I don’t know how much sense the real-world tropes of skeptical atheists and fervently faithful theists make in a world where you can literally bargain with God to get your dead friend back from Heaven. In the D&Dis world, it really is atheism that requires faith!
In the campaign, the atheists are trying to fight/destroy the gods, who they believe are false gods distracting from the worship of the true gods Truth and Wisdom. I didn’t want to make that too obvious in the book because it might limit the usefulness of the classes in other settings.
So you’re atheists are actually nay theists… If that’s the case I have difficulty imagining how a group containing both atheists and theists could work at all...
I don’t know how much sense the real-world tropes of skeptical atheists and fervently faithful theists make in a world where you can literally bargain with God to get your dead friend back from Heaven. In the D&Dis world, it really is atheism that requires faith!
In the campaign, the atheists are trying to fight/destroy the gods, who they believe are false gods distracting from the worship of the true gods Truth and Wisdom. I didn’t want to make that too obvious in the book because it might limit the usefulness of the classes in other settings.
So you’re atheists are actually nay theists… If that’s the case I have difficulty imagining how a group containing both atheists and theists could work at all...