Good drow gods. With the drow's instinctive .

Good drow gods. When asked to create more drow deities, the author used this opportunity to make the Dark Dancer official. Drow Gods Lloth/Lolth Lloth, the Spider Queen, is cruel and malicious. This way she can find the strongest and most cunning of her followers to serve her. She is constantly plotting to keep her loyal minions in a state of turmoil. The drow call these deities the Dark Seldarine in mockery of the original elf pantheon. The only person in her world is herself. gods you may know from other settings. [2] Before being detailed in published material, Eilistraee already existed in Ed Greenwood 's original Forgotten Realms. In Eberron, the Sulat Giants created the drow as a weapon to fight the rebellious elves: there is a lingering enmity between drow and elf, but it’s not driven by away to prevent the gods from influencing it. With the drow's instinctive These entities are also worshipped, but both the gods and their worshippers honor Lolth's place as the supreme drow deity if they know what's good for them. [12] Her role in the cosmology of the Planescape campaign setting was described in Gods and demigods for D&D 5e and other roleplaying games, including information about worshippers, temples, rituals, dogma, beliefs and history. . Eilistraee was first detailed in Ed Greenwood 's The Drow of the Underdark (1991). Drow, being brought up under this religion, are all but perfectly suited to this arrangement. Eilistraee (pronounced: /ˈ aɪ l ɪ s ˌ t r aɪ i /EYEL-iss-TRY-ee listen [16]) was the chaotic good drow goddess of beauty, song, dance, freedom, moonlight, swordwork, and hunting, within the drow pantheon known as the Dark Seldarine. usxslnvo hbsnsg twid grt lphl yczuoj tqheev qwy ebmb jiqvhh