*beings with a perfect memory that dates back to the very origin of creation* *intelligence 18* LITERALLY THEY HAVE A HIGHER STRENGTH THAN INTELLIGENCE AND I'M MAD
@@Mr0901 No. Intelligence represents "information knowledge", while wisdom represents "application knowledge". That's why in 3.5 Intelligence allows for a larger amount of skill points as you "know" the theory behind how to do several things, but you still depend on your physical or mental fitness to accomplish stuff. Yet Wisdom is a "how to do things" attribute, just as seeing and observing are different in the spot skill (or perception for non-hardcore DMs), thus being keyed off Wisdom, as an example.
Wisdom in D&D is your ability to intuit and perceive. Wisdom saves are used to notice something is of about you or your environment. Wisdom skills are used to notice things about others or your environment. Wisdom is also the caster stat for those who derive their powers from the world around them or from gods. To quote the book on wisdom: "Wisdom reflects how attuned you are to the world around you and represents perceptiveness and intuition."
@@Mr0901 BiscuitCookie's right. As the old saying goes: intelligence is knowing a tomato is a fruit, wisdom is knowing not to put a tomato in a fruit salad. And charisma is being able to convince someone to eat a fruit salad with tomatoes.
There is an official campaign that has one get a split personality and one of the personalities is scared of the rumors it hears about itself. So it swims around scared of running into this ancient monster.
You're the only D&D RUclipsr, actually the only RUclipsr period, who can actually make me feel nerves, anxiety, fear, excitement, happiness, curiosity, etc; from their videos. Just listening to you describe the Aboleth in the beginning made my hair stand on end. Well done sir. Keep it up. 🤟🏻😁 I'm binging all. Your D&D Lore videos. I just found you.
Lovecraftian abomination that predates the gods themselves. CR: 10. I don't know whether to be disappointed with the Aboleth or even more scared of stronger monsters.
Well, they predate the gods as a community, as a race. For example, a common human not trained in any style of combat might have a very low cr, maybe 1, that would be compared to a cr 10 not trained aboleth, maybe their soldiers or assassins are more powerful
Think of it like the classic superman VS batman. Sure, if you put an aboleth naked up against a tarrasque with no preparation it will lose. But an aboleth in the wild, who knows the tarrasque is coming? The tarrasque should stand no chance at all.
In a straight up fight. Easy to deal with. In it's lair, and with a DM who understands the Aboleth, may as well be dealing with an angry god. The best Aboleth encounters mean that you never actually come face to face with the Aboleth.
Woooo more D&D! It’s interesting how the Aboleth and Kraken has ties to the gods or before them and other worlds aside from Abir-Toril. Makes you wonder how big the oceans are when it comes to the creatures. As for the Far Realm itself, well... hopefully it stays far for the sake of the multiverse.
The Aboleths may not be pre-gods. I'm not quite sure why everyone just trusts the worlds of self obsessed genocidal fish monsters. Here's another idea: They were created by some ancient water primordial. It explains their elemental nature, their hatred of the gods, and the age of the Aboleths. I personally favor this explanation. The Aboleth domination messes with several different events. First of all, it just doesn't jive with the Obyrith, the original demons and evil creatures. Second of all, we know that Dragons existed during the Dawn War, thanks to the death of Io, (Some vowel then an O,) the original dragon god, of whom Bahamut and Tiamat are the children of. And dragons were not slaves. So, the Aboleths must have been pre-dawn war. The issue with that is... Well, it's called the Dawn War for a reason. It was the first *anything* beyond Ao, the creator god. There's also the Mind Flayer Empire, and the Spell Weavers.
Space likely doesn't mean what space means in our realm, hence how one can kind of easily access the Far Realm by dreaming. Due to the Far Realm's nature, it's not actually 'far' in relation to going there
@@firetarrasque4667 they also have complete belief in their memory but that is what is most vulnerable about them. Their memories can be tampered as they only keep it in their heads. Who is to say they actually existed at all. Kept in existence by their memory says, by what others say, but nothing more.
Ah, don't worry about it. What seems scary to 300 million humans spread across thousands of nation states is a lot less scary to several quintillion humans living another 10,000 or so years in the future on a dyson sphere with access to an energy budget to disassemble the planet in a matter of months. These creatures are all about living far longer than the normal DnD races, but they accomplish nothing in the timescales it takes humans to go from shit farmers to ecumenopolis builders.
I thought I'd never see one again. You rarely post these and I understand that they don't garner the attention you need to keep this channel afloat, but I sincerely appreciate each and every one of them.
I came upon your channel from a RUclips algorithm suggestion. I've been binge watching ever since. I feel like... you're forcefully prying my mind open to an entire universe I had no idea existed... I had heard of dungeons and dragons, but I had NO IDEA the size of this... UNIVERSE... I am in AWE, and your videos are so amazing and well done that I get lost in them. I had no idea... wow. WOW.
Just happened across this channel and have been enjoying ur content. But I watched the mind flayer vids and was like," where's the one on the elder mind??" I'd love to see that vid, hope u make it.
If this all happened only 30,000 years from the current date and the Aboleths have been around for tens of millions of years, then really the Aboleths would see the races and the gods as just temporary things.
This makes me want to RP a firbolg who's clan drinks aboleth blood and retains the memory of hundreds of generations of my firbolg ancestors: i would love and miss people i'd never met, and carry grudges eons of years old
This year I DMed a one-shot which involved Aboleths. Basicaly, the adventurers frustrated one of the Aboleth's plans to conquer the North, then the creature captured a friend of them, after that he designed a whole dungeon underwater and baited the players to rescue their friend. They just made it out alive because the cleric used mass healing word during the escape. Fun fact is he did not had it prepared, but I, innocently, assumed he had.
That's something interesting to think about; The fact that the Lovecrafian gods and horrors that we know and love are not only existent in the D&D universe, but they even left their mark in multiple ways (the far realm, aboleths, ect.).
Most top level lore for all of the greatest fantasy settings reaches for Lovecraft. Even settings like Game of Thrones; everything that's on the edges of what is known goes straight to lovecraft in that fiction.
Come back with a big one. You’re awesome bro. I find the Abberations very interesting and much prefer them over a creature like a troll or mage when you could use a slaad or mindflayer
The 5E MM doesn't say how you can fully kill an aboleth unless the "kill it on its 'native plane'" (the Elemental Plane of Water?) thing applies. Now, 5:03 gives us a regular time for reproduction of 5 years for an adult aboleth. Aboleth say they predate the gods, so they've been around for a long time. But if you put all that together, doesn't that mean we should be overrun by aboleths by now? Unless the gods traveled to the EPoW or did some other crazy powerful stuff, the aboleths the gods killed when they overthrew them from ruling the Prime Material Plane should have just come back without their population truly decreasing. The depths and oceans of Abeir-Toril and other D&D Prime worlds must be teeming with aboleths to the point that it's odd that they're able to hide at all. Otherwise, something is just not adding up. How long does it take for an aboleth to mature to adulthood? How long does it take for a slain aboleth to be reborn on the EPoW? How long before it can return to the PMP? How long did the aboleth rule before the gods came?
That's assuming all of them stay on the Prime Material Plane, and at least in 3.5e the Aboleths weren't actually sea dwelling, but dwelt in lightless lakes beneath the earth
Unless they have a set number of aboleth souls. Elves are sometimes run like this. Where its literally impossible for them to overpopulat as thier are inky so many elven souls.
I adore Aboleths from a lore perspective. Shame it was just such an underwhelming fight for my party, even in its lair, protected by its Sahuagin slaves. If you're smart enough to stay away from the water and have a couple of rangers/casters, the fight becomes fairly trivial.
@@javierpatag3609 Someone elsewhere in the comments suggested that they're either lying or mistaken, and were really created by a water primordial or something.
This makes me want to RP a firbolg who's clan drinks aboleth blood and retains the memory of hundreds of generations of my firbolg ancestors: i would love and miss people i'd never met, and carry grudges eons of years old
Yes, at last! Great to see the return of the D&D videos as they were my favourite videos of yours, despite being a very long-time viewer. Does this mean that the long-awaited sequel to the mind flayer video will happen? You said you planned a video on the elder brain, but it never happened. I'm still waiting 😂 EDIT: I made this comment before watching it to the end. Seems like you planned it out all along. I'll be looking forward to seeing the next video!
I think a very important lore and story point was missed. According to the Abolethic Sovereignty books, the Prime Aboleth somehow infested realmspace stars and celestial bodies with Far Realm entities and incited them to act against the Material Plane. Later on this entity would try to use the Key of Stars to open a gateway to the Far Realm itself using these star spawn Elder Evils in order to bring about the end of the world.
The Elder Evils of the Far Realm always make me think of Lovecraft's universe and also the Eldrazi from Magic the Gathering. An Aboleth is in many respects similar to an Eldrazi scion.
As a terrible DM, aboleths are one of my favorite creatures, and im fond of their way of dominance; mind control. I often catch myself actually wishing Illithids were more like them, to better explain their own dominance, when their mins powers to do that are limited, and even the Elder Brains' ranges are only a handful of miles, when the world is huge, but the I prefer a happy world, where things like Aboleths, and Illithids, don't rule everything, so maybe its for the best? Beyond that, I sort of think it would be amusing for an Aboleth to sort of trick/provoke a deity, through its followers, to do things that would strengthen their aquatic positions, like surge the oceans up over more lands; a kind of permanent "high tide" flood, or to freeze the oceans, and replicate a space like what the Blue Age was before. I do sometimes struggle with their motivations, though. They could hang deep, breed up, and then conquer a ton, but they don't, and 5e basically leaves us with only the "simplest" of these aberrations. I wonder what they are like on the Elemental Plane of Water, or where their deepest domains still exist, and what they might do to sieze more control?
I've watched your D&D lore videos multiple times already and I am glad, that you are back at makingg them. I've never played D&D myself (aside from Baldur's Gate) but I find the lore of the world absolutly fascinating! :D I do ask myself though, whether the first of the Aboleths is still alive, since he sounded like a beeing even the gods wouldn't be able to defeat... but maybe that's one of the things, you'll talk about in the second part, so I'm looking forward to it! :) mfg PatrickSieben7
3:00 that's Evelyn from the wafflecrew! A Paladin of the morning light wielding an axe and uses winged boots standing her ground against Dendar the night serpent. That's Evelyn!
I was running D&D since 2nd Ed came out. In all this time there are so many creatures I never used even once. This is one of them. Too bad too they are very interesting.
Granted, 5th Edition has changed things.... but to say that every time a 5th Ed. campaign is played, that it is in Toril while showing the Curse of Strahd module, is so very wrong. "Homebrew" worlds are quite prevalent.... and last time I checked, Strahd von Zarovich was ruling his land of Barovia in the Demiplane of Dread, Ravenloft; not exactly putting his vampiric feet up at the Six Candles in Cormyr.
I hear what you are saying, those campaigns i was referring to are the officially released hard cover books. I should have explained myself properly. The reason I didn't mind showing Curse of Strahd though, was because even though 99.9% of the adventure happens in Ravenloft...the very beginning happens in the Sword Coast. The game assumes that you start in Daggerford and from there, you get ported towards Ravenloft. The official setting for 5th is indeed Toril.
You know, as soon as I had hit "Reply" to add my comment, it had occurred to me that such might be the case, in context to Curse of Strahd. I can't really offer an explanation as to why I didn't then delete or amend the comment. I do wish that I had remembered that there was a 2nd Ed. module for Ravenloft which also starts assuming that the players are in the Forgotten Realms sett--huh, I suppose that referring to "Toril" as the "Forgotten Realms setting" no longer works in context to 5th Ed--ahem, in Toril. If I recall, it specified either The Vast or Vassa....and the module was "The Forgotten Knife" or something similar. Point being, there was already a precedent for this and I rather have remembered it before having begun typing this comment. Also, to be fair, I wasn't aware of Toril taking Oerth's spot as being the official setting. Then again, I'm essentially the old man on his porch, angrily shaking his cane, yelling at the other Editions to get off his lawn....while holding 2nd Ed. in a vice-grip with his other hand. As an aside, however; I did find it amusing that a Ravenloft module was in part set in the Forgotten Realms, and the plot revolved around a god from Greyhawk.
*beings with a perfect memory that dates back to the very origin of creation*
*intelligence 18*
LITERALLY THEY HAVE A HIGHER STRENGTH THAN INTELLIGENCE AND I'M MAD
wouldn't memory be Wis?
@@Mr0901 No.
Intelligence represents "information knowledge", while wisdom represents "application knowledge". That's why in 3.5 Intelligence allows for a larger amount of skill points as you "know" the theory behind how to do several things, but you still depend on your physical or mental fitness to accomplish stuff.
Yet Wisdom is a "how to do things" attribute, just as seeing and observing are different in the spot skill (or perception for non-hardcore DMs), thus being keyed off Wisdom, as an example.
Wisdom in D&D is your ability to intuit and perceive. Wisdom saves are used to notice something is of about you or your environment. Wisdom skills are used to notice things about others or your environment. Wisdom is also the caster stat for those who derive their powers from the world around them or from gods.
To quote the book on wisdom: "Wisdom reflects how attuned you are to the world around you and represents perceptiveness and intuition."
@@Mr0901 BiscuitCookie's right. As the old saying goes: intelligence is knowing a tomato is a fruit, wisdom is knowing not to put a tomato in a fruit salad.
And charisma is being able to convince someone to eat a fruit salad with tomatoes.
@@Erick7Greenday in short
Int is book smarts
Wis is street smarts
Imagine the shock to abeloth culture if a high level wizard used a wish spell to give one of them massive amnesia
There is an official campaign that has one get a split personality and one of the personalities is scared of the rumors it hears about itself. So it swims around scared of running into this ancient monster.
@@thejezuit4048 Everyone loves Whimsy! Not the orher one so much.
😂🤣@@thejezuit4048
Heck yes! More D&D Lore. I've been waiting a while for one of these.
I agree.
Aww yeah, more d&d lore.
These are literally the reason I subbed in the first place.
Fricken aye mate
Hey Negative Legend i love your videos, you should do a "what happened to D&D"
@@manofcarbon883 I unsubscribed because he stopped making them. Resubscribe!
Defence Council: I would like to strike the testimony of the witness.
Judge: Request denied, the Aboleth has perfect memory, it's testimony stands.
You're the only D&D RUclipsr, actually the only RUclipsr period, who can actually make me feel nerves, anxiety, fear, excitement, happiness, curiosity, etc; from their videos. Just listening to you describe the Aboleth in the beginning made my hair stand on end. Well done sir. Keep it up. 🤟🏻😁 I'm binging all. Your D&D Lore videos. I just found you.
I agree, phenomenal narration. All the writing, tone, editing and art is superbly well done.
"Before there was time, before there was anything, there was nothing. And before there was nothing, there were monsters." The Lich, adventure time.
Lovecraftian abomination that predates the gods themselves.
CR: 10.
I don't know whether to be disappointed with the Aboleth or even more scared of stronger monsters.
Power scaling in DnD is all over the place. Though, I don't see an aboleth being able to take down a tarrasqe or something
Well, they predate the gods as a community, as a race. For example, a common human not trained in any style of combat might have a very low cr, maybe 1, that would be compared to a cr 10 not trained aboleth, maybe their soldiers or assassins are more powerful
@@AraujoEnrique I'd rather put a cr 1/6 for a random human without training
Think of it like the classic superman VS batman.
Sure, if you put an aboleth naked up against a tarrasque with no preparation it will lose.
But an aboleth in the wild, who knows the tarrasque is coming? The tarrasque should stand no chance at all.
In a straight up fight. Easy to deal with. In it's lair, and with a DM who understands the Aboleth, may as well be dealing with an angry god.
The best Aboleth encounters mean that you never actually come face to face with the Aboleth.
Woooo more D&D! It’s interesting how the Aboleth and Kraken has ties to the gods or before them and other worlds aside from Abir-Toril. Makes you wonder how big the oceans are when it comes to the creatures. As for the Far Realm itself, well... hopefully it stays far for the sake of the multiverse.
The Aboleths may not be pre-gods. I'm not quite sure why everyone just trusts the worlds of self obsessed genocidal fish monsters. Here's another idea: They were created by some ancient water primordial. It explains their elemental nature, their hatred of the gods, and the age of the Aboleths. I personally favor this explanation. The Aboleth domination messes with several different events. First of all, it just doesn't jive with the Obyrith, the original demons and evil creatures. Second of all, we know that Dragons existed during the Dawn War, thanks to the death of Io, (Some vowel then an O,) the original dragon god, of whom Bahamut and Tiamat are the children of. And dragons were not slaves. So, the Aboleths must have been pre-dawn war. The issue with that is... Well, it's called the Dawn War for a reason. It was the first *anything* beyond Ao, the creator god. There's also the Mind Flayer Empire, and the Spell Weavers.
Space likely doesn't mean what space means in our realm, hence how one can kind of easily access the Far Realm by dreaming. Due to the Far Realm's nature, it's not actually 'far' in relation to going there
@@firetarrasque4667 they also have complete belief in their memory but that is what is most vulnerable about them. Their memories can be tampered as they only keep it in their heads. Who is to say they actually existed at all. Kept in existence by their memory says, by what others say, but nothing more.
Ah, don't worry about it. What seems scary to 300 million humans spread across thousands of nation states is a lot less scary to several quintillion humans living another 10,000 or so years in the future on a dyson sphere with access to an energy budget to disassemble the planet in a matter of months. These creatures are all about living far longer than the normal DnD races, but they accomplish nothing in the timescales it takes humans to go from shit farmers to ecumenopolis builders.
Finally a new dnd vid! Feels like it's been years since the last one! xD
KokoroNoSama I mean it’s been a year
WOOSH
Gio P what are you even whooshing? Whooshing is for when people miss obvious jokes
I think he doesn't know what whooshing really is, ironic.
I'm so happy you're doing DnD content again! I've missed it so much! Now we just need that pastor music and the unmatched positivity
I thought I'd never see one again. You rarely post these and I understand that they don't garner the attention you need to keep this channel afloat, but I sincerely appreciate each and every one of them.
I came upon your channel from a RUclips algorithm suggestion. I've been binge watching ever since. I feel like... you're forcefully prying my mind open to an entire universe I had no idea existed... I had heard of dungeons and dragons, but I had NO IDEA the size of this... UNIVERSE...
I am in AWE, and your videos are so amazing and well done that I get lost in them. I had no idea... wow. WOW.
Just happened across this channel and have been enjoying ur content. But I watched the mind flayer vids and was like," where's the one on the elder mind??" I'd love to see that vid, hope u make it.
If this all happened only 30,000 years from the current date and the Aboleths have been around for tens of millions of years, then really the Aboleths would see the races and the gods as just temporary things.
they ruled longer than most races existed, this'd likely still feel like a sudden and abrupt crash to their seemingly endless empire
"This whole religion thing is just a fad, they'll get over it eventually."
"Everything was better before the gods hit the reset button again. This is the fifth time!"
"For all of their might they never expected that which actually defeated them.......RELIGION"
Religion is a great cancer on our world too.
@@Welther47 nothing wrong with religion. The problem is extremists.
@@OfficiallyAmoro You can't have a little bit of it without extremes. And there is plenty wrong with religion
@@OfficiallyAmoro Religion is arrogant enough to claim the answer to everything. It's naíve and misleading
This makes me want to RP a firbolg who's clan drinks aboleth blood and retains the memory of hundreds of generations of my firbolg ancestors: i would love and miss people i'd never met, and carry grudges eons of years old
This year I DMed a one-shot which involved Aboleths. Basicaly, the adventurers frustrated one of the Aboleth's plans to conquer the North, then the creature captured a friend of them, after that he designed a whole dungeon underwater and baited the players to rescue their friend. They just made it out alive because the cleric used mass healing word during the escape. Fun fact is he did not had it prepared, but I, innocently, assumed he had.
Thank you for making more of these. I am a huge fan of your style of DnD monster lore coverage!
Seems very Lovecraft esque, interesting.
That's something interesting to think about; The fact that the Lovecrafian gods and horrors that we know and love are not only existent in the D&D universe, but they even left their mark in multiple ways (the far realm, aboleths, ect.).
Most top level lore for all of the greatest fantasy settings reaches for Lovecraft. Even settings like Game of Thrones; everything that's on the edges of what is known goes straight to lovecraft in that fiction.
Yes! Mixes my two favorite features in dnd. Underwater leviathans, and the aberrations.
Dude I LOVE these videos man. Your voice with the "creepy" esk ambience really make these videos what they are
Keep up the good work!
So happy to see you making more D&D videos!
I love your voice with this onimous music, makes the story more mysterious and intense
Come back with a big one. You’re awesome bro. I find the Abberations very interesting and much prefer them over a creature like a troll or mage when you could use a slaad or mindflayer
Omg you are back with another D&D lore video!!!!!
Holy crap, I was watching your old D&D lore videos yesterday and was like “damn I wish he was making these still.” And bam here it is. Stoked 🤘
The 5E MM doesn't say how you can fully kill an aboleth unless the "kill it on its 'native plane'" (the Elemental Plane of Water?) thing applies. Now, 5:03 gives us a regular time for reproduction of 5 years for an adult aboleth. Aboleth say they predate the gods, so they've been around for a long time. But if you put all that together, doesn't that mean we should be overrun by aboleths by now?
Unless the gods traveled to the EPoW or did some other crazy powerful stuff, the aboleths the gods killed when they overthrew them from ruling the Prime Material Plane should have just come back without their population truly decreasing. The depths and oceans of Abeir-Toril and other D&D Prime worlds must be teeming with aboleths to the point that it's odd that they're able to hide at all. Otherwise, something is just not adding up.
How long does it take for an aboleth to mature to adulthood? How long does it take for a slain aboleth to be reborn on the EPoW? How long before it can return to the PMP? How long did the aboleth rule before the gods came?
That's assuming all of them stay on the Prime Material Plane, and at least in 3.5e the Aboleths weren't actually sea dwelling, but dwelt in lightless lakes beneath the earth
Unless they have a set number of aboleth souls. Elves are sometimes run like this. Where its literally impossible for them to overpopulat as thier are inky so many elven souls.
Hell yeah! Dnd lore! And I think this might actually be your best lore video so far. I love it ^^
Hey, so glad you are making dnd videos still
I adore Aboleths from a lore perspective. Shame it was just such an underwhelming fight for my party, even in its lair, protected by its Sahuagin slaves. If you're smart enough to stay away from the water and have a couple of rangers/casters, the fight becomes fairly trivial.
it's like, you're fucking fantasy man, it's not a real challenge in the first place
Sounds more like an unskilled DM then anything else
I love these DnD videos. The game never interested me but the lore is fascinating.
HELL YES! More D&D lore! Your voice is amazing.
Definitely want more D&D!!! Enjoy the hell out of these!!! Cheers
Please continue this! These d&d lore videos are so cool
You have really interesting content! This is really useful for any DM to add depth to their campaigns, homebrew or not.
2:08 that's darkest dungeon if anybody wonders
Mrchivo33 thank you
Ooooh i missed these videos!!! Great work!!!!
Love the d&d lore vids. Especially since I’m a dm it’s nice to know the background on the creatures I use in my games
I feel like everything time I think I know what D&D's most ancient creature is another bigger *fish* takes the spot.
There's always a bigger fish lol
Woohoo, no views, likes or comments! Actually the first DnD Lore video I watch; will definetely binge my way through the rest of them.
Yeah another D and D video. Thanks for making this video
So, the Aboleth's empire was basically underwater ancient Egypt.
Awesome stuff, both content and how you present it!
Also, don't they get reborn in the plane of water if they die?
This is the detail that gets me. Why are they reborn in the Elemental Plane of Water when they are aberrations from the Far Realm?
@@javierpatag3609 Someone elsewhere in the comments suggested that they're either lying or mistaken, and were really created by a water primordial or something.
Maybe they choose the plane of water. As it supposedly a heaven for sea creatures, and the Aboleths are aquatic
@@shockerhaven07 Chose might be a strong word since such abilities are usually reserved to creatures Native to such a realm.
Make more D&D lore, your videos are amazing!
I'm very late to the party, but I love the clips from Darkest Dungeon that you sprinkled in there!
Dude! These are amazing
Been waiting for more D&D lore.
are you a dm? Because your narration and voice acting is god tier!
This makes me want to RP a firbolg who's clan drinks aboleth blood and
retains the memory of hundreds of generations of my firbolg ancestors: i
would love and miss people i'd never met, and carry grudges eons of
years old
Firbolethg
Finally you maid one for a Aboleth !!! short version you make Geart DnD Videos
These videos are amazing! Keep it up!!!!
Thank you for the d and d only reason I’m subbed
Yes rhexxx rated god has blessed us with kek vid
"the largest empire this world will ever see." *laughs in illithid.*
Even funnier, the Aboleths fear Illithids because they don’t show up in their racial memory which freaks them out since they remember everything else.
WOOO! I find these videos super interesting & inspiring!
Yes the Lore is back. Tiem for more D and D
WHEEEW took you long enough since the peryton one it's been ages
Yes, at last! Great to see the return of the D&D videos as they were my favourite videos of yours, despite being a very long-time viewer. Does this mean that the long-awaited sequel to the mind flayer video will happen? You said you planned a video on the elder brain, but it never happened. I'm still waiting 😂
EDIT: I made this comment before watching it to the end. Seems like you planned it out all along. I'll be looking forward to seeing the next video!
glad to see more D&d content.
I think a very important lore and story point was missed. According to the Abolethic Sovereignty books, the Prime Aboleth somehow infested realmspace stars and celestial bodies with Far Realm entities and incited them to act against the Material Plane. Later on this entity would try to use the Key of Stars to open a gateway to the Far Realm itself using these star spawn Elder Evils in order to bring about the end of the world.
Love this channel ♥
I love any eldrich lore this included.
Just the video I was waiting for.
Thank the gods, D&D lore!
I love your DND lore videos they are my favourite thing ever. Can you do lore of the kraken or the gith next?
The Elder Evils of the Far Realm always make me think of Lovecraft's universe and also the Eldrazi from Magic the Gathering. An Aboleth is in many respects similar to an Eldrazi scion.
I've never played D&D but I enjoy the lore.
Can't wait for the next one!
Hell yeah, more dnd lore!
Out of curiosity, do you do still intend to do a video on the elder brains of the mind flayers?
4:06 - sought (past tense of seek): Prime Aboleth sought it's fortune...
I love the ancient Lovecraftian horror monsters that the Mythos includes.
To quote a certain space marine .
"Hell... It's about time. "😆
As a terrible DM, aboleths are one of my favorite creatures, and im fond of their way of dominance; mind control. I often catch myself actually wishing Illithids were more like them, to better explain their own dominance, when their mins powers to do that are limited, and even the Elder Brains' ranges are only a handful of miles, when the world is huge, but the I prefer a happy world, where things like Aboleths, and Illithids, don't rule everything, so maybe its for the best? Beyond that, I sort of think it would be amusing for an Aboleth to sort of trick/provoke a deity, through its followers, to do things that would strengthen their aquatic positions, like surge the oceans up over more lands; a kind of permanent "high tide" flood, or to freeze the oceans, and replicate a space like what the Blue Age was before.
I do sometimes struggle with their motivations, though. They could hang deep, breed up, and then conquer a ton, but they don't, and 5e basically leaves us with only the "simplest" of these aberrations. I wonder what they are like on the Elemental Plane of Water, or where their deepest domains still exist, and what they might do to sieze more control?
I've been dying for a new end video
Where did u get that a space picture at 1:36? I wanna make that my wallpaper
I've watched your D&D lore videos multiple times already and I am glad, that you are back at makingg them. I've never played D&D myself (aside from Baldur's Gate) but I find the lore of the world absolutly fascinating! :D
I do ask myself though, whether the first of the Aboleths is still alive, since he sounded like a beeing even the gods wouldn't be able to defeat... but maybe that's one of the things, you'll talk about in the second part, so I'm looking forward to it! :)
mfg PatrickSieben7
"When you first open the Monster Manual, you see the Aboleth."
Aarakockra: ;-;
Gotta put this in the dnd playlist
Aboleths are the embodiment of "never forgive, never forget"?
Thank God for the ability to jack up the playback speed. RUclips, you've saved me again!!
Dude! Great video.
YESSSSSS!!!!!!!!
They’re back baby!
Yes it’s back! D&D
3:00 that's Evelyn from the wafflecrew! A Paladin of the morning light wielding an axe and uses winged boots standing her ground against Dendar the night serpent.
That's Evelyn!
I was running D&D since 2nd Ed came out. In all this time there are so many creatures I never used even once. This is one of them. Too bad too they are very interesting.
He’s back.....YES!!!
Am aboleth episode from webdm AND mrrhexx!? God damn I love you guys
YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEESSS! ITS BACK! NIIICE
Yes! been waiting for more these are great
Granted, 5th Edition has changed things.... but to say that every time a 5th Ed. campaign is played, that it is in Toril while showing the Curse of Strahd module, is so very wrong. "Homebrew" worlds are quite prevalent.... and last time I checked, Strahd von Zarovich was ruling his land of Barovia in the Demiplane of Dread, Ravenloft; not exactly putting his vampiric feet up at the Six Candles in Cormyr.
I hear what you are saying, those campaigns i was referring to are the officially released hard cover books. I should have explained myself properly.
The reason I didn't mind showing Curse of Strahd though, was because even though 99.9% of the adventure happens in Ravenloft...the very beginning happens in the Sword Coast. The game assumes that you start in Daggerford and from there, you get ported towards Ravenloft. The official setting for 5th is indeed Toril.
You know, as soon as I had hit "Reply" to add my comment, it had occurred to me that such might be the case, in context to Curse of Strahd. I can't really offer an explanation as to why I didn't then delete or amend the comment. I do wish that I had remembered that there was a 2nd Ed. module for Ravenloft which also starts assuming that the players are in the Forgotten Realms sett--huh, I suppose that referring to "Toril" as the "Forgotten Realms setting" no longer works in context to 5th Ed--ahem, in Toril. If I recall, it specified either The Vast or Vassa....and the module was "The Forgotten Knife" or something similar. Point being, there was already a precedent for this and I rather have remembered it before having begun typing this comment. Also, to be fair, I wasn't aware of Toril taking Oerth's spot as being the official setting. Then again, I'm essentially the old man on his porch, angrily shaking his cane, yelling at the other Editions to get off his lawn....while holding 2nd Ed. in a vice-grip with his other hand.
As an aside, however; I did find it amusing that a Ravenloft module was in part set in the Forgotten Realms, and the plot revolved around a god from Greyhawk.
Every time he mentions a word related to age take a shot
I clicked on this video so fast my finger hurts
Apply I C E
Find a claric
Yay finally more DnD content
2 Years later, all I can think is:
_Julian Tyraan_ would like to have a word with them...
I missed your d&d videos
Yaaaayyyyyyyy another D&D vid
So to travel to the far realm safely you have to be a potato attached to a brain stem. Gotcha.
You know your captions say apple death right?cracked me up
If you're a fantasy, you gotta have your squiddy incomprehensible psycic monsyers