Tags
Commercial Maps, Crypt, Dungeon, Dungeons & Dragons, Fantasy, Labyrinth Lord, Maps, OSR, Reliquary, RPG, Shrine, Temple
Most of the temples of Zueshel were destroyed after the Seven Heretics struck down the God-King – however a few rebuilt into pyramid-temples dedicated to the heretics themselves. Most of these contain (or at least claim to contain) a holy relic of either the death of Zueshel or from the later deaths of the Seven Heretics.
This particular temple claims to have the son of one of the seven heretics entombed in the reliquary below it. It serves both as an administrative centre of the rural province it is in as well as a place of quiet contemplation. Pilgrims carry water to the temple and pour it into the pool in the northeast corner as they silently ask for the intervention of the heretics or the child below into their daily affairs.
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Because of the incredible generosity of my patrons, I’m able to make these maps free for commercial use also. Each month while funding is over the $300 mark, each map that achieves the $300+ funding level will be released under this free commercial license. You can use, reuse, remix and/or modify the maps that are being published under this commercial license on a royalty-free basis as long as they include attribution (“Cartography by Dyson Logos” or “Maps by Dyson Logos”). For those that want/need a Creative Commons license, it would look something like this:
Cartography by Dyson Logos is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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Reblogged this on DDOCentral.
I love how you show every level including the top, it really gives you an idea of how the whole comes together.
Did you mean to say “This particular temple claims to have the son of […]? If so, I’m not sure I understand the meaning of it. The temple is someone’s son?
This particular temple claims to have the son of one of the seven heretics entombed in the reliquary below it.
So, according to their claim, they have entombed the son of one of the seven heretics in the reliquary.
Gotcha, the sentence still sounds a bit odd to me, but with the explanation it’s much more clear.