The Final Adventure Path For 1st Edition Pathfinder Comes To A Close In Midwives To Death
Midwives to Death is the last segment in the final adventure path being released for 1st Edition Pathfinder. Stop a lich, close down an edition.
Here it is folks, the last Pathfinder adventure for Pathfinder 1st Edition. It’s the end of an era, and what better way to celebrate than by taking out a Lich King? Here’s to one last adventure before a new era dawns.
via Paizo
Midwives to Death ($24.99)
Against the Rise of Terror
The heroes finally have the tools they need to stop the Whispering Tyrant, but the lich-king has not been idle. Why has he devoted so much attention to an isolated border fortress, right when divinity seems to be within his grasp? A quest to discover the tyrant’s secrets plunges the heroes into a deadly race through a fecund forest, into fearsome dungeons built long before the Shining Crusade, and between spiteful villains harboring ancient grudges. Old enemies stand in the heroes’ way yet again, but unexpected allies can help turn the rising tide of death and despair. If the heroes are victorious, they can seize the only chance to deny the Whispering Tyrant his greatest weapon and strike him down before he gains the power of a god.
This volume of Pathfinder Adventure Path provides the dramatic conclusion to the Tyrant’s Grasp Adventure Path and includes:
- “Midwives to Death,” a Pathfinder RPG adventure for 16th-level characters, by John Compton.
- A massive article celebrating the final Adventure Path volume for the first edition of the Pathfinder RPG. Written by Paizo’s developers and designers to close out the first edition with a bang, this article presents new monsters, GM advice, gods both new and revised, staff PCs, a new prestige class, new archetypes, and more! These new rules work with the Tyrant’s Grasp Adventure Path or any campaign, and are written by John Compton, Adam Daigle, Eleanor Ferron, Thurston Hillman, James Jacobs, Jason Keeley, Luis Loza, Ron Lundeen, Robert G. McCreary, Erik Mona, Michael Sayre, Owen K.C. Stephens, Mark Seifter, and Linda Zayas-Palmer.