Funny, because his eployer (a mutant sorceress) does not have one. Faxon there is barely a unique enemy, and yet he’s got his own miniature. Likewise, plenty of the more minor villains show up.
The Succubus queen Areelu Vorlesh, Khorramzadeh the Balrog, Aponavicia the Marilith, Xanthir Vang the Walking Worm… they are all here, and awesome! Khorramzadeh kind of resembles the previous set’s Fire Demon (same species), but believe me, he is a sight to behold in person. On the evil NPC side, we have almost all of the main villains of the campaign. And hey, her armor is modest! That other one is Imrijka, an orc lady who raided Carmen Sandiego’s closet. Of course, they picked a succubus because she’s pretty and humanoid, and I would love to see an ugly monster seek redemption, but she is a really cool figure. But see that succubus there? Arueshalae is the first redeemed/good-aligned demon that Pathfinder has used, and she might be the first for D&D as a whole, at least canonically. Surprisingly, I only pulled a few of them, and to be honest not many are represented. Some of the adventure’s NPCs are indeed represented in Wrath of the Righteous. The Vescavor Queen is surprisingly larger than the Apocalypse Locust. Gigantic, but awesome! And plenty of his locust servants show up fairly often in the set, bigger than you would expect. He stands about six or seven inches tall, which is GIGANTIC for this kind of thing.
The Incentive piece is the main villain, Deskari. Just as before, they are tiny – medium and small are an inch or less, while Large figures get to be two to three inches (Baphomet, Khorramzadeh, and the Vescavor Queen are the only ones reaching that height).
#Pathfinder movie fanfiction for free
The figures come four to a pack (three medium/small and one large) for $15, or about $45 for the big incentive dude (shipped for free with a case, retails for that amount).
#Pathfinder movie fanfiction plus
It contains 55 normal minis plus one ginormous “Incentive” piece. The miniatures set coincides with the release of th elast part of the adventure, too. It also uses the recently-added “Mythic” rule set in Pathfinder, which allows characters to become strong enough to face enemies like gods and major demon lords. Along with the obvious level of demon-smiting, it has a surprising number of well-realized NPCs, to the point where the adventure feels like a good novel (note: There ARE novels being written, but they are awful.
The adventure starts with a major demonic incursion, and soon becomes a massive struggle to stop Deskari, Demon Lord of the Apocalypse, from taking over. WotR is an epic adventure set in the Worldwound, a place where the border between earth (“Golarion”) and Hell (The Abyss) is weakest. Take that, haters! Wrath of the Righteous is a module-based set – although a lot of the figures are of generic monsters (and thus always useful), pretty much all of them at least appeared in Wrath of the Righteous, a massive six-part adventure path published by Paizo. Pathfinder, by the way, is sort of like Dungeons & Dragon’s knockoff cousin – developed because some people did not like 4th Edition, but wanted to see 3rd Edition continue. Some months back, I reviewed Skull & Shackles, a pirate-themed set of Pathfinder miniatures.