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Veyr
2011-03-20, 06:05 PM
Life-Shaping Handbook (http://athas.org/products/LSH)
Athas.org

So, due in large part to my Fleshwarping (http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?t=190350) list, I've been reading through Athas.org's Life-Shaping Handbook, but since the book has other stuff in it, and I'm reading all of it, I thought I'd do a full review.

A few caveats:
I've never reviewed a book before. Be nice!
I never played TSR's Dark Sun, and I've only read a very little bit of the old Dark Sun books. The Life-Shaping Handbook references Windriders of the Jagged Cliffs, a book by TSR that's presumably related to the material contained herein, but I haven't read it. So I cannot judge the book on how well it sticks to Dark Sun lore.
Though I've created a few 3.5 Dark Sun characters for games, none of those games lasted very long, so thus I have only theoretical knowledge of Dark Sun.
I haven't read anything about 4E's Dark Sun, so I have absolutely no idea if any of what Athas.org wrote extended into 4E. I'm guessing not.

Anyway, that said, I begin:

Table of Contents
Introduction
Life-Shaped in Your Game
How to Use This Book
Chapter 1: The Jagged Cliffs
Chapter 2: Races
Rhulisti
Rhul-Thaun
Chapter 3: Supplemental Rules
New Skills
New Feats
New Spells
Chapter 4: Prestige Classes
Cliffclimber
Gahv-erahn
Graftwarrior
Life-Shaper
Life-Tender
Nature-Master
Windancer
Windrider
Chapter 5: Equipment
Weapons
Armor
Gear
Mounts
Chapter 6: Life-Shaped Items
Handling Life-shaped Items
Tools
Tissues
Creatures
Mutated Items
Artifacts
Chapter 7: Monsters
Chapter 8: Adventure Sites

What Is It?
Before I get into the actual sections of the book, my own introduction. The Life-Shaping Handbook focuses on an area of Athas called the Jagged Cliffs, an enormous fissure in the northern Tablelands filled with mists and jungle. By far the wettest region of Brown-Age Athas, water's abundance is far more dangerous than the lack thereof, contrasting nicely with every other region of the campaign setting.

As their name implies, the Jagged Cliffs are extremely steep — much of the region is more vertical than it is horizontal. They are inhabited by halfling-like creatures known as the Rhul-Thaun — the most direct descendants of the Rhulisti, progenitors of all the races, on Athas. The Rhulisti themselves are long, long gone, vanished at the end of the Blue Age when both sorcery and psionics were unheard of, but the Rhul-Thaun carry on their most prized craft: Life-shaping.

Life-shaping is the use of living forms in item creation. Mechanically, we're talking about Grafts and Symbionts, hence the inclusion on my Fleshwarping list. As the book's title indicates, life-shaping is the primary focus of the book.

Introduction
Pretty stock-standard: your usual italicized fluff intro (well written for the short blurb that it is, I suppose), followed by, well, an introduction. We get information on the region's history, specifically how the Rhulisti worked with living material "the way a smith works with iron".

Life-Shaped in Your Game
Interestingly, this section does not seem Dark Sun-specific. This is how you would introduce life-shaped items to any campaign. The book asserts that it poses an unusual challenge for a DM and that he must be careful, but I find their suggestions patently obvious: either life-shaped items show up in some far-flung region of the world that the PCs haven't been to yet (like, say, the Jagged Cliffs), or else you have a mysterious NPC show up with the strange items. Either works fine, of course, so there's nothing wrong with the advice, but it's not exactly genius-level ideas here.

How to Use This Book
Standard requirements (in terms of other books you need), summaries, and abbreviations. Nothing shocking here.

Chapter 1: The Jagged Cliffs
All about the environment of the Jagged Cliffs. Frankly, I'm sort of disappointed in this section. It gives you some rules for the new terrain types (Barren Rock and Vertical Forest), plus a smorgasbord of natural and supernatural hazards (the steams and mists are interesting, as are the "mutagenic areas"), but very little detail is offered on how one should play an environment that is vertical.

My primary concern here is that when playing 3.5, you usually use a map, and maps are, by definition, two-dimensional. For the most part, that works just fine: there's not that much verticality that needs to be taken into account. You can usually get away with the higher-ground bonus, or if it's a tall wall, you simply can't make a melee attack to there. But an environment that might have an adjacent square, 5 ft. away, be 10-15 ft. above you, seems like it needs something new.

I haven't attempted to run anything in this kind of environment, but I feel like I'd have to do quite a bit of creative thinking coming up with ways to map and run it, and the Life-Shaping Handbook doesn't provide those.


Conclusion
Should have had more information on the actual playing of a terrain that is so unusual.


Chapter 2: Races
OK, so on to more interesting stuff: the races that inhabit the Jagged Cliffs. There are two, sort of: in the Blue Age, there were Rhulisti; now, in the Brown Age, we have Rhul-Thaun. The races are actually the same people, just the thousands of years between the Blue and Brown Ages have changed things about so much that we get separate sections for each.

Both share villages that are vertically oriented; the image I get is of adobe houses set into cliffs, as certain Native Americans do. Since the Jagged Cliffs themselves haven't changed much, both share ample supplies of water and almost complete isolation from the rest of Athas. Both races are described as fiercely xenophobic. Neither race is likely to have anyone who speaks Common.

Rhulisti
The Rhulisti look like somewhat-taller Halflings. They have an intense reverence for nature (despite warping all living things to serve their needs; apparently they "rarely did it in reckless ways, having several rules that guided their craft."

The Rhulisti considered themselves the only sentient race on Athas. Everything else was an animal, and like all living things, animals were somewhere between "tools" and "raw material" to the Rhulisti.

And they had a pretty good basis for this belief: they ruled all of Athas back in the day. Tyr actually stands atop the greatest Rhulisti city, Tyr'agi.

Notably, all of the Rebirth races are descended from the Rhulisti. I'm not entirely clear on what races, then, the Rhulisti considered themselves superior to back in the Blue Age, but this is probably just my lack of knowledge about Dark Sun.

Anyway, the Rhulisti worship Nature; occasionally they'll worship a particular element, especially Water, but mostly it's just Nature as a whole. They take Nature very seriously, which does seem incongruous with the whole "life-shaping" thing, but whatever. They do tend to be Lawful, so I guess those "rules" mentioned earlier have a lot of meaning.

As for magic and power, the Rhulisti never knew arcane magic at all, since they disappeared long before Rajaat showed up. Considering their love of nature, they'd pretty obviously hate Defilers with a passion matched by few on Athas, but they'd probably also hate Preservers, calling them unnatural abominations even if they don't explicitly destroy nature. They certainly hated Psionics, and the Undead, and Divine magic was seen only rarely and then with confusion and horror.

Mechanically, the Rhulisti are Small with +2 Wis/-2 Str, and get quite a few saving throw bonuses (as in, +1 to all saves, +2 if it's a spell, spell-like, psionic, or psi-like abilities).

They also have bonuses to life-shaping (both Craft and Knowledge), and always treat Knowledge (Life-shaping) as a class skill. They don't get free training in it, though.

Importantly, the Rhulisti have their own language as their only Automatic Language, and they have no Bonus Languages. The only way a Rhulisti character knows Common is if he spends the skill points; doing so would also be grossly out of character for the average Rhulisti.

Their Favored Class, for those who care about such things, is Bard. Why, I have no idea. Nothing in their fluff says anything about music... Sydonai reminded me that the Dark Sun Bard is quite different from the 3.5 one; basically, the Bard is a social skillmonkey with lots of aptitude for poison, which starts looking quite appropriate for the Rhulisti.

Overall, they're a rather weak race, mechanically. Small with bonus Wis and a penalty to Str means they make decent Wis-based casters if you can afford to not get a Bonus Feat, and the saving throw bonuses do cover a ton of material (though they don't stack, so no +3 vs. spells/powers), but the skill bonuses are pretty weak — you only get +2 to two different skills, and they're not exactly the best of skills, and those are the only things you get.


Rhul-Thaun
The Rhul-Thaun are the only surviving Rhulisti in the Brown Age, though they've changed enough that they get a new name. Far from their planet-dominating ancestors, no Rhul-Thaun has left the Jagged Cliffs for a very, very long time. They're still Lawful (more so, actually; more on that below), and they still worship Nature.

There is a new... saint, I suppose. High Lord Rhan Thes-onel is not a god, but a sort of cultural hero that the Rhul-Thaun expect to return to save them. Basically, he's Nerevar, and some of the Rhul-Thaun are looking for the Nerevarine.

Psionics are more common with the Rhul-Thaun than the Way was with the Rhulisti, but they actually hate it more, since they associate the increased prevalence of Psionics with Rajaat's curse, thinking it some kind of new mutation. Rhul-Thaun born with Psionics may learn to use it, but only in the most completely subtle of ways — if at all. None would use it openly, and no study of it exists.

The Rhul-Thaun also do not really know anything about Arcane magic. Rajaat experimented and developed sorcery in Rajaat's Swamp at the bottom of the Jagged Cliffs, and the Rhul-Thaun know about that, but they don't know what he did, exactly, and they have remained ignorant of what sorcery has done to the rest of Athas. The blurb is silent on their opinion of Divine magic, but they probably still hate it.

Anyway, the main thing with the Rhul-Thaun is that they are obsessively ritualistic. They have a nice, neat little ceremony for everything. This is what I meant about being even more Lawful than the Rhulisti: everything needs to have its own little place, with its own little ritual. They've gone beyond "Lawful" and into the "Obsessive Compulsive". They need these rituals in order to deal with the world, because it gives them the sense that they are in control of the world despite the fact that they haven't controlled it in a very long time.

On the other hand, they're apparently "curious to discover what lies beyond the Misty Border." I have absolutely no idea how these things mesh. They're amusingly befuddled by the concept of horizontal life.

They still do the whole life-shaping thing, but they're not even remotely as good at it as they used to be. At this point, they don't understand it, they just follow the rituals that have been passed down in order to make new life-shaped items.

Mechanically, the Rhul-Thaun are doing much better than their forebears. +2 Dex joins the +2 Wis/-2 Str, bringing them up into positive net ability scores, which is nice.

They get a new +4 to Climb thanks to living in the Cliffs (why didn't the Rhulisti have this?), plus a +2 to Move Silently because "Rhul-Thaun are sneaky". At this point, I also need to point out that the Rhul-Thaun's Favored Class is Rogue: What? This makes absolutely no sense. Why, on earth, would the lawful-turned-obsessive-compulsive society turn out Rogues of all things? I think someone forgot that these things were not Halflings.

They keep the +2 to Knowledge (life-shaping) and keep it as a class skill, but lose the +2 to Craft (life-shaping). They do qualify as a Rhulisti for all effects related to race, though, which is nice.

And thankfully, the Rhul-Thaun get some Bonus Languages (their Automatic is Rhul-Thaun which is distinct from Rhulisti). Frustratingly, this list does not include Common, and "most Rhul-Thaun do not speak any language but their own," but at least if you want you can a Rhul-Thaun who knows Pterran or something and hopefully someone else in the party can translate?


Conclusion
The races' fluff seems a bit contradictory in places, and for the Rhul-Thaun to have +2 Move Silently and Favored Class: Rogue is absurd, plus both races are mechanically on the lower end (though the Rhul-Thaun are much better, thanks to the +2/+2/-2 ability scores), so overall I don't think too highly of this chapter. I like the ideas behind these races, but I don't think the execution was too well done. I would probably, at the very least, redo their racial stats were I to use them in a campaign.


Chapter 3: Supplemental Rules
New skills, feats, etc.

New Skills
To start with, they add a couple of synergies to Knowledge (Architecture & Engineering) that have nothing to do with life-shaping or the Cliffs: +2 to Craft (Structure) and +2 to Profession (Mason). The latter assumes that your architecture and engineering is done in stone, which I'm not so sure about, but whatever; this was a previously nigh-useless skill that got a boost, and though that boost is minor in the extreme, I'm in favor of anything that improves it, so kudos there.

There's also some synergy bonuses for Craft (life-shaped) and Knowledge (life-shaping), mostly between each other.

Craft (Life-shaped) (Int, Trained Only)
The only (to my knowledge) Trained Only Craft skill, this probably warrants it. Moreover, you need to be trained not only in Craft (Life-shaped), but also in Knowledge (Life-shaping). That kind of dependence is unheard of in the rules; I suppose it makes sense, but it is somewhat annoying, especially since the only classes that have Knowledge (Life-shaping) as a class skill are the ones who have all Knowledges in-class (Rhulisti and Rhul-Thaun always do, though, so there is that).

You also need a Healer's Kit or Botanist's Kit (added by this book), or else you take a -2 penalty. A Shaper's Lab can give you a +2 bonus, though it costs 500 Cp (gp if not Dark Sun) and weighs 40 lbs. (note, the description of the skill claims this item is found on page 50; it's actually on page 45)

Furthermore, the materials for life-shaped items are pretty much impossible to find outside of a Rhulisti or Rhul-Thaun settlement.

Last but not least, you'll need a bunch of feats to do anything with this skill. More on that in Chapter 6: Life-Shaped Items.

Heal (Wis)
Life-shaped creatures have a higher DC for long-term care (18 rather than 15), and there's an additional use of Heal to repair life-shaped items (also DC 18) at a rate of 1d8 HP per hour.

Knowledge (Life-Shaping) (Int, Trained Only)
Pretty standard-issue Knowledge skill. DCs are pretty easy.


New Feats
There's a lot of these; nothing sticks out at me immediately (actually, a few do, namely feat taxes for crafting life-shaped items, but they're better brought up in the rules for creating life-shaped items). Several of them are more +2/+2 skill feats; blech.


New Spells
There's a handful. None of them are terribly impressive, but I don't see anything offensively weak. They're mostly just really specific to life-shaped items/creatures.


Conclusion
I don't really like Knowledge (Life-shaping), personally. It simply doesn't mesh well with the rest of 3.5, since there's so little class support for it. I'd probably roll it into Knowledge (Nature), maybe with a kind of "Skill Trick" (i.e. 2 point Skill tax) to extend it to life-shaping. Also, Craft (Life-shaped) requires a ton of stuff, which makes it unwieldy. It has several feat taxes, the Shaper's Lab is extremely expensive and heavy, plus it depends on the Knowledge skill. I know they're trying to make it special, but it's just too much.


Chapter 4: Prestige Classes
The intro blurb warns of "stringent entry requirements", which worried me greatly, but in reality these PrCs have extremely easy requirements, with all but two enterable before ECL 6 (rather rare in general 3.5). The problem is that only one can be taken by a non-Rhulisti/Rhul-Thaun.


Cliffclimber
A specialist in moving around the Jagged Cliffs. I have my concerns about this in 3.5 (seeing as such a mundane ability is not going to do well in later levels), but we'll see.

Requirements:
BAB +2
Climb 5 ranks, Survival 4 ranks.
Cliff Combat, Endurance feats.
Rhul-Thaun race.
Well, those are pretty nice. Cliff Combat's pretty meh (retain half Dex bonus while climbing, use a Buckler while climbing), but it is a Fighter feat, meaning a Fighter 2 that can get Survival in-class (there has to be an ACF for that) qualifies for this pretty trivially. A Rhul-Thaun can enter this class at 4th as long as they have Climb and Survival in-class and at least 3/4 BAB, which is also nicely flexible.

Anyway, it's ten levels of full BAB, good Fort saves, d8 HD, and 4+Int skills. Sadly, that's about the best news we get.

A bonus to Climb, minor bonuses to Attack and AC while on cliffs, the ability to ignore certain types of difficult terrain, Track and Swift Tracker, and a size category increase for the purpose of carrying loads are all pretty meaningless when spread out across 8 levels.

Then you have a dead level, followed by Hide in the Mists, which allows you to hide while being observed in hilly or mountainous terrain. Whether or not this was intended to allow you to hide without cover and concealment is debatable; a claim that after you have it, "it becomes almost impossible to detect your approach, especially if you invest a few ranks in Move Silently" would seem to indicate that that was the designer's intent. Either way, RAW, you can't, which is incredibly annoying.

Anyway, yeah. This is probably best used as an NPC Prestige Class: the fluff is that Cliffclimbers are crucial for Jagged Cliff villages to communicate with one another rapidly, since they're the only ones who can move freely among the cliffs. Entry is dead-easy, though the two feats are pretty meh (actually, Endurance is awful and Cliff Combat is pretty meh). My biggest problem with this class is that it's 10 levels long, rather than the 5 that would be all this concept deserves, and that at no point does it give an actual Climb speed. That would seem to be the most obvious thing in the world to give, but it doesn't.

Conclusion
Worthless for PCs; use for NPCs from the Jagged Cliffs. If made into a 5-level or even 3-level class, and it gave an actual Climb speed, it'd be a lot better.


Gahv-erahn
Basically, it's a physician. The Rhul-Thaun have little Divine and no Arcane magic, so disease, poison, and injury needs to be healed the old-fashioned way. Importantly, these guys actually know how to treat people, thanks to their mostly-forgotten lore regarding life-shaping.

Requirements:
Heal 5 ranks, Knowledge (Nature) 3 ranks.
Combat Expertise, Skill Focus (Heal) feats.
Rhul-thaun or Rhulisti races.
Another very easy entry, though Combat Expertise seems horribly out of place and feat-tax-y.

Unlike the Cliffclimber, however, this class is actually pretty good. The chassis is meh (d6 HD's not terrible, but 1/2 BAB and no spellcasting/manifesting is pretty harsh), but at least there's decent class features:

One, they gain the ability to heal actual HPs with First Aid, which is major (it's only 1d4, but still; provided you're allowed to use it on not-dying characters, it's unlimited healing at a rate better than Lesser Vigor), which is solid at ECL 4. The bonuses to Heal checks, ability to always take-10 on Heal checks, and improvements to the amount healed by Long-term Care are all extremely minor, but they're there.

The main thing is, this class is 5 levels long. This is a very good thing, because it's short, focused, and allows you to move on to more important things as you get into the middle levels. That said, the only reason I'd take it is for the capstone, which has a serious editing mistake: It opens with "At 10th level". The class doesn't have 10 levels. RAW, text-trumps-table, which means... I don't even know what that means. RAW, you either can't get the capstone at all, or you have to slog through 5 dead levels to get it.

RAI, obviously, you get it at 5th, which is ECL 7th, and it's a quite solid ability: with a DC 30 Heal check made within 3 minutes of someone dying, you can bring them back to life (0 HP, stabilized, any ability scores at 0 or lower get set to 1), and this costs no experience levels or Con drain. The character does have a 50% chance to lose any given spell slot for the day, and does lose all Power Points for the day, but still, it's non-magical, free Revivify with a much larger window of opportunity. This is a damn good class feature.

Conclusion
Quite solid if you don't mind the BAB loss and don't need the levels for, say, spellcasting. Excellent for a fast-progression PrC like War Mind or Ur-Priest (also goes a long way towards balancing the Ur-Priest out since you're not getting 9th level spells until 17th)


Graftwarrior
A warrior-type who uses weapons that have been permanently attached to his body; eventually, they become so much a part of it that they grow with him. A pretty cool idea.

Requirements:
BAB +3.
Knowledge (Warcraft) 3 ranks.
Graft Awareness feat.
Special: Must have at least two grafts without receiving a negative level
Very easy requirements here; don't even need to be a Rhul-Thaun here. Graft Awareness is a pretty good feat for someone focusing on using them in combat, since it protects them from Sundering and from other forms of damage.

You get 5 free grafts that don't count towards the normal maximum (more on that in the Grafts chapter), which is pretty cool except that all told it only comes out to 6,000 gp worth of Grafts. Your Grafts get improved Hardness and HP, and you can heal them a bit each day, but those are both really minor features. Otherwise, you also get 3 Fighter Bonus Feats, and the chassis is decent enough with a d10 HD, full BAB, and good Fort and Ref (but only 2+Int skills on a weak skill list), but it's really not that impressive.

Conclusion
Is it worth 3 Fighter Bonus Feats (the two lost from levels and the pre-req)? Absolutely. Does that say very much? Not at all; the Fighter's a pretty awful class. This was clearly balanced against the Fighter, and as a result, it's pretty lacking. Would be much better if the free grafts could scale somehow. Would be pretty good in a Gestalt game with a sublime initiator on the other side, though, since it gives feats and free equipment.


Life-Shaper
Well, this is the point of the whole book. It interestingly gets a Craft Reserve a la the Artificer, though it's quite small.

