Jester of the FoS wrote: ↑Mon Jun 06, 2022 9:06 pm
Rucht Lilavivat wrote: ↑Thu May 26, 2022 12:36 pm
4) I also like that they took the setting and advanced the timeline. I didn't need to read, again, that Azalin tried to escape and failed. That's been canon for decades. I really like that something happened in Darkon and we don't know what! Did he escape? Did he blow himself up? I really like that it's been left unknown.
Nitpick: It didn't advance the timeline so much as roll it back. Azalin blew up Darkon in the Requiem. He just never returned and now the land is vanishing. What happened to him is a big mystery, but one we'll never know the answer to.
Nitpick of your nitpick (sorry for necro-posting

):
The Ravenloft: Mist Hunters module series uses Azalin as a recurring antagonist and final boss of the campaign, answering many questions about him that
VRGtR left unaddressed. While it's debatable whether those modules should be considered canon (does the idea of "canon" even matter in 5e?) they give us an interesting new take on old Azzie, which...
...I don't hate.
If anything, I'd say they managed to improve Azalin in a couple of small ways. The fact that his curse is partially lifted when he's inside Irik's mausoleum, and that knowing that, he
still refuses to visit his son, immediately tells you what kind of person he is.
Likewise, putting emphasis on his pride as a king, and letting him know that his domain and subjects are doomed if he leaves, adds an additional layer to his torment. Even if he does escape, that will only demonstrate that he is worthless as a king and as a father. His laboratory notes in the final adventure show him all but screaming that Darkon is not "real" and its destruction shouldn't matter to him, but we get the strong impression that a part of him still cares, and we are left uncertain what path he might choose in the end. Could Irik's ghost be right that some part of his father can still be redeemed? With Azalin, who knows?
Plus, I thought the writers' hinting at other ongoing plans involving a female clone named "Subject S" was a nice touch.
