New Character Options from Erlendheim Part 4

Back to the characters

This is the latest in a series of posts on the new character options I introduced for the PCs in my D&D campaign known as Erlendheim. It was based on a home-brew world of my own but intersected with the 2nd Edition AD&D version of the Planescape setting. This was very special for me as I had always loved that setting and the Planescape products from that time. It was very exciting for me to explore it with my players and I wanted to make it special for them too. So, I created, with their help, new features and class options for each of them. They have little or nothing to do with balance in the game, and most of them are overpowered but that didn’t bother me. It just meant I could ramp up the challenge of the situations they ended up in. You can take a look at the previous entries in this series here.

How to Resurrect a God

So, at a point during their adventures through Sigil, the PCs in my D&D campaign of a few years ago discovered that the god to whom most of them owed their devotion, Helm, was, in fact, dead. Or, at the very least, gone. In the Parted Veil bookshop, the proprietor and confirmed atheist, Kesto Brighteyes, confirmed this for them. This shook our Bariaur cleric’s beliefs to their core. As a senior priest of Helm, Menuk had been praying to his god all his life, and receiving spells and other abilities in return. So, if his god was dead? Who had been answering his prayers? The answer was Aegir, the elemental spirit and Fathomless former patron of our Warlock. They had been intercepting the prayers of the people of Erlendheim and gathering power from them for centuries, posing as Helm and controlling the populace. This revelation rocked Menuk to his core and he immediately lost access to all his priestly spells and features. But at that moment, he also started to hear a noise, as of a plate gauntlet scraping against stone. Only he could perceive it. And it got him thinking there must be a connection to Helm.

This set the PCs off on an investigation, following the trail that began with the sound in Menuk’s head. They had already heard of a portal to the Astral Plane, where they might find the body of Helm floating forever through that wispy sea. It was in the Shattered Temple, headquarters of the Faction known as the Athar, a fiercely anti-deity group. So, they infiltrated the building and jumped through that portal onto the petrified body of a god. Here, the noise in Menuk’s head became clearer, beginning to sound like the words, “Pray, pray, pray, pray, pray to me.” They fought an Astral Dreadnought, which had taken up residence in the region, while Menuk used the power of prayer to awaken Helm.

I inserted a “god-resurrection” mini-game here. This gave the otherwise de-powered Menuk a goal and a focus for the fight while the others struggled with the Dreadnought.

When his prayers finally woke the god, Helm’s great, mailed fist rose and crushed the Astral Dreadnought. He then transported the PCs back to his home plane, Mechanus, where he appeared to them, once more restored to his throne. And this was when he declared Menuk to be his new Right Hand, and imbued him with a new set of Clerical abilities along with all those he lost earlier.

This was one of the most epic and grand encounters and scenarios I have ever run and it was a joy to bring this chapter full circle.

New Cleric Features – Helm’s Right Hand

Below are the details of the new Cleric features that he got. As always, these were written specifically for this particular Life Domain Cleric of Helm so their usefulness might be limited. But, if any of them catch your eye, please feel free to customise and use as you want.

Channel Divinity: The Watcher Over the Fallen

From 2nd level the Life Domain Cleric can use this feature once between long rests. When any creature that is within the Cleric’s line of sight falls to 0 hit points, as a reaction, using Channel Divinity, they can choose to restore them to one hit point instead. This feature cannot be used to heal undead or constructs.

Tough Love

From 6th level, when the Life Domain Cleric summons a weapon using the Spiritual Weapon spell, it can be used to cast any of their healing spells.

Channel Divinity: Helm’s Shield

From 8th level, the Life Domain Cleric gains the ability to summon Helm’s protective power in the form of a shimmering bubble of light. Helm’s Shield surrounds them or any creature the Cleric chooses and can see within thirty feet.
The Shield has an AC of 10 and hit points equal to 10 + the Cleric’s level.

Helm’s Mailed Fist

From 14th level the Cleric gains the ability to transform into the physical embodiment of Helm in the world. They take on the form of a glowing, platinum warrior, adorned in full plate and standing 14 feet tall. The Cleric can take this form for a number of rounds equal to their wisdom modifier (minimum of 1.)
The form grants the following:
AC bonus: +3
Temporary Hit Points: 15 + Wis modifier
Spell Slots: 1 extra spell slot of any level available to the Cleric
Channel Divinity: 1 extra Channel Divinity
Attacks: Add +5 to hit and +5 to weapon damage (damage counts as magical damage)


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Author: Ronan McNamee

I run thedicepool.com, a blog about ttrpgs and my experience with them.

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