Requirements:
Craft (life-shaped) 6 ranks, Heal 4 ranks, Knowledge (life-shaping) 6 ranks.
Shape Tool feat.
Rhul-Thaun or Rhulisti race.
Special: Must have passed the "womb immersion".
The requirements are pretty easy; Shape Tool's already a feat tax for life-shaping, but at least you're getting more benefit out of it. The Special requirement is a role-playing thing that shouldn't be any trouble for a Rhul-Thaun who satisfies the other requirements; you just need to undergo their initiation thingy.

The class features, though, are pretty meh. You get 3 bonus feats, which can help some with the myriad feat taxes found in life-shaping, plus you can use life-shaping a bit faster (by 5th level, you take half as long as normal with ordinary and mastercraft life-shaped items). You also gain some improved use out of the Heal skill, but only with life-shaped items and creatures, which is less useful. As mentioned, you get a Craft Reserve, but it's quite small. The chassis is not awful, considering that this is the replacement "caster" (1/2 BAB, good Will), since it has a d6 HD and 6+Int skills on a half-way decent list. But overall, it's not giving you any combat ability you couldn't have just bought.

Conclusion
Mostly, it just doesn't seem worth it to a player character. It does reduce the costs of having life-shaped items, but I'd stick this on a cohort so I can go do real things. The class features just don't give you any combat ability aside from what the life-shaped items themselves can give you, and those you can always just buy or have someone else craft them for you.


Life-Tender
Basically, you care for animals. It's yet another healing class, this time focused on life-shaped creatures.

Requirements:
Handle Animal 3 ranks, Heal 3 ranks, Knowledge (life-shaping) 4 ranks.
Rhul-Thaun or Rhulisti race.
Well those couldn't be any easier.

Five levels, d6, 4+Int with an OK list, but 1/2 BAB and only good Will. Pretty meh chassis, but at least you're done by ECL 6.

Unfortunately, you get nothing of note. Improved ability to heal life-shaped creatures and items, take-10 on Heal, Wild Empathy but only with life-shaped creatures, and a mundane Remove Disease 1/week. Meh.

Conclusion
This one has trouble being worth it even for NPCs.


Nature-Master
Unlike the Life-Shaper, who are mostly just following the Rhul-Thaun's passed-down rituals for making life-shaped items, the Nature-Master actually understands how life-shaped items work, and has real skills in creating and warping life.

Requirements:
Craft (life-shaped) 15 ranks, Knowledge (life-shaping) 15 ranks.
Skill Focus [Craft (life-shaped)], any two Shape feats.
Rhulisti race.
Pretty trivial requirements, since Life-Shaper hits most of the feats; mostly you just need to be 12th level to get those 15 ranks in anything. The fact that you have to be Rhulisti is a problem, though; the intent seems to be that this PrC is available only if you go and play a Blue Age game...

Five levels, poor BAB, only Will is good, d6 HD, and 2+Int skills. The chassis is not good. However, you do get another Craft Reserve, which is comparable to the Artificer's at the same ECL.

This class is basically similar to the Archmage, I suppose: you get to choose one of several abilities at each of 5 levels. They each cost XP; how on earth you spend XP as you gain a level is not explained. The description also does not indicate whether or not you can take any of the options more than once.

At any rate, the options are pretty meh.
+1 enhancement bonus to AC and reduction by 1 of ACP on life-shaped armor
+4 Str, +2 HP/HD on life-shaped creatures
Grafts that don't cause penalties to interaction skills
Tissues that don't require an adaptation period, and have 25% extra HP.
Take-10 on Craft (life-shaped) or Knowledge (life-shaping)
+1 enhancement bonus to attack and damage on life-shaped weapons.
Bonus Feat

Conclusion
Basically, another NPC class, I guess. I'd make my Life-shaper Cohort take levels in this, but I wouldn't take it myself.


Windancer
Basically, they're street performers who do all sorts of acrobatics on the Jagged Cliffs.

Requirements:
Balance 5 ranks, Climb 5 ranks, Jump 5 ranks, Perform (dance) 8 ranks, Tumble 5 ranks.
Vertical Orientation feat.
Rhul-Thaun race.
Aside from the Nature-Master, the highest ECL entry of any of these PrCs. I have strong doubts that it's worth it. Vertical Orientation is a +2 Climb, +2 Jump feat that gives you 6 feet of vertical reach...

5 levels, 3/4 BAB, 6+Int skills, good Ref, d6 HD: Not awful, though certainly not too impressive. The Skill list is OK.

The class features are meh as anything, though. Evasion is seriously the most powerful feature here. Being able to move normal speed while using Balance, Climb, and Tumble is OK, as is the avoidance of being Flat-footed while Climbing (it also lets you avoid that while Balancing, but you already have 5 ranks in order to enter the class so you already had that).

The other major feature is that you can, once per day, use Perform (dance) in place of Diplomacy. I doubt you can pump Perform (dance) any better than you can Diplomacy itself, so I'm not sure this helps Diplomancers, but any interaction with Diplomacy is worth mentioning from an optimization standpoint.

Conclusion
Yet another NPC class, and this one requires that the NPC be fairly high level. I cannot imagine any reason for taking this class other than some weird form of Diplomacy cheese.


Windrider
Masters of strange life-shaped flying mounts.

Requirements:
Handle Animal 4 ranks, Knowledge (Geography [Jagged Cliffs]) 2 ranks, Ride 8 ranks.
Mounted Combat, Weapon Focus (any ranged weapon) feats.
Rhul-Thaun race.
Special: Must have sworn the Windrider's Oath.
Well... Weapon Focus is a blatant feat tax, and Knowledge (Geography [Jagged Cliffs]) is a skill tax, but otherwise not too bad. The Oath is incredibly minor, but if you accept a mission as a Windrider and betray it (note: you don't have to accept, and it's OK to fail, you just can't say you'll do it and then not), you do lose some class features, most notably the Mount.

Ten levels, d8 HD, 3/4 BAB, good Ref, 4+Int skills but meh skill list. The main class feature is the life-shaped flying mount, which is apparently completely custom-designed. Anyway, it advances like a Druid's Animal Companion or Paladin's Mount does. The progression gives very few bonus HD (only +4 at 9th level, ECL 14), but relatively large bonuses to Natural Armor and Dexterity.

The main issue here is, because it's completely custom-designed, it's almost impossible to judge this feature. Life-shaping a creature allows things that are up to Colossal in size with up to 64 HD and 44 Str — are you allowed to have one of those when you take this class? There are no guidelines whatsoever. And seriously, the Life-shaped Creature rules are really imbalanced, so you're quite likely to get something very good here.

Well, other than that, at 8th level (ECL 13), you get the ability to make a Full Attack provided your mount moves no more than one Move Action. That's pretty solid.

You also have bonuses when dealing with Rhul-Thaun, including a 3%/class level discount on goods and services (30% off? That's... really good.) Finally, you get 3 Bonus Feats, though the list is small and the options meh (Ride-by Attack is pretty poor for an archer, and Spirited Charge is absolutely useless)

Conclusion
The discount on buying stuff from Rhul-Thaun is possibly the most powerful ability here; if you have some ability of your own with life-shaping, you should be able to buy the raw materials at 30% off, resulting in a total discount of 65% when you're crafting your own stuff. That's... rather good.

