Vecna: From Lich to Godhood - D&D Lore

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Published 2024-04-20
This long awaited DnD Lore on the Arch-Lich Vecna spans the story of Vecnas rise from man to deity. There is a lot of material (most of it conflicting) on the deity Vecna, but his story is a classic tale of a rise to power despite the odds. One thing to note on this video for all of those lore guys in the comments are I did not get into the possible origins of his Lich powers, including topics like Mok'slyk the Serpent, Orcus, or other possible sources of power.

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All Comments (21)
  • @bskec2177
    This whole series is "You think you have a problem, let me tell you about me day" and I 'm totally here for that.
  • @VikingMale
    His right hand…. His left hand is the hand of Vecna, but the right hand is secretly plotting against him and is on the side of good….
  • @tyrant-den884
    "Acerack, was it? They day you were allowed into Vecna's tower was the most important day of your existence; for me, it was Tuesday."
  • @leyrua
    The sword of Kas seems like a pretty archetypical evil artifact. Reminds me of an item I came up with that was a little more subtle. It was basically supposed to be a legendary sword of alarm, but it worked by allowing the wielder to telepathically hear antagonistic thoughts in a huge area around them. It wasn't that the sword was evil, it's just that the wielder was hearing all of the negative thoughts and "call to the void" moments of everyone around him (without hearing any of the positive thoughts), and eventually he went from being the loyal bodyguard of the king to gradually becoming more and more paranoid, until one day he snapped.
  • @robertcorr6971
    Good work man, keep up the good work. I'm always interested in the Dark Lords of the Dread Domains so I was amped to see you cover the Vecna Reborn stuff.
  • @dallaspark9100
    While I know these stories of vecna by heart, your narration of the events are really engaging and well made, and I really hope you make a fallow up, these videos will help a lot of new DMs run Eve of ruin next month!
  • @KS-PNW
    First one of your videos I've seen, it was really well done! Def gonna check out your other stuff 👍👍
  • @venkelos6996
    Personally, I like the idea that, even as a deity, in addition to all his self-interested goals, he has "responsibilities", too; secrets he's maybe discovered, or even been handed, but that are now his responsibility to ensure no one else also learns of them. Maybe the lore with Thurizdan is true, and it's critically important no one else ever learns that they are all fitments in the dreaming Mad God's mind, or that if he ever wakes up, everything will blink out, like a dream, or be destroyed, and replaced with something "better". Maybe people who get too close to this become Nothics, to keep them from learning more. I like the bit where you explain how Vecna and Kas didn't actually die, but were flung through the Abyss. Liches are my favorite undead; evil, immortal archmages who spend eternity unlocking ever more power, but they protect themselves against final death with their phylactery, so I was curious how Kas bypassed his "get out of death free in seven days" card, but that only works if they are destroyed, so if he got flung into Ravenloft, where even his soul can't escape, that makes sense, and then once he became a deity, the Dark Powers pushed him back out, as they won't abide other gods in their domain.
  • @IEatSand22890
    Just wanted to say I enjoy your lore videos. Keep it up!
  • @CarmenMultz
    10/10 man, keep up the awesome work! This channel is awesome
  • @thelibrary2
    well written serious & firm narrating feels like The stupendous wave, some dark souls aesthetic.
  • @user-wz7eq2yk6n
    You know I started learning about dnd to figure out the plots of stranger things by watching these types of videos. Now I’m in too deep lol
  • @BeaglzRok1
    My personal twist for Vecna's story in my game is that Vecna orchestrated Kas' betrayal through the sword. He had faced enough enemies prior that he would recognize that any resistance against him, any defeat and destruction he might face, must be of his own design. Most modules that mention any Sword of Kas to use against Vecna, be it the real artifact or a replicated forgery, make mention that its abilities become impotent when brought into Vecna's presence, which is easily the biggest contradiction to the one part of his lore that literally everyone agrees on: the sword's power was greatly effective against Vecna. Vecna is THE Big Bad Evil Guy of D&D. His plans span centuries, but few people truly realize just how thorough one's knowledge and control needs to be in order to consider every potential variable across not just days or weeks of people having random impulses and all manner of extraplanar beings exerting their own influence, but hundreds of years. No DM can truly know the scope of the butterflies he has sown to reap fields of whirlwinds. A single false death sets a legend of false hope for millennia into the future that can be exploited again and again. More deviously, a man of secrets and falsehoods can turn even the truth into a weapon that, in regards to his capability, can inspire zealotry in his followers and despair in his enemies. All of this from merely one outcome of one fight during one day, let alone the actions he has taken both prior and since. The infamous Acererak of the Tomb of Horrors still feared him before his downfall, whose power is so great that his bids for godhood are known throughout the multiverse. None of this paints the picture of a villain that can be cut down and have his grip on the world released as with Sauron from Lord of the Rings, Vecna is far worse: an inevitability. Despite the loss of his empire and failed rituals, he has still made the jumps from mortal to undeath and from undeath to divinity. His is not a meteoric rise, spectacular as a bolt of lightning, but a slow, quiet, ceaseless, and often unnoticed march of death that can be stayed, but never stopped.
  • @AvromCrovax
    The question is did Cass become a vampire or was he the first dhampir?
  • @mammonclarke
    Another great video! Thanks for all your hard work puttiing these together.