Skip to main content

Part-Time Gods (2nd Edition)

By: Third Eye Games

Type: Softcover

Product Line: Part-Time Gods

See Other Printings & Editions

Search on Part-Time Gods

Last Stocked on 11/19/2024

Product Info

Title
Part-Time Gods (2nd Edition)
Publisher
Product Line
Author
Misha Bushyager, Maggie Carroll, Danielle DeLisle,
Publish Year
2018
Pages
312
Dimensions
9x11.5x1"
NKG Part #
2148029943
MFG. Part #
3EG2001-SC
Type
Softcover

Description

Long ago, an entity known as the Source visited humanity and gifted certain people with divine power. For a time, the world existed in a state of balance between order and chaos, between life and death, between divinity and mortality. That is, until the gods waged war against the Source and eventually against each other, until the gods were close to extinct.

The gods of today are shadows of what the old gods possessed. Their power has been heavily diminished, and many choose to live a regular, mortal life, revealing themselves as gods only when absolutely necessary. The reason for this is twofold. First, fate doesn’t like it when the gods share their secrets with a mortal. Unless they are the god’s worshipper, terrible events and horrific accidents have a way of happening to the people closest to the god. Secondly, divine works attract creatures and monsters called Outsiders, created by the Source (after its capture) to destroy any god they encounter.

And so, the gods exist today in a state of flux. They have a mortal life, a job (or career if they’re lucky), friends, family, and everything that comes with being human, and they work hard to protect these things from harm. On the other side of the coin, they also have a Dominion to command and oversee, a deific Territory to defend from intruders, secret societies to which they owe allegiances (called Theologies), and other gods in their pantheon to try to get along with. This becomes their life, the balancing of the mortal and the divine, the normal and the supernatural, the mundane and the strange. The gods belong not to either world completely, and each of them knows that delving too deeply into one means losing pieces of the other.