The mounted full attack thing is also quite solid.

Unfortunately, it's 10 class levels to get those things. Extraordinary Artisan would be a 25% discount and only on things you craft yourself, rather than 30% on everything, but it's just a feat. The full-attack thing is good but only because WotC made it stupidly hard to do that; it shouldn't have been so difficult in the first place. As a result, while this class is quite good for say, a Ranger or Fighter, those are terrible classes and it's a shame that this class found that balance level.

Also, I worry about that mount. +4 HD over 10 levels means it's going to be very low on HP.


Conclusion
Way too many of these classes seem completely unfitting for a player character, and even those that do work for PCs are still rather weak. It's difficult to do anything powerful in 3.5 without access to non-OGL material and refusing to use spellcasting and psionics, but I seriously wouldn't be comfortable using these classes unless my entire party consisted of Fighters, Monks, and Paladins.


Chapter 5: Equipment
This is the non-life-shaped equipment; the life-shaped stuff comes next chapter. Several of these items are grafts, however.

Importantly, the Rhul-Thaun don't trade with the rest of Athas, and have no use for Ceramic Pieces (Cp). They instead use "ghav-egoth", which has a value equal to 1 Cp, except there is no "foreign exchange" market. Thus, you need to sell things to Rhul-Thaun in order to get ghav-egoth, and then buy things from them with ghav-egoth. Unsurprisingly, ghav-egoth is worthless outside of the Jagged Cliffs.


Weapons
The vast majority of Rhul-Thaun weapons are grafts. There's a variety of those; they all share immunity to being disarmed (cuz that would involve actually removing your arm). All of them leave the hand free for other things, but you can't attack with a weapon in your hand in the same round as using a grafted weapon.

The grafts basically mimic normal martial weapons otherwise (they are all martial, for the record). The Clawgraft is a cool image, at least; it basically turns you into that chick Wolverine from the second X-Men movie (the one with the claws that came from her fingertips instead of from the back of her hands).

For non-grafts, there's a Life Leech Pole and a Life Leech Sword, which have an interesting property: the first time you attack a target in a given day, they take an extra 1d8 damage, and each time after that it's an extra 1d6 damage. That's pretty solid (the sword also has a Frighten effect, but it's low DC and only affects things with 3 HD or less). Sadly, they're both Exotic.

Also, the Spinethrower (also exotic) can deal quite a bit of damage, at range (1d6 spines dealing 1d3 damage each), though its "ammunition" of spines is limited to a max of 40, regrowing 10/day.

Finally, the Flashlance can spring outward (it actually grows rapidly at its target), for an extra 1d4 damage on the attack; it retracts by your next turn, so you get +1d4 damage 1/round. It's kind of nifty, anyway. At least this one's Martial (it's also Reach).

There's a few others, but they don't interest me as much.


Armor
Rhul-Thaun armor's actually pretty cool: two of them are actually a kind of paste that you apply to your body, and it armors you. One of them is transparent until you get hit (but its AC is lower against that first attack), which is a nice affect. The Spineshield functions as a Spinethrower (which is some pretty hefty damage, as noted above), but doesn't say if it's Exotic or not — it also increases your effective size for shield bash damage with it.

The best thing here, though, is the Climber's Shield — it's a Buckler that doesn't interfere with your hands, so you can attack with the hand that has it without losing its AC. Improved Buckler Defense was never a good feat, but now you don't need it. Plus the AC's +2, not the +1 of a Buckler.


Gear
There's some steel wire ("ironthread") that is, unsurprisingly, quite strong. I like that they have a mechanic where the wire can cut into things.

There's a living grappling hook, which is neat: even cooler are the living locks, one of which has a DC 30 Open Lock check and the other which cannot be picked at all. The latter actually has no keyhole; it operates much like a fingerprint-scanner but requires the flesh in question to be alive and attached to the person it's keyed for, so none of that "cut off the thumb" stuff. There's also a living lockpick that shapes itself to any lock (aside from that one I just described), so it gives a +10 to Open Lock.

Finally, we have Sleekoil. Sleekoil is basically mercury or quicksilver, based on the description, but the book actually claims that it is completely frictionless and will stick to nothing except Sovereign Glue. Well then. Many catgirls died bringing us this information, is all I can say.


Special Substances and Items
Apparently most of the alchemical items out there can also be made with Craft (life-shaped). Well that's nice. Most of the items here are raw material for life-shaping, or food for life-shaped creatures; not much of note except the Firetears and Spore Pods.

Firetears are a splash weapon a la Alchemist's Fire, but deals 3d6 fire on a direct hit, 1d6 fire splash, and another 1d6 fire the following round to the one who got the direct hit. That's... pretty solid, at least as far as alchemical items go, and it's only 30 Cp. That sounds pretty good to me.

The Spore Pods are kind of interesting: they're each a splash weapon that has some decent effects: one sickens targets and forces all splashed to take a 20% miss chance against targets for a minute (DC 15 Fort save negates both). Another has a DC 15 Fort save vs. 1d4 rounds of unconsciousness for a direct hit, dazed for 1 round if splashed. Finally, there's DC 18 against poison with 1d6 Con primary and secondary, which is pretty harsh. The splash effect on that is still 2d6 damage, too. These things range from 10 Cp to 30 Cp, making them surprisingly affordable, too. Suffers from the usual static DCs on alchemy, but the prices mean you can actually use them at the low levels where they're potent. They can even be made with Craft (life-shaped), which is a thought — that does cut the price by a third.


Tools and Skill Kits
Botanist's Kit provides a +2 bonus on Heal checks related to plants, and only can be used 10 times. Laaaame.

Shaper's Lab gives +2 to Craft (life-shaped), which is much better, but boy-oh-boy is it expensive at 500 Cp...


Mounts
Nothing shocking here; they can all fly aside from the Dhev-Sahr. The Yihn-eflan is the only one a PC will ever be using, since it's the only one trained for war. As noted in the Windrider section, and really emphasized below in the Life-shaped Creatures section, you are much better off getting a custom-shaped creature, either shaping it yourself or getting an NPC (or Cohort) Life-shaper to make one. Or actually, don't do that, because you'll break the game in half.


Conclusion
The weapons are interesting, and a few of the Exotic ones might even be worth a feat (well, probably not, but at the least they're not completely worthless), and the armors are actually quite good. The alchemy items are very good by 3.5 standards. The rest is pretty much as expected.



Continued in Next Post

Veyr
2011-03-20, 06:07 PM
Chapter 6: Life-Shaped Items
Aha, the point of this book, finally. Life-shaped items come in three forms:
Tools — non-living items created through life-shaping. I'm guessing these are organic by-products or the dead husks of creatures they create? Sort of unclear.
Tissues — grafts and symbionts, basically. These are alive and need to be attached to a host to stay that way.
Creatures — fully independent creatures, that can even breed true.


