The question has come up in my game that shouldn't humans also have weapon familiarity? Shouldn't Shoanti treat their bolas as martial weapons? Varisians their bladed scarfs? Taldorans their falcatas? And Tiens their shuriken?
I may simply be wondering this since my Pathfinder RPG cleric is the son of a Taldoran diplomat and I'd like to take proficiency with the falcata for my bonus racial weapon proficiency...
I live in a little cottage in the woods, built over one of the many Seals of Tar-Baphon. Every night, voices whisper to me to open the Seal. What should I do?
So what other creatures that don't understand the monks actual spoken language will see from his lip movement, when he speaks to them will be totally off of what they hear too?
I don't know about the rest of you, but to me, tongue of the sun and moon has never seemed to fit with the monk class.
It fits perfectly if one assumes that the level at which the monk attains this ability is simply the level at which all his movies are available in a dubbed version!
Post in this thread module ideas you'd love to see:
I'd really love to see an adventure like the original Castle Amber set in Golarion. Possibly with revolving around the Odeber Family (Pathfinder Chronicles Campaign Setting page 199).
I can't believe no one has geeked out about the MiB in last week's episode yet! Sure, no one actually called The Observer a Man in Black, but he was classic! Woo!
I'd still like to see some Tesla or Nazi super-science mentioned, though... :(
I'm with the It Was Enjoyable But I'll Need To See More crowd. I'm kinda hopin' to see some mention of Nikola Tesla and the ol' Nazi super-science, but I'm not sure Fringe will actually go that direction.
But as Wes hinted... some day we'll be saying a LOT more about all of the fiends of Golarion.
My one desire for this book is the inclusion of a Neutral Evil fiendish language. I've always thought it silly that devils and demons each have their own tongue, but daemons have to crib from others to speak.
1862 by Robert Conroy is the only book in the past 20 years that I've actually been so disgusted with when I finished it, that I threw it away. Didn't give it away, didn't sell it off -- threw it away so that no one would ever read that copy again.
The book is supposed to be an alternate histroy of what would happen if Great Britain sided with the Confederacy during the War of Damnyankee Agression. Only, with the addition of the world's most powerful empire to its foes, apparently the Union whips 'em both -- and faster!