Race: Human
Gender: Male
Name: Ghenyfhar
Age: 32
Class: Alchemist/Fighter
Family: N
Prior Career Quests-
Defeating extremist members of different religions, intent that their way is the only way, endangering the lives of others in the process.
Religious Affiliation: None, extreme anti-theist
Goals-
Pathfinders goals and long term plans, which may influence party relations.
Pathfinder Skillsets
*ranked Basic, Proficient, Focus
Melee Combat Focus
Agility Proficient
Ranged Combat Proficient
Stealth None
Subterfuge None
Magic None (From his perspective)
Healing Basic
Lore (Arcana, dungeoneering, engineering, nature) Focus
Diplomacy None
Intimidation None
Sense Motive
Profession Alchemist
Skill Array Knows 12 languages,
Pathfinder Contract Recruiter Considerations-
*Failed Quests, Article Violations, and Injuries
- Repeated breaching article 1a, as a result of drunken bar brawls.
- Against working with clerics and Paladins.
Ghenyfhar is a muscular human, though due to various treatments given to himself, he isn't as human as he used to be.
He has grown a pair of vestigial arms, which he uses to aid himself in combat, with his natural arms swinging a lucerne hammer at foes from beyond the reach of most martial combatants, one vestigial limb holding a tower shield, and the other holding potions and other concoctions at the ready.
He has also grown a creature from his own flesh, a tiny creature that resembles a Compsognathus. Yet whether by accident or design, where the familiars to wizards and witches are often timid and in need of protection, Ghenyfhar releases his flesh-beast into battle, where it grows to the size of an adult human, getting stronger in the process.
Ghenyfhar often self-medicates during conflicts, drinking potions or injecting himself with syringes of something known only to him, and when others try, causes them to be sick. Yet somehow it can cause him to grow in size, stretch his limbs further, or somehow even distort reality and cause his very image to blur.
Ghenyfhar is on a crusade against the gods and their worshippers, claiming that they don't deserve to be worshipped, and it is mortals who are powerful. Self belief allows mortals to shape the world around them, and can be so powerful that a naive farmhand would not tell a god apart from the greatest of wizards. So why should we worship them, die in their causes, and fight their wars for them?
His strength of conviction is so strong, it causes those who claim to receive their power from gods to struggle to cast their spells on him, and when they do so, to be less effective than those who accept the preachings and dogma they spout.
This message was last edited by the player at 00:19, Fri 29 Mar 2019.