![]() ![]() So this suggests the possibility where you try to resurrect someone who's already living a different life as a different person. "the target doesn’t wish to return" - so even without that, we can pretty much assume that the soul in question will have been washed clean and moved on eventually. "The Lady of Graves has decided that the target’s time has come" - I mean, once you're more than 50 years after their death, wouldn't that be kind of a given? How are the increasing time spans for the really high-level versions of this even applicable? it gets weird, because fo the two caveats. Now, Resurrection heightened to 10th is actually even more interesting, since (by the way the Golarion afterlife works) those souls will eventually reincarnate. Now, if its heightened to 9th, then those issues go away. and if you're talking about a skeleton who's been undead for more than a year they don't qualify under that, either. So, if you're talking about a skeleton, then they're not really intact. And resurrection requires "the target’s body to be present and relatively intact." This is up to GM interpretation, but I'd imagine that a destroyed (0 hit point) undead is "intact" enough for resurrection purposes.)ĮDIT: What got me thinking about this was the 9th-level ancestry feat Rejuvenation Token, which specifically says that resurrect using your soulbound object doesn't bring you back to life but returns you to your Skeleton state. I think saying the PC is destroyed is a holdover from talking about bringing undead monsters and NPCs down to 0 hp, because doing so doesn't "kill" the undead creature. But can they still be resurrected and returned to life by the ritual, so long as the spell's requirements are met (died within the past year), yes? So it seems implied that the PC is gone for good. In Book of the Dead, undead characters brought down to Dying 4 are destroyed.
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