Azuth: Difference between revisions

From 2d4chan
Jump to navigation Jump to search
1d4chan>The Hat That Was
mNo edit summary
1d4chan>Someone else.
Line 18: Line 18:


By the fourth edition and the assassination of [[Mystra]], Azuth was deposited in [[Baator]] after Dweomerheart started dissolving. He was taken prisoner by [[Asmodeus]] and consumed, elevating the [[Archdevil]] to Greater God status, and leaving 4e without any direct deities of magic, further contributing to the further dumbing of 4e's magic mechanics.
By the fourth edition and the assassination of [[Mystra]], Azuth was deposited in [[Baator]] after Dweomerheart started dissolving. He was taken prisoner by [[Asmodeus]] and consumed, elevating the [[Archdevil]] to Greater God status, and leaving 4e without any direct deities of magic, further contributing to the further dumbing of 4e's magic mechanics.
In 5e, he's back.  Why?  Fuck you, that's why.


==Worshippers==
==Worshippers==

Revision as of 22:14, 9 October 2017

Azuth
Alignment Lawful Neutral
Divine Rank 3e: Lesser God, 4e: Dead God
Pantheon Faerun
Portfolio Wizards, Spells
Domains Illusion, Knowledge, Law, Magic, Spell
Home Plane Dweomerheart (Arcadia then Elysium)
Worshippers Wizards, Sages
Favoured Weapon Old Staff (Quarterstaff)


Azuth is the god of Wizards in the Forgotten Realms campaign setting. He is a servant of Mystra and is served in turn by Savras and Velsharoon who are more specific gods of magic.

History

Azuth was born a mortal man. As the premier servant of the mistress of Magic, Mystra, he was the first Magister, which to say made him one of the most powerful entities of his time, on top of being the best spellcaster of his time. It also transpired he was somehow having a love affair with his own deity. During his adventures as mortal, he got himself into a conflict with the demigod Savras, who was a patron of divination and prophecy. The conflict culminated in a mageduel which Azuth won, and ended up trapping the god inside a scepter. Though the various churches disputes how the duel came to its conclusion. Azuthians say that since Azuth had the favour of Mystra he was able to overcome a god. While followers of Savras say that he simply let Azuth win because as a god of prophecy he was always going to know the outcome. It was pretty much a foregone conclusion that when he finally got old and kicked the bucket he was going to be promoted to godhood and became the patron of Wizards and spell "book-learning". He would then sponsor other individuals to become Magister after him, so as to encourage other people to take up the magical arts.

By the fourth edition and the assassination of Mystra, Azuth was deposited in Baator after Dweomerheart started dissolving. He was taken prisoner by Asmodeus and consumed, elevating the Archdevil to Greater God status, and leaving 4e without any direct deities of magic, further contributing to the further dumbing of 4e's magic mechanics.

In 5e, he's back. Why? Fuck you, that's why.

Worshippers

As a god of a particular brand of spellcasting, not of "Magic" or "Spellcasters in general", (which tends to fall under Mystra's portfolio), Azuth is a god of Wizards and very little else, but anyone who prepares their spells rather than casting spontaneously will have Azuth as their patron. Though certain Monks and Sages appreciate his academic approach to magic and worship him as a god of education and scientific methodology.

The Magister

Mystra's foremost servant in the realms is the Magister and comes with the responsibility for promoting the understanding and availability of magic to the people. Unlike the Chosen of Mystra who need not necessarily be spellcasters at all, the Magister is always an arcane spellcaster, and typically always a Wizard as well, because other arcanists like Sorcerers or unusual classes like Warmages or Dread Necromancers are too limited to be able to fulfil the job requirements.

It used to be that the position of Magister was transferrable by defeating the holder in a mageduel, which would be an impressive feat considering the sheer number of buffs the Magister gets by default. But then it ended up that the Magister would just be hounded by a queue of ambitious dickhead wizards looking for more power with no guarantee they would actually be any good in the job, and the Magister would become a recluse and hide rather than doing the job themselves, so Azuth put a stop to that practice, and sponsors candidates he thinks are worthy. Though that doesn't stop the dickheads from lining up, hoping to have a go anyway.

When appointed, the personal sigil of the Magister appears in every temple of Mystra for ten minutes and every magic user in the world feels a ripple, informing them the position has changed. Mystra has also decreed that her priests must reveal the identity of the Magister if they know it, subject to a suitable donation to the church of course.

Thankfully, the new Magister gets a 10 day grace period, where they get teleported to a pocket dimension so they can get instructed by heralds of Azuth in the requirements of the role, while usually getting access to the spellbook of every previous holder of the role, a significant prize in itself.

When they get released back into the wild, as their duty involves spreading magic around they are able to recover half of the experience cost for items they create if they give them away, turning them into an arcane Santa Claus.

Other abilities include:

  • A complete immunity to enchantment, and a +2 holy resistance to all magical effects
  • Spell Resistance 20
  • The ability to sense wild or dead magic zones
  • They can hear whenever their name gets mentioned anywhere in the world along with the following nine words and the general direction of the speaker,
  • constant Mindblank protection
  • The ability to levitate, true seeing, read magic and feather fall at will and dimension door and water walk 6/day
  • They can pass through ANY magical barrier of 6th level or lower without ill effect
  • Complete immunity to a chosen spell of each spell level
  • The ability to imbue permanency on any spell they know.
  • They get Spell Focus for every spell
  • They prepare their spells in ten minutes.

So no wonder everyone wants the job...

Holders of the role can step down from the role voluntarily and allow someone to take it from them (presumably subject to Mystra's and Azuth's approval). But considering it usually takes some substantial magical power to get the role in the first place, the gods would like you to keep serving. In which case the previous holder can relegate themselves to being a Chosen of Azuth, or become a sentient magical item, or start-over by being reincarnated as a whole new person with magical gifts.

Halruaan Magehound

Very typical of Azuth's role as the god of Wizards; this prestige class represents spellcasting followers of Azuth, in a society of spellcasters, tasked with monitoring other spellcasters. They don't make the most epic of casters themselves, but give spellcasting opponents real bother.

There is no requirement for them to be arcane spellcasters, so Clerics can qualify. The feats required are also fairly generic, but there are a number of cross-class skills needed that a pure Wizard or Cleric may need to really focus on unless they multiclass.

Magehounds lose two levels of spellcasting progression over a 10 level class, but gain the ability to sense magic instinctively, increased saves against spells up to +5, spell resistance up to SR25 (which means lv1 casters don't have a chance against them, while even lv20 casters fail 20% of the time), and can generate an antimagic field once per day.

Jordain Vizier

Eunuch advisors in the Magical Realm of Halruaa who serve in the name of Azuth or Mystra directly. They are forbidden from learning how to cast spells themselves but are expected to have encyclopaedic understandings of magical knowledge. This means that even though Jordain are selected at a very young age, they need a huge amount of skills to qualify, so they typically start as Rogues, Monks or Experts.

The class provides inbuilt magical nondetection, Spell Resistance, magical knowledge (read "Bardic knowledge") and small boosts to attack rolls. Most interestingly, the class comes with the ability to counterspell a number of times equal to their class level + CHA bonus, even without the ability to cast spells of their own, which is awesome because they won't need to have specific spells prepared for such eventualities, or run down prepared spells (because they have none).

As mentioned, they are forbidden from learning to cast spells themselves (though that hasn't stopped one character in the books from being a Sorcerer and doing it instinctively) They also get rendered sterile, because the the elixirs and rituals that transform them into Jordain change them fundamentally and the magical government would prefer magically resistant genes not to enter the general population without being controlled.