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Cryhavok said:
The bird of hermes is my name, Eating my wings to make me tame.
Cryhavok said:
Cryhavok said:
That's a really bad interpretation of the rules for demon weapons. I mean, it makes sense if you're coming from the angle of being unfairly punitive towards your players, but the rest of us don't run our games like the unholy lovechild of the worst aspects of Gygax and Wick.
In any case, technically one only has to make a test if one's willpower falls below that of the demon. If it's already below, then you're golden.
Without Signature
Cryhavok said:
That's a really bad interpretation of the rules for demon weapons. I mean, it makes sense if you're coming from the angle of being unfairly punitive towards your players, but the rest of us don't run our games like the unholy lovechild of the worst aspects of Gygax and Wick.
In any case, technically one only has to make a test if one's willpower falls below that of the demon. If it's already below, then you're golden.
Cryhavok said:
I think that if your players are ‘abusing’ rules you should sit down and have a talk with them, not passive-aggressively punish them in game. That’s pretty much the definition of petty, vindictive GMing. Any given player is as much responsible for maintaining the game as a social activity as the GM; acting like it’s your own personal tin-pot dictatorship is a sure sign to get any sane players to bolt away from your table like a cat in an earthquake.
If you really want to enforce the idea that Greater Demons are impossible for players to bind in demon weapons, than why do you suppose that rules for such a thing exist? I think you underestimate the amount of power that PC’s in Black Crusade are supposed to wield, eventually. Sooner or later they will become favored servants of the dark gods, valued even more than Greater Demons. The game basically has rules for going up to Abaddon’s level. Think about that for a bit. It’s not supposed to be ‘PC’s helpless against any meaningful NPC.’ They’re supposed to be able to triumph over enemies like this. It’s a matter, in part, of how much they will have to sin and sacrifice to get what they most desire.
Without Signature
Cryhavok said:
I think that if your players are ‘abusing’ rules you should sit down and have a talk with them, not passive-aggressively punish them in game. That’s pretty much the definition of petty, vindictive GMing. Any given player is as much responsible for maintaining the game as a social activity as the GM; acting like it’s your own personal tin-pot dictatorship is a sure sign to get any sane players to bolt away from your table like a cat in an earthquake.
If you really want to enforce the idea that Greater Demons are impossible for players to bind in demon weapons, than why do you suppose that rules for such a thing exist? I think you underestimate the amount of power that PC’s in Black Crusade are supposed to wield, eventually. Sooner or later they will become favored servants of the dark gods, valued even more than Greater Demons. The game basically has rules for going up to Abaddon’s level. Think about that for a bit. It’s not supposed to be ‘PC’s helpless against any meaningful NPC.’ They’re supposed to be able to triumph over enemies like this. It’s a matter, in part, of how much they will have to sin and sacrifice to get what they most desire.
As to your second: you are again making assumptions. I did not say it would be impossible. I gave examples of the consequences of trying. If the players can face them and win, then the blood, sweat, and scars say they can. The post of mind that you quoted starting this was infact talking about the consequences of someone succeeding, and how it would be alot like holding on to the tigers tail. I would never enjoy the happy-go-lucky version of the grimdark, where no one has to face the consequenses of what they do. Yeah players might have the chance to be the badasses of the grimdark, but unless they can actually take all comers, and out wit the gods themselves they will never be at the top. And no, black crusade does not (yet) take the players to the level oc power Abbadon enjoys. The entirety of the screaming vortex doesn't even contain a fracton of the forces at his command. Maybe in a future supplament, one where the players can command all the forces of chaos and bear all 4 marks of chaos at the same time the game will, but right now, that idea is laughable. Have you never heard the phrase, "there is always bigger fish." And as long as the players are still mortal, they will not be nearly as valuable as you seem to think, not in any version of the grimdark that I have ever heard of, chaos is kind of like that. Maybe when they have rules for becoming a deamon prince. But then I think it is clear that you and I play in very different versions of the grimdark, and we wont reconcile this between us, so I think Im just going to ignore you from now on and get back to watching my players overcome things you would apparently cry about before running away.
