What Is Aeor? | Critical Role's Powerful City That Almost Destroyed The Gods
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- Опубліковано 15 лип 2024
- In this video we answer the question What Is Aeor? Critical Role's Fallen City that Almost Destroyed the Gods in the Calamity. D&D fans might be familiar with Aeor from its appearance in critical role campaign 2. Another one of Matt Mercer's amazing creations Aeor still holds many untold secrets.
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What Is Aeor? | Critical Role's Powerful City That Almost Destroyed The Gods - Розваги
What other secrets do YOU think awaits in Aeor?
I know it is a meme.. but I want some juicy and hilariously relevant Bolo lore 🤷
F.C.G's legs.
Love to see the laboratory/shop where they put together Fresh Cut Grass and his compatriots, if the other automata are real. Places in Aeor where specialist knowledge is retained in other forms (infecting spirit that cooperates with the host to achieve goals of it's own putting a friendly twist on a necromancer NPC has a charm to it IMHO), After the Mighty Nien visit, is Aeor more open to relic hunting? Arcane energy enhancements. More mad mages and artificers frozen beneath in places yet to be explored.
This is so helpful, especially with all the new reveals in C3 connecting back to the Calamity and all the Ruidus things
I seriously love these videos! Thank you so much for all the work you’ve done. You’ve inspired me 🖤
I dont play D&D but I watch Critical role, with that said I have a question. You talk about the betrayer gods and what happened to them and the artifacts. Yet you pull D&D official handbooks to back up stuff. My question is basically is this just D&D lore or is it Critical role lore? Do these places, gods, and stories all already exist in D&D or do some of them exist and he just chooses the back story? Does the Raven queen who ascended to godhood from Aeor actually exist in the D&D official text, or is it just a creature with a stat block in the official text, or is it not even in the D&D books at all? Sorry if the question is confusing I tried my best to get the point across.
It’s actually a combination of the two. Everything as a whole has its basis in classic D&D lore with a smidge of Pathfinder added in (Sarenrae & the gunslinger subclass), but has been tweaked & repurposed for Matt’s world of Exandria. Take the Raven queen for example. Almost everything about her history as Matt has described it is textbook D&D that has been passed down since her creation but Critical Role only changed a few details to make her Matt’s own interpretation. Same with Aeor & the Aeromatons. Flying cities have long since been established in earlier editions along with the warforged player race, but Critical Role’s lore combined the two, leading to a unique city that created what is essentially a reskinned player race. Does this help?
Is that a Gorm, at 3:30?
Just wish you put credits to the artists of those images. I could recognize many of the images you used and know the artists that made them. Using other peoples art without permission is not cool.
always gon find something to whine abt