Scion is a game about history whether we play it up or not in our game and Nemetondevos: Revised gives us that context we desperately needed for "the newly revived Gaulish Pantheon" Onyx Path introduced the Mysteries of the World supplement.
While some may find it frustrating the author leaves things open ended or simply states there is no solid account for some of these real world gods, this reader found the facts that ARE known about the Gaulish Pantheon fascinating and the reframing of the narrative to old gods trying to relearn themselves liberating from a Storyteller and player perspective, though I may be biased as David Taylors strict insistance of historicity even when it clashes with "canon" is one of the reasons I keep buying his supliments, from Lebor Óe In Dea to Mysteries of the Otherworld, both which I recomend along with this.
While the relics are suggestions and not strictly written out mechanically, the author introduces a new version of the Pantheon Specific Purview Nemeton that gives a player more than just "ability to throw fireballs remotley around your temple in southern France" and mechanics to play a druid that is more historically accurate than the tree hugging nature priest in Mysteries of the World.
Also, it's free. Why are you still reading this? Get it.
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