Keranos Character in Theros | World Anvil
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Keranos

Mercurial and temperamental, Keranos personifies storms. Adventuring in the service of the god of storms is often challenging but never dull.   God of Storms Keranos is the god of storms and wisdom. Merciless and impatient, Keranos is equally likely to strike out at mortals with a bolt of inspiration or a blast of lightning. To revere Keranos is to exult in the power of wisdom, clarity of purpose, and the fury of the storm. He is favored by tinkerers, inventors, and sailors as well as those seeking solutions to intractable problems. He doesn’t tolerate the company (or the worship) of fools, and he despises vapidity and indecision.   Keranos rarely appears directly to mortals, preferring to communicate through an epiphany or a crashing bolt of lightning. When he does deign to manifest in the mortal world, Keranos prefers the form of a stout, bearded, male human wearing a purple loincloth girdled in a mithral chain belt with a clasp in the form of a dragon’s skull. His bearing is upright and stern, with a clipped, brusque way of speaking. Particularly clever plans and observations bring a hint of a smile to his face. When interacting with mortals, Keranos sometimes appears in the form of a great horned owl with lightning strikes flashing in its eyes.   Keranos’s Influence Keranos is the embodiment of wisdom and insight unhindered by compassion or patience. Just as the storm vents its fury unpredictably and without warning, so does Keranos deliver the wisdom he chooses to impart.   A storm, for all its unpredictability, can still be weathered by those who apply foresight and knowledge. So it is when dealing with Keranos. He rewards those who act with forethought and decisiveness and punishes the reckless for their stupidity.   Those who seek to solve enigmas and create wonders of art and science often invoke his name. The creative process is fraught with frustration, and his insights make short work of such hindrances as easily as the lightning parts a mighty oak.   Keranos dispenses inspiration without regard for the morality of its application. He is just as likely to reward the shrewd general seeking to topple a polis as a gentle healer searching for a cure for a malady. Good and evil don’t color his thinking, only action and the thrill of birthing new ideas into the world. Furthering the act of creating—be it ideas, weapons, art, or magic—is what matters most.   Keranos’s Goals For good or ill, Keranos exists as a disruptive force. He doesn’t desire authority over other gods and, in fact, doesn’t particularly enjoy their company. Keranos finds satisfaction in investing bright mortals with prescient visions to see how they adapt. Those who prove themselves decisive and intelligent, such as the missing Queen Cymede of Akros, earn his grudging respect and continued blessings of precognition. He finds satisfaction not only in granting insight, but also in expressing the awesome fury of the storm. Where others see only chaos and destruction in storms, he sees them as shaping the firmament in ways that challenge and engage mortals. His blasts of lightning set house and forest ablaze, thus rendering the soil clear for new life and new creations. His is a vision he alone is equipped to see. He is content to watch his divine kinfolk scheme and plot while he looks on, stern and inscrutable.   Divine Relationships Keranos is neither friendly nor sociable, so his dealings with most of the rest of the pantheon tend to be terse, formal, and brief. This doesn’t mean that no interactions of note take place, however.   Of all the gods, Thassa has the most cordial relationship with Keranos. He enjoys the sea god’s love of ancient lore, introspection, and complex patterns. The two sometimes talk for days at a time debating the flaws in ancient sophistries and discussing the meaning of the stars. Thassa, imperturbable and constant, makes the ideal counter to the wise yet temperamental Keranos.   Another interesting relationship exists with Purphoros. The passions of the divine blacksmith run hot, as does the need to create. The melding of Keranos’s inspiration with Purphoros’s passion is a formidable combination. This partnership resulted in the creation of Epiphany, Keranos’s mighty javelin.   Worshiping Keranos Keranos’s name is often invoked by those amid a storm who seek safety, or by someone who is faced with a particularly difficult problem. Only the foolhardy call out to Keranos frivolously or in jest, since he might well smite the offender with a bolt from the blue.   In Akros, where Queen Cymede actively promoted the worship of Keranos, elaborate ceremonies are conducted beginning just before the first summer thunderstorm. Intricate, open-framed sand paintings with complex geometric shapes are created by dancers in flowing blue silken wraps. Then, as the rains fall, the paintings are washed away, symbolizing the impermanence of genius and the power of change. Akroan oracles strive to predict the exact time of the first storm in hopes of allowing enough time to stage the celebration. A similar festival in Meletis, called the Lightning Festival, gives its name (Astrapion) to the third month of the year.   On the last day of every month, Keranos’s priests and laity bring offerings of fish and distilled spirits to his temples. The fish are cooked under a skylight open to the stars, with a shot of spirits thrown on the fire.     Keranos’s Champions Keranos sees his champions as tools to bring insight and change to the world. He doesn’t contemplate the moral or ethical consequences of his insights, believing that such concerns are beneath a god’s notice. This outlook might put his champions in a difficult ideological situation, stuck between the demands of a wrathful deity and uncomfortable moral choices.  
