Difference between revisions of "Avaricious"
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{{mentalFault | {{mentalFault | ||
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− | |description=Greed, | + | |description=Greed is good. At least, it's good to you. You have a very strong desire to line your pockets, although what you do with your riches is up to your individual tastes. Be you a miser or spendthrift, you take a −2 penalty on [[Virtue]] checks to resist opportunities, even obviously dangerous ones (fun if you're also a [[Coward]]), that offer significant largess. You'll probably end up searching for treasure in every corner of a dungeon (or similar location where unowned valuables might reasonably lie unclaimed), or looting every corpse you find — friend and foe alike. You cannot resist taking any ''especially'' valuable-looking object except by making a [[Virtue]] check (DL 15 or more, depending on value of item and circumstance). That golden, gem-encrusted urn must be worth a king's ransom, and even if you ''know'' it's booby-trapped, you've just got to have it… |
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Latest revision as of 20:17, 6 April 2015
Greed is good. At least, it's good to you. You have a very strong desire to line your pockets, although what you do with your riches is up to your individual tastes. Be you a miser or spendthrift, you take a −2 penalty on Virtue checks to resist opportunities, even obviously dangerous ones (fun if you're also a Coward), that offer significant largess. You'll probably end up searching for treasure in every corner of a dungeon (or similar location where unowned valuables might reasonably lie unclaimed), or looting every corpse you find — friend and foe alike. You cannot resist taking any especially valuable-looking object except by making a Virtue check (DL 15 or more, depending on value of item and circumstance). That golden, gem-encrusted urn must be worth a king's ransom, and even if you know it's booby-trapped, you've just got to have it…