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AnnShadow
2007-11-05, 02:34 PM
With the new rules making it so that players playing clerics do not have to worship a deity to get their power; I have a correlative question; do druids have to worship nature.

As wizards get their power from ----

Such that nature is the SOURCE of the power that druids tap into.

For example - electricity. I do not have to worship physics or chemistry or General Electric to get my power; I just plug in my equipment and it works.

Jasdoif
2007-11-05, 02:38 PM
Druids have to revere nature. They don't strictly have to worship it, however.

Brickwall
2007-11-05, 02:38 PM
You can be a cleric of a cause, but you can't get access to a deity's power without worshipping that deity. A druid is basically a cleric of nature itself, only with a couple different class features. You can't be a druid of a 'cause', because you are already a druid of nature. No changing it.

mostlyharmful
2007-11-05, 02:44 PM
With the new rules making it so that players playing clerics do not have to worship a deity to get their power; I have a correlative question; do druids have to worship nature.

As wizards get their power from ----

Such that nature is the SOURCE of the power that druids tap into.

For example - electricity. I do not have to worship physics or chemistry or General Electric to get my power; I just plug in my equipment and it works.

Wizards get their power from understanding the world and manipulating it. Druids get their power from their faith. Bear in mind that "nature" can mean a whole lot of things, and can be interpreted as most anything with enough mental juryrigging. Then add in that "faith" has always been a neublious concept to begin with and can be expressed in all kinds of ways. You don't just need to be a tree hugger hippy, try varying your medium say, desert, mountains, tundra, the urban environment. Or saying that the supernatural is by nessecity something that should be studied and incorporated into a wider understanding of what's nature, and go worship aberations or undead. Then have a look at how wide a scope real world expressions of faith can be, almost any action, agenda or movement has some level of "faith" assosciated with it, even if it's only to oppose the standerd conception of what a devote person is doing.

Short answer, yes to be a druid you have to have a strong personal interest in "nature". Which is about as wide a definition of a characters motivation as can be acted on. Try playing a humans-are-part-of nature, and thus all cities are just big termite mounds and are therefore not just ok but what needs to be made big and more "humanized"

Keld Denar
2007-11-05, 02:44 PM
Just because a druid worships nature, doesn't mean they love all nature equally. A desert druid might make it his/her goal to eliminate all forests, because he/she believes that a desert is the perfect environment. He/she could see forests as unnatural or unorderly, unlike the simple complexity of miles of barren wasteland.

He/she could embrace the elements, especially the harsh and uncaring destructiveness of fire, electricity, and water, disregarding of their effects on the environment, because these are the primal forces of the world.

There are lots of ways you can swing your fluff. Then, pick your spells and your class features accordingly. Yay open-ended roleplaying

Aquillion
2007-11-05, 02:47 PM
I would say, actually, no. Druids are not clerics, and they do not necessarily worship nature the way a cleric worships a god or embraces an ideal. A druid may simply believe in the natural order--they just feel that it is the way things are. Loving it, worshipping it, and so on would be inappropriate, since those are human concepts, and nature is not human (or even anthromorphized, the way clerical deities and ideals are.)

In fact, I can see a druid clashing with a cleric of a Lawful Good or Chaotic Evil nature god (or even a 'cleric of nature'), arguing that their deities and their concept of 'idealized nature' do not reflect the true natural order and are, in fact, perversions of it.

Nature doesn't care if you worship or love it or not. A druid understands nature, and accepts nature, and has a sort of enlightened harmony with it... but they don't really worship it the way clerics worship their deities or ideals.

cupkeyk
2007-11-05, 02:55 PM
In a Dark Sun Article, there is a variant druid that destroys nature, turning plants, animals and people (bwahahahahaha!!!) into sand, using their moisture to power his spells.

There was also a druid PRC called a defiler or something that spreads taint.

Alex12
2007-11-05, 02:59 PM
I recently read about an Urban Druid base class that was pretty cool. They're like druids except they live in the city and have urban-style powers.

Rachel Lorelei
2007-11-05, 03:09 PM
Personally, I prefer to represent Druidic abilities as the result of a truly deep understanding, rather than worship.

martyboy74
2007-11-05, 05:17 PM
There was also a druid PRC called a defiler or something that spreads taint.

Blighter (CDiv).

Indon
2007-11-05, 05:20 PM
Well, sometimes evil druids (and evil Druid PrC's) are associated with actively hating and seeking the destruction of nature, so probably not.

Though, by the same token, Good druids seem likely candidates to love Nature, and Neutral Druids, well, they can do what they like.

