We know his son is named Luitpold, but that's all I know.
Considering that Orion and Ariel were once two elves, but were sacrificed to the forest to act as their eternal rulers, I'm pretty sure it is a romance.
We know his son is named Luitpold, but that's all I know.
Considering that Orion and Ariel were once two elves, but were sacrificed to the forest to act as their eternal rulers, I'm pretty sure it is a romance.
His son is Luitpold. He features in a few of the Genevieve novels.
And I think his nephew is Wolfgang. He's the Crown Prince in The Enemy Within, but I can't actually find his specific relation.
>nu-Vlad and nu-Isabella
No End Times allowed. End Times means everything published after 2006 by the way, including those shitty new models.
Its based of their Total war warhamemr models. Which doesnt include the end times.
I'm going to keep some of the art and some of the unique regiments, though. That stuff was the shit and can easily be brought back into pre-ET stuff half the time.
Besides, a few even have interesting tidbits of fluff - one of the undead regiments mentions how necromantic energy actually changes the designs on shields and banners. It helps explain why apparently every VC skeleton has bats and skulls and shit on their shields.
>3e was rough but it had the germ of something cool in it.
Yeah, it's called Star Wars: Edge of the Empire.
Much as I love that system, I will never not be bitter at FFG for essentially using WHFRPG 3e as a beta test for it.
Honestly, percentile really just fits warhammer better. It's far less heroic.
Are there any sources that explain how the Bretonnian navy is so modern while the army is so ass backward, and how the crews interact with the rest of society? Like, are they all technically knights, and just ignore the fact that they're swabbing poop decks, or are they all peasants and ignore that they are extraordinarily well trained in such a shitty society?
It's based on their TWW incarnations, which are a direct antithesis to the end times.
The rules of the land dont apply to the rules of the sea. Also i imagine the crew are city dwellers, whos fathers were sailors or are mainly hired sailors from Tilea and Estalia.
Quite frankly it's just a bit of older lore that never got changed as the setting did, and they've just awkwardly stepped around the issue. If someone wanted, they could probably explain it without breaking the lore too badly - I might even take a shot at it someday as a bit of headcanon - but even those who don't like the state of the Bretonnian navy don't really have an organized idea of what it should be instead.
As to your question, I think that's explained/implied well enough in that old Bretonnian navy lore - the nobles act as officers, the peasants act as crewmen, sailors, and possibly 'marines.' Probably based a lot on the British navy - they might even have midshipmen, if anyone ever cared to go into that. The lowest ranking ships - the Buccaneers - are crewed by conscripted prisoners, however, and probably only have a few nobles on board, if at all.
And it's not as if peasants can't be educated or trained, otherwise there wouldn't be any merchants or Men-at-Arms or architects or scholars.