  Alignment: Usually chaotic, often neutral Suggested Classes: Barbarian, bard, cleric, druid, sorcerer, wizard   Suggested Cleric Domains: Knowledge, Tempest   Suggested Backgrounds: Acolyte, entertainer, guild artisan, noble, sage, sailor   Most champions of Keranos are calm under pressure, creative, and clever. They often seek to challenge the status quo and thrill at wielding the power of the storm.   Keranos’s Favor Keranos chooses champions who are deliberate and wise, yet able to bring the storm’s fury when needed. He expects his champions to be aggressive and self-reliant and disdains the lazy and the foolish, who deserve whatever ill fortune befalls them.   The god of storms is inscrutable at the best of times; thus, it can be difficult to discern why you’ve earned his favor. What prompted him to gift you with foreknowledge of important events? How have you demonstrated your potential? The Keranos’s Favor table offers a handful of suggestions.   Keranos’s Favor
  • d6 Circumstance
  • 1 You were born amid a great storm that destroyed most of your village.
  • 2 One of your parents was struck by lightning.
  • 3 As a child, you were favored by an oracle of great power who saw Keranos’s spark within you.
  • 4 You solved a riddle, puzzle, or cipher that was previously thought unsolvable.
  • 5 You were born under auspicious stars.
  • 6 You have no idea why Keranos grants you visions, and the burden weighs heavily on your soul.
  Devotion to Keranos Just as the storm is unpredictable and often dangerous, so is service to the lord of storms. Keranos’s devotees hatch their grand designs always with an eye on the darkening sky. As a follower of Keranos, consider the ideals on the Keranos’s Ideals table as alternatives to those suggested for your background.   Keranos’s Ideals
  • d6 Ideal
  • 1 Devotion. My devotion to my god is more important to me than what he stands for. (Any)
  • 2 Wisdom. The pursuit of knowledge and insight is the highest aspiration one can achieve. (Any)
  • 3 Foresight. Fortune favors the prepared, not so much the bold. (Neutral or lawful)
  • 4 Fury. I am the storm and will not be denied. (Chaotic)
  • 5 Impatience. Whatever it takes to reach an epiphany, I will do it. (Chaotic)
  • 6 Change. There are no constants in this life. If we don’t innovate and adapt, we are doomed. (Chaotic)
  Earning and Losing Piety You increase your piety score to Keranos when you expand the god’s influence in the world in a concrete way through acts such as these:  
  • Solving a challenging riddle or puzzle
  • Smiting the unwise and foolish in Keranos’s name
  • Helping a polis successfully plan for or adapt to a threat
  • Building or restoring a temple to Keranos
  Your piety score to Keranos decreases if you diminish Keranos’s influence in the world, contradict his ideals, or make him look ridiculous or ineffectual through acts such as these:  
  • Jeopardizing others through rash or foolish actions
  • Willingly subverting or impeding a wise course of action
  • Failing to plan appropriately for a challenge
  • Giving in to wanton fury and destruction
 
  • Keranos’s Devotee
  • Piety 3+ Keranos traitAs a devotee of Keranos, you have proven your wisdom and your allegiance to the storm lord. Once on each of your turns when you hit a creature with a weapon attack, you can deal an extra 1d6 lightning damage to the target. You can use this trait a number of times equal to your Intelligence modifier (minimum of once). You regain all expended uses when you finish a long rest.
  • Keranos’s Votary
  • Piety 10+ Keranos traitWhen you fail an Intelligence or a Wisdom saving throw, you can reroll the die, and you must use the new roll. Once you use this trait, you can’t do so again until you finish a long rest.
  • Keranos’s Disciple
  • Piety 25+ Keranos traitThe energy of the storm fills your being, granting you advantage on initiative rolls.
  • Champion of Storms
  • Piety 50+ Keranos traitYou can increase your Intelligence or Wisdom score by 2 and also increase your maximum for that score by 2.
    Oracular Conflux A few of Keranos’s most isolated temples serve a purpose beyond worship, being sites for the reading of worldly signs and recording of knowledge. These oracular confluxes provide followers of Keranos the tools to glean great truths, be they natural occurrences or omens of the gods. Because of Keranos’s connection to storms and the heavens, such temples often have weather vanes, telescopes, and other tools used to predict the weather and chart the course of celestial bodies.   Each shrine has multiple methods of predicting the future that it might offer visitors—with reading the stars, the clouds, or the entrails of sacrificed animals being particularly common. The most popular readings are those conducted during thunderstorms. Crowds gather in the shrines to watch oracles make predictions based on rainfall, wind, thunder, and other weather measurements. In some communities, oracles actively strive to be struck by lightning, risking their lives to receive mighty messages from their god.
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