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Pathfinder Adventure Path: Lord of the Trinity Star

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96 pages, Paperback

Published October 28, 2025

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68 reviews4 followers
December 12, 2025
The lead author has no business being involved in a product such as this and is only onboard due to her ethnicity, to inoculate Paizo against those who would cry “cultural appropriation!”

Trinity Star has perhaps the worst beginning to a Paizo AP that I have ever seen. PCs are simply dragged by the nose as they run along the rails of the author’s gleeful story.

Once the PCs have chosen their mythic destinies, they engage in such high adventure (I kid you not) of rescuing a cat from a tree, unclogging a traffic jam, settling a spellcaster debate, and retrieving someone from an art gallery.

Nothing interesting happens until page 28. After a fun battle, the PCs, with mythic destinies mind you, hang out in a city helping people after it’s been attacked, performing all manner of mundane tasks.

At this point, players may be wondering if they wandered into a playhouse, where they are unwitting participants in a bad script. Paizo, have you heard of player agency?

The quality of the writing and adbenture is quite low, bringing into stark relief how far Paizo has fallen from its creative heights and from Rise of the Runelords.

Paizo has constrained itself voluntarily with DEI, virtue-signaling, political-correctness, and safe spaces. Their primary concern seems to be never offending anyone on the political left. In the process, quality has suffered. Writers are no longer chosen based on merit, as the proving grounds of Dungeon magazine and RPG Superstar previously helped ensure.

Art is politically correct and wildly inconsistent, depicting Xanderghul in ways that make him look like two or three different people.

This one is a real stinker. Paizo forced another Runelords AP, when they should have let things lie if they didn’t have a great, organic story to tell.
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