Mork (3.5e Deity)

Mork

Greater Deity
Symbol: An Angrier Orcish face than Gork
Home Plane: The Great Green (Which is Greener than Gorks)
Alignment: Chaotic Neutral
Portfolio: War, Battle, Brutality and Fighting
Clergy Alignments: Chaotic Neutral
Domains: War, Strength, Chaos, Destruction, Orc
Favored Weapon: Greataxe (A bigger one than Gork)
This page needs an image. If you are an artist, or know of any image that would fit this page, please upload a picture and add it.

More information...

Mork is one of the two major Orcish Gods. He differs from his brother Gork in that he is kunnin', but strong, as opposed to Gork who is strong, but kunnin'. Mork's power stems from his Orcish Soul, giving him plenty of RAW STRENGTH to muster in the need of beating anyone who dares do anything to offend him.

Dogma

Mork encourages Orcs to act Orcy. In such, he encourages his followers to fight anything and everything they can lay seige to at the current point in time. Even if this means each other.

Clergy and Temples

Mork does not have temples built in his honour, but rather effigies made by the Orcs in his image (or maybe in Gork's image, the Orcs generally can't agree with it). The clergy of Mork are wartorn, battlehardened and up for a good fight. In general, they're Orcs. But Shaman Orcs!


Back to Main Page 3.5e Homebrew Deities Greater

This page may resemble content endorsed by, sponsored by, and/or affiliated with the Warhammer 40,000 franchise, and/or include content directly affiliated with and/or owned by Games Workshop. D&D Wiki neither claims nor implies any rights to Warhammer 40,000 copyrights, trademarks, or logos, nor any owned by Games Workshop. This site is for non profit use only. Furthermore, the following content is a derivative work that falls under, and the use of which is protected by, the Fair Use designation of US Copyright and Trademark Law. We ask you to please add the {{needsadmin}} template if there is a violation to this disclaimer within this page.
gollark: ddg! wikipedia list of cognitive biases
gollark: Possibly. But in general, by sneaking a thing into the category via technicalities or quoting the definition and saying "see, it obviously fits" or something like that, you can make people treat it like a central member of the category.
gollark: This is something called the "noncentral fallacy", where because a thing is an *edge-case example* of a category, you taint it with all the connotations of everything else in the category.
gollark: A lot of political arguments are also something like "abortion is murder" / "abortion is important for choice", where you just associate it with badness/goodness tangentially to taint it with that badness/goodness.
gollark: Nevertheless, people will go around actually answering it based on whether they associate warm fuzzy feelings™️ with Israel or Palestine.
This article is issued from Dandwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.