The_Snark
2007-11-05, 05:28 PM
Evil druids are not allowed to actively hate and seek to destroy nature; you're thinking of Blighters. Evil druids can be portrayed as more of predators (possibly even hunting their own kind in animal form) or people who attempt to destroy civilization to return it to the wilds, or... all sorts of options, really, but they still have to have some connection to nature.

It doesn't have to be worship, but you have to respect, revere, or understand nature on some level. Unless you're a blighter.

VerdugoExplode
2007-11-05, 05:29 PM
Well, they might only like nature, especially if they asked nature out to the prom but nature snubbed them in favor of the more popular abstract representations like love or justice. Or if a druid and nature had a nice night out but nature didn't return any of the druids calls the next day.

I'm sorry, I couldn't resist.

Charles Phipps
2007-11-05, 05:33 PM
in my games, I have Druids who are more or less just the Clerics of Nature themed deities. They don't love NATURE so much as they live in very rustic environments.

Not counting Urban Druids and the like.

Crow T. Robot
2007-11-05, 05:44 PM
Gatekeepers from Eberron like nature, but they are more interested in protecting the natural order rather then nature. They see cities as a waste of time rather than a blight.

As far as worship goes, I'd say they do. They are the priests of their faith.

mostlyharmful
2007-11-05, 05:49 PM
Gatekeepers from Eberron like nature, but they are more interested in protecting the natural order rather then nature. They see cities as a waste of time rather than a blight.

As far as worship goes, I'd say they do. They are the priests of their faith.

and Kick-ass hardcore priests at that.

AnnShadow
2007-11-06, 08:41 AM
I would say, actually, no. Druids are not clerics, and they do not necessarily worship nature the way a cleric worships a god or embraces an ideal. A druid may simply believe in the natural order--they just feel that it is the way things are. Loving it, worshipping it, and so on would be inappropriate, since those are human concepts, and nature is not human (or even anthromorphized, the way clerical deities and ideals are.)

In fact, I can see a druid clashing with a cleric of a Lawful Good or Chaotic Evil nature god (or even a 'cleric of nature'), arguing that their deities and their concept of 'idealized nature' do not reflect the true natural order and are, in fact, perversions of it.

Nature doesn't care if you worship or love it or not. A druid understands nature, and accepts nature, and has a sort of enlightened harmony with it... but they don't really worship it the way clerics worship their deities or ideals.

the above quote is kind of the way I was looking at it.

My theory of nature is thus.
Nothing you can do to the earth can hurt it. The earth does not care. A lifeless pile of rock is the same as a rain forest to the earth, and both exist with out the interference of man. Pure nature. Frozen waste, teeming coral reefs, lifeless ocean floors where no man has ever been totally devoid of life.

A hurricane (such as Katerina) will kill hundreds and not be called evil. it just is. A volcano can bury an entire city entombing thousands. Is the volcano
evil? Should it be worshiped?

Should an oak tree be worshiped? Lightning storms are a force of nature and do not worship the forest, or trees, or animals. the storm simply burns down the entire forest and all the oak trees until it runs out of heat and fuel. Is the lightning evil? Is the fire evil for destroying a hundred thousand oaks? is man
evil for cutting down a hundred thousand oaks? Does the earth care?

Azerian Kelimon
2007-11-06, 08:47 AM
You DO know the Earth would have destroyed itself sooner or later, even if humans hadn't popped up? Some things go uncontrolled by nature. Nature was wholly screwed as soon as comets and meteors fell.

Alex12
2007-11-06, 08:55 AM
You DO know the Earth would have destroyed itself sooner or later, even if humans hadn't popped up? Some things go uncontrolled by nature. Nature was wholly screwed as soon as comets and meteors fell.

Actually, I think comets, meteors, etc are part of nature. Nature != life. Life may be a part of nature, but it isn't all of it by any means. And of course the Earth would have been destroyed even without humans. Entropy is one of the laws of nature, ditto thermodynamics. Everything gets destroyed eventually. But that's in RL. In D&D, considering a) the active presence of gods and b) the presence of ways to ignore the laws of physics (aka magic, psionics, etc) means that that's not necessarily true.

Azerian Kelimon
2007-11-06, 09:02 AM
Gods are supernatural. Bringing them in this debate is a baaaad idea.A god can create life outta nowhere, create new energy (blatantly impossible by rules of thermodynamics, but hey, he screws, he screws, he screws high), etc.


And as a side note, we're talking Prime Material Plane (and maybe Land of Wild Beasts) when we say nature. Name 3 beasties or Magical beasties who have supernatural abilities. Almost all are extraordinary, aren't they?