Using Items
Life-shaped items are non-magical/psionic in nature, and are unaffected by dispel magic or a null psionics field or what have you. Life-shaped tissues do take up body slots like magical items, however.

Also, Blue Age life-shaped items can go dormant, surviving, inactively, without nutrients for centuries or millenia. Other Blue Age life-shaped creatures have been living, reproducing, and dying for all this time; designed to breed true, only the slightest of mutations have blemished the Rhulisti's work.


Size and Life-Shaped Items
Life-shaped items don't (usually) resize to fit a new owner, unlike magical/psionic gear. Thus, almost all existing life-shaped items are Small, as the Rhulisti and Rhul-Thaun are.


Construction
Tools require the Shape Tool feat (prereq: 5 ranks each in Craft (life-shaped) and Knowledge (life-shaping)), Tissues require Shape Tissue (10 ranks in each), and Creatures require Shape Creature (15 ranks in each).


Nourishment and Rest
Living life-shaped items (tissues and creatures, that is, not tools) require food, water, oxygen, as well as rest in the case of creatures. Creatures eat one dose of "cam-rahn" (10 Cp) per HD per day, while tissues must be soaked in "lor-rahn" (10 Cp) for 30 minutes per day, or they begin to starve. Creatures can last 1d4+1 days without; tissues only 1d2+1 days.


Tools
I'm only going to mention the really interesting tools here.

Clingrope
Ranged touch attack to stick to anything. You can make Grappled checks with it, and you can Trip grappled creatures. This thing is awesome.

Malleable Tool
Putty you can shape into any tool weighing 10 lbs or less. It's a one-shot deal, though; it retains that shape forever.

Mysk, False
his is apparently indistinguishable from a mysk — which, for the record, is a Life-shaped Tissue that goes over your face and gives you a +1 enhancement bonus to Cha. At any rate, this doesn't do that, instead it makes your face look absolutely identical to the last face it was placed on. As a nonmagical effect. RAW, it's "just" +10 to Disguise, but still, this is awesome.

Conclusion
Some cool stuff, nothing shocking. The Clingrope, though, is awesome.


Tissues
In addition to needing feed (which apparently Rhulisti tissues did not need), Rhul-Thaun tissues only last 3d8 months... this dramatically reduces their usefulness.

Grafting and Removal
Rhulisti grafts, apparently, could be removed and reattached at will, but Rhul-Thaun grafts, no so much. Removing one without a DC 15 Heal check causes 1d4 Constitution damage.

Further, while grafts will always work for Rhulisti and by extension Rhul-Thaun, they have a % chance to fail when grafted to any other race. Halflings are the highest after the Rhuls, with a 95%; Pterrans are the worst off with only a 10% chance of it working. There... are not any rules for what happens when you fail one of these rolls...

Number of Grafts
You can have 1 + Con mod grafts at a time without issue; for each graft you have in excess of this number, however, you take a negative level that cannot be avoided and cannot be healed until the number of grafts is reduced.

Drawbacks
As if there weren't enough already. You take a -1 circumstance penalty to Bluff, Diplomacy, Gather Information, and Handle Animal checks per external graft. If you're living in the Jagged Cliffs among the Rhul-Thaun where life-shaped items are a sign of wealth and prestige... this makes no sense whatsoever. Moreover, that's a typed penalty; 3.5 does not have many those. If I have a circumstance bonus to those skills, does it "not stack" with the penalty and therefore I only take the highest value (by default, the positive one)?

You also suffer double penalties from being around a defiler while he's defiling.

An interesting case of "drawback" here is that if you fail a Fort save vs. Massive Damage (i.e. you're going to die), you have a 40% chance of it instead disabling a single Graft, basically killing it but allowing it to be repaired with the Heal skill. There's also a 40% chance of you just dying, and a 20% chance of you and the Graft dying, but seriously, a 40% chance to ignore a failed Massive Damage save is a rather nice benefit rather than drawback.

Not mentioned in the drawback section, but I figure I will: many of the tissues do something to you when they're attached. For the most part, it's just some damage, but worth mentioning.

Body and Graft Slots
You have 2 feet slots (one per), 2 hand slots (one per), 1 head slot, 2 torso slots, 4 arm slots (two per), and 4 leg slots (two per). That's a total of 15 slots for grafts; plenty of room, really. But anyway, there's no way around these limits.

Tissue Descriptions
And here are the items themselves. Again, only mentioning items of particular
interest.

First, we have the weapon grafts. A really important note that was left off of the descriptions in the Weapons section earlier: they can be considered both a manufactured and a natural weapon for the purposes of effects that distinguish between them. Thus, both Magic Fang and Magic Weapon work, but also things like a Necklace of Natural Attacks would work on them, which is kind of a very interesting idea. Otherwise, I've already discussed those grafts.

The Breathermask is continuous, nonmagical Water Breathing for 300 Cp (100 Cp if you shape it yourself). That's a nice deal.

Similar thing, the Chameleon Cloak gives +10 to Hide (+20 if you're not moving). The base price is 9,000 Cp, but if you shape it yourself, 3,000 Cp is a steal for that much.

Detoxifier is nonmagical Neutralize Poison plus 1 hour of poison immunity for 35 Cp. It's a one-shot, but looks a lot better than Antitoxin.

75 Cp for the Directional Sensor (always know North) is pretty solid.

Eyestalks are interesting; they're 150 Cp, and they replace your eyes with eyes that can leave the eye socket on a stalk, extending one foot away from you. The exact rules for how this works are not there, but it's suggested that you can look around corners, through small openings, etc. Interesting.

The Healing Pod is an awesome image (it's basically a tree that you go cocoon yourself in to get healed), but it's preposterously expensive, takes a full year to grow, and has a random chance of doing terrible things to you. Why did they think a rejuvenation chamber was so powerful?

OK, Flexars, Ingenies, Mysks, Soolmons, Tendonils, and Vigrons are weird. They each give a +1 enhancement bonus to an Ability (Dex, Int, Cha, Wis, Str, and Con, respectively). Excepting the Mysk, which you can only have one of, you can have three of each of these things (it doesn't explicitly say so, which it should, but we can assume RAI was that they stack). Since they cost 2,000 Cp each, a +2 bonus to an ability score costs the same as a magic or psionic item would; a +3 is cheaper (6,000 Cp versus 9,000 Cp for the same, following custom magic item creation rules).

However, you can't go past +3, which is an issue. The book should have included +2 versions that cost 8,000 Cp; then when you had two you'd have +4 for 16,000 Cp (same as a +4 magic item), and you could reap the benefit of a +6 item for a decent discount (24,000 Cp vs. 36,000 Cp), though you take interaction penalties and you have to feed the thing, plus it takes up more slots, etc etc.

And of course, you should be able to wear all three Mysks at once. There are three different types of Mysks that do different things, it just says you can only have one for some reason.

Mimicskin gives you the Changeling's signature racial feature, for 180 Cp.

