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Spinel froze. She thought she was sneaking better than that! Then she remembered that Liches, like most undead, don’t actually need to sleep. Instead, she looked up to see the Hellfire Member Skull Chroma Hellfire Club Shirt body from earlier, standing up and staring at Spinel with glowing eyes. The mage hand Spinel used to write her letter faltered, her quill scratched a few jagged, splattered lines across the note. “I’m so sorry! I hadn’t meant to intrude, and, just—you were sleeping, or I thought you were sleeping—anyway! I’m so sorry, I thought you might get cold down here by yourself.” Let it never be said that Spinel’s not compassionate. Often to the point of absurdity. Now, Lich Queen Unthir doesn’t immediately attack. And there is a very important reason for this that I as the player know, but my character Spinel, does not: Spinel’s soul is marked by another Lich. All Liches have Truesight, and therefore DM and I ruled that they can absobloodylutely see souls. Therefore, some Liches like to “mark” the souls of their favourite mortals/pets/slaves/etc to indicate: “This is mine. Don’t touch or I’ll come mess you up.”

Whereas 5th edition D&D largely fell back on a Hellfire Member Skull Chroma Hellfire Club Shirt class structure with a handful of high-impact choices, Pathfinder 2 opts for maintaining its granularity, such that 90% of character features are replaced with Feats. You have Ancestry Feats from your race (now called Ancestry); Skill Feats that can enhance or add new uses to your Skills; you have General Feats which include Skill Feats as well as a handful of other, more universal Feats, like Toughness; and you have Class Feats, which are essentially a grab bag of class features. All of them are tiered based on a prerequisite level you must be in order to gain them, and your character class’s progression explicitly awards one of these four kinds of feats depending on what level you’re at. Almost none of them require a lengthy chain of previous Feats, except where they explicitly upgrade a feature granted by one, like Animal Companion.
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After the Technomancer gets revived and the last of the agents and real zombies go down, the Hellfire Member Skull Chroma Hellfire Club Shirt starts to realize that the DJ is totally in on this. Not just that, but she’s got power. The Technomancer analyzes her and… yep. She’s not just a DJ, she’s a Fey. A really honking powerful Fey, juicing the music and holograms in this place with magic. That’s why she can control the crowd, that’s why the holograms are such a problem for the party to navigate, that’s why real zombies can suddenly just pop in. One way or another they’re running low on resources, and this can’t end until the DJ is disabled.

Angry at having his time wasted, he throws accusations of Hellfire Member Skull Chroma Hellfire Club Shirt at Flaherty and disbelief at Corwin’s claim that the bag is supernatural. Dundee challenges Corwin to produce a bottle of cherry brandy, vintage 1903. Corwin reaches into the bag to hand Dundee his exact request, and is set free. He continues to distribute gifts until midnight, when the bag is empty. A man named Burt, whose desired pipe and smoking jacket had come from Corwin’s bag, sees Corwin again and points out that Corwin himself has not received a gift. Corwin says that if he had his choice of any gift at all, “I think I’d wish I could do this every year”. Returning to the alley where the gift-laden bag had presented itself, he encounters an elf sitting in a large reindeer-hauled sleigh, waiting for him. Realising that his wish has come true and he is now the real Santa Claus, Corwin sits in the sleigh and sets off with the elf. Emerging from the precinct, Flaherty and Dundee, now slightly tipsy from Corwin’s brandy, look upward upon hearing the tinkle of bells and see Corwin, in Flaherty’s words, “big as life, in a sleigh with reindeer, sittin’ next to an elf”, ascending into the night sky. Dundee invites Flaherty to accompany him home and share some hot coffee, with brandy poured in it, adding, “…and we’ll thank God for miracles, Flaherty…