docs: update HBW/Miscellaneous-assistance-pages/Deity-Equivalences

This commit is contained in:
MortenGM 2025-06-22 17:21:00 +00:00 committed by Strix
parent 04d833ef73
commit ebc3cc30d6
1 changed files with 7 additions and 8 deletions

View File

@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
title: Deity Equivalences title: Deity Equivalences
description: Lists equivalent deities. Not to be read by players description: Lists equivalent deities. Not to be read by players
published: true published: true
date: 2025-06-22T15:42:35.605Z date: 2025-06-22T17:20:58.668Z
tags: game-master, deity equivalences, deities, pantheons, gods tags: game-master, deity equivalences, deities, pantheons, gods
editor: ckeditor editor: ckeditor
dateCreated: 2023-01-06T16:53:50.445Z dateCreated: 2023-01-06T16:53:50.445Z
@ -572,9 +572,9 @@ dateCreated: 2023-01-06T16:53:50.445Z
<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Lord of Nine represents <strong>Law as Chains</strong> — law as a seductive and absolute power, used not to guide or protect, but to trap, control, and corrupt. His commandments wear the mask of wisdom. His chains are clasped in moments of seeming victory.</p> <p>The Lord of Nine represents <strong>Law as Chains</strong> — law as a seductive and absolute power, used not to guide or protect, but to trap, control, and corrupt. His commandments wear the mask of wisdom. His chains are clasped in moments of seeming victory.</p>
<p>He does not crave adoration — he seeks obedience. Worship is rarely given to him by name; instead, it is offered through systems, codes, and beliefs that bind the soul in oaths. Entire cultures may revere discipline, honor, or sacred duty, believing they serve a god of structure or nobility — when, in truth, they are shackled by the contracts of the Lord of Nine. His truest followers are often unaware of their allegiance, mistaking submission for virtue and bondage for purpose.</p> <p>He does not crave adoration — he seeks obedience. Worship is rarely given to him by name; instead, it is offered through systems, codes, and beliefs that bind the soul in oaths. Entire cultures may revere discipline, honor, or sacred duty, believing they serve a god of structure or nobility — when, in truth, they are shackled by the contracts of the Lord of Nine. His truest followers are often unaware of their allegiance, mistaking submission for virtue and bondage for purpose.</p>
<p>The Lord of Nine does not steal your freedom — <strong>he convinces you to surrender it</strong>. His bargains seem fair, even generous. His words promise justice, security, victory — and always come at a cost unseen until it is too late.</p> <p>The Lord of Nine does not steal your freedom — <strong>he convinces you to surrender it</strong>. His bargains seem fair, even generous. His words promise justice, security, victory — and always come at a cost unseen until it is too late. He never speaks a lie — yet you are always deceived.</p>
<p>In every vow kept beyond reason, in every bargain accepted without understanding, his chains tighten. And when the last lock is sealed, the soul smiles, unaware it is already on its knees.</p> <p>In every vow kept beyond reason, in every bargain accepted without understanding, his chains tighten. And when the last lock is sealed, the soul smiles, unaware it is already on its knees.</p>
<p><strong>His end is order. Perfect, inescapable, eternal. A world where all are bound by their own consent, willingly shackled beneath his infernal dominion.</strong></p> <p>His end is order. Perfect, inescapable, eternal. A world where all are bound by their own consent, willingly shackled beneath his infernal dominion.</p>
<p><i>"Every contract is a promise. Every promise is a chain. Every chain, in time, leads to him."</i></p> <p><i>"Every contract is a promise. Every promise is a chain. Every chain, in time, leads to him."</i></p>
</td> </td>
<td> <td>
@ -582,11 +582,10 @@ dateCreated: 2023-01-06T16:53:50.445Z
<p><strong>The Desperate Merchant: </strong><i>"I gave them a fair contract — its not my fault they didnt read the fine print. If their ruin brings me wealth, then so be it. Business is war, and I play to win."</i></p> <p><strong>The Desperate Merchant: </strong><i>"I gave them a fair contract — its not my fault they didnt read the fine print. If their ruin brings me wealth, then so be it. Business is war, and I play to win."</i></p>
<p><strong>The Oathbound Warrior (Feudal Honor Example): </strong><i>"He is my lord. His word is law. If he commands it, I obey — without question, without doubt. Honor is not convenience. It is sacrifice."</i></p> <p><strong>The Oathbound Warrior (Feudal Honor Example): </strong><i>"He is my lord. His word is law. If he commands it, I obey — without question, without doubt. Honor is not convenience. It is sacrifice."</i></p>
<p><strong>The Dying Parent: </strong><i>"Let them take my soul, just let my son live. Let him grow strong, let him rise. Ill sign what they give me. Whatever the cost — Ill pay it."</i></p> <p><strong>The Dying Parent: </strong><i>"Let them take my soul, just let my son live. Let him grow strong, let him rise. Ill sign what they give me. Whatever the cost — Ill pay it."</i></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>The Cultured Diplomat: </strong><i>"He is not some monster with horns and flame. He is elegance, discipline, refinement. His promises are true — and that makes him better than any other god."</i></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>The Princes Regent: </strong><i>"The boy is too young to rule. I only do what must be done — on paper, in his name. Every seal is official, every decree legal. When he comes of age… there will be nothing left that isnt mine."</i></p>
<p><strong>Desperate farmer:</strong> <i>“Let my neighbors claim be overturned, my lord, for I had the land first. Give me the words to win the magistrates ear.”</i></p> <p><strong>The Noble Diplomat: </strong><i>"I promised peace, and I delivered it. So what if the terms favor us? They signed. If their people starve next winter, thats not my fault. They were warned."</i></p>
<p><strong>The Starving Mother: </strong><i>“I will do what must be done. Just let my children live through the winter.”</i></p> <p><strong>The Willing Acolyte: </strong><i>"Others serve out of fear or ignorance. Not me. I serve because he is right. In a world of chaos and lies, he alone is honest. He makes no promises he wont keep — and he keeps everything."</i></p>
<p><strong>The Court Official:</strong> <i>“Grant me clarity, Lord of Law, to find fault in their defense, and bind them with truth.”</i></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>
</td> </td>
<td>&nbsp;</td> <td>&nbsp;</td>