AtomicKitKat
2007-11-06, 09:42 AM
My Desert Druids are Cactus Huggers.:smallwink:

Azerian Kelimon
2007-11-06, 09:52 AM
Are they closet Masochists, too? :smallwink:

Alex12
2007-11-06, 10:05 AM
Gods are supernatural. Bringing them in this debate is a baaaad idea.A god can create life outta nowhere, create new energy (blatantly impossible by rules of thermodynamics, but hey, he screws, he screws, he screws high), etc.


And as a side note, we're talking Prime Material Plane (and maybe Land of Wild Beasts) when we say nature. Name 3 beasties or Magical beasties who have supernatural abilities. Almost all are extraordinary, aren't they?

Regeneration is an extraordinary ability that violates at least one of the laws of physics (namely, the whole inability to create mass from nothing violation)

Hydras regrow their heads in a matter of seconds. The Tarrasque is literally incapable of death barring high-level magic. Basilisks can literally alter the atomic structure within someone's body from flesh to stone. Magic exists as a force in D&D, and as such, quite probably due simply to background magic, not all the rules work the same. Just the fact that creatures can regrow limgs (or heads!) from stumps with no matter intake indicates that the laws of nature are different. It's impossible to say whether the Material Plane would be destroyed by entropy when some creatures within it can actively violate the laws of physics.

AslanCross
2007-11-06, 10:14 AM
You DO know the Earth would have destroyed itself sooner or later, even if humans hadn't popped up? Some things go uncontrolled by nature. Nature was wholly screwed as soon as comets and meteors fell.

Well, we're still around, aren't we? The comet that killed the dinosaurs did have a massive effect on the planet as a whole (and it's total hell if we go by what that Discovery Channel documentary says), but things still will survive. Apparently it takes more than that to kill all living things without hope of coming back.

In any case, my take on it is that Druids do not need to love Nature in the sense that they are nurturing and tree-hugging, let alone be vegan. Wild animals kill and eat, so there's no reason druids should abstain from meat---unless of course, there are very few wild animals but more than enough plants to go by. Evil druids would emphasize the more predatory aspects of nature, as well as the death and entropy of it. After all, death is part of the cycle. They wouldn't strive for balance as TN druids would, however. That said, revering nature does not necessarily mean one should be a tree-hugger.

JellyPooga
2007-11-06, 10:32 AM
By all means, no, a Druid does not have to love, or even revere, nature.

Consider a man who has been 'chosen' by "nature" (for whatever reason) to lead a fight against those that would destroy it...to that end, he has been gifted with certain abilities (read: spells, wild shape, etc.). Though he may not understand how or why he has these powers, he has them nonetheless...in time, he may come to know the purpose for which he has been selected, but until that time, there is nothing beholding him to the love/worship/whatever of nature.

It's not the stereotypical Druid archetype and doesn't explain how he knows Druidic or knows about the prohibition on metal armour or has skill from the Druid class skills list, but they can easily be worked in...once they have, wham, one druid that doesn't have any opinion of nature at all except that it's there (true, the premise behind it is that one day he will be a typical druid, but that's besides the point).

Wolfwood2
2007-11-06, 10:32 AM
I've played a storm-focused druid who revered the power of weather, wind, and water.

Not so much into the animals and the plants. Oh he respected them, but that wasn't his focus. I even got the DM to let me have a Storm Elemental using the elemental companion substitution class feature.

AtomicKitKat
2007-11-06, 11:00 AM
Much of the regeneration is simply converting fat stores into new matter?

Alex12
2007-11-06, 11:19 AM
Much of the regeneration is simply converting fat stores into new matter?

Using that logic, every time you cut off a hydra's head, it loses some weight. SRD gives hydras a weight of 4000 pounds. How much would you figure each head weighs?

AtomicKitKat
2007-11-06, 11:43 AM
Using that logic, every time you cut off a hydra's head, it loses some weight. SRD gives hydras a weight of 4000 pounds. How much would you figure each head weighs?

Not really. As any bodybuilder will tell you, fat weighs more than muscle, and bone even more so. I figure most of these monsters probably eat up the severed heads after the fight(along with the poor saps who lost to them), while trolls and the sort typically try to reattach, or else stuff whatever they can down the throat hole.

AnnShadow
2007-11-06, 12:00 PM
Not really. As any bodybuilder will tell you, fat weighs more than muscle, and bone even more so. I figure most of these monsters probably eat up the severed heads after the fight(along with the poor saps who lost to them), while trolls and the sort typically try to reattach, or else stuff whatever they can down the throat hole.

Well not to get too far off track... but muscle weighs more than fat.

And Regeneration is an ability that octapus have amongst other animals. also plants.

It is not stored fat. It is the type of cell structure and probably too complicated to explain here.

Roderick_BR
2007-11-06, 01:28 PM
If you mean worshiping it like a deity, no. Druids draws their powers from nature, they revere it and protect it, but other than the restrictions listed on their class abilities, they don't have to answer to an higher being like clerics do.

