The Candlekeep Annex: RPed Baldur’s Gate No and Low Reload Adventures

WiseGrimwald

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Very cool, Finarfin! Glad to see you up and running again!

(As for Ava, she's kind of stalled out in the pocket plane. She's alive and well, but I didn't RP her enough and that caused me to lose interest in her. Sometime soon I intend to update her posts. I'm hoping that will rekindle my interest in her adventure. We'll see.)

Best,

A.
I sometimes get the problem of losing interest if I don't role-play the character. I'm beginning to think that role-playing is easier for smaller parties that have a lot in common.
For that reason, I'm thinking of having a Tempus-Worshipping party if my current run comes to an end: - Cleric of Tempus; Berserker; and Fighter-Thief; all of them being Dwarves. No arcane magic could be a challenge, but could make for a different game. I've already made the portraits. :) All that I did was add the background and the Tempus symbol to existing portraits of dwarves. Obviously the first one is a cleric and the second one a berserker. By a process of elimination, the third is the fighter/thief. The last one might need to be changed as it doesn't shout out - Fighter/thief. If I can't get a better portrait, it might become a duo rather than a trio.

I've found plenty of Dwarven thief portraits, but none with a shield to which I can add a Tempus Symbol. :confused:

Perhaps he/she doesn't need a Shield of Tempus.

PS

I am wondering how Tempus would react to thieves. Though I haven't seen anything written about it, I have the impression that he would not approve of back-stabs and similar tactics. Am I correct?

EDIT

Having investigated further, I'm sure that Tempus wouldn't have approved of any character using poison i.e. Assassins or Blackguards.
I have also realised that I wouldn't approve of Tempus. One idea down the drain! 🤣

I'll have to investigate which of the gods I could follow! Lathander, Sune and Helm seem good choices.

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WiseGrimwald

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Journal of Helmuth

WE helped Charlestonian and Brage. Then the temple messenger instructed us what to do next.

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That was to deal with Mutamin, the basilisks, and the medusae.

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Next we raided the cave near the sirines, after which the temple messenger returned and we killed the Beregost murderer and her cohorts..

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Near Gullykin we met more assassins.

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To the south we met Lethe who was after Tenya's bowl. She was a problem. She killed both Tenya and Val before she fell. Raising them made a big hole in our finances.

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She did have some useful equipment though.

The Nashkel mines are next on the agenda.
 

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Finarfin

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Conan, Barbarian Dwarf: Part 7 – Wrath of Trademeet​

The city’s stink still clung to him. Conan needed air. Needed space. So he left Athkatla behind and followed the road into the wilderness. Soon he came upon a small town called Trademeet. Yet for a place of trade, no merchants shouted, no carts rolled, no coin clinked. The market lay dead.

The town elder promised him gold and honor if he could end the curse choking their livelihood. Conan spat, grinned, and agreed. Gold was always welcome. But truthfully, he craved the fight.



The Genies

His first stop was a silken tent pitched outside the gates. Within lounged strange blue figures—genies, levitating with idle grace, their laughter cutting the air like silver bells. They blocked all caravans, demanding tribute.

Conan entered without bowing.
Cease your meddling,” he told them. “The town starves. Move on.

Their leader, Khan Zahraa, smirked.
That is a very precocious statement for a mortal. What do you intend to do about it, then, little one? How do you intend to dissuade us from this activity?

Conan’s lip curled. “I will not ask again. Leave—or you will taste my wrath.”

The genies howled with laughter. One conjured a trinket, tossing it at his feet.
Truly amusing, wayfarer. For the gift of your humor, we award you this ring!

They laughed harder. Too loud. Too long. Mocking the King of Aquilonia?

Conan’s chest rumbled. A chuckle. Then a roar of laughter, harsher, heavier, like a madman cracking his skull against stone. The genies faltered, their mirth thinning as unease crept into their eyes.

Then his mirth stopped dead, cut clean as an axe through bone. His gaze blazed like coals.
Truly amusing you are, you blue maggots. As payment for my laughter, I award you—death.”

Before they could weave a spell or take up their swords, Atlantean steel flashed. Rage made him faster than their sorcery, stronger than their glamours. His blade split the air—and then split the genies, their bodies unraveling into smoke and ash:
Screenshot (510).jpg
As Conan left the tent, a small grin tugged at his scarred mouth.
What funny creatures live in this world,” he chuckled.



The Druids

His next path led to the druid grove, where a monstrous, rotting mass of vegetation lurched from the mire. A living corpse of a tree, roots thrashing like tentacles.

Conan sized it up, frowning at its sheer size.
“Bigger than an elephant… but slower.”

It slammed the earth, trying to crush him. He darted close, and with a precise swing, cut deep into its heartwood. The thing shuddered, groaned, and toppled, shaking the grove:
Screenshot (511).jpg
But worse waited. Druids poured from the woods, chanting and hurling nature’s wrath. For a time, even Conan staggered beneath their magic. Yet fury made him unbreakable. One by one, they fell beneath his sword, until only silence and carrion crows remained:
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When he returned to Trademeet, the people hailed him as savior. Gold weighed down his pouch, ale sloshed in his belly, and soft hands of local women curled around his neck. A girl perched on his lap as he drank, her laughter sweet in his ear while he roared for more ale. For one night, Conan allowed himself to rest, like a wolf among sheep, his fangs hidden only because the flock dared not see them.



