![]() Story Board Here you will find elements from my campaigns. The current year in my campaign is 5039 OC / 1357 DR My take on Elven ships: Everyone knows Elven ships are grown. How I see it is thedifferent tonnage is just different stages of life for the ship. The first mode of transport being the Glide-about. Then the Flitter, man-o-war, WarBird, Monarch Armada, and Armada. After a number of years magics are employed to transform it into it's next stage of life. And there is a lot of room to fill in with new ships. I'd like to see a new pic made of the "Bat" that is more organic in design to fill in a spot between Flitter and Man-o-War. The TigerMoth is a unique ship in my campaign.It has the ability to cloak. And that's a very rare ability for ships in the games I run. This ship was stolen by a female pirate and her crew before it could even enter service and is a black eye to the EIN whenever it shows up. It mainly sticks to raiding small ships and outposts. The Vigilance is the ship the PC's in my campaigns have come to call home. It has one very unique ability in being able to regenerate. it's a slow rate and could never effect the outcome of a battle but is invaluable when it comes to repair costs. Commissioned as the HMS Vigilance during the first Unhuman war by the Gray Hawk Navy, it looks as new as the day it first left dry dock because of it's regenerativeabilities. The secret is in the helm. it appears to "be one" with the deck. Not bolted to the floor boards like other ships. The PC's have also come to realize the Captains Log is the original one and is magically tied to the ship and helm. They have yet to realize its'significance.The Captain's Log of the Vigilance is a thick, sturdy book of Vellum pagesbound and covered with brown leather. The cover is stamped in gold leaf with theship's name and an obscure ancient saying. It reads: "His heart was mailed withoak and triple brass who first committed a frail ship to the wild seas." The Ring of Five Dragons is the adventuring company the crew of the Vigilance works for. more to come... |