Nendreel wrote:Role math time again. I modified Rodion's list from D5 to save time.
26 players
3 Elder Things (Lovo, CM5, ghostly)
3 Yith (Kanin, Comm9, NG1)
1 Shoggoth (elon)
1 Black Brotherhood Leader (Strike)
2 Re-Animators (Nen, PCM)
1 Recruiter (Jak)
9 Unaligned JOAT Humans (Chuck, Yoshi, Betiko, Rishaed, Edoc, Vodean, IB, Jonty, chap)
3 Town JOAT humans (Saf, Rodion, spiesr)
1 Town dreamer king (Soundman)
1 Outer God (Hippo)
1 Other (Witt)
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I thought it was time that I reposted this.
Just a reminder of why Nendreel needed to go. It is also a reminder of a skewed world of unreality. Those of you who know you are in the wrong place and/or know that others are listed in places that should be - take heed.
Compare this to:
betiko wrote:ok just a little recap isn't going to hurt anybody, as you can see all townies have been targeted at some point, even though they are all here. It's definitely someone's win condition to kill them all:
DoomYoshi: normal unaligned? human(targeted twice, zombie, cult)
betiko: normal unaligned? human (killing ability)
jonty125: normal unaligned? human (killing ability)
rishaed: normal unaligned? human (aligned to hippo then changed to survivor? killing ability?)
new guy1, yith
Commander9, yith (cult)
thehippo8, human form yog (killing ability)
pancakemix, reviver doc (killing ability?)
Rodion town joat (targeted twice, zombie, killing ability)
soundman, town dreamer (revived, killing ability?)
spiesr, town doc (revived, formerly? insane, killing ability)
safariguy5, town joat (revived, killing ability?)
also, how can chapcrap be in a yith body and not the other way around? / did you get that right?
Aside from the revived - Rodion and Rishaed stick out like sore thumbs!
Rishaed has been all over the place and playing far too scummy to keep around. He has tried to fly under the radar and until now done a pretty good job of it. But your number is up buddy!
Vote Rishaed.
@ Betico - There is an often misunderstood misconnection between the book
The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers (1895) and the Lovecraft version. H.P. Lovecraft read Chambers book in early 1927 and included passing references in his own writings (ie, the Lake of Hali and the Yellow Sign—in "
The Whisperer in Darkness" (1931), one of his seminal Cthulhu Mythos stories). Lovecraft borrowed Chambers' method of only vaguely referring to supernatural events, entities, and places, thereby allowing his readers to imagine the horror for themselves. The imaginary play
The King in Yellow effectively became another piece of occult literature in the
Cthulhu Mythos alongside the Necronomicon and others. In the story, Lovecraft linked the Yellow Sign to Hastur. Hastur (The Unspeakable One, Him Who Is Not to be Named, Assatur, Xastur, or Kaiwan) is a fictional entity (Great Old One) of the Cthulhu Mythos. The King in Yellow is merely one of many aspects of this potent and truly amorphous denizen.
Fastposted a bunch