


Abilities: 2 talents, 3 skills, 1 knowledge.Advantage: +5 to strength, stamina, and wits during frenzy.They care little for politics or society sticking mostly to themselves and their clan. Wild and feral, Gangrels are animalistic and insulure. Disciplines: Celerity, Potence, Presence.Abilities: 3 talents, 2 skills, 1 knowledge.Brujah are harbingers of change and seekers of a vampiric Utopia. Quick to pick a fight and just as likely to win. Hot-headed, brash, idealists, and rebels, the Brujah are a rather militant clan. The chosen clan will also affect your starting stat distribution. Each clan provides a set of three disciplines to use throughout the game. They also are the rulers of Eastern Europe.Each clan is different providing a specific strength and weakness. While a Tzimisce is an extremely sadistic kind of vampire, it is also a scholar and a born politician. They also are one of the few clans that still support the innocence of the Salubri. They hate the Camarilla but they hate the Tremere much more, because of the fact that the Usurpers used Tzimisce blood when they became vampires in the first place. The Tzimisce is considered as the "soul" of the Sabbat, as they are the spiritual leaders and the intellectuals of the sect. The Tzimisce consider that torturing the mind can achieve the same, if not better results than torturing the body, so their mastery over Dominate is amazing too.Īnother torture is their famous blood bond torture, when they blood bond one person to another and then kill one of them in order to see the other one suffer.

Their most dreadful weapon in their arsenal, Vicissitude, can be used to deadly results. The Tzimisce are extremely adept at using torture, being immensely creative when it comes to inflict grievous wounds and exaggerate harm upon someone. However, on closer inspection it becomes clear that this is simply a mask hiding something alien and monstrous. Polite, intelligent and inquisitive they seem a stark contrast to the howling Sabbat mobs or even the apparently more humane Brujah or Nosferatu. At a casual glance or a brief conversation a Tzimisce appears to be one of the more pleasant vampires. The Tzimisce have left the human condition behind gladly, and now focus on transcending the limitations of the vampiric state. If one were to described a Tzimisce as inhuman and sadistic, it would probably commend them for their perspicacity, and then demonstrate that their mortal definition of sadism was laughably inadequate.