Subterfuge

But Conan’s quest was not over. Imoen was still in the mage’s clutches, and Conan was not yet ready to storm their halls. He needed allies. Information. Coin.

The trouble was, coin never stayed long in his pouch. Ale swallowed most of it, women claimed the rest, and Conan gave it freely with the grin of a man who had never learned thrift. Sometimes, he admitted, he was no better with silver than he was with subtlety. So it was back to the city—to earn it all again.

The local thieves’ guild beckoned. Conan had been a thief once, in his youth, scaling palace walls for jewels and for women. He respected the craft. In another life, he might have ruled the underworld as easily as a kingdom.

They asked him to infiltrate a rival guild run by a man named Mae’Var. Subterfuge, his employer insisted. A word Conan rolled in his mouth like spoiled wine. But he agreed. Crom alone knew he needed the training.

The rival den stank of fear. A starved prisoner whimpered in the cells. Ahead, Mae’Var himself oversaw the torture of another victim, his smirk oily, his hands soft. Conan’s fingers twitched on his sword.

Subterfuge, he told himself. Wait. Endure.

He spoke with Mae’Var, who sent him on petty errands. Stealing trinkets. Playing the lackey. Every moment gnawed Conan’s pride. By the time he left the guildhall, rage boiled over.

Door just behind his back, he roared: “To hell with subterfuge!”. He turned back, smashing the door wide and cutting down the thieves in their own hall. Blood sprayed the walls. Shadows screamed:
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The End of Mae’Var

When Conan returned, Mae’Var’s smug face twisted into disbelief.
“You dare attack me, in my own guild, surrounded by my own guards? What a fool you are!”

Conan did not answer. He walked forward, step by step, eyes like iron. The fight broke. Guards rushed him and died screaming. Blades bounced off his fury. Soon, Mae’Var alone remained, bloody, broken, crawling.

Conan loomed over him, voice cold.
You dishonor thieves, and men, and yourself. The shadows deserve better than you.”

Then his sword came down:
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The Alehouse Aftermath

Conan ended the night where all men end—at a tavern table, ale spilling from his beard. A drunk staggered close, snarling about dwarves. Once, in his first day while trapped in this new body, Conan had taken such blows and been cast down, half-broken and humiliated. He still remembered that fellow, Marl.

But this time, he only grinned, slow and dangerous.
Friend,” he slurred, rising unsteadily, “you’ve struck a king.”

The fight ended quickly, the man and his friends sprawled on the floor, groaning and broken, while Conan stood over them, laughing like thunder. For him, it was just another night:
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Finarfin

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Conan, Barbarian Dwarf: Part 8 – Crom reborn​

It began, as such things often did, with drink. After his fight in a tavern, Conan sat over an ale-stained table, when two grave-faced merchants whispered nearby. They spoke of a mythical relic hidden deep beneath the graveyard, a weapon forged in ages past to slay the restless dead. A single touch, they claimed, could unmake a vampire. Conan drained his mug, grunted, and rose. That seemed like something that could come in handy.

The graveyard was not a place of rest, but a place of hunger. The stones leaned like crooked teeth, gnawed by time, and the crypt doors gaped like maws waiting to swallow the living. Conan descended the cracked steps, and the air grew thick — damp, heavy, and foul with rot.

The walls below were not built for men. Cyclopean blocks pressed in, etched with runes that pulsed faintly like the veins of some sleeping titan. A whispering chorus slithered through the dark, promising eternity, promising ecstasy, promising the cold kiss of undeath.

They came to him: pale shadows in tattered finery, their eyes pools of night, their smiles a thin crescent of fangs. The vampires drifted like wraiths, but when their claws struck, they struck with the hunger of wolves. They tried to drown his mind in velvet whispers — rest, yield, belong — but Conan’s fury was a mountain storm. Their claws scraped uselessly at his hide. He tore them down with steel, and their shrieks echoed like broken glass in the blackness:
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At last he found it — the artifact. A mace of tarnished silver, its head shaped like a screaming skull, veins of faint blue fire running through its haft. A relic from some forgotten war against the night. Conan grinned and tested it on the next pale beast that leapt from the dark.

The vampire staggered, wounded — but not slain. The mace glimmered, but its full wrath slept still. Conan spat on the flagstones. “Bah. Needs work.”



He returned to the city, to the smoke and clang of the dwarven smithy. The name Cromwell was whispered with reverence, and when Conan laid the relic upon the anvil, the smith’s eyes gleamed.

So you’re the mad little bastard that’s been stirrin’ the whole city,” Cromwell muttered, wiping his hands. “Let’s see this trinket…”

Conan leaned on his blade. “It kills, but not enough. Can you wake the rest of its fire?

