@ChrisPerkinsDnD Thinking of allowing Strahd as a lock patron. Any cool way to allow the character to defeat him without losing its class?
— Manny (@techjunkie30) May 7, 2016
You'd be better off choosing the Dark Powers as patrons. https://t.co/YKtWp23VIp
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) May 8, 2016
Sooo…you're saying my warlock's patron SHOULDN'T be Miss Snazzlepants the pink sugar unicorn? https://t.co/FD05MG5rbS
— Moxxie Hyde (@BluValkyrie) May 8, 2016
I personally find that very scary. https://t.co/pdqAyGs3Po
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) May 8, 2016
@ChrisPerkinsDnD I was running into trouble with this because it always felt like the patron's agenda needed to align with the plot, somehow
— sam kritchevsky (@sam_kritch) May 8, 2016
The patron has made an investment in the warlock. As the warlock gains power, the patron's influence grows. https://t.co/rfk29mewMS
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) May 8, 2016
@ChrisPerkinsDnD @Wolfenight I don't know, I'm playing a warlock whose patron is Elvira, Mistress of the Dark. True story.
— Stephen Downie (@OneStephen) May 8, 2016
I ❤️ Elvira, Mistress of the Dark. https://t.co/ZK2xIQgpFf
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) May 8, 2016
@ChrisPerkinsDnD Even Fey Patrons? The Fey in my games are assholes, but not really dark.
— BiteyMcChomp (@BiteyMcChomp) May 8, 2016
Fey can have a really dark edge to them. Immortality does weird things to one's perspective. https://t.co/LynMTve2vz
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) May 8, 2016