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Brian Duguid

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Posts posted by Brian Duguid

  1. 20 minutes ago, Steve said:

    The whole book generally lacks the additional "s" in most cases, so it should stick with that.

    We run the risk of derailing this useful thread (and your own helpful efforts), so we'll probably have to agree to disagree 🙂 or take it to PMs. My view, and that of the style guides I've checked, is it should be consistent with how it is spoken; so any simple rule based solely on the presence of a written terminal "s" is ill-advised. Hence the difference between Thomas's and Socrates' in the link I shared, and why we don't write bus' when we say bus's.

  2. 17 hours ago, Steve said:
    • p.119, Life After Death, 2nd sentence, "Mastakos's entourage" -> "Mastakos' entourage".

    • p.120, Initiate Membership, 1st para, 1st sentence, "Mastakos's small cult" -> "Mastakos' small cult".

    I'm not sure this thread needs additional pedantry, but the original is reasonable: the normal advice is to follow spoken pronunciation in these cases (https://www.sussex.ac.uk/informatics/punctuation/apostrophe/possessives has a good discussion).

    • Like 1
  3. 2 hours ago, Erol of Backford said:

    Anyone able to give rough boundaries as to where the Galanini are in the East Wilds?

    What makes you put them in the East Wilds? The Guide has them "mainly in Galin, Estali, Helby, and Tiskos". Three of those are on the shores of Lake Felster, while Helby is in between Safelster and Pralorela. If there's a reference to Galanini being in the East Wilds, I've missed it.

  4. 12 hours ago, Squaredeal Sten said:

    There has got to be some Bestiary or story material in tumbleweeds.  Plants that break free and move with the wind  on terrain where there are no forests to break the wind - that looks ghostly right there.  Surely with an animist worldview it is obvious that tumbleweeds have spirits and both the movement and plant runes.

    There is a Praxian Tumbleweed encounter in The Lifethief, by Beer With Teeth.

    • Like 1
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  5. I drove through a few hundred miles of what I was told was "arid desert" in Australia's Red Centre a couple of weeks ago. It was pretty much impossible to see the desert because there was so much vegetation everwhere, presumably a consequence of a wet summer. Clearly a lesson there for any Praxians intent on a heroquest to revive Genert's Garden, if they can tear themselves away from their forthcoming plan to occupy Dragon Pass for a few moments.

    • Like 2
  6. Here's another Prosopaedia trivia question.

    Who's missing?

    Jeff will have made his choices, and it all looks reasonable enough to me. But ... who is lacking an entry who you would like to have seen with their own entry, for whatever reason?

    Here are a handful that occurred to me (and I haven't finished reading yet):

    The Larnstings; the Luathans; Snodal; Srvuali; Varzor Kitor.

    I'm thinking mainly of entities that still have some canonical existence within RQG or other canon product. I'm not really interested in the Destors, Finovans etc.

    Who else is missing and why should they be there?

    I was surprised to see Damal in there. I'd really have liked to see Uncol, or whoever the Uncoling deity is.

    • Like 3
  7. There was a Palmaltelan issue of Tales of the Reaching Moon, #11, but that's wildly non-canonical if you care about that.

    The Stafford Library book, Revealed Mythologies, is the next place to turn to after the Guide.

  8. On 7/10/2023 at 4:03 PM, ChrisWentWhere said:

    they could become lay members of the Ring - sounds quite fun actually, but really? the Humakti is a 90% Honour bound bundle of joy. I do not see that happening... which I guess is the nub of it. Am I being too dogmatic here? I was thinking of a simple ok roll over your Honour and reduce if you don't. Is that enough? Too much?

    So, are you basically asking ... can there be honour among thieves?

    Page 234 of the RQG rulebook defines honour as "a personal code of dignity, integrity, and pride". Personal emphasises that it is to some degree judged separately from social codes of behaviour; it is a personal virtue that is evidenced through individual acts of behaviour. It is certainly not identical to morality or compassion. See the table of dishonorable acts on the same page: stealing from others is not inherently dishonorable, in the way that breaking an oath certainly is, because the latter is a breach of integrity. Humakti cause harm to others all the time, and not even in pursuit of some higher goal, when hired as mercenaries. Note also that even plundering a holy place of your own religion is a mere -5% dishonor, compared to breaking an oath at -25%.

    I'm not suggesting that Humaktis routinely get involved in acts that their society considers immoral. Any Lanbrili is also highly unlikely to satisfy Humakt's standards of honourable behaviour. A thief can never be entirely honest with the broader community they operate within. But amongst thieves, there can certainly be their own kind of honour, and perhaps the secret here is to find the overlap between any Lanbrili code of honour and the Humakti's code of honour. And one way to understand and define that overlap would be the making of an oath, to set clear expectations of all those concerned.

    • Like 2
  9. 6 hours ago, Hellhound Havoc said:

    What's going on there?

    One interpretation is that they found a High Priestess of Ernalda sleeping, and that sufficient magic was present such that killing the Priestess also "killed" Ernalda, locally and temporarily. When the Hero Plane impinges sufficiently on the mundane world, the binary difference between person and their god may be erased. The killing is the culmination of a Lunar heroquest which summons both their own power and that of their enemies into a single place.

    Just one interpretation, of course. And it may not help with the heart in a rock bit :-).

    • Like 3
  10.  

    I'm delighted to announce that my book about the Gloranthan black elves, The Voralans, is now available on Jonstown Compendium in Print on Demand.
     
    It's available in two versions, a standard colour softcover for $16.99, and a premium colour hardcover for $28.99. And, of course, you can still get it in PDF for $11.99.
     
    The black elves are walking, talking, magical mushroom humanoids, who have a lifelong telepathic link with one another. The book explains their biology, culture, psychology, technology and occupations (including character generation); mythology; and the cult of Mee Vorala. It also provides a black elf bestiary; fungal diseases; and fungi / fungal products.
     
    It is illustrated throughout with some genuinely amazing work from Lee O'Connor, Elizabeth Kirshtein, Dario Corallo, Simon Bray and Ludovic Chabant.
     

    POD advert.png

    • Like 5
  11. Well, I didn't hit ten five-star ratings yet, but never mind.

    To celebrate Silver best seller status I have uploaded a 27-page bonus PDF, which should be available now to anyone who has purchased the book.

    It contains preliminary art sketches, the original art specifications, and associated discussion. Inside the PDF you will find (amongst other things):

    • The difficulties of using the RuneQuest SIZ scale to understand how tall black elves (and others) actually are
    • Three sketches of types of black elves that didn't make it into the book for budget reasons
    • A couple of "easter-egg" type details explaining things in the pictures that the artists didn't even tell me!
    • The relationship between black elf weaponry and a dishwasher
    • Big heads vs little heads - a (short) discussion
    • etc

    As always, reviews and star ratings are greatly appreciated, if you enjoyed the book.

    Silver seller advert.png

    • Like 3
  12. According to The Coming Storm, they take wolf form "as soon as the sun goes down on Wildday and remain a wolf until sunrise". That agrees with Dorastor: Land of Doom, which says "every Wildday night".

    As Sten says, there are no timezones in Glorantha, so Wildday night will be the same everywhere, from dusk to dawn.

    Canonically (from the Dorastor book), it's Wildday that governs, and the full Red Moon in Dragon Pass is just a coincidence. The curse was in place long before the Red Moon rose into the sky.

    • Like 2
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