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SANTIAGO: A Myth of the Far Future Player's Guide (4E)

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THIS IS THE D&D 4E VERSION OF THIS PRODUCT.

 This book is designed to help you, as a player, design a character for use in the SANTIAGO: A Myth of the Far Future adventure path, as well as futuristic campaigns of your own.

Join the hunt for Santiago in Mike Resnick's far future galaxy using the D&D 4E rules, or start a futuristic campaign of yof your own with this book and the companion Campaign Guide - the far future needs heroes, and the far future is up to you!

They say his father was a comet and his mother a cosmic wind, that he juggles planets as if they were feathers and wrestles with black holes just to work up an appetite. They say he never sleeps, and that his eyes burn brighter than a nova, and that his shout can level mountains.

They call him Santiago.

Far out on the Galactic Rim, at the very edge of the Outer Frontier, there is a world called Silverblue. It is a water world, with just a handful of islands dotting the placid ocean that covers its surface. If you stand on the very largest island and look into the night sky, you can see almost all of the Milky Way, a huge twinkling river of stars that seems to flow through half the universe. And if you stand on the western shore of the island dur- ing the daytime, with your back to the water, you will see a grass-covered knoll. Atop the knoll are seventeen white crosses, each bearing the name of a good man or woman who thought to colonize this gentle world. And beneath each name is the same legend, repeated seventeen times: “Killed by Santiago.”

Toward the core of the galaxy, where the stars press together so closely that night is as bright as day, there is a world called Valkyrie. It is an outpost world, a place of ram- shackle Tradertowns filled with dingy bars and hotels and brothels, where the explorers and miners and traders of the Inner Frontier congregate to eat and drink and embellish a few tall tales. The largest of Valkyrie’s Tradertowns, which isn’t really very large, also has a postal station that stores subspace messages the way the postal stations of old used to store written mail. Sometimes the messages are held for as long as three or four years, and frequently they are routed even closer to the galactic core, but eventually most of them are picked up. And in this postal station, there is a wall that is covered by the names and holographs of criminals who are currently thought to be on the Inner Frontier, which tends to make the station very popular with bounty hunters. There are always twenty outlaws displayed, never more, never less, and next to each name is a price. Some of these names remain in place for a week, some for a month, a handful for a year. Only three names have ever been displayed for more than five years. Two of them are no longer there. The third is Santiago, and there is no holograph of him.

 On the colony world of Saint Joan, there is a native hu- manoid race known as the Swale. There are no longer any colonists; they have all departed. Near the equator of Saint Joan, very close to where the colonists once lived, there is a blackened swath of land almost ten miles long and half a mile wide, on which  nothing will ever grow again. No colonist ever reported it— or if any of them did, the report has long since been mis- placed by one of the Democracy’s thirty billion bureau- crats—but if you go to Saint Joan and ask the Swale what caused the blackened patch of ground, they will cross themselves (for the colonists were a religious lot, and very evangelical) and tell you that it is the Mark of Santiago.

Even on the agricultural world of Ranchero, where there has never been a crime, not even a petty robbery, his name is not unknown. He is thought to be eleven feet three inches tall, with wild, unruly orange hair and immense black fangs that have dug into his lips and now protrude through them. And when youngsters misbehave, their parents have merely to hint at the number of naughty children Santiago has eaten for breakfast, and order is immediately restored.

Wandering minstrels sing songs about him on Minotaur and Theseus, the twin worlds that circle Sigma Draconis, and always he is portrayed as being exactly 217 years old, taller than a belltower, and broader than a barn, a hard- drinking, womanizing Prince of Thieves, who differs from Robin Hood (another of their favorites) primarily in that he takes from rich and poor alike and gives only to himself. His adventures are legion, ranging from his epic hand-to-hand struggle with a chlorine-breathing Gorgon to the morning he went down to hell and spat full in Satan’s burning eye, and rarely is there a day that does not witness the addition of a few new stanzas to the ever-evolving “Ballad of Santiago.”

And on Deluros VIII, the huge capital world of the race of Man, the nerve center of the Democracy, there are eleven governmental departments and 1,306 men and women charged with the task of finding and terminating Santiago. They doubt that Santiago is his given name, they suspect that some of the crimes attributed to him were committed by others, they are almost certain that somewhere in their files they possess his photograph or holograph but have not yet matched it with its proper identity—and that is the sum total of their knowledge of him. Five hundred reports come to them daily, two thousand leads are followed up each year, munificent rewards have been posted on half a million worlds, agents are sent out armed with money and everything that money can buy, and still those eleven departments exist. They have outlived the last three administrations; they will continue to survive until their function has been fulfilled.

Silverblue, Valkyrie, Saint Joan, Ranchero, Minotaur, The- seus, Deluros VIII: interesting and evocative worlds all. But an even more interesting world in the strange tap- estry of Santiago’s life is the outpost world of Keepsake, at the heart of the Inner Frontier; for Keepsake is the home, at least temporarily, of a group of unseasoned adventurers who are destined to play a major role in the saga of the man known only as Santiago....

 

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Reviews (1)
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Customer avatar
Steve S October 07, 2013 12:59 pm UTC
Is there a Pathfinder version of the Player's Guide?
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Customer avatar
Tom R January 08, 2022 4:32 am UTC
Yes, but you might have found it in the 8 years since you asked...
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Product Information
Pages
66
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File Last Updated:
November 17, 2012
This title was added to our catalog on November 17, 2012.