And blighters are anti-druids. They steals life force from creatures and plants to power his spells, since they are no longer normal druids. A normal evil druid would destroy things using the power of nature, not nature itself.

WhiteHarness
2007-11-06, 01:41 PM
Seriously, what do historical druids even have to do with nature?

Wolfwood2
2007-11-06, 01:48 PM
Seriously, what do historical druids even have to do with nature?

What do historical druids have to do with D&D?

Dausuul
2007-11-06, 02:04 PM
My own take on druids is that they are not so much worshippers and protectors of nature as they are intermediaries between nature and humanity. In my campaign worlds, a druid would scoff at anyone who talked about "protecting nature"--nature takes care of itself. The druid teaches respect for nature, not because she feels it necessary to protect the trees from the evil woodchoppers, but because those who don't respect nature are apt to get stomped flat by it... particularly in a world where nature contains things like treants, elementals, dire animals, and the Tarrasque.

By the same token, druids see no distinction in kind between a human city and an anthill. Urban settings are just as natural as wilderness ones, and a druid is quite at home in a city--and often rather amused by the city-dwellers who seem to think they have somehow exempted themselves from natural law.

AnnShadow
2007-11-06, 02:38 PM
If you mean worshiping it like a deity, no. Druids draws their powers from nature, they revere it and protect it, but other than the restrictions listed on their class abilities, they don't have to answer to an higher being like clerics do.

And blighters are anti-druids. They steals life force from creatures and plants to power his spells, since they are no longer normal druids. A normal evil druid would destroy things using the power of nature, not nature itself.

What I posit is do they necessarily have to revere or even care to protect it. As wizards could care less or are even less aware of how their spells work. Wizards manipulate the forces they tap.

I am saying can a druid likewise simply USE the forces that emanate from the earth or nature and likewise not even care about nature.

Like building a windmill or waterwheel to harness the power of air or water to do a task. You simply USE it to your needs.

Dalboz of Gurth
2007-11-06, 02:46 PM
There are many types of Druids in AD&D. I don't know how many of these made it to 3e, but they were definitely in 2nd edition so check out a 2nd ed Druid Handbook if you can. This list encompasses most of the druid types in existence:

1. Urban Druid as mentioned before is a popular yet widely unused and misunderstood sub-class. Basically this is a druid who spent a lot of time in nearby nature, woods, but for some reason or another had or chose to live near civilization. The interest of these druids is to build a more economical and mutually beneficial situation where the town uses nature to help themselves become a great city.

It's been one of my abandoned whims to create such a town. Imagine Rivendel or Lothlorien. That's what you would call the ultimate goal of an Urban Druid, to create a city that is part nature and part human/metal/etc...

Most urban druids I've come across, however, just wind up calling themselves regular druids who live in Elvish cities.

2. The Tree Hugger. Basically this druid is "Nature is tops, and humans are fodder for trees." These types of druids tend to be more chaotic and usually wind up being evil if they don't watch themselves. i.e. Poison Ivy

3. The Ranger type Druid. This is the most common druid, they kind of act like Minsc from Baldur's Gate. Basically they spend time and live in the forest. They accept the neutrality, the vulgarity and the beauty of Nature. They will preach against violating their forests, but will more often than not try to negotiate terms of borderships between the world of man and the world of nature. They rarely try to mix man and nature, but they don't go so far as the tree huggers who will exterminate man for the purpose of nature. These druids are rarely capable of evil acts due to their inherent neutrality.

WhiteHarness
2007-11-06, 02:56 PM
What do historical druids have to do with D&D?

D&D stole the term; they could at least be a little bit faithful to what little source material exists. Otherwise, it's just misinformation.

Serpent Stare
2007-11-06, 04:09 PM
The way I see it, druids tend to revere nature (in it's trees-and-animals sense), even sometimes to the point of worship, because they see the wildness and mystery of natural places (most often ones full of wildlife) as sacred. The way the class is set up (the secret language, the druids' sense of unity, etc.) seems to suggest that in order to become part of druidic culture and learn how to tap nature's power you have to have a deep respect for it.

As to the idea of using nature simply as a tool to draw power from (and nothing more), it inevitably shapes the druid. Even if he doesn't intend to use his power for the protection of nature, whether because he scoffs at the idea that it needs to be protected, or for any other reason, he depends on it to fuel him and give him strength. It's the wall he's always got his back to. It's the one thing he's always got going for him, no matter what. A connection that deep with anything will play a dramatic role in the shaping of one's identity through time. A druid depends on being able to feel and connect to the raw, wild essence of the natural world, no matter where he is or what he's doing.

My two cents. :smallwink: