However, any text in a given book set on a graphical background or in handwritten fonts would most likely not be picked up by the OCR software, and is therefore not searchable. The result of this OCR process is placed invisibly behind the picture of each scanned page, to allow for text searching. Most older books are in scanned image format because original digital layout files never existed or were no longer available from the publisher.įor PDF download editions, each page has been run through Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software to attempt to decipher the printed text. If you do have Geb in your story but don’t want him to be the direct bad guy, the Maidens ARE Undead, and Undead can be hijacked by other Necromancers for a time.These products were created by scanning an original printed edition. ![]() While Geb is typically too withdrawn to use them, the DM may decide that the Maidens are too cool to let languish in their field and set them on a journey to malice the players. ![]() You need to free them from their petrification to put them down for good. ![]() This is the only way to keep a Maiden from returning to life with Reconstitution, as well! Otherwise, if a Maiden is killed, reduced to rubble, or even entirely vaporized, they’ll regenerate fully anywhere from a week (if killed through damage) to a few months or years (if reduced to rubble or ash) later to resume whatever duties they held before. Mechanically, the victim actually gains +1 AC for every 3 points of Dex they lose and they don’t actually die or fully petrify at 0 Dex, something I’m assuming is a writer’s oversight.Īnyway, Stone to Flesh does have another use against a Maiden, though, stripping the creature of its rocky outer shell to remove both its DR 5/Adamantine and its 17 Spell Resistance for 1 round until the shell grows back. Eventually, inevitably, the victim will be entirely transmuted into stone, and dying while under the effects of the curse may cause the victim to join the Petrified Maidens in the field… At the DM’s discretion. Some may see it as a supernatural infection rather than a curse and attempt to treat it like a disease or, worse, try and clear it out like normal petrification Stone to Flesh does not cure the curse, it merely undoes 1d3 points of Dexterity damage and chases the slow stoning backwards a bit. The Curse of Stone is tricky and dangerous when played correctly. It takes a full minute for the curse to manifest, but it reveals its presence as a slowly spreading petrification that saps 1d6 Dexterity from its victim each day. They can also reel back and deliver a painful punch with their free hand to deal an additional 1d6+2 damage, and their touch is actually far worse than the swings of their sword, as it transfers the Curse of Stone to the victim. They come armed with +1 scimitars that cannot be removed from their grasp, each blow taking 1d6+6 chunks out of their foe. ![]() Once disturbed, the Maidens are a force to be reckoned with. Geb has an entire army of these unfortunates at his beck and call, contained within the Field of Maidens (an incomparable creative genius and a master of wordsmithery Geb is) until he requires their service… But since he’s become withdrawn to the point no one in Geb actually sees him anymore, the Petrified Maidens have been gathering stony dust ever since, waiting for someone to disturb them. The unfortunate victims of the wizard king of Geb, Geb (yes he named the nation after himself), these creatures may at first appear to be Constructs until you actually carve into them and find out they bleed. Monster Spotlight: Petrified Maidens CR 6
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |