The Cloak of Mastery This appears to be a finely made grey woollen cloak with a hood. It will detect as strong alteration magic. The c...| nagorascorner.blogspot.com
Greek Worshippers| Nagora's Corner
This excerpt from the Demon Slayer movie “Mugen Train” is a discussion between a demon-slayer in training and his mother. Mostly it is the mother talking except for the part in italics. Her explanation of her son’s duty is a neat encapsulation of what Good in AD&D is about:| Nagora's Corner
Xochipilli (Lombard Museum)| Nagora's Corner
Babylonian Worshippers| Nagora's Corner
Magic resistance in AD&D is not very precisely defined, although it’s not too bad compared to some rules. It is initially covered in the Monster Manual thusly:| Nagora's Corner
This excerpt from the Demon Slayer movie “Mugen Train” is a discussion between a demon-slayer in training and his mother. Mostly it is the ...| nagorascorner.blogspot.com
Babylonian Worshippers So, following on from the previous post, here's the table for Babylonian worshippers: En...| nagorascorner.blogspot.com
Xochipilli (Lombard Museum) Central American Worshippers For the first time we come to a pantheon in D&DG in which every PHB class is repres...| nagorascorner.blogspot.com
Magic resistance in AD&D is not very precisely defined, although it’s not too bad compared to some rules. It is initially covered in t...| nagorascorner.blogspot.com
Greek Worshippers No paladins in the Greek pantheon. Seems reasonable, I guess. Zeus Swanning About Art: Linda Sutton Including Titans Thi...| nagorascorner.blogspot.com
Just a gentle tap should fix it - oh...| Nagora's Corner
So, I recently discovered that the world upon which The City State of the Invincible Overlord (CSIO) is situated has two moons, according to the Necromancer edition of the setting. There’s nothing I know of in the original release to say that this is the case, but it’s not unlikely enough for me to reject it.| Nagora's Corner
Hooray - Granny's in Town!| Nagora's Corner
Last time, I uploaded a map of the area we normally think of as constituting what we call "Ancient Greece" - a designation that the people living there may have struggled to understand given that they so rarely thought of themselves as being anything other than rivals until Alexander the Great rolled in and told them all to shut up. After he died, of course, they went back to not thinking of themselves as one nation until the Romans rolled in and told them all to shut up and pay their taxes.A...| Nagora's Corner
This is Sparta!| Nagora's Corner
Finnish Worshippers| Nagora's Corner
I still love method IV and the little webpage I mention in that other article has had some success/praise and quite a lot of usage from other people who like a bit of ivy. I thought I'd move the utility up to this site instead of running it at home. So here it is, complete with a new feature: you can ask for sets that qualify by race instead of class. Enjoy and let me know if there's any bugs| Nagora's Corner
Art: Inonibird@tumblr| Nagora's Corner
Filling the Sandbox| Nagora's Corner
Cthulhu Mythos Worshippers| Nagora's Corner
Simulating, but simulating what?| Nagora's Corner
Or: D&D meets Javascript| Nagora's Corner
Shang-Ti, crusher of tortoises| Nagora's Corner
Celtic Worshippers| Nagora's Corner
American Worshippers| Nagora's Corner
There comes a point in any genealogical backtrace when you realise that everyone in the world is now an ancestor of whoever you are studying. Generally, the researcher, politician, or random nutjob on YouTube then slides the window forward a few generations so that they can continue to make arbitrary claims like being of African descent (like everyone else), from native-born English stock (except for all those Anglo-Saxon immigrants that were born in Denmark and Germany), or that their oppone...| Nagora's Corner
The Old School of Marc Miller| Nagora's Corner
Introduction| Nagora's Corner