Oblivion: Difference between revisions

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(Added "Ashen Relic" and "Wisdom of the Dead" from the Book of Nod Apocrypha.)
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= LEVEL 2 =
= LEVEL 2 =
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== ASHEN RELIC ==
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'''Oblivion''' ••
'''Prerequisite:''' Ashes to Ashes ''or'' Oblivion's Sight
''This Ceremony allows for the preservation of pieces of a Kindred’s body even after they’ve been destroyed. The Ceremony has become more dangerous in the era of the Second Inquisition, as tangible proof of the Kindred’s existence poses more danger than ever before. Many of the Hecata and Ministry hunt down such relics, lest the secret of this ancient Ceremony draw unwanted attention from Kindred of the Camarilla or the Second Inquisition. Still, some morbid Kindred find relief in surrounding themselves with the remains of their ancestors (or descendants) and practitioners of Oblivion occasionally find other uses for such relics. To the mercurians of the thinbloods, such relics are a source of speculation and an ingredient of unknown power for their alchemy.''
'''Ingredients:''' The decaying body of a vampire, plus salt and herbs associated with embalming.
'''Process:''' The concoction is applied to the body or body part of the destroyed vampire. Since the decay of the remains — especially supernatural features such as fangs — only takes a few minutes at most, a swift performance is essential.
'''System:''' The player makes their Ceremony test. A win preserves one small body part, such as a finger bone or a fang, while three successes in the margin can preserve a femur or skull. Once created, the relic (usually in the form of a mummified hand, skull, femur, or desiccated eye) persists until destroyed or exposed to sunlight. At the Storyteller’s discretion, a particularly high roll or a critical success may grant the relic the power to persist despite sunlight.
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''<sub>Book of Nod Apocrypha, pg. 35</sub>''
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''<sub>Players Guide, pg. 95<br>Prerequisite(s) for ReVamped, pg. 87</sub>''
''<sub>Players Guide, pg. 95<br>Prerequisite(s) for ReVamped, pg. 87</sub>''
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== WISDOM OF THE DEAD ==
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'''Oblivion''' ••
'''Prerequisite:''' Ashes to Ashes ''or'' Where the Veil Thins
''This Ceremony allows the Kindred to glean skills and abilities from the head or skull of a corpse. The information gleaned represents the spiritual echoes of the deceased. Their spirit or will is not invoked.''
'''Ingredients:''' The head or skull of the deceased, pure water and a small flame.
'''System:''' The cermonist must possess a skull or head. After rolling Resolve + Oblivion (Difficulty 2 for a mostly intact head, or 3 for a skull), the Kindred begins to glean knowledge from the deceased. The Storyteller will name one skill the deceased was most knowledgeable about in life (or unlife if a Kindred skull) and an additional skill per point of the margin of success. For the rest of the night, the user may draw upon the deceased’s knowledge: each time the user rolls one of the deceased’s skills, so long as they are still carrying their skull or head, they may add 2 dice to your dice pool. This only applies if the deceased had a higher skill rating than the user.
At dawn, roll one die for each skill roll boosted: a failure on any of these dice indicates the skull or head dissolves to ashes as the Ceremony ends and it cannot be reconstituted by any means.
'''Duration:''' Until dawn, or the head/skull is destroyed.
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''<sub>Book of Nod Apocrypha, pg. 35</sub>''
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Revision as of 14:22, 17 January 2024

OBLIVION

Obtenebration | Necromancy | Abyss Mysticism | Mortis | Thanatosis


Oblivion is a mysterious, unpalatable power that most vampires rightly fear to use, witness, or fall victim to. Only vampires of Clans Lasombra and Hecata wield it with any frequency, and even they do so tentatively. Oblivion requires cautious masters who know the power’s risks, as no other Discipline reaches into the Underworld and allows its manipulator to extract tangible darkness or furious spectres. Oblivion is the darkest of arts.


Notably, while the Lasombra are prone to expanding their repertoire of Oblivion powers, the Hecata focus their energies on developing Ceremonies. Ceremonies take longer, but are required for communing with and making passage through to the lands of the dead.




CHARACTERISTICS


Discipline oblivion.png
  • Type: Mental
  • Masquerade Threat: Medium-High.
    Spirits and abyssal shadows rarely show up well on cameras but are obviously unnatural if witnessed in person.
  • Blood Resonance: None.
    Psychopaths and the emotionally detached. Blood empty of Resonance.
  • Note: When making a Rouse check for an Oblivion power or Ceremony, a result of “1” or “10” results in a Stain, in addition to any Hunger gained. If the user’s Blood Potency allows for a re-roll on the Rouse check, they can pick either of the two results.

Oblivion allows for the manipulation of creatures and substances originating from the Underworld. When the Hecata use this Discipline, they tend to channel the entropic nature of the Underworld and its surroundings, decaying flesh, calling forth spirits, and posing a dangerous risk to the living.


Oblivion projections and spirits sustain damage from fire and sunlight, counting as vampires with Blood Potency 1 in this regard. They also take one level of Aggravated Health damage per round from bright, direct lights, and may also be damaged (Superficially or Aggravated) from blessed weapons and artifacts, depending on the strength of the blessing and whether the wielder has True Faith.


Oblivion’s powers are ineffective in brightly lit areas. Daylight and rooms without shadows are prohibitive, preventing the Discipline’s successful function, though ultraviolet light and infrared light place no restriction on the Discipline’s use. Moderately lit rooms apply a one-die penalty to the Discipline roll involved.


The use of Oblivion negatively affects the necromancer’s psyche, with many powers causing Stains as the vampire finds themselves performing increasingly macabre acts in service to this Discipline.