs too easily in most of my games. (I have a similar problem running Vajra... which at least evens itself out a bit whenever the PCs suggest having the two of them meet up...) - but also, if you do (good-aligned) adventures out of Waterdeep for long enough, you should probably end up friends with both of them.
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          • D doodlepoodle@ttrpg.network
            Hear ye, hear ye! Tales From the Tables is back with episode 52: Lady Mage of Waterdeep, part 2. Apologies, not very meme-y this time, still submitting for the sake of completion and popular demand 🙂 Our intrepid adventurers befriend Laeral Silverhand, and get to know the fames Lady Mage of Waterdeep from a different, personal side. It's very much a Laeral special, lovingly consulted with the man, the legend, Ed Greenwood. It saddens me that so many D&D players only know Laeral superficially, if at all. "Ruler of Waterdeep" "Oh, she's a powerful wizard and very old, isn't she?" And that's about the extend of most players' knowledge... She's a truly fascinating character who's walked Faerun for over 7 centuries, with beautiful, oft heart-wrenching stories to tell. I do hope my little hints at but a handful of events from her past will encourage a few people to at least read up about her on the Forgotten Realms Wiki, or better yet, reach for the many amazing books by Ed Greenwood or Steven E. Schend.
            Link Preview Image
            AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
            AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
            Ahdok
            wrote last edited by
            #10
            I've been meaning to ask for a while, do you have any official character art reference sheets for Angela (and/or the others?)
            D 1 Reply Last reply
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            • AhdokA Ahdok
              It's actually a significant issue in Waterdeep's setting that she *can't* just planeshift and visit Khelben, because of where his soul is. (It's not somewhere you can planeshift to...)
              D This user is from outside of this forum
              D This user is from outside of this forum
              doodlepoodle@ttrpg.network
              wrote last edited by
              #11
              Yep, and that's why she and the current Blackstaff, Vajra... don't exactly mesh well on personal level. Although they're very professional about it and do work together for the good of Waterdeep, things are... a bit tense.
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              • AhdokA Ahdok
                I've been meaning to ask for a while, do you have any official character art reference sheets for Angela (and/or the others?)
                D This user is from outside of this forum
                D This user is from outside of this forum
                doodlepoodle@ttrpg.network
                wrote last edited by
                #12
                They did get some poster-style images for their "who's who" special, but other than that, not really. I really should set that up soon...
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                • A archpawn@lemmy.world
                  How common is using Clone to live forever? The spell is cheap enough that even poor people can afford the material components (so long as they don't mind a squalid lifestyle), but I'm guessing there's not enough casters for everyone.
                  ? Offline
                  ? Offline
                  Guest
                  wrote last edited by
                  #13
                  It's 3000 GP just for the material components, plus another 400 to pay the caster. At one gold piece a day (the amount a skilled artisan earns) it'd take 11.5 years to earn a clone with a poor lifestyle (2 SP per day). So you're living a poor lifestyle for basically half your professional life, just to earn the ability to repeat your professional life and spend another 11.5 years of it earning the ability to repeat your professional life just to spend 11.5 years of it earning the ability to... you get the idea. You'd also need to find a caster capable of casting an 8th level spell, which is rare. Possible? Yes. Popular? I doubt it.
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                  • ? Guest
                    It's 3000 GP just for the material components, plus another 400 to pay the caster. At one gold piece a day (the amount a skilled artisan earns) it'd take 11.5 years to earn a clone with a poor lifestyle (2 SP per day). So you're living a poor lifestyle for basically half your professional life, just to earn the ability to repeat your professional life and spend another 11.5 years of it earning the ability to repeat your professional life just to spend 11.5 years of it earning the ability to... you get the idea. You'd also need to find a caster capable of casting an 8th level spell, which is rare. Possible? Yes. Popular? I doubt it.
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                    archpawn@lemmy.world
                    wrote last edited by
                    #14
                    23 years. I'm assuming you're going for Squalid living conditions rather than Wretched, so you can only save half your money. But you'd still be able to afford Poor conditions for most of your life. If that's not worth it, why even bother the first time? Just do the minimum it takes to get to a good afterlife, like go grab a sword and go on a suicide mission for a good god. Of course, really what you'd do is spend 3.5 years saving up 250 gold, then learn a tool proficiency, and now you're a skilled worker and can live a Modest lifestyle and save 1 gp per day, and save up the rest of the money in 2 years. > plus another 400 to pay the caster. How do you know how much to pay the caster? I thought 5e didn't have an equation for that. Adventures League has a few spells you can buy, which mostly follow the equation level^2 + 2\*consumed component cost + unconsumed component cost/10. Using that, Clone should cost 2840 gp (including components).
                    ? 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • A archpawn@lemmy.world
                      23 years. I'm assuming you're going for Squalid living conditions rather than Wretched, so you can only save half your money. But you'd still be able to afford Poor conditions for most of your life. If that's not worth it, why even bother the first time? Just do the minimum it takes to get to a good afterlife, like go grab a sword and go on a suicide mission for a good god. Of course, really what you'd do is spend 3.5 years saving up 250 gold, then learn a tool proficiency, and now you're a skilled worker and can live a Modest lifestyle and save 1 gp per day, and save up the rest of the money in 2 years. > plus another 400 to pay the caster. How do you know how much to pay the caster? I thought 5e didn't have an equation for that. Adventures League has a few spells you can buy, which mostly follow the equation level^2 + 2\*consumed component cost + unconsumed component cost/10. Using that, Clone should cost 2840 gp (including components).
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                      ? Offline
                      Guest
                      wrote last edited by
                      #15
                      I remember offhand it being 50 GP per level of the spell you want to cast, though I can't say where in the PHB I read that.
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                      • A archpawn@lemmy.world
                        How common is using Clone to live forever? The spell is cheap enough that even poor people can afford the material components (so long as they don't mind a squalid lifestyle), but I'm guessing there's not enough casters for everyone.
                        AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
                        AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
                        Ahdok
                        wrote last edited by
                        #16
                        On average, it's cheaper to use reincarnate, you just provide a bodypart, and, so long as you didn't die of old age, reincarnate will make you a new "newly-adult" body. It's more expensive than Clone in materials, but much lower level, and if you roll a long lived race like an elf, gnome, or dwarf, you get a lot more mileage out of it before having to go around again.
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                        • AhdokA Ahdok
                          On average, it's cheaper to use reincarnate, you just provide a bodypart, and, so long as you didn't die of old age, reincarnate will make you a new "newly-adult" body. It's more expensive than Clone in materials, but much lower level, and if you roll a long lived race like an elf, gnome, or dwarf, you get a lot more mileage out of it before having to go around again.
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                          archpawn@lemmy.world
                          wrote last edited by
                          #17
                          It's a "new adult body", not a "newly adult body". I'm not sure having a new body resets your age. Though if nothing else, getting a long-lived body means you won't have to cast Clone as often. Also, I looked into it and it looks like the people she's talking about died before 5e. In 3.5, it was a lot harder to undo aging. There was an epic feat for it, and I suppose Clone and Reincarnate arguably might work, but it didn't say they do, and neither could bring someone back that had already died of old age.
                          AhdokA 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • A archpawn@lemmy.world
                            It's a "new adult body", not a "newly adult body". I'm not sure having a new body resets your age. Though if nothing else, getting a long-lived body means you won't have to cast Clone as often. Also, I looked into it and it looks like the people she's talking about died before 5e. In 3.5, it was a lot harder to undo aging. There was an epic feat for it, and I suppose Clone and Reincarnate arguably might work, but it didn't say they do, and neither could bring someone back that had already died of old age.
                            AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
                            AhdokA This user is from outside of this forum
                            Ahdok
                            wrote last edited by
                            #18
                            You're right that it's not clear in the spell text exactly how to handle this, (a common theme with 5e stuff.) - However I'm remembering having a discussion a whole while back about "how old is the new body?" and finding a Sage Advice post saying it's however old that species is when it reaches adulthood, so I was basing my claim off that.
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