He probably willingly committed suicide to appease his Master. Or his Master killed him after he took a few blows without succeeding in killing the hero.
He probably willingly committed suicide to appease his Master. Or his Master killed him after he took a few blows without succeeding in killing the hero.
Don't fall for the Ronway hype, it's all smoke and mirrors, and that damage from the "Second Acolyte" was just a bag of flaming poo. Not saying it wasn't infernal, just not a second Cursed Acolyte.
The zombies are actually just strung out Juggalos he keeps in his basement. Seriously, don't let them bite you.
Lol...aww...okay Pinecone - the thing with the Cursed Acolyte is that his image is based off that of Ronway. There are several other images in card art who are forum members (I think this was a reward for the Infernal Relics Kickstarter, which occurred before I discovered the game). For example, the Deputy (in the Chairman's deck) is Arenson, and the guy getting blasted by Apostate in his card "Remorseless Provocation" is PWatson. There are a bunch of others, but I can't remember all of them right now.
Yep - check out the references page of the wiki for the list of those publicly known/shared.
I think it's worth noting that HP is probably an abstract value detirimined by factors like health, endurance, luck, skill, readiness and possibly even divine intervention. Attempting to supply a statisical basis for a normal human is difficult because of this fact, although I'd say that the average human has between 3 and 10 hp under normal circumstances.
It's worth noting that in DnD an epic level character can be killed with a simple 1d4 damage dagger when caught by surprise when unprepared however.
I see. Makes sense
Pydro is Seige Breaker, an apparently unknown to anyone Seige Breaker and Cursed Acolyte are actually nemesis. I believe the nemesis symbol is Cristopher shrugging.
Sorry to get serious, but I'll try to answer the OP's question with my own reasoning.
*put glasses on and enters geeky mode*
Legacy possesses super-strength. It seems reasonable to think that a super-strong human should be able to KO an untrained, unexceptional, normal human with a single punch. Legacy's typical punch, reliably delivered using a power, does two damage.
So I would think that a typical, everyday, unexceptional human would have around 2 HP. This goes up with training, powers, curses and whatever.
Heroes (and most targets) have a lot more HP because of their exceptional training, experience, and super-powers. This considering HP as an abstraction of endurance, health, dodging ability, determination, capacity to roll with punches, fighting experience, Ronwayishness, etc.
*geeky mode OFF. Keeps glasses on because he needs them anyway*
Now, I'd like to fight the rumor : the Eel and I are in no way related, similar, members of the same gaming club, or playing in the same jazz-band. And anyway I know nothing about Jazz and have a lot more hairs.
Pretty sure Proletariat clones have 6 HP in Sentinels.
Proletariat and his clones share a single pool of HP in Tactics; I don’t think it makes sense to say the clones have more HP.
Right. I wasn’t saying that. I was disputing the claim that the clones, in SENTINELS (not Tactics) had 5 HP, when in fact they have 6.
I like that that "disputing the claim", it makes it sound like you were in a huge debate with someone over something meaningful. When really your were just correcting a mistake someone made in a very non-serious post.
I'm verbose. Deal with it.