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Angel of Condemnation Slawomir Maniak

Angels
Whatever their original forms might have been, the an-
gels of Amonkhet have been twisted into distorted re-
flections of Nicol Bolas. Their limbs are long and thin,
with elongated shins and forearms. Their huge wings
are adorned with white and black feathers. Light shines
through their joints and chests as if from an internal
fire, and their eyes glow with a gold or orange light.
Bolas’s angels are his personal agents during his
absence from Amonkhet. Their mission, which they
pursue with unwavering devotion, is to keep Nakta-
mun free of dissenting voices. They stand as sentinels
over the city, extending supernatural senses to detect
the presence of dissenters. They use their long, hooked
staffs to capture those who question the God-Pharaoh’s
rule, and are tasked with carrying out the punishment
that Bolas’s law demands. Dissenters are bound into
sarcophagi—the Tombs of Disgrace—and exposed to
the mockery of fellow citizens in the Display of Doubt.
On the following morning, the angels carry the sar-
cophagi into the desert and abandon the dissenters to
the horrors of the sands—and the Curse of Wandering.
Use the statistics of a deva for an angel on Amonk-
het, replacing its mace attack with a staff attack. When
the angel hits with a melee attack using its staff, the
target is grappled (escape DC 17). Until this grapple
ends, the target is restrained and the angel can’t attack Archfiend of Ifnir Slawomir Maniak
another target with its staff.
Demons
Deep in the desert, far from the protection of the Hekma
and the safety of Naktamun, lies a place called Ifnir, the
Demons’ Nest. The people of Amonkhet believe that
the God-Pharaoh banished all the demons of this plane
to the desolation of Ifnir as punishment when they rose
up in rebellion against him. Some say that the angels
carry the worst dissenters into the heart of Ifnir, which
is a fate far worse than merely being abandoned amid
the scouring sands.
The demons of Ifnir bear some resemblance to Bo-
las, with long limbs and tails, huge wings, and gaunt
bodies adorned with horns and blades. Other demon-
ic creatures have more bestial features, including am-
mits—crocodilian demons sometimes used as challeng-
es within the trials of the five gods—and the scorpion
demons called soulstingers, whose venom causes ex-
cruciating pain in its victims.
Use the statistics of a nalfeshnee for a demon such
as an Archfiend of Ifnir. The statistics of a giant croc-
odile can model an ammit, and those of a bone devil
work well for a soulstinger demon.

Seraph of the Suns Winona Nelson

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