Norbert is still a pretty little wallflower. If there ever was a glowing undead killing sword up for grabs he would feel he made it as an adventurer and return home to show it to all his relatives.
Norbert is still a pretty little wallflower. If there ever was a glowing undead killing sword up for grabs he would feel he made it as an adventurer and return home to show it to all his relatives.
Alright, we will keep such things out of his hands for now. :)
What do we tell the baron.
I was thinking of letting Roald say, that there is an attack on his house in the making. It would already have happend if Olaf didn't go for the wrong baron, so this is the truth. We can tell that people think he kidnapped the mayor's daughter, on top of all the taxes and "thievery" his guards put the people through in his name, and that this was the last straw.
We than put ourselves in the position of negotiators between the three parties. Afterall, economically speaking it's better to trade with each other than be at war
Norbert couldn't remember his name, but Phil sounds right.
Phil would have a better view of the house. To Norbert all rich people and homes look alike.
Hmm... Feels like we may need a roll to determine if Roald'swords offend the baron, don't we think?
I am not sure what to roll. There does not seem to be any attempt to be insightful or anything, so WIS does not seem right. Is Roald trying to be charming or somehow avoid offence?
If no normal roll fits we can roll the Die of Fate.
He's not trying to offend, but also not 'not trying '.
He doesn't like being played and has a hard time not showing it.
Can we let the baron say something like 'go on' as if he's thinking: I hear your words but I don't like what I'm hearing, you better tread lightly.
Let Roald continue his argument and roll the die of fate afterwards?