Road (Pilgrim)Road (Pilgrim) CR 3Source GameMastery Guide pg. 291 XP 800 Human commoner 5 NG Medium humanoid Init +0; Senses Perception +7DefenseAC 11, touch 10, flat-footed 11 (+1 armor) hp 17 (5d6) Fort +1, Ref +1, Will +4OffenseSpeed 30 ft. Melee spear +2 (1d8/×3) Ranged spear +2 (1d8/×3)StatisticsStr 10, Dex 10, Con 11, Int 13, Wis 12, Cha 10 Base Atk +2; CMB +2; CMD 12 Feats Alertness, Endurance, Iron Will, Skill Focus (Heal) Skills Handle Animal +5, Heal +10, Knowledge (religion) +5, Perception +7, Perform (sing) +5, Profession (midwife) +5, Ride +5, Sense Motive +7, Swim +5 Languages Common Combat Gear potions of cure light wounds, neutralize poison, remove blindness/deafness, remove disease, and sanctuary; Other Gear y water
Boon A pilgrim will tend the wounds of injured PCs with her Heal skill or one of her healing potions if the need is great or if the PCs make a donation to her church of at least half the potion’s price.
Pilgrims are religious mendicants who roam the long roads visiting shrines, temples, and other places sacred to their faith. They are ordinary folk, little trained in formal theology but with a passion for spreading their religion through their travels, being of service to all that they meet, and healing the hurts of a sad and lonely world.
Pilgrims can serve as lay priests, common healers, or village wise women in settlements too small for a formal temple or full cleric. A pilgrim might also be found on a battlefield, pressed into service to make up for an army’s lack of divine healers.
Replacing one of the pilgrim’s commoner levels with a level of adept creates a healer that has at least limited access to healing magic. Hit Dice, hit points, base attacks bonus, and skills don’t change, but the pilgrim’s Will save increases to +6.
A pilgrim often works alone, but two or three might staff a remote clinic (CR 5 or 6). Pilgrims can also be found in groups of four, often accompanied by four caravan guards or eight acolytes (CR 8). A single pilgrim may be served by a guard, caravan guard, or pair of acolytes (CR 4). A pilgrim in turn might serve under a shaman (CR 6), while an evil pilgrim may work with a torturer, helping to keep prisoners alive (CR 6).
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