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I'm opening this thread by Mr.Bambu advice.
Copying from a discussion we were having:
About the infernals
About Drizzt
Copying from a discussion we were having:
About the infernals
And here I proceed to further elaborate:Saga89 said:since it's not directly stated an infernal is a threat in the physical sense but may be intended also as a threat to the influence of an archdemon/archdevil (after all the enmity between Graz'zt and Demogorgon was born purely out of the possession of a title) [...] the infernal IMHO should be downgraded to something like: at least High 3-A, possibly low 2-C, higher with preparation time.
Saga89 said:Back to the infernal and back when Robert J. Schwalb, crunch and fluff designer for the 4e, had a real blog and not this self-promoting thing, also interpreted the infernal as not a real imminent threat but only a potential one:
So they would still need to be powerful enough to dominate the "lower" circles of hierarchies of Lower Planes but weak enough to be "put down" like wild dogs by the highest echelons when need arises.robertjschwalb said:Neither the archdevils nor the gods tolerate their existence and many screaming scions are put down before they can swell in evil and size. Yet, perhaps as a testimony to the wickedness pervading the Nine Hells, there remain enough to be worrisome to those who cast a wary eye toward Asmodeus's blighted realm.
Personal power (in the destructive sense) in the Lower Planes is directly tied to prestige (or at least was up until 4e got discontinued; I have almost no knowledge about what 5e may have changed), as seen in the cases of the archdevils Bael, Glasya and Hag Countess, and to the control an outsider may exert out of his plane/demiplane/level/circle/whatever. There was also a 3.5 campaign against Demogorgon, Savage Tide published on Dungeon Magazine, where the whole point was to weaken his grasp on the 88th layer of the Abyss in order to weaken Demogorgon himself.
So a loose infernal would pose a threat in the sense he can almost certainly rise to a prominent position and gain enough power to become a real challenge.
So it could fairly be at least High 3-A, likely low 2-C, higher with preparation time.
Mr.Bambu said:As for the Infernal... that is very interesting, then. I would like to bring this up to the other D&D voodoo people (Azzy and Qawsed and the like) and perhaps suggest a rating be shifted to "At least 6-B, would eventually become 2-C"
Saga89 said:Not even the fact that the Epic Level Handbook suggests to threat all abominations as rank 0 divinities? That would also mean they can't be permanently killed by anything that doesn't have rank 0 divinity or higher, iirc. Or is that just low-Godly rege?Mr. Bambu said:The High 3-A tier still doesn't sit right with me since there's no reason to place it at baseline 4-D.
Mr. Bambu said:Probably just Low-Godly, though that is a good point. Those profiles were largely handled by Qawsed if you wanna speak with him.
About Drizzt
Saga89 said:Drizzt do'Urden defeating Demogorgon (it was heavily implied he defeated the actual demon prince and not only some aspect)
Saga89 said:About Driz'zt, the parallel Out of the Abyss 5e campaign corroborate what is said in the books making no mention of the various demon lords being avatars:
Mr. Bambu said:Also I will note, Drizzt should probably be beefed up in tier to "At least 6-C, possibly 6-B" based on his 4e level of 21 (putting him right between scaling to Imix and Father Llymic)