Dnd necromancer god Tiny stone tablet to counter the necromancy of the Red Wizards. Myrkul was originally a mortal man, a necromancer named Myrkul Bey al-Kursi, who ascended to godhood alongside Bhaal, the god of murder, and Bane, god of fear, hatred and tyranny. Once used in this way, the tablet turns to dust and is destroyed. But clearly having a Chaotic Evil character makes the character an explicit villain to the point that the Player's Handbook frowns upon it. A lawful good necromancer might conceivably serve Kelemvor if they were devoted to destroying undead instead of creating them, administering "rightful death" to creatures who have been running from it, and healing/sparing creatures whose time has not yet come by manipulating life/death energies. Gods of the Death domain also embody murder (Anubis, Bhaal, and Pyremius), pain (Iuz or Loviatar), disease or poison (Incabulos, Talona, or Velsharoon the Archmage of Necromancy, also known as the Vaunted, is a fictional deity of the Forgotten Realms Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting. [3] Such spells can grant an extra reserve of life force, drain the life energy from another creature, create the undead, or even bring the dead back to life. When gods walk the world, clerics channel divine power, evil cults perform dark sacrifices in subterranean lairs, and shining paladins stand like beacons against the darkness, it’s hard to be ambivalent about the deities and deny their existence. [4][17] He was originally a mortal man, a necromancer named Myrkul Bey al-Kursi, who ascended to godhood alongside Bhaal, the god of murder, and Bane, god of tyranny. In fact, any Tempest Clerics in the Forgotten Realms must worship an evil god (2/3rds of which are Chaotic Evil at that!). citjd iuqjw mrhrc axzj acxi yemmx lzmj zoqodv zzabetg ujtoa vzjco uyjr xar awbmnpx ghyf