Cryhavok said:
As to your second: you are again making assumptions. I did not say it would be impossible. I gave examples of the consequences of trying. If the players can face them and win, then the blood, sweat, and scars say they can. The post of mind that you quoted starting this was infact talking about the consequences of someone succeeding, and how it would be alot like holding on to the tigers tail. I would never enjoy the happy-go-lucky version of the grimdark, where no one has to face the consequenses of what they do. Yeah players might have the chance to be the badasses of the grimdark, but unless they can actually take all comers, and out wit the gods themselves they will never be at the top. And no, black crusade does not (yet) take the players to the level oc power Abbadon enjoys. The entirety of the screaming vortex doesn't even contain a fracton of the forces at his command. Maybe in a future supplament, one where the players can command all the forces of chaos and bear all 4 marks of chaos at the same time the game will, but right now, that idea is laughable. Have you never heard the phrase, "there is always bigger fish." And as long as the players are still mortal, they will not be nearly as valuable as you seem to think, not in any version of the grimdark that I have ever heard of, chaos is kind of like that. Maybe when they have rules for becoming a deamon prince. But then I think it is clear that you and I play in very different versions of the grimdark, and we wont reconcile this between us, so I think Im just going to ignore you from now on and get back to watching my players overcome things you would apparently cry about before running away.
You did say it should be impossible. You said that anyone who had a willpower less than the demon's unmodified willpower would have to continuously make demonic mastery tests, thus making the mastery of a demon weapon containing a greater demon of Tzeentch entirely untenable. Or, alternatively, you failed to think through what you said and didn't realize that that would make the control of a demon weapon containing a greater demon of Tzeentch basically impossible. Both of these things are bad. I'd take your observances with a lot less grievance than if you didn't have the tendency to come into threads and tell people they were having badwrongfun in their game at their own table. I, myself, certainly don't pull punches at the gaming table - just ask my players about their dead characters. But Black Crusade is supposed to be high risk, high reward. You certainly seem to be a fan of the former but seem to blanch at the latter, presumably because of a penchant for adversarial-style GMing.
As for your other points, it's literally possible, by the rules, to gain infamy points of up to 150, which is Abaddon's level. The rules explain what it takes to ascend to the status of a demon prince (though they obviously don't give rules for what happens afterwards).
Without Signature
Perhaps it should be impossible. There is such a thing as a trap, or "BAD IDEA". For example, ramming your jetbike into a Land Raider at high speed *could* give him big penalties to hit you on the way there with those sponson lascannons, but your solution was certainly less 'healthy' than just trying to not get hit.
Likewise, while technically possible, its not necessarily nonsensical for an embodiment of Willpower, Planning and Fate to be a "BAD IDEA" to bind into an object capable of curdling your mind and soul from in there behind the seals. I wouldn't recommend chaining your plasma cannon to your arms so it can't be dropped or disarmed if you're a guardsman either.
So while its perfectly reasonable for a guy with 50 willpower to bind a massive, angry Juggernaut of Khorne into your favorite weapon, the greatest Sorcerers of Tzeench would probably have the presence of mind to realize that they'd be pissing off something that's already achieved what they aspire to become through their same methods…
And as for those that don't… well… you know what they say about taking on more than you can handle…
To be fair, I really doubt there's something happening when you've got lower WP than the daemon contained within the daemon weapon. Would be silly if you'd have to test daemonic mastery all the time ad nauseum, and it would make all the published daemon weapons with high WP (pandemonium staff, bloodfeeder, firestorm blade, forgewhip, great axe of khorne, soulfire lance) kinda impractical to use. Especially the khorne ones as brutes rarely have tzeentchian level of WP.
Instead of forcing a daemonic mastery test when your WP goes under the daemon's WP (as it's always lower), any time you take WP damage, and therefore lowering your WP more, that forces a daemonic mastery test. It's kinda the same principle, as it would only happen if your WP somehow went below the daemon's anyway. While previously your WP had to go below the daemon's, now it will force a daemonic mastery test every time the WP goes lower (both permanent and temporary damage).
Suck on that logic compromise.
Well, look at the options. The average human has roughly 35 WP. The average CSM starts at 40. Just in the main book, this gives us the following options for someone who's never purchased an upgrade:
Nether Swarm [21], Bloodletter [34], Brazen Myrmidon [20], Cackling Abomination [28], Daemonettes [28], Pink Horrors [32], Juggernauts [marine only at 40], Plaguebearers [35], Screamers [marine only at 40]. All of the weapons given as examples save the Daemon-Prince [75] are compatible as well.
Even a Great Unclean One could be mastered by one with at least 70WP; a rarity, but then so should having a greater daemon weapon too. That way, someone with less willpower by default gets completely puppetted or subsumed within days or hours [the whole 'posessing unworthy wielders' schtick], but as it turns out most daemons can actually be tamed by most STARTING characters already.
Kiton said:
The hard part of getting a Greater Demon weapon is that the ritual to summon one is very difficult. It's stil not very easy.
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