Monday, April 6, 2026

Starfinder: Alien Archive 3 [RPG]

 Paizo released its third Alien Archive for Starfinder (first edition) in 2019, continuing the initial annual release schedule.  I rated the first two as excellent, if pricey.  Now, (too many) years later, what do I think of the third one?  I’ll make up my mind as I write the review!

 

Let’s start with the cover: a shining valkyrie, an insect-like jinsul, and a little plant-creature raxilite (I think?) stand on rampart, firing outward.  It’s okay, but doesn’t wow me.  The inside front-cover and inside back-cover have the standard decorative map of the Pact Worlds system.  There’s then a two-page table of contents and a two-page overview that has the usual (but useful) “How to Read a Creature Stat Block”.

 

The core of the book is, of course, pages and pages of new species: each of the 66 gets two pages of coverage.  I’ve talked before how Starfinder has concise stat blocks, so there’s always lot of room for lore development.  I think the artwork is okay, but a step below what appeared in the first two books.  I obviously can’t go through each new species one by one, but I’m going to call out a few that I found especially interesting.

 

·       There are twenty new playable races.  The animals-as-humanoids trend is strong, with brenneri (otters), dromada (kangaroos), expraksa (birds), hanakan (velociraptors), ijtikri (squids; these were everywhere for a while!), morlamaws (walruses; a great import from SFS), and telia (turtles).  Having played the game for a decade, I tend to think that most of the choice of race is cosmetic because the special racial abilities are few and fairly minor.  My preference would have been fewer playable races but more depth and meaningful differences between them.

 

·       Along with morlamaws (above), I was really happy to see some of the creatures introduced in Starfinder Society make it to the big time!  Jinsuls and izalguun are other imports.

 

·       Similarly, some of the creatures from Free RPG Day materials make an appearance, like animated armor and stridermanders.

 

·       A few entries that really stuck out to me: Drift natives (time-eaters that are great for GM plots), ferrofluid oozes and living holograms (I’ve fought these a million times in scenarios now!), quantum slimes (love the doubling effect), shakalta (playable race; twin-souls in one body, so must multiclass!), thorgothrel (intelligent oozes that believe in de-evolving all humanoid life—fun motivation!), rendalairn (a CR 25 colossal death orb!)

 

After the entries, there’s a substantive ten-page feature that introduces Creature Companions to the game.  How this works is that each PC is allowed to purchase one Creature Companion.  At base, a Creature Companion can only take one move action each round.  A PC can take a feat to trade their standard action in a given round to their Creature Companion (or, at Level 4, take another feat to give up just a move action so their Creature Companion can have a standard action).  I *really* like this, as it intelligently alters the action economy to keep “pets” from overshadowing other PCs—while still making them situationally useful.  Several example Creature Companions are given, as well as some new gear (I think the environmental field collar would be a must-have).

 

There’s not a lot that’s worth discussing in regards to the nine appendices (20 pages), with “Creatures by Terrain” and “Creatures by Pact World” the only ones I would consult other than the Universal Creature Rules.

 

That’s Alien Archive 3.  I don’t think it’s a must-have.  But now that the prices have come down, it’s a much better deal for 160 pages of material than before.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

What I Read (2025)

 BOOK LOG 2025


1 January 2025: Avatar by John Passarella.  “Angel novel.  Solid, could pass as an ep.”

6 January 2025: Worlds Without End by Caroline Spector.  “Shadowrun novel.  Ancient elf tries to stop return of mysterious evil.  Very different than one would expect of the setting, but not bad.”

9 January 2025: The Turn of the Screw by Henry James.  “Norton Critical Edition.  Interesting how much early interpretation differed from later.”

11 January 2025: The Blue Hour by Paula Hawkins. “Ok murder-thriller, but predictable.”

15 January 2025: The Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith.  “Strike novel.  Very enjoyable.”

28 January 2025: Two Faces of Liberalism by John Gray. « Excellent defense of minimal ‘modus vivendi’ liberalism. »

18 February 2025: Collapse by Jared Diamond. “Workmanlike writing, but impressive coverage.”

22 February 2025: Godsgrave by Jay Kristoff.  “Genuine surprises with a hard edge, a real page turner.”

15 March 2025: Initiation by Carla Jablonski.  “First book in Timothy Hunter series.  Liked Trench-Coat Brigade.”

8 April 2025: The Running Grave by Robert Galbraith.  “Strike book about a cult.  A bit over-complicated but still good.”

9 April 2025: Showdown at Centerpoint by Roger Macbride Allen.  “Last in the Corellian Trilogy.  Average.”

18 April 2025: Mansfield Park by Jane Austen. « Features the most insipid protagonist ever. »

9 May 2025: In Good Company by Gary McKay.  “Story of an Aussie platoon commander during Vietnam.  Interesting how little has changed tactically in many ways.”

