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Bastards & Bloodlines: A Guidebook to Halfbreeds (Races of Renown)

Bastards & Bloodlines: A Guidebook to Halfbreeds (Races of Renown)



User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Another solid effort from Green Ronin Publishing
Having enjoyed their Master Class books, I decided to give one of the Races of Renown books a try.

Now, my understanding is that Green Ronin is prohibited from using any race-related material already published by Wizards of the Coast, so I avoided the books on orcs, whom I already know quite well, and drow, who I scarcely ever use, and went for what promised to be the most original book, this one.

This book really is original, providing some unique half-breed races, along with balanced rules for creating you own halfbreeds, either as races or templates. A few of the half-breeds use rules that make them a little to easy to abuse, particularly the Wyrd, an ogre mage/elf cross, but for the most part they’re fair and balanced and, most importantly, playable.

There’s only one real flaw with this book, and that’s a definite trend towards a lot of nature-focused half-breeds, combining various fey creatures with various woods-friendly humanoids. The results are always interesting (I have a player who now wants to play a woodwose), but perhaps a trifle repetitive. Since I generally run a very nature-focused game, I don’t have a problem with it and the book doesn’t lose any stars.

The feats and items sections are interesting as well, providing rules for making new race-specific items along with a few new examples, and feats that take advantage of the mixed heritage of the book’s races.

The prestige classes are adequate but, in my opinion, underpowered. Since they only take up a scant eight or nine pages, again, the book loses no marks with me for this. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go look at the Green Ronin web-site and see if any other books catch my eye.

5 Stars Excellent, but…
I absolutly loved this book. I’ve always loved “half-breeds”, so when I saw this book I quickly bought it. I wasn’t dissapointed. The art was great (with the exception of Makbin), the writing was wonderful and it also offered quite a bit of “crunchy” parts as well.

Pros:

The layout was wonderful and the writing was well-written and interesting. Though not as entertaining as a novel, I enjoyed reading this book- it was interesting and well written. The art is also great, if slightly comic-booky in style. The races written up are interesting, albeit strange and exotic- but that’s the way I like them. The info on half-breeds in society is helpful. All in all it’s a great book, but…

Cons:

As the previous reviewer stated, quite alot of the races are crosses between nature friendly humanoids and nature “monsters”. There’s also quite alot of elf half-breeds. The races listed are also extremely exotic and strange- so if you don’t like bizaare stuff then this book isn’t for you. I was expecting stuff like orcs/dwarves and that sort of thing, not things like halfling/blink dogs, elf/naga or elf/giant eagles. Still, I was fine with that-I loved it actually, but it wasn’t what I was expecting. Bastards and Bloodlines still has some or the more “normalish” half-breeds, too, though.

This my own personal pet-peeve, but it seemed to me like alot of the half-breeds parents got together, had a baby, and then seperated and abandoned the child to one of the parent races. One of the reasons that I love half-breeds is that the idea that two unlike races can fall in love and marry and have a half-breed child is interesting and has great story and roleplaying oppurotunity. A treant that fell in love with an elven druid and worked hard to win her heart, overcome elven resistence and established an area to ensure peace for their children and their lives is much more interesting then “a treant and an elf have a baby and then abandon each other and their child”.

Still, this book is great, and has very little flaws.

Art: 9- the art in this book was great, if slightly comic-bookish. I dislike Makbin (one of the artists) but otherwise the art was good.

Writing: 10- it was extremely well-written, with very minor flaws.

Playability: 9- if you ever need a resource for half-breeds, this is the book for you. One of my players begged for me to “magically change” his half-elf into a Decataur, they loved it. I’ve also dropped in a couple Half-breed NPC’s in the campaign, and they made the game much more interesting and fun.

All in all, a great book, and if your even remotely interested in half-breeds, this is your book- buy it now!

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