pantheonrising:player:pg_suggestions

Though you’re free to create any kind of character you like for the Pantheon Rising Adventure Path, the following suggestions are designed to help you make a character well suited for this campaign. These suggestions are summarized on the Suggested Character Options Table, which lists character options from strongly recommended to not recommended.

Ancestries

Alkenstar is home to a wide variety of ancestries and ethnicities, though the majority of its inhabitants are humans, particularly ethnic Garundi closely descended from Nexian and Gebbite immigrants. Since the city’s founding over a century ago, plenty of other diverse peoples have found their footing here, including Mwangi from west of the Barrier Peaks or south of Geb, Keleshites from as near as Katapesh or Qadira or as far as Kelesh, and Vudrani from Jalmeray or elsewhere across the Obari Ocean.

Dwarves are the city’s second-most populous ancestry, many hailing from the nearby Sky Citadel of Dongun Hold. It was Dongun dwarves who supplied the first firearms to Ancil Alkenstar’s burgeoning community of technologists and magic-weary refugees. Today, Dongun dwarves continue to be regarded as among the best gunsmiths and explosives engineers in the world.

Jaric halflings and Vourinoi elves are far from unknown in Alkenstar—Ambrost Mugland and Anjelique Loveless are only two of the most famous examples, respectively. Roughly as common as these are kholo and geniekin, the latter of which are perhaps more common than usual in Alkenstar due, in part, to the mysterious effects of mana storms on mortal bloodlines.

Finally, a notable number of Gebbite dhampirs and Nexian fleshwarps—comprising a combination of temporary visitors, traveling adventurers, and full-blown expatriates—also call the City of Smog home. Perhaps more than any other ancestries, these individuals are uniquely suited to Alkenstar’s industrial environment; hazardous pollutants and smog are of less concern to undead, and fleshwarps too often boast anatomies that lessen the severity of environmental dangers.

For more details on these ancestries and others that call Alkenstar home, see the Pathfinder Lost Omens Ancestry Guide.

Classes

Alkenstar is the Inner Sea’s preeminent hub of technological and industrial innovation. In the City of Smog, the quickest way to gain power, prestige, or profit is to invent something that other people want; this holds as true for adventurers as it does for aristocrats and common folk. Because scientific experimentation and progress are keystones of daily life in Alkenstar, alchemists and inventors (Pathfinder Guns & Gears ) do extremely well as a general rule. Whether by mixing rare reagents collected from the Mana Wastes or by tinkering with the literal tons of scrap that fill Alkenstar’s junkyards, there are countless opportunities for old-time residents and newcomers alike to practice the skills necessary to become accomplished in either of these fields.

The same can be said for the gunslinger class (Guns & Gears), which is probably more common in Alkenstar than in any other corner of the Inner Sea region. Alkenstar’s proximity to Dongun Hold —the birthplace of black powder—means that firearms aren’t just easily accessible, but practically commonplace. Mercenaries, monster slayers, bounty hunters, and criminals all might call themselves gunslingers, though only a few ever exhibit the true grit necessary to make it to the big leagues. The most talented shootists and desperados command a high price as guns-for-hire or swiftly rise through the ranks of organizations such as the shieldmarshals, making the gunslinger class a natural fit for this campaign.

For the full rules on gunslingers and inventors, see Pathfinder Guns & Gears.

Beyond these three thematically suitable classes— alchemists, gunslingers, and inventors—characters of any class well-suited for urban adventuring can hope to succeed in the Pantheon Rising Adventure Path. Investigators and rogues can uncover countless mysteries and hidden treasures on the streets of the City of Smog, and swashbucklers and bards can likewise find opportunities for escapades and entertainment at every turn.

For all of Alkenstar’s emphasis on technological novelties and progress, it’s sometimes hard to beat a well-placed punch or a masterfully executed sword swing. The fearsome threat of monsters encroaching from the Mana Wastes makes adventurous martial experts of all stripes—such as fighters, monks, and barbarians—always in high demand.

