![]() ![]() Dead gods don’t grant spells, which makes it very difficult to be a cleric of one. Of course, all of that is at least somewhat moot, since they’ve all been killed by Acererak of Tomb of Horrors fame and dead gods don’t really work the same way as living ones. So would what sort of patron each would be-archfey makes a certain amount of sense for “primal spirits,” but it’s not defined anywhere. So a cleric of Nangnang would have been more likely than a warlock, but a warlock is not implausible that would be up to the DM. If they Omu believed the trickster gods to be gods, they could have become gods even if they were not originally. Note that the Forgotten Realms is a mythopoetic setting-believing something can make it true. That could just mean they were weak gods, or it could mean they were some other form of power, not properly gods, and that was the source of the difficulties. We do know that the trickster gods were relatively poor at the whole “god-hood” thing, and were only able to supply spells to a limited number of clerics. However, implication is all we have-the label of “god” was simply what the Omu called the beings they worshiped, after their original patron deity, Ubtao, left. ![]() Nangnang is a former grung who is now one of the “Nine Trickster Gods of Omu,” which would imply that Nangnang is a god rather than an archfey. ![]()
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