Village Backdrop: Y’taris (5e)

Village Backdrop: Y’taris (5e)

This installment of RSP’s Village Backdrop-series is 10 pages long, 1 page front cover, 1 page of advertisement, 1 page editorial/ToC, 1 page SRD and 1 page back cover, leaving us with 5 pages of content, so let’s take a look at the settlement!

 

Y’taris is a village born of convenience: In the bleak and desolate harshness of the Broken mountains, there is a stone circle crafted as a silent witness to the confluence of ley lines here; a nexus of power that brings pilgrims galore to these desolate shores. Here, angles have fought, fey have roamed, apocalyptic cults have tried to enact their genocidal fantasies…and right now, another type of ill has befallen the place, namely that of being basically the fantasy-equivalent of a cut-throat tourist trap.

 

One Ayred Guilespire is in charge of nearly all stalls in the Grey Market, a boil-covered disgusting gnome runs the taverns and a dwarven lady coordinates the pickpockets. That would be the rulers here. Yeah, this is not a nice place. While the settlement is, quality-wise, magically attuned, the marketplace section this time around is pretty standard considering the highly magical flavor of the place.

 

I mentioned that this was not a nice place, right? well, there’s a lich nearby. Who supposedly gets a stream of fresh corpses from the village. Yeah…Anyways, the village does come with the by now traditional nomenclature entries, notes on local dressing habits and appearances and, as always, 6 rumors and 6 events are neat and the latter even sport a unique little hazard. It should also be noted that the place’s taverns etc. come with notes on costs of drinks – and one, interestingly, even has a brawling fine. A missed chance: If you go to the wrong place, you may end up with a room with secret doors and staff stealing belongings…but no DCs to notice or general capabilities for the staff are provided.

 

Being a remote place, it is magic that makes the village work – once again providing a nice angle to develop as a GM. Oh, and much like real life tourist traps, there is an arcane system of fines in place, guaranteed to infuriate the PCs.

 

Beyond the obvious power of the confluence, there is also an even more powerful, less known place of dark might here and they say that you can even purchase corpses and similar necromancy supplies here…if you know where to look.

 

Conclusion:

Editing and formatting are top-notch, I didn’t notice any glitches. Layout adheres to RSP’s smooth, printer-friendly two-column standard and the pdf comes with full bookmarks as well as a gorgeous map, of which you can, as always, download high-res jpegs if you join RSP’s patreon. The pdf comes in two versions, with one being optimized for screen-use and one to be printed out.

 

Jeff Gomez’ Y’taris is an amazing idea -I really like the magical tourism angle and the execution per se is nice. However, at the same time, it fell short for me. There is ample adventuring potential, but if the place is such a powerful destination, why does no one clean it up? Where are the remnants of ages long past, the unique local effects? We have ample of ways to represent cool magical locales in PFRPG and this one…boils down to a VERY lame CL-bonus and a tiny chance of not using a spell slot while casting inside the circle. That’s really, really lame and the effect of the “hidden”, lesser-known power-nexus is also…kinda bland. Considering the vast potential and flavor of this place, I can’t really see anyone traveling here for the meager benefits the sights provide. 5e’s engine would have been perfect for some cool tweaks here…but alas, nope. Let me make that clear – this does have its benefits; it’s not a bad installment by any means…but it feels, to me, like it falls short of what it could have easily been. I can’t rate this higher than 3.5 stars – it doesn’t deserve being slapped down to 3, though, which is why I’ll round up.

 

You can get this village here on OBS!

 

You can directly support Raging Swan Press here on patreon!

 

Endzeitgeist out.

 

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