Cromwell studied the weapon, grunted, and spat into the forge. “Maybe. Steel has moods, like men. It can be brittle, or it can be strong. Temper it right, and it sings. Mistreat it, and it betrays you.

Conan’s gaze narrowed, and his voice came low:
The Riddle of Steel. You know it.”

The smith froze, eyes widening. “How… how do you know those words? Few living even whisper of it.”

Conan’s gaze was steady, his voice like gravel. “Where I come from, it is all a man has. The gods laugh at prayers, Crom least of all. But steel… steel never lies."

Cromwell’s eyes narrowed, his voice hushed. “Tell me more, warrior. The riddle of steel has haunted smiths for ages, spoken of only in scraps of lore. If you know it, speak — and I will listen as we work.”

So they worked together, sparks leaping like fireflies. As Conan turned the bellows, sweat cutting lines through the grime on his face, he spoke:

Listen well, smith. Fire and wind come from the sky, from the gods of the sky. But Crom is my god, and he lives in the earth. Once, giants lived in the Earth, Cromwell. And in the darkness of chaos, they fooled Crom, and they took from him the enigma of steel. Crom was angered. And the Earth shook. Fire and wind struck down these giants, and they threw their bodies into the waters, but in their rage, the gods forgot the secret of steel and left it on the battlefield. We who found it are just men. Not gods. Not giants. Just men. The secret of steel has always carried with it a mystery. You must learn its riddle, Cromwell. You must learn its discipline. For no one—no one in this world—can you trust. Not men, not women, not beasts.

Conan pointed to his sword, eyes hard.
This… you can trust.”

Cromwell’s grin split his beard. “Aye. That’s the truth of it.

The forge roared. The skull-mace drank fire, drank steel, until it pulsed like a heart in Conan’s hand. Conan chuckled.

Not only do you look like my god, smith… you even bear his name. Cromwell. Crom himself, reborn in this world to guide my hand.

Cromwell bowed his head, in the respect of one craftsman to another. “May the riddle of steel serve you, Conan. May your steel hold, and your path be straight. And may Crom himself—wherever he watches—bear witness to your strength."

At last, the two dwarfs clasped forearms, respect forged like iron between them.
 

Finarfin

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Conan, Barbarian Dwarf: Part 9 – Queen of the Damned​

He returned to the crypts with his new weapon, and this time the dead fell like wheat beneath the scythe. Each blow flared with holy fire, tearing vampires into ash and smoke. His laughter echoed off the cyclopean walls, a sound louder than their shrieks.

But then the chamber darkened. The air grew colder, sweeter, as though perfumed with death. She stepped from the shadows, pale as moonlight, clad in silks that clung to her form like whispers. Her eyes burned red as embers, her smile cruel and beautiful.

Bodhi, Queen of the Damned:
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Well, well,” she purred, circling him. “The little dwarf with the soul of a giant. I smell the battles on you, the thrones, the crowns. You’ve tasted glory once. Do you not long for it again? Come to me, and I will give you back what time has stolen. Love, victory, a kingdom without end.

Conan’s jaw tightened, knuckles white on the mace. “I had love once, witch. She burned brighter than flame. You are nothing but ashes.

Her laughter slid like silk, wicked and low. “Then you will kneel… or you will break.

Come closer,” Conan growled, hefting the mace. “And see if I break.

The fight began.



Bodhi
He was crude, scarred, a brute in a dwarf’s shell — and yet the fire in him burned brighter than the sun. Even now, with her voice curling around him like velvet, he did not falter.

Think, barbarian,” she hissed, weaving between shadows. “You are wasted on mortals who will wither and rot. Stay with me. I will make you eternal. Strength without end, battles without loss. You would drink kingdoms dry and laugh as centuries crumble.

She let her fingers brush his cheek, cold as grave soil.
You need not fear age. You need not fear death. Only say the word, and I will make you god.”

But his eyes burned like coals, and her touch met only iron.



Conan
Her words slid against him like oil against stone. Eternal life? He had seen men who clung to it, their eyes hollow, their hands trembling as they watched the world outgrow them. He would not be one of them.

You speak of chains, witch,” he snarled, raising the mace. “But I was born free — and I will die free.”

She lunged, talons flashing. He met her with steel and fury.



Bodhi
He laughed as she cut him. Laughed! Blood soaked his beard, yet he came on like a storm. No fear. No hesitation. Her charms slid from him like water from rock.

You could be my king,” she hissed, darting behind him, claws raking his spine. “At my side, we would enslave gods. Think of it, Conan — a throne beyond time!



Conan
Her claws burned, her voice pressed like a dream, but his rage cut deeper. He swung again, the relic blazing with every strike, a weapon born for this very foe.
You offer me dust and whispers,” he growled. “But my blood is fire, and I’ll see you burn.



Valen
The dwarf should have fallen a dozen times over. No man could withstand her, not the Queen of the Night, not the sister of death herself.

Valen had watched her slaughter armies. She had seen her tear champions apart like parchment. Yet here he stood, trading blood for blood, and she — she faltered.

