Changeling
(changeling)
Changelings are the offspring of hags and whomever they trick into mating with them.✝123
Appearance
Changelings can be of any ancestry, including dwarves, gnomes, orcs, and goblins, but humans are most common.124
They primarily resemble a member of their father's ancestry but are exceptionally slight, pale, and dark-haired, and are often distinguished by having mismatched, differently coloured eyes,1243 with one bearing their father's eye color and the other being a supernatural shade, such as violet or bright green.43
Adventurers
Changelings carry the potential for occult sorcery in their hag blood, and the path of the bard utilises the same type of magic. Many changelings who adore nature's beauty become druids or rangers, while changeling rogues make expert manipulators with lacerating claws. Some changelings become champions to protect what they love.5
Ecology
Changelings are typically born when a hag tricks a male of another species into coupling with her. The hag normally murders and eats the changeling's father before he can ever see his child. After giving birth, the hag then abandons the child with a family or organisation of the father's ancestry that she believes will care for the child, such as a temple.12 Changelings can also be born when a hag coven performs ritual magic near a settlement, and such babies are often soon abandoned or orphaned. They can be of any gender,3✝ and often possess an aura of oddness that prevents them being fully accepted into their birth-father's society.12
The limited powers inherited from the changeling's hag mother normally manifest around puberty. The changeling finds themself able to see in the dark, their skin gains a supernatural hardness, or their nails subtly change become sharp and hard enough to effectively function as claws.1243
Some manifest stranger powers. For instance, changeling children of dreamthief hags can better resist magically compelled sleep or dreams.2 Changelings are also fundamentally infused with inhuman magic and often become powerful witches or sorcerers,6 or are drawn to occult or primal magics.2 Despite these differences, it is very possible for a changeling to be completely unaware of her supernatural origin.6
The Call
Around the same time that changelings develop their new-found abilities, they also hear the Call, a powerful psychic cry issued by their hag mother that is designed to lure them away from their foster communities.241 Most changelings feel it as wanderlust, but its origin is much more sinister: the changeling's mother forms a coven with at least two other hags to summon their wayward children home.2643
Those who follow the Call are abducted and subjected to an horrific ritual that harnesses their innate magic and twists their physical form eventually resulting in the birth of a new hag.2 Some changelings who have been subjected to rejection and persecution actually embrace this wicked metamorphosis,1 while those with stronger social bonds or deep druidic beliefs resist it and live out their mortal lives typically as solitary changeling exiles.2
The Call primarily targets female changelings,3 and this prevalence led to a long-held mistaken belief that all changelings are female.✝ The secret heritage of male changelings is therefore more hidden within their paternal ancestry.2
Heritages
Changelings vary greatly depending not only on the species with whom the hag mated, but on the hag parent herself. These differences fall into the following categories known as heritages, while the changelings who exhibit these differences are known as mays. Below is a list of the best-known heritages along with their hag parents:7
Habitat and society
Changelings grow up in the society of their fathers and this shapes much of their character. Despite their monstrous mother, they have no predisposition towards evil, but their innate otherness often marks a changeling as an outcast,8 and as a result they often relate easiest with other mixed heritage outsiders, especially aiuvarins.64 Those who are embraced by their adopted society, however, find it easiest to ignore the sinister Call of their progenitor.14
Changelings live wherever hags dwell, such as Varisia, the River Kingdoms, and the fey-haunted Verduran Forest. They are comparatively common in the Lands of the Linnorm Kings, where they associated with the powerful seeress norns; the witch kingdom of Irrisen; and most commonly in the haunted kingdom of Ustalav.6
Changelings occupy a terrifying place amongst the folklore of the Inner Sea region, representing some primal feeling that even people they think they know might not be what they seem. In these tales, a changeling is a manipulative monster using their human form to torment their community. Unfortunately, these often false tales can lead to the very real persecution of any changeling whose heritage is discovered. The same folklore also claims that changelings who resist the Call are rewarded after death by Pharasma, who turns their souls into shoki psychopomp.9
References
Paizo published a major work about changelings and their culture titled Blood of the Coven, and articles for playing changeling characters in Inner Sea Races, Advanced Player's Guide for Pathfinder Second Edition, and Player Core.
For additional as-yet unincorporated sources about this subject, see the Meta page.
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 “Bestiary” in The Haunting of Harrowstone, 84. Paizo Inc., 2011 .
- ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 “Monsters A-Z” in Bestiary, 62. Paizo Inc., 2019 .
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 “Ancestries & Backgrounds” in Player Core, 76. Paizo Inc., 2023 .
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 “1: Ancestries and Backgrounds” in Advanced Player's Guide, 30. Paizo Inc., 2020 .
- ↑ “Changeling” in Ancestry Guide, 21. Paizo Inc., 2021 .
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 “Chapter 3: Rare Races” in Inner Sea Races, 169. Paizo Inc., 2015 .
- ↑ 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 “Changeling Heritages” in Blood of the Coven, 4–9. Paizo Inc., 2017 .
- ↑ “Bestiary” in The Haunting of Harrowstone, 85. Paizo Inc., 2011 .
- ↑ “Chapter 3: Rare Races” in Inner Sea Races, 168. Paizo Inc., 2015 .