9 May 2025: The Outsider by Albert Camus. “I need to think about this one.”

15 May 2025: The Walrus & The Warwolf by Hugh Cook. “Ridiculous but fun and different style of fantasy.”

18 May 2025: Breaking the Dark by Lisa Jewell.  “Infuriating fan fiction that tries to ‘fix’ everything ‘wrong’ with Jessica by making her a bland #mumlife carbon copy vision of ‘stable’ and ‘happy’”

22 May 2025: The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu.  « Starts off amazing, but then gets really silly. »

1 June 2025: If This Book Exists, You’re in the Wrong Universe by Jason Pargin.  “Hilarious and awesome; have to get the others.”

1 June 2025: Gerald’s Game by Stephen King.  “Overlong epilogue, but good.”

23 June 2025: Newton by I Bernard Cohen and Richard S Westfall (eds).  “Norton edition.  Good coverage of many topics.”

30 June 2025: X-Men: Watcher on the Walls by Christopher L Bennett.  « Post 9-11 security state theme, handled well. »

30 June 2025: No Bikinis on the Front Yard: My Lighthearted Stories in the Army by Larry Patrick.  « Very funny and I learned a lot.  Proud of my dad! »

9 July 2025: Silver Linings by Katrina Nannestad.  « Well-written. »

20 July 2025: Spirit of the Crocodile by Aaron Fa’aoso and Michelle Scott Tucker.  “Great YA book about Torres Strait islanders.”

29 July 2025: Delores Claiborne by Stephen Kingston.  « Draws you in immediately! »

10 August 2025: The Surface Trials by HM Waugh. « Surprisingly good. »

23 August 2025: Middle English Lyrics edited by Maxwell S Luria and Richard L Hoffman. “Hard to read—literally!”

4 September 2025: Westfallen, Book 1 by Ann and Ben Brashares.  “Solid YA time slip novel.”

14 September 2025: The Hall-Marked Man by Richard Galbraith. « Latest Strike novel.  Excellent. »

15 September 2025: Oak-Leaf Bearers by John Flanagan. « Fourth Ranger’s Apprentice book.  Exciting large scale battle scenes! »

27 September 2025: A Slowly Dying Cause by Elizabeth George. « New Lynley novel.  Disappointing flat mystery, though some good Havers bits. »

5 October 2025.  Muhammad: Biography of a Prophet by Karen Armstrong. « Hagiographic and relentlessly apologetic. »

6 October 2025: The Association of Small Bombs by Karan Mahajan.  « Elliptical story about cycle of terrorist bombings in India.  Ok. »

8 October 2025: They Bloom at Night by Trang Thanh Tran.  « Interesting spin on Black Lagoon-type horror tales. »

9 October 2025: Frog: The Secret Diary of a Paramedic by Sally Gould.  “Readable and heartfelt.”

12 October 2025: The Koran trans. by N.J. Dawood.  “Boring and repetitive.”

18 October 2025: Stop Screaming, I’m Scared Too by Rod Henderson.  « Well-written and heartfelt account of an Army aviator’s time in and after service. »

14 November 2025: Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress.  “Re-read of one of my all-time favourites.  Remains thought-provoking and resonant, now more than ever.”

24 November 2025: Inversions by Iain M Banks.  “Clever tale told in two different settings with subtle links between them.”

3 December 2025: Descent of Angels by Mitchel Scanlon. “Tells origins of Luther, Zahariel, and Lion, but doesn’t appreciably tie into Horus Heresy.”

11 December 2025: A Study in Ashes by Emma Jane Holloway.  “Third book in The Basketville Affair.   Good but overlong.”

14 December 2025: Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits by Jason Pargin.  “Fun and clever.”

17 December 2025: Dark Mirror by Craig Shaw Gardner.  “Angel novel.  Good characters, but pedestrian plot.”

20 December 2025: House of Secrets by Chris Columbus and Ned Vizzini.  “Enjoyable, fast-paced kids’ adventure book.”

22 December 2025: The Ghost Machine by James Lovegrove.  « Firefly novel.  Ok, but afraid to push storytelling beyond established boundaries. »

25 December 2025: The Christmas Market Murder by Peter Boland.  « Really satisfying classic locked-room mystery. »

27 December 2025: Ready Player One by Ernest Cline.  « Fantastic story and love poem to the 1980s geek culture. »

29 December 2025: Lair of the Crystal Fang by S.A. Sidor.  “Really strong Arkham Horror novel.  Makes we want to check out more.”