Valen's eyes widened. If she falls, we all fall. Valen tried to run, but the dwarf’s mace took her before her second step.



Bodhi
Pain tore through her, pain she had not felt in centuries. His weapon burned, searing her essence, forcing shadows from her like smoke from a dying fire. She screamed, but worse — she feared.

This was no dwarf. No mortal. Something older walked in him, something she could not bend.

She tried one last time, desperation lacing her voice.
“I can give you her,” she hissed. “Your sister, the girl — Imoen. She can be yours. Safe. Eternal. Just say the word, Conan. Just—”

His fist closed in her hair, and the mace thundered against her chest. Light exploded. She screamed as her body crumbled to ash.



Conan
The crypt shook, his weapon blazing in the dark. He spat, chest heaving, blood and ash mingling on the stones.

And yet, he frowned. The ash was wrong. It curled, not like death, but like smoke seeking cracks in the stone. He had seen sorcery flee before. He knew she was not gone.

Run, witch,” he muttered, lifting the mace. “But the day will come when there’s nowhere left to crawl.



Bodhi (Epilogue)
Her essence slipped into the cracks, fleeing, scattering. Broken, humiliated, but alive. She pulled herself together in the dark of her lair, body half-formed, trembling.

Him. That dwarf. That barbarian.
She could not believe it. Her mind, her beauty, her power — none of it enough. And yet even through the wound, even through the fire that still seared her bones, she remembered the way he laughed in her face, the way he met her eyes and did not look away.

Not a thrall. Not prey. Not even merely an enemy.
Something more.

Her lips peeled back from perfect teeth, trembling with rage, yes — but also with hunger.
He should have been mine,” she whispered to the shadows. “And if he cannot be mine… then I will break him, remake him, until he kneels at my side.”

The night closed around her retreat, and with it grew a hunger darker than any she had ever known.
 

Finarfin

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Conan, Barbarian Dwarf: Part 10 – The Cursed Keep

In the smoky hall of the Copper Coronet, where he had once split chains and freed slaves, a fair maiden approached him. Her name was Nalia, a lady of noble birth, her keep overrun by beasts. Conan was never one to refuse a princess — especially when a reward was promised, and ale already sang in his blood.

The keep was stone and silence — cold walls weeping with damp, its halls echoing like tombs. Yet from the cracks and stairwells came the stench of trolls, their heavy feet dragging, their breaths rasping. Their eyes gleamed in the torchlight like coals, and their growls rolled through the keep like thunder in the deep.

Some creatures had serpent eyes and whispering tongues. One such mage spat incantations at Conan, its voice like hissing steam. The spell broke against the shield he had won in Trademeet, its surface glowing faintly. Still, Conan was no fool — he spat into his beard and downed a potion of stoneform, his skin hardening like rock as the creature shrieked. Steel silenced it soon after:
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Deeper still, the stone itself rose against him. Golems — vast, implacable, carved from the bones of the keep — bore down on him, each strike like a falling boulder. But Conan’s new flail was no ordinary weapon; its chains rang with a strange power, each blow not only shattering stone but drinking in some of the force hurled against him. Still, the fight was long and punishing, until at last the largest of the brutes crashed to the ground, its ruin shaking the floor.
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Yet even in victory, Conan was marked. One golem’s strike had carried with it a hidden curse, sinking into his blood, coiling through his veins like molten lead. He felt it gnaw at him, unseen, unshakable.

And then the keep itself betrayed him. Corridors once swept clean now swarmed with trolls, pouring in from unseen cracks, their claws wet, their roars like drums in the deep. Doom, doom. The sound pounded in his skull, echoing off the stone like the mines of some forgotten age:
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Conan fought, teeth bared, smashing the beasts down as he pulled potion of healing to his lips. Nothing. No healing. Blood spilled freely, his body refusing to knit. And when he turned to flee — the secret door he had used before was gone, swallowed by the stone as though the keep itself had conspired against him:
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For the first time in many battles, Conan felt the edge of doom. Trolls closed in behind, green fire in their eyes. He bared his teeth, pulled free a vial of invisibility, and drank. His form flickered, vanished into shadow.
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Silent as when he once crept through the jeweled towers of Zamora — climbing walls slick with dew, stealing gold from under the noses of fat merchants — Conan passed among the trolls unseen. Their stink filled his nostrils, but his step was sure, and soon the night swallowed him whole:
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(Side note: I screwed up here hard. I saved the game after golems, next day I had 10min after lunch and told myself I will just play a bit. As I had claw, I totally forgot that the golem cursed me as it's the same icon. Atop of that, I cleared the whole 1st floor before going up, but suddenly there were parties of trolls there again, all coming at once. Not to mention the stupid door which one can't use to get out, like what the hell is that even? Luckily Conan made it and his journey continues)

Back in Trademeet, priests broke the curse and healed his wounds. His fury smoldered like iron in the forge. Once more he strode into the keep, but now his wrath was fire unchained. The trolls fell one after another, hacked apart until their bodies smoked in piles. When the last beast dropped, Conan stood alone in the echoing hall, bloodied but unbroken. The keep was his.