Platons are kind of like the enhancement bonus items: you can wear up to three, they give you a +1 Natural Armor bonus each. Not awful, considering there's absolutely no ACP/ASF/Max Dex, they stack with real armor, and they cost only 120 Cp each.

Gladiator Tail gives you a tail slap natural weapon for 700 Cp; not bad. Grasping Tail has a Str of 12 and can pick stuff up, plus a (weaker) tail slap, all for 500 Cp; much better.

The last I'll mention is the Velocet; it gives +5 ft of move speed, and the leg it's attached to gets +1 damage when used in unarmed strikes. It's not so amazing (and 2,000 Cp's kind of expensive for the effect), but I like the image of it. You can have one in both legs; speed should stack by RAW, I think.

Conclusion
Some pretty solid stuff in here, especially for the price. The awkwardness of using tissues, however, is problematic, since they need to be fed, and they only live 3d8 months. Not to mention that you need ranks in two different skills plus a feat to make these.


Creatures
OK, so... it's a build-a-monster workshop. You choose a body size, you pick your movement type(s), manipulator(s) (which double as natural weapons and for holding stuff), hide/shell/armor type, and accessory(ies).

The monsters end up as Construct (Life-shaped) creatures, which are pretty similar to Living Constructs a la Warforged.

Anyway.... these don't seem terribly well balanced. I'm going to just build a flying mount for a Windrider to show you what I mean.

1st: Body — no real reason not to take the biggest thing we can, so Colossal. It comes with 32 HD, but we can up that pretty cheaply, to a max of 64 HD, so let's do that. Our monster now has the following stats:
{table=head]HP | BAB | Size | AC | Str | Dex | Con | Int | Wis | Cha | Price
64d8+704 (avg. 996) | +48 | Colossal | 5 (5 T, 6 FF) | 44 | 8 | 22 | 1 | 11 | 5 | 6,200 Cp[/table]Nearly 1,000 HP for less than the price of a +2 weapon.

Still, it currently can't move, and this is for a Windrider, so we'll give a Fly (average) speed; the base is 40 ft., but that's kinda slow, so we'll improve it. The base cost is 1/8 of the body's cost, so 800 Cp, plus 10 Cp per +5 ft. of speed, max double. We'll take the 80 ft., so we're at +880 Cp, or 7,080 Cp. Still cheaper than a +2 weapon.

For manipulators, there's a limit of 8 for a Huge or larger creature; lucky us, we have one. Since these are natural weapons and make for sick natural weapons, I see little reason not to have 8. Four claws, each dealing 2d8 damage, cost another 6,200 Cp (1/4 the body's cost each); a Jaw manipulator costs another quarter, for another 1,550 Cp. A Sting is another 1,550 Cp; to round things out, we'll include a pair of "Special-Use Gripplers" — these do nonlethal damage and less of it than the others, but they're also only 620 Cp each, and we can presumably do something interesting with them since they're special use (the rules don't really say what, though — but holding a weapon or using a graft-weapon doesn't seem out of the question).

That's a total cost of 10,740 Cp for the manipulators, bringing our total to 17,080 Cp; a bit less than a +3 weapon now. For a full attack routine that goes something like this: +65/+65/+60/+60/+60/+60/+60/+60, for 2d8+17, 2d8+17, 2d8+17, 2d8+17, 2d8+17, 2d8+17, 2d6+17, 2d6+17. On a creature with very nearly 1,000 HP. And can fly. And we're not done yet.

A sort of glaring problem that we have is that the creature's AC's pretty low. Luckily, we can give it Natural Armor. We could go all the way up to a +12, but it's expensive and costs us some of that movement speed we bought, so I'm going to stick with the Tough Hide; a +4 bonus to Natural Armor at 1,575 Cp. We're now at 18,655 Cp, breaking the +3 weapon mark.

Senses are next; currently our creature can not see, hear, or even feel, though the basics are just 12 Cp. Anyway, the "Ultimate Sensory Package" is just 650 Cp, and it gives: Low-light Vision, Darkvision 60 ft., Blindsight 80 ft., Scent, +8 to Listen and Spot, +4 to Search, and the Improved Initiative feat. Tack 650 Cp onto the creature for all of this; we're now at 19,305 Cp.

Ability enhancements are up next; they cost either 100 Cp (physical scores) or 150 Cp (mental scores), times the old modifier (minimum 1, thank god), to get a +2 bonus to the score. You can do it as much as you want.

First up is that Int; I don't want this thing going down to the first spellcaster who can cast Touch of Idiocy. Going from Int 1 to Int 15 is a paltry 1,050 Cp; that seems like buffer enough. Plus it gets us skill points; yay, skill points! With 2+Int per HD... and 64 HD... you have 268 skill points, with a cap of 67. Cha's next; same deal, but we start at Cha 5 so it only costs 750 Cp. Wis is 11; decent, but there's almost no reason not to bump it to 15 for 300 Cp. Those enhancements were all at the minimum rate (since they're all being done with a +1 effective modifier), and I don't see any reason to improve them more.

Now is Dex. Our touch AC is still 5, and even our regular AC is only 9. So, this needs fixing. Going from Dex 8 to Dex 14 is all at the minimum rate, plus it's only 100 Cp for being physical, so that's just 300 Cp. AC is now 12. I want Dex to at least counter-act size penalties, so that's an 18 — 800 Cp. AC is 14, FF is 9, Touch is 10. Another 22 Dex would make a lot of spellcasters cry; that costs another 9,900 Cp. We're now at AC 25, Touch 21, Flat-footed 9. Respectable. You could keep pumping this, but I'm satisfied with that.

The total cost of our ability scores bonuses is 12,800 Cp; our creature is now costing 32,105 Cp; that's just under a +4 weapon (the +4 bonus is 32,000, but even a Quarterstaff needs to be Masterwork for 32,300).

And now we get to Accessories. These are little things you can add for extra bonuses. Many of them are quire cheap. A bonus feat is 1,000 Cp; I'm not sure what I'm doing with my 22 feats from HD as it is, so I'm not going to bother with that. But Camouflage (as the Ranger class feature) for 500 Cp? Done. Another +2 to Initiative (on top of the +4 from Imp. Initiative and the +11 from Dex) is 250 Cp. For 500 Cp + half the body's price (so 3,600 Cp), we can get: +10 feet of move speed, Resistance 10 each to Acid, Cold, Electricity, and Fire, and +30 ft. to Darkvision. I'll take that.

