<div>I've had a copy of awakened Talene (got her quite early, didn't realize how rare it was at the time) for some time and though she's still L she's been a key memeber of my team (one ascended, mostly M\M+ right now). I'm at ch.24 btw</div><div></div><div></div><div>My headmate really likes her ysoki Fighter's rat familiar, and was vaguely tossing around ideas for somehow playing her as a caster if said ysoki ever bit the dust. An awakened familiar could be fun! I don't yet have ideas for the others, but I'm very glad for their inclusions. :></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>download awakened poe</div><div></div><div>Download:
https://t.co/5l56zylL34 </div><div></div><div></div><div>They'd be a welcome sight on Golarion! After all, they stop Cthulhu eating ye! AUC.register('auc_MessageboardPostRowDisplay'); AjaxBusy.register('masked', 'busy', 'auc_MessageboardPostRowDisplay', null, null) Swiftpaws the Maned Wolf Jun 6, 2023, 06:10 am My character idea is a morbidly obese maned wolf (+2 Con, Cha) cultist (+2 Cha, Con) of Lamashtu either an efreeti sorcerer (if awakened animals have the ability to talk to normal animals) or flame druid with sorcerer archetype (if not) with boosts to Con, Wis, Int, and Cha and focusing on bluff, diplomacy, and intimidation and fire magic.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Given the clockwork prosthetics and such, I'd say that limbless animals could get limbs.Then again, maybe there's going to be a feat that have a limbless animal "grow" arms and legs. Not having arms and legs is exactly what makes an awakened snake pc interesting to me and so much cooler than a humanoid snake beastfolk. Looking and moving like other animals of your species is a big part of the appeal of this ancestry to me.Looking at the 3rd party dragon ancestry from battlezoo, I think they have solved this problem pretty well: The dragons have 2 hands normally, but you can take a class archetype on any martial class that takes your hands and your weapon/armor proficiencies away, but gives you strong unarmed attacks, ancestral armor and free feats. I would love to see something similar for awakened animals.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I should think that an awakened snake can use its lower body and tail like a pair of hands for the purposes of grappling folks and opening containers, and possibly even wielding weapons. Disney's animated Robin Hood and Jungle Book movies seem relevant...</div><div></div><div></div><div>Back in London, Holmes and Watson learn from the book about a mythical sea god who could be awakened by the sacrificing of persons representing the different nations. They also decipher Davy's numbers, which they find are co-ordinates pointing to Ardnamurchan Lighthouse on a Scottish coastline. Once at the lighthouse, Holmes and Watson have a final confrontation with the cultists and their leader Lord Rochester, whose fortune finances the sect. Holmes manages to stop the 'summoning', but a fierce storm appears, which Rochester assumes is the coming of Cthulhu. Despite Holmes' attempt to stop him, Rochester jumps to his death into the raging sea below. Upon returning to London, Watson plans to write their adventure into a book, however Holmes tells him to not do it as the knowledge they have witnessed may fall into the wrong hands, which Watson thankfully accepts.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>The mammalian brain contains glycogen, which is located predominantly in astrocytes, but its function is unclear. A principal role for brain glycogen as an energy reserve, analogous to its role in the periphery, had been universally dismissed based on its relatively low concentration, an assumption apparently reinforced by the limited duration that the brain can function in the absence of glucose. However, during insulin-induced hypoglycaemia, where brain glucose availability is limited, glycogen content falls first in areas with the highest metabolic rate, suggesting that glycogen provides fuel to support brain function during pathological hypoglycaemia. General anaesthesia results in elevated brain glycogen suggesting quiescent neurones allow glycogen accumulation, and as long ago as the 1950s it was shown that brain glycogen accumulates during sleep, is mobilized upon waking, and that sleep deprivation results in region-specific decreases in brain glycogen, implying a supportive functional role for brain glycogen in the conscious, awake brain. Interest in brain glycogen has recently been re-awakened by the first continuous in vivo measurements using NMR spectroscopy, by the general acceptance of metabolic coupling between glia and neurones involving intercellular transfer of energy substrate, and by studies supporting a prominent physiological role for brain glycogen as a provider of supplemental energy substrate during periods of increased tissue energy demand, when ambient normoglycaemic glucose is unable to meet immediate energy requirements.</div><div></div><div> dafc88bca6</div>