After returning to Nalia, bloodied and reeking of troll guts, Conan drank until the tavern lanterns spun. His head lolled, and Nalia—still strangely fascinated by him—dabbed at his wounds with clean cloth.

I guess nothing hurts you, Conan,” Nalia said, dabbing at a cut on his brow.

Conan blinked at her, ale-fog in his eyes, and muttered solemnly:
Only pain.”

She stifled a laugh and tilted her head at him. “What will you do now, mighty barbarian?

Conan squinted back, trying to focus on her face.
I’ll… I’ll find my kingdom.

Her brow arched. “What kingdom?

The promise I was kingdomed,” he slurred.

She blinked, puzzled.

Conan chuckled, shaking his head. “No, no… the kingdom I was promised.” His mug crashed against the table, sending foam cascading like a tiny waterfall.

And this kingdom of yours,” Nalia pressed, her voice softer now, “will there be a queen beside you? What will she look like?

Conan waved a heavy arm toward the far side of the tavern, pointing at a scarred mercenary woman arm-wrestling three men at once.
You see that woman there? She needs to have the same… the same… the same…

Strength?” Nalia guessed, leaning in, lips quirking.

Conan froze, then nodded slowly, as if she had just spoken a word of divine truth. His gaze lingered on Nalia, hazy but oddly searching, before his chin dropped to his chest and he collapsed on the table with a drunken snore.

Nalia sat back, cheeks warm, her lips caught between a smile and a sigh. “Strength,” she echoed under her breath. “Strong enough to drag you to bed, at least.”
 

Alesia_BH

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Close call, Finarfin! Glad Conan lived to fight another day!

(Ava's narrowest escape involved a golem too, although in her case it was a lack of crit protection that endangered her, not cursed wounds.)
 

Alesia_BH

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912
Looking forward to the updates! Have you decided your take on Melissan with Ava? And have thought more about the wizard slayer?
I've debating what to do with Ava. I kind of ruined her SoA run by rushing to UAI, seeking crit protection. Part of me wants to restart her so I can do a partly RPed run.

The other issue is that my SCS settings were wrong in this run. There are a few things I'd like to tweak, most notably allowing HLAs as special abilities. I prefer the original mechanic, in some ways, but SCS no longer reconfigures enemy spell books to accomodate a player preference for that option. Instead HLAs just end up being crowded out by L9s, often underwhelming L9s.

Whichever path I intend to take, I need to start moving forward. I'll make call later today, either re-rolling Ava or bringing her posts upto date and finishing her run.

Best,

A.

Btw, loving Conan's run! Sorry I haven't been super engaged with it so far. I drifted away from he game for a bit, but I seem to be drifting back now.
 

Finarfin

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Close call, Finarfin! Glad Conan lived to fight another day!

(Ava's narrowest escape involved a golem too, although in her case it was a lack of crit protection that endangered her, not cursed wounds.)
yeah, BG1 went easy, but in BG2 both this and the trap which I wrote about in part 5 (or 6?) were close calls, luckily with happy ending. Does anyone actually know how far that trap there goes? Not sure if it's intended that it goes so far, but it's dangerous as hell. Will have to take a screenshot next time I play thief

And yeah, golem criticals I can imagine being a close call for any char without a helmet or protections :D good job on making it through it!
 

Alesia_BH

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912
I am wondering how Tempus would react to thieves. Though I haven't seen anything written about it, I have the impression that he would not approve of back-stabs and similar tactics. Am I correct?

EDIT

Having investigated further, I'm sure that Tempus wouldn't have approved of any character using poison i.e. Assassins or Blackguards.
I have also realised that I wouldn't approve of Tempus. One idea down the drain! 🤣
Lol. I noticed this question earlier. I never found the time to respond, and I felt a little guilty about that.

I agree with your conclusion :)
 
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Alesia_BH

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Does anyone actually know how far that trap there goes? Not sure if it's intended that it goes so far, but it's dangerous as hell.
It's on an angle in front of the stairs. It starts over by bags of rice or whatever on the left and ends near the crate just to the right of the stairs. Here's a screenshot from an Ava save:

Screenshot 2025-09-08 at 3.31.35 PM.jpg


As for your survival probability, it was pretty high. That's a 14d6, no save. With 61HP, you had a 3.57% chance of dying.
 
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Alesia_BH

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912
Ava, Halfling Swashbuckler: Gratuitous XP Hunting in and Around Athkatla

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A few weeks ago, my updates on Ava's game ground to a halt. Upon reviewing the screenshots, I now understand why that happened at the exact moment it did. This part of Ava's adventure was unlovely- unstylish, uncool, bordering on unshareable. I was single-mindedly focused on getting her to UAI, and that led to cheesy and non-sensical play. We darted here and there, looking for XP soft spots. When we did find them, we didn't always handle them with tact and grace either. It was more like collect the XP points and roll on.