OK, final monster, 35,705 Cp:
{table]Size/Type | Colossal Construct (Life-shaped Construct)
Hit Dice | 64d8+704 (996 hp)
Initiative | +17
Speed | Fly 90 ft. (average)
Armor Class | 25 (-4 size, +25 Dex, +4 natural), touch 21, flat-footed 10
Base Attack/Grapple | +48 / +81
Attack | Bite +65 melee (2d8+17) or
Attack | Claw +65 melee (2d8+17) or
Attack | Special-Use Grippler +65 melee (2d6+17 nonlethal) or
Attack | Sting +65 melee (2d8+17)
Full Attack | 2 claws +65 melee (2d8+17), 2 claws +60 melee (2d8+17), bite +60 melee (2d8+17), 2 special-use gripplers +60 melee (2d6+17 nonlethal), sting +60 melee (2d8+17)
Space/Reach | 30 ft./20 ft.
Special Attacks | —
Special Qualities | Acid Resistance 10, Blindsight 80 ft., Camouflage, Cold Resistance 10, Darkvision 90 ft., Electricity Resistance 10, Fire Resistance 10, Life-shaped Construct traits, Low-light Vision, Scent
Saves | Fort +38, Ref +36, Will +23
Abilities | Str 44, Dex 40, Con 22, Int 15, Wis 15, Cha 15
Feats | (22 open feats)
Market Price | 32,705 Cp
Cost to Shape | 10,901 Cp and 67 bits[/table]

Conclusion
Absurdly cheap for the power of creatures you can make with it. The only real limitation is that you need 15 ranks in Craft (life-shaped) and Knowledge (life-shaping) to qualify for Shape Creature.


Conclusion
The tools are neat, and the tissues are OK but awkward. The creatures are broken, full-stop.


Mutated Items
Basically, Rhulisti life-shaped creatures have been around for a looong time, hundreds of generations at the least. Some mutations have crept in, despite their best efforts.

These are basically Cursed Items, but for life-shaped items. Not really that interesting.


Artifacts
Apparently, at the end of the Blue Age, the Rhulisti began to experiment with intelligent life-shaped creations (I guess my Int 15 death-bird doesn't count?), called Rhul-Tal. These are treated as intelligent items and artifacts.

These are pretty much all plot points; they're pretty interesting, but I don't think I can summarize them in a way that's meaningful without just rewriting what's in the book.

Conclusion
Solid plot-points here; worth reading if you're looking for life-shaped related plot hooks in a Dark Sun game. Not all of them are strictly Rhulisti/Rhul-Thaun related, either.


Chapter 7: Monsters
I'm going to be honest: monsters don't interest me much and I don't know a lot about CRs. I don't DM often and when I do I tend to stick to humanoid enemies with class levels. I'm not going to go through this chapter and figure out what's under or over CRed. I'm just going to point out monsters I think sound interesting.

The "Experiment Bav-rem" is a life-shaped creature gone wrong: it's just a mass of constantly-changing organic tissue, consuming and assimilating all in its path. It's CR 15, and it's a doozy: every single attack is a DC 23 save-or-die that gives the Experiment Bav-rem an additional 1d4 Constitution. It lurks around the village Bav-rem, where the experiment originally took place, occasionally reaching out in search of food.

The Farspeaker is a bird whose wings are replaced by enormous ears, and apparently every Farspeaker has a unique name and knows every other Farspeaker's unique name. If you speak a Farspeaker's name to another Farspeaker, the named Farspeaker will speak aloud everything that is said to the one you are speaking to. In other words, they're a great communications device.

The Mother, a type of life-shaped lizard, can "eat" life-shaped tissues, keeping them safe and nourished until they're requested again, at which point the tissue is spat back up. This just amuses me.

A Ban-enos secretes a resin that can make items that are automatically masterwork with a DC 12 Craft (life-shaped) check, and some of them have a mutation where applying negative energy to the shaped item turns it into deep crystal, which is pretty sweet.

Shieldswarms are a swarm of life-shaped creatures that actually will fly around their owner, granting them concealment. I like this.

The Watchpack is a living backpack that can store and retrieve items for the owner automatically (free action).


Conclusion
I like that they went with humor on a lot of these; several are quite silly.


Chapter 8: Adventure Sites
A series of locations, complete with inhabitants and the like, but no quests or anything; they're free to be used as you like. There are no maps, but they are otherwise pretty detailed. Again, not really a whole lot I can do to summarize without just telling you about all of them. They look interesting enough.



Conclusion
OK, wow, that was long. I don't think I'll be doing this again any time soon.

Anyway... eh, I'm not terribly impressed. The fluff on the two races is OK but pretty basic, and their racial stats are mediocre and in the case of the Rhul-Thaun, completely nonsensical based on the fluff. The skills are unwieldy, the PrCs are largely useless, and the biggest part of the book, the life-shaped creatures, are not even remotely balanced.

On the other hand, the grafts and other items are pretty interesting, and I didn't see any glaring problems with those. Several of the pre-made monsters were interesting and amusing, and you kind of get a sense of the bizarre environment of the Jagged Cliffs when you read about the behaviors of the wild life-shaped creatures.

Overall, though, I wouldn't really recommend this book too highly, except maybe as inspiration for doing it better yourself.

LOTRfan
2011-03-20, 06:17 PM
This is pretty cool. I agree with you on the Rhul-Thaun.

Sydonai
2011-03-20, 08:33 PM
Just so you know, the DarkSun Bard is closer to a Base-Class Assassin then anything else.

Veyr
2011-03-20, 08:36 PM
This is pretty cool. I agree with you on the Rhul-Thaun.
Thanks! But uh... what exactly do you agree about?


Just so you know, the DarkSun Bard is closer to a Base-Class Assassin then anything else.
D'oh, I forgot about that. That does make sense, for Rhulisti and Rhul-thaun. Rogue still doesn't.

LOTRfan
2011-03-20, 08:40 PM
Thanks! But uh... what exactly do you agree about?

They are much better (mechanically) than the Rhulisti.

Veyr
2011-03-20, 08:57 PM
They are much better (mechanically) than the Rhulisti.
Oh yeah, absolutely. Dunno what that was about.

Mostly, I'm really disappointed in the life-shaped creatures section. I mean... I didn't expect great balance (because that kind of thing is notoriously hard to do), but the prices are so low that there's no reason not to just make the most devastatingly dangerous creature ever.

LOTRfan
2011-03-20, 09:10 PM
Please tell me that the cp in 35,000 cp stands for ceramic pieces. :smalleek:

Veyr
2011-03-20, 09:54 PM
Yeah, Cp is ceramic pieces, which are equivalent to gold pieces in Dark Sun. Copper pieces aren't used, to the best of my knowledge (silver pieces are like platinum, and gold in Dark Sun is worth 10x what platinum is in other settings)...

But still, 32,704 Cp/gp is around the cost of a +4 weapon. It's trivially affordable with 13th WBL, for a creature that could go toe-to-toe with a Regeneration-less Tarrasque and have a reasonable chance of coming out ahead.

Sydonai
2011-03-20, 11:12 PM
To be fair, these things die in less than a year and they require constant maintenance. And if they are as smart as the one you made then why would they do what you ordered them to instead of the other way around?(Example: "Find a way to extend my life or I'll eat you and your family.")

Veyr
2011-03-20, 11:22 PM
Hah, that would be wonderful if the Life-Shaping Handbook had rules for such things. As it stands, I'm reasonably sure it doesn't. Life-shaped creatures are implied to be quite obedient, provided they're not wild/mutated.