Tabletop Gaming

PATHFINDER: ABSALOM CITY OF LOST OMENS

Explore the Big Smoke

- Designer: Various | Publisher: Paizo RICHARD JANSENPARKES

One of the greatest lures of the Path nder RPG has always been its setting. Golarion is a complex kitchen-sink of tropes and cliches that gleefully rip o everything from Conan the Barbarian to Les Miserables, and at the heart of everything stands the metropolis of Absalom. As be ts a world built on adventure, this vast and storied city is packed with countless ideas for games and quests. You could easily guide a party of heroes from their rst brush with danger through to their ascension to legends without ever crossing the walls. Every corner seems to be alive with intrigue and crime, and every park is a potential battlegrou­nd. Conveying an appropriat­e feeling of both scale and depth for a city as dense as Absalom is no easy feat. It’s not the kind of thing you can cover in a single spread, or even a single chapter of a wider book. It requires something chunky, stu ed with enough informatio­n to ll an encyclopae­dia. Enter Absalom: City of Lost Omens. e latest edition to Path nder 2E’s array of sourcebook­s, it’s a huge and occasional­ly unwieldy love-letter to one of the most fascinatin­g cities found in fantasy gaming. Where other books have been keen to embrace the game’s rules-heavy, option-dense style of play, City of Lost Omens revels in its role as a guide. Perhaps the simplest way to illustrate this is to simply glance at the breakdown of its contents. As a whole, the book extends to very nearly 400 pages. Of these, only a scanty seven are given over to new feats, gear and other crunchy bits of rules text. e remainder is almost entirely devoted to pure worldbuild­ing. is is, honestly, a lot to take in. e text is densely packed with names, dates and locations. Any serious attempt to get a handle on the book requires extensive use of the - fortunatel­y well-constructe­d index. If anyone can claim to have an absolute understand­ing of everything in City of Lost Omens they are either a genius or one of the editors. ere are hundreds of shops, streets and temples laid out for gamers to explore, and dozens and dozens of NPCs given potted biographie­s. Everything from the famous Starstone Cathedral, where the fatally selfassure­d can attempt to brave a deadly dungeon for a shot at godhood, to the dankest and darkest streets of e Puddles is touched upon with a careful eye and a quick pen. Despite this devotion to drawing out the complex world, however, City of

Lost Omens makes sure to keep at least one eye on the fact that it isn’t simply a gazetteer. Many of the pages are dotted with invitation­s to adventure; small, sketched-out hooks that GMs can use to entice players. Some of these are linked to the more powerful, obvious locations, but many are sparked from small and intimate locations.

A neat side-bar alongside the descriptio­n of a famous restaurant, for example, includes a potential quest from the head chef. He is being hounded by a mysterious customer demanding that he prepare and serve an angelic - and thoroughly sentient - aasimar, with the lives of his family under threat if he doesn’t comply.

ere isn’t all that much for GMs to go on, but just the hint of adventure could easily spiral into several sessions of satisfying gaming.

Still, though, the sheer quantity of lore on hand can be hard to digest. It’s well-written and solidly presented, but it’s hard to imagine how much of it the average gaming group will use. Especially when you consider that much of the more fundamenta­l stu has already been chronicled in fanmade wikis and websites online.

e book only really falls into must-buy territory for two groups of customers. e rst are those who are certain that they’re going to run a campaign set in Absalom’s twisting streets within the next couple of years. e second are the die-hard Path nder fans who simply want to know more about a world than you can scrape from a wiki page.

Absalom: City of Lost Omens is an incredible guide to one of fantasy gaming’s most complex and convoluted capitals. It really has no interest in o ering anything beyond that and does not pretend to serve any other goal. is won’t be for everyone, but if the idea of 400 pages of raw lore is an exciting prospect, it’ll be a ne addition to your library.

❚ PLAY IT? YES

A thick, detailed guide to one of gaming’s greatest cities.

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