This has not been my style, historically, speaking, and I don't love the idea of letting it become my style in the present. I do kind of want to cover the end of Ava's run, though, and that requires me to cover how she got there, warts and all. So here we are.

We'll begin with Draug Fea's crew.

Traps.
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Traps
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Boomerang twacks.
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Dispelling arrows and done.
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See what I mean? That was all very uncool.

Continuing the uncoolness, we proceeded down the Bodhi's lair quest line, despite having no intention of leaving for Spellhold anytime soon. This was just the easiest way to collect XP, so that's where we went.
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I don't love any of this, but at least I can say that my multi-decade streak of calling Gracen Gravy is still intact.
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I can also say that Ava is, or was, objectively badass at this stage of the adventure, with the minor exception of her vulnerability to crits.
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We were rocking Boomerang main, Belm off at this point. RoAC II and Ilbratha were used religiously to mitigate critical risk. Honestly, Ava may win my all time sleepy head award because I full on refused to fight without running Ilbratha II.
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That brings us to the moment where my fear of crits finally felt like something other than paranoia. After dropping Lassal, we swung over to Watcher's Keep for more easy XP.
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Absent the high level casters, the WK statues are pretty easy. They're slow and there's plenty of room to both kite and door.
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As a swashie, though, there's exactly one way that it can go wrong: catch an arrow, and then catch a crit from the golem. That's what happened exactly. Ouch!
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And that, I suppose, may help some of you understand why I ended up playing Ava the way that I did. Her AC was solid. Her melee output was respectable, 4 APR with a decent THACO. Adding in her traps and her item set she was oh so close to being a complete character. The one thing that was missing was critical protection. It's understandable that I found myself racing to that goal, even if the result as a cheesy as all getup SoA midgame.
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In retrospect, my mistake may have been waiting until the EE era to run a swashie. In vanilla Ava would be rocking crit protection via Pale Green and loving life.

Best,

A.
 
Last edited:

Finarfin

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It's on an angle in front of the stairs. It starts over by bags of rice or whatever on the left and ends near the crate just to the right of the stairs. Here's a screenshot from an Ava save:

View attachment 18581

As for your survival probability, it was pretty high. That's a 14d6, no save. With 61HP, you had a 3.57% chance of dying.
that's really helpful, thanks! I was sure it was on the steps where Ava is standing on the picture and that's why it surprised me. But since Ava is standing on the other side, I see there is a way to get behind it without triggering it? Do you have to stick to those back of rice or the other way? Or did you just go through main entrance?

3.57% of dying is still way more than comfortable in my eyes :D
 

Finarfin

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Absent the high level casters, the WK statues are pretty easy. They're slow and there's plenty of room to both kite and door.
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How do you aggro only non-caster statues? I tried it myself before, but ended up only succeeding in one of them. Call for help ensured most of them came later along with mages.

And good job on surviving! I guess most characters have their near death experience. All chars have to experience that not to get too comfortable I guess
 

Finarfin

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Conan, Barbarian Dwarf: Part 11 – Shadows and Chains

Whispers carried to Conan in a smoky tavern: the Shadow Temple, a ruin deep in the wilderness, drowned in darkness and crawling with the restless dead. Treasures, they said, lay buried beneath its stone cold vaults. Conan fingered the mace Cromwell had reforged, the weapon that drank the essence of the undead. He grinned.

The temple rose before him, black stone scarred with cracks, its entrance like the maw of a corpse. Within, the air was thick, stagnant, filled with whispers that clung like cobwebs. From the gloom came an army of skeletons and shadows, their eyes hollow, their blades brittle. They swarmed. Conan roared. Steel met bone, and the mace flared with hungry light. Nothing stood.

From the broken ribs of one skeletal champion he tore a scroll, humming with sorcery. He spat. “Best keep this. Might be worth more than the bones I cracked to get it.”:
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From the far chamber came a sound like knives scraping bone. Chanting — guttural, venomous, swelling until the stones themselves seemed to tremble. In Athkatla, he had heard the name: lich. Not a mere shade or skeleton, but an archwizard who had bound his soul to unlife, wielding sorcery that could unmake cities. Their very words were death, their spells storms of fire and plague:
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Conan’s grip tightened on the mace as he pushed the door wide. There it stood: a lich, draped in rotting finery, its jaw working like a corpse trying to breathe life into words of power. The air stank of grave-dust and fire.

Conan did not wait. He roared, charging, the mace blazing with hungry light. The lich’s hand snapped up, spells bursting — fire licked his skin, frost bit his beard, lightning cracked against his chest. Conan drove through it all, step by step, until his weapon smashed through skull and crown alike:
Screenshot (530).jpg

The chanting died in a rattle of bones. Conan spat on the floor, hefting the mace. “Drops down like anything else, I guess.”

More came. More fell. The temple echoed with shattered bones, but the hoard was poor, little more than cursed baubles. Conan spat on the ruins and left, disappointed.



Back in Athkatla, rumors stirred his heart. A place between realms. A prison not of walls, but of planes. Some called it the Planar Prison. Conan’s eyes narrowed. Such a place might hold the secret of passage between worlds. A way back to Hyboria. Or a dead end. Still, he would see. He still owed Imoen her freedom — that he would not forget — but this might bring him closer to home.