On the spiritual side of things, clerics, champions, and other pious adventurers might strongly consider Brigh, the Whisper in Bronze and patron goddess of clockwork inventors, as their deity. The Temple of Brigh in Alkenstar is the largest organized church dedicated to the Bronze Lady in the Inner Sea region. Ever-orderly Abadar is also a popular deity with Alkenstar’s most cosmopolitan believers.At the other extreme, comfort-eschewing wasteland wanderers vastly prefer the age-old wisdom of the divine hunter, Erastil. Finally, many Dongun dwarves pay stalwart homage to Torag, Father of Dwarvenkind, and honor him with creative spins on ancient traditions.

Because of the surrounding region’s unique climate—magic-warping mana storms are relatively common outside the city’s walls—druids, wizards, summoners, and sorcerers don’t flock to Alkenstar as a rule, but they aren’t necessarily unknown either. The few arcane spellcasters who intentionally travel to Alkenstar often do so in the hopes of attending Blythir College, the city’s only official academy of magic. Sorcerers and druids are more likely to dwell on the city’s outskirts, where they can better tap into the mysterious powers of so-called wellspring magic (Pathfinder Secrets of Magic 248).

Many spellcasters living in the City of Smog are exiles from Geb or Nex, where they likely first gained their penchant for ancient necromantic secrets or universal arcane truths, respectively. Witches, magi, and oracles similarly travel to the Mana Wastes for their own mysterious reasons, and their unorthodox relationship with esoterica makes them perhaps a bit more common in the weird and wild Mana Wastes.

Languages

Owing to its cosmopolitan cultural makeup, the Grand Duchy of Alkenstar’s official language is Common (Taldane), though the high population of dwarves (especially dwarves from Dongun Hold) makes Dwarven nearly as ubiquitous. The most successful merchants and travelers also take it upon themselves to learn Kelish, a language commonly spoken in nearby nations like Geb, Nex, and Katapesh.

In the wastelands beyond Alkenstar’s walls, roving bandits, violent mutated giants, and horrific monsters tend to speak Kholo, Jotun, Aklo, or a pidgin of all three. Those who deal with evildoers could do far worse than to practice one of these tongues as well.

Skills and Feats

Alkenstar is a city of inventors and makers; thus, virtually everyone has at least a bit of training in the Crafting skill, which is useful not just for making and repairing things, but also identifying the many different kinds of clockwork creatures that roam the city. By the same token, anyone who expects to be fighting or evading clockworks and their masters would do well to study Thievery as a means of disabling devices.

Even for those with supernatural means of avoiding arrest, prowess in Athletics or Acrobatics can often spell the difference between capture and escape. Likewise, silver-tongued outlaws can benefit greatly from expertise in social skills like Deception, Diplomacy, Intimidation, or Society. Although Performance can be useful for creating diversions, a knack for Religion might be even more practical in a settlement whose predominant church—the Temple of Brigh—functions like an essential cog in daily goings-on. Of course, when all else fails, there’s always pure and simple Stealth, an invaluable addition to any outlaw’s skill repertoire.

Although Nature and Survival are of minimal use in Alkenstar proper, the outskirts of the city are rife with animals and environmental dangers, making naturalists and survivalists useful in certain situations. While Medicine and Occultism are always useful skills to have on hand, neither will open any special doors in this campaign.

Among the subcategories of the Lore skill, Alkenstar Lore, Brigh Lore, and Engineering Lore are highly relevant throughout this Adventure Path.

Suitable feats include any that complement your character concept and/or play into the above skills. As an outlaw, your character might particularly benefit from feats that could help you survive on the outskirts of proper society or without the assistance of the law. Likewise, because Alkenstar’s architecture is so tightly packed together, feats that increase mobility in close quarters will typically be more useful than those which require a Large animal companion or mount to enjoy. The Suggested Character Options Table includes lists of specific feats to consider for your character.

  • pantheonrising/player/pg_suggestions.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/10/30 15:11
  • by frayzion