Source Book of the Dead pg. 88Deathless acolytes are an oddity among undead, neither willingly transformed nor, strictly speaking, transformed against their will. The creation of a deathless acolyte is an act of direct intervention by a deity, typically as a double-edged reward and curse granted to a faithful priest who failed in completing a divine mandate due to circumstances beyond their control.
Deathless Deities
Urgathoa isn't the only deity who has deathless acolytes. Other deities of death and war have their own deathless servitors. Included below are adjustments that can be quickly applied to the above stat blocks to modify them for other deities. Make the following adjustments and see the sample deity entry below.
Alignment match the acolyte's deity
Aura replace the acolyte's aura with an alternate one (see below) if it's more appropriate
Chastise Heretic and Denounce Heretic apply to anyone who doesn't follow the acolyte's deity
Spells replace
goblin pox and
false life with spells from the acolyte's deity's spells
Domain Spells use the domain spells from one of the deity's domains
Weapon replace the
scythe with the deity's favored weapon
Example Deity: Gorum (CN)
The mortality rate among priests of
Gorum is exceptionally robust, as are the ranks of his deathless acolytes.
Aura field of bloodshed
Domain Spells athletic rush,
enduring might (hierophant only)
Spells replace
goblin pox with
true strike and
false life with
enlarge Weapon greatsword (1d12 slashing,
versatile P)
Alternate Aura
Field of Bloodshed (
abjuration,
aura,
divine) 20 feet (hierophant 40). All creatures within the aura gain a +2 status bonus to damage with weapon Strikes. Creatures within the aura who attempt to Cast a Spell that doesn't deal damage must succeed at a DC 5 flat check or the spell fails, and the slot or Focus Point is wasted.
Eternal Servitude
Most priests and clerics don't aspire to become a deathless acolyte. Undergoing the transformation in the first place is usually an indicator the acolyte failed to achieve an important task set by their deity in life. Being forced to complete in undeath what one failed to achieve potentially means missing one's eternal reward to devote their existence to an undefined and potentially indefinite period of servitude.
She-Who-Feasts
There are some among the deathless who I must watch carefully.
Urgathoa's priests are hedonistic and boringly predictable, but on at least two occasions, I have encountered the rumored handiwork of one of her deathless hierophants: a being called She-Who-Feasts. I have yet to unravel the creature's purpose, but she seems drawn to flash points of great political strife, working behind the scenes to foment discord before fading back into the margins of history.
War's Toll
In the wake of the War of Immortals, deathless acolytes of all types have grown in number, especially deathless zealots, as both deities and their followers fell in battle without completing divine mandates. Curiously, deathless zealots of slain deities retain their power and continue to roam, still striving to carry out missions granted to them by their lost patrons.