Through mercenaries’ whispers and a mage’s trembling tongue, Conan found the way. Runes carved on an ancient portal flared as he entered. And then came the beasts.

Snake-like horrors and shackled thralls filled the halls beyond. Their hissing stirred memories of his homeland — of serpents coiled around stone altars, of the old snake-god cults he had crushed with his own hand. These shadows were no different. They bled, they broke, and they burned.
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They came in endless waves. Conan split skulls, tore chains, but the tide swelled:
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They kept coming, their feet pounding like drums in the deep. His rage howled, yet his arms grew heavy:
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At last, he pulled a potion of invisibility from his belt, vanishing into shadow, regrouping like the thief he once was:
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The Warden awaited him, cloaked in malice, eyes like burning pits. Conan demanded answers. The Warden only sneered and lifted his hands, chanting a spell that froze the marrow. The very air trembled:
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Conan snarled and stepped back. Some old barbarian instinct — a hunter’s twitch bred from countless battles — pulled him away just as the spell crashed down. Those few steps saved his life. Then the fury came. His blood roared, rage boiling through his veins. The spell struck — and shattered against him.
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He lunged. Steel, bone, blood. The Warden staggered, then fell, silence closing in around his corpse. No secrets spilled from those dead lips. No map to Hyboria, no wisdom.

Only gold. Only treasure. Conan spat, gathering his spoils. Waste or not, every coin, every weapon brought him closer to the strength he would need. For Imoen. For vengeance. For the mage Irenicus.

And the hunt went on.
 

Finarfin

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Conan, Barbarian Dwarf: Part 12 – The Tombs of the Dead

The Five Flagons roared with laughter, tankards clashing, boots stomping. At the center of it all, Conan locked arms with a sailor twice his size, veins bulging, faces red with ale. The crowd bellowed for the “First Warrior,” and when the sailor’s wrist finally cracked against the table, the room erupted like thunder. Conan only grinned, downed the loser’s drink, and stood.

Too much ale, though — even for him. He staggered outside, hunting for a place to piss. That was when he saw it: a narrow, iron-bound door half-hidden in shadow. Shrugging, he picked his spot beside it, relieving himself with a satisfied sigh. The hinges groaned. The door opened.

A tomb.

The stink of dust and age rolled out. Conan froze, the haze of drink burning away in an instant. He was no stranger to ale or danger, and this new body had a way of sobering him at the first whiff of battle. He stepped inside.

The sarcophagus waited. When he wrenched the lid aside, darkness spilled forth, coiling and snarling. A lich rose, its laughter colder than grave soil:
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Steel met sorcery. Conan swung, spells screamed back. Then came the swords — a swarm of gleaming blades, each immune to his strikes. Poison gnawed at his veins, and a crushing spell staggered him to the ground:
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He rose, teeth bared, but even he knew when to retreat. The blades pursued, unrelenting. Worse still, another spell could have stunned him or ended him in an instant. Conan ran outside and ended up in the local temple.

Guardian Vottnar stood by, watching Conan and the swords with the calm of stone. He would not join the fight — but when Conan tossed him gold mid-battle, the priest muttered a blessing, light surging through Conan’s battered frame and healing him:
Screenshot (544).jpg
Refreshed, the barbarian whirled back into the tomb. With no blades to shield it, the lich fell like rotten timber, his skull cracked wide by the mace that devoured the dead:
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Inside the sarcophagus lay bones and a map — another tomb. Conan spat. “One corpse leads to another.” He shoved the loot into his sack and left. But first, he would sleep off the night’s drink.

The next site was no different — another sarcophagus, another lich. But this one summoned something worse: an angel twisted in darkness, a Valkyrie dragged down from Valhalla and shackled in shadow. A Fallen Planetar.

It struck like a thunderstorm, but Conan struck harder. He feinted, then crashed into it with a Power Attack so fierce the creature reeled, stunned. One moment of weakness was all he needed — his new flail shattered its black wings:
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The lich that had summoned it fared no better.
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More bones. More maps. More whispers of power.

At the final tomb, the voice came. Deep, commanding, promising.

The sarcophagus split open with a sigh like the world exhaling dust. A shimmer rose, pale and gold-flecked, a figure without flesh — a ghost wrapped in ancient sorcery.

Kangaxx. The name whispered through the chamber like a curse.

The spirit hovered, its crown of bone half-formed, its voice rolling like thunder through water.
Mortal… long have I waited. You have broken the first seal. But I am not whole. My bones, scattered, lie in the hands of others. Bring them to me, and I shall rise again.”

Conan narrowed his eyes, hand resting on his mace.
Why should I carry scraps for a ghost?”

The spirit’s hollow gaze burned brighter.
Because I command the roads between worlds. You seek your home — Hyboria. Release me, and I will show you the way. Your throne. Your queen. All restored.

