Since it came up in the recent Q&A, and many have been asking, here is my adaptation of the Corruption Rules I used in the Whitestone arc, available for you all for freeeeeeee!https://t.co/lyaRnme1jw
— Matthew Mercer (@matthewmercer) January 8, 2018
I recall when Percival got his second point, you mentioned that when he went to kill someone, he now went to inflict pain before killing them, but I see no equivalent here. Where would torturous tendencies lie on the chart? I was still early in the process of developing them at the time. I’ve shifted things slightly as I have a better grasp of the system, and condensed things a bit.
— Matthew Mercer (@matthewmercer) January 8, 2018
Aaah! Cool to see you building on Heroes of Horror. Fun book to work on! #dnd #wotcstaff Dude, it defined much of my Ravenloft campaign in ‘07-‘09. You guys all did phenomenal work. <3
— Matthew Mercer (@matthewmercer) January 8, 2018
The slow and steady decline of those characters was an absolute pleasure to experience. I’m about to run a Curse of Strahd campaign for a group that hasn’t been spoiled for anything in the setting and this couldn’t have come at a better time for me.Hells yeah!
— Matthew Mercer (@matthewmercer) January 8, 2018
As someone who suffers from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, I’m surprised to find I’m moderately corrupt and one step away from becoming murderous! 😛 Hahaha! Get on those restoration spells!
— Matthew Mercer (@matthewmercer) January 8, 2018