Mace of Mog
(Weight 1)
This enchanted mace blessed by the
Newhon God Mog allows the character to double their damage roll only against
corporeal monsters and hit incorporeal monsters for normal damage. Any bearer
of the mace will find their eyes will change to resemble a spider’s eight eyes.
This will cost the player four points of charisma as long as the character owns
the mace. Should the player lose the mace the effect will fade in a few days.
It in no way actually impacts the player’s vision.
Mog
“If there is a God he's a great
loathsome spider in the darkness.”
― John Fowles, The Collector
― John Fowles, The Collector
Lesser God
Symbol: Silver medallion with the image of Mog
Home Plane: Newhon
Colors: Black and Silver
Alignment: Neutral (Chaotic Neutral)
Portfolio: Secrets, Arachnids, Underworld, Wealth
Worshipers: Thieves, Explorers, Scholars, Criminals, Assassins, Seers
Cleric Alignments: Neutral
Domains: Spiders, Secrets, Fate and Wealth
Favored Weapons: Mace, Dagger
The Lord of Newhon’s Arachnids rules
over creatures both eight-legged and two-, dwelling in the paradisiacal environs
of Godsland on Nehwon’s southern continent. Mog’s physical form is that of a four-legged
spider with a handsome, but not yet all-together human face. Some say there is
a passing resemblance between Mog and “that mongrel and long-suspected
cutpurse, burglar, and assassin, the Gray Mouser.”
The Gray Mouser worshipped Mog the Spider God for a time (and also
robbed his temple, but Mog was happy for the few worshippers he still has and
forgave his wayward son), and by the end of his adventures was one of the god's
few surviving worshippers. This god is a human-sized spider with a man's head.
His worshippers claim that he sits in the middle of a vast web which contains
the fates of all humans. Some say that a human can survive only so long as he
or she can evade Mog's grasp. Mog’s worship is now rare. Those few
who still worship him usually do so in private in order to avoid the scorn of
others. For his part, Mog would like
to attract new worshippers, but all his attempts have failed. He does not have
a temple on the infamous Street of the Gods in Lankhmar. He is considerably
less evil (he is amoral) than often portrayed and sometimes confused with
Newhon’s voracious and evil Demon Spider
Deity of Ilthmar. He is more like the Anansi,
the trickster spider god of African folklore than Lolth.
Mog enjoys hanging out with the
Newhon barbarian war god Kos and Death (Newhon).
Mog is always eager to acquire new
servants and the players will do nicely. Characters that bear his mace can
expect Mog to begin contacting them in their dreams offering rewards for quests
and promising curses if ignored. He would like to see the artifact the Mace of Mog recovered so that he can
expand his influence further on this Dungeon World…
Anansi is the trickster spider god of West African.
He often takes the shape of a spider and is considered to be the god of all
knowledge. He is also one of the most important characters of West
African and Caribbean folklore.
He is also known as Ananse, Kwaku Ananse, and Anancy;
and in the southern United States he has evolved into the “Aunt Nancy” of folklore. He is
a spider, but often acts and appears as a man.
The Anansi tales are believed to
have originated in the Ashanti people in Ghana. (The word Anansi
is Akan and means, simply, spider.) They later spread to
other Akan groups and then to the West Indies, Suriname,
and the Netherlands Antilles. On CuraƧao, Aruba,
and Bonaire he is known as Nanzi, and his wife as Shi Maria.
Anansi is depicted in many different
ways. Sometimes he looks like an ordinary spider, sometimes he is a spider
wearing clothes or with a human face and sometimes he looks much more like a
human with spider elements, such as eight legs.
Orlando Jones plays a
version of Anansi on the Showtime cable television series American Gods.
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