Conan’s mouth twisted into a wolfish grin.
I don’t trust you, shade. But if you lie…” He hefted the mace. “…then you’ll wish you’d stayed in the grave.”

The ghost’s laugh was a dry rattle. “Bring them, mortal. Bring them, and all will be revealed.

Conan spat, but he dropped the bones into the waiting sarcophagus with a thud like earth on a coffin.

The chamber darkened. The air thickened, pressing in on his chest. Bone knit to bone, gold etchings flared like firebrands, and with a scream that shook dust from the stone, Kangaxx rose. Fleshless, robed in shadows, his crown gleaming.

The lich spread his arms, drunk on his own rebirth. “Free. Whole. Eternal!” His crown gleamed, eyes burning with ancient hunger. He sneered down at Conan. “And you, mortal… a fool, to have trusted me.”

With a gesture, the air split, and from it descended a towering figure in broken armor — another Valkyrie, her wings blackened, her halo a crown of ash. Chained to his will. Her blade hummed with divine ruin as she flew toward Conan.

The dwarf only spat ale from his beard and braced his stance. The clash shook the chamber — steel shrieking, wings beating like thunder. But Conan’s rage was older than gods. With a savage cry he unleashed his Power Attack, the blow striking so true it staggered the fallen goddess. She reeled, stunned, and in that instant Conan finished her, flail crashing through helm and skull alike:
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Conan did not wait. He charged like a storm breaking against Kangaxx, mace blazing with stolen fire. Spells lashed out — but Conan crashed through, roaring. One swing, then another, until crown and skull shattered beneath his blows:
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The lich’s body crumpled, robes folding inward like ash into a hearth.

But the silence did not last. The sarcophagus shook, cracked, and from its depths rose something worse — smaller, darker, a thing of pure malice. A skull, crowned and burning, hovering in the stale air. Its sockets burned with endless hunger.

A voice thundered not from lungs, but from eternity itself.


Kangaxx

At last. Power coursed through him, the sweet taste of freedom after centuries of chains. This fool had not only freed him — he had delivered him into his true form. Kangaxx’s laughter split the crypt, high and cruel.

This idiot with his mace… he thinks himself a slayer of the dead? He will be the first sacrifice. His soul shall be the kindling for my empire reborn.”

Kangaxx drifted higher, skeletal jaw parting in a hiss. With a flick of will he unleashed his arts — chains of binding, waves of frost, fire that had ended kings. Each spell was a contemptuous gesture, the casual swat of a god toward an insect.

Yet… the barbarian did not fall. The chains shattered against him. The flames scorched, but he pressed through. Rage burned in his eyes, not fear. Kangaxx’s delight curdled into slight irritation.

Then let steel answer steel,” he hissed, summoning his army. Swords of pure force shimmered into being, indestructible, eternal. They leapt for the dwarf like wolves unleashed.



Conan

They came. Blades that no weapon could break, screaming through the air. Conan snarled — instinct tugging him a step back, the same instinct that had saved him from death before. Then fury claimed him.

Steel or spell — it all falls!” he roared. His weapon whirled, his body twisting in a Greater Deathblow. One after another, even the spectral swords shattered, breaking against the raw force of his swing. One lingered, hounding him like a phantom. Conan growled, downed his potion of invisibility, and slipped into shadow until its hunger guttered out:
Screenshot (552).jpg

When he reappeared, his eyes burned hotter than ever. He charged.



Kangaxx

Impossible.
The spells — useless. The swords — gone.

How? No mortal could withstand such might. Yet the dwarf came on, eyes like burning coals, mace dripping with the fire of gods. Kangaxx spat incantations, words of ruin, but they slipped, faltered, as if the very air bent to the barbarian’s roar.

Blow after blow fell. Each strike was a mountain crashing down, each impact cracking bone that had outlasted empires:
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No…” Kangaxx whispered as pain — true pain, after centuries of untouchable rule — coursed through him. “I am eternal… I am—

The mace fell. Gold and bone exploded. The scream that followed was not of death, but of disbelief, echoing into the void.



Conan

Dust drifted. The chamber lay silent. Conan stood over the ruin, chest heaving, sweat and blood mingling on his skin. He spat again.

Eternal?” He raised the mace, its glow fading in the still air. “You drop like anything else. By Crom, they should learn by now—underestimate me, and you’ll learn the truth the hard way.”
 

Finarfin

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anyone knows how Bigby's Crushing Hand works? on wiki it says this:

A Saving throw vs. Paralysis must be made, with a -4 penalty, or be rendered Unconscious for 12 seconds.

yet my saving throws were like this. How is it possible that Conan became unconscious (as seen on one of the screenshots from the battle?). Yet he became unconscious only for a really short while (1-2 seconds):
Screenshot (543).jpg
 

Alesia_BH

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912
But since Ava is standing on the other side, I see there is a way to get behind it without triggering it? Do you have to stick to those back of rice or the other way? Or did you just go through main entrance?
I CLUAed Ava into the area just to take the screenshot. She landed on the far side, over by the mage and yuan-ti.

As an fyi, it is possible to walk around over by the rice bags, though.
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