Slight misunderstanding. Full blood versus half blood elf.
And the Runecaster is a third party for Pathfinder.
A runecaster is a wielder of divine magic, similar to a cleric only in the type and nature of the magic at his command. Indeed, the runecaster has more in common with the wizard than he does with the standard servant of the divine, due to the scholarly way in which he collects and maintains his spell selection. Runecasters seek out esoteric sources of divine lore, runes and words of power, wherever those sources might be, securing those secrets for themselves and their fellow scholars.
Ah, the runecaster is a divine class for 3.5, not Pathfinder. In Pathfinder under races of stone their is a geomancer that is similar but more arcane over divine. I'm really not for 3rd party classes and races. I'm looking to just make the world homebrew, not the whole game.
And with your rolls if you plan to go elf your homeland and things are as follows.
Background Roll #1 on D100 (+0): 76 (1 rolls)
Background Roll #2 on D100 (+0): 98 (1 rolls)
Background Roll #3 on D100 (+0): 21 (1 rolls)
Your from a Non-Elven City or Metropolis If you're an elf, you gain access to the Civilized social trait and the Forlorn race trait.
Both of your parents are dead and you gain access to the orphened trait, and you gain 1d2 siblings. If you roll a 2 you gain access to the kin guardian trait. As always also roll a d100 to determine if it's older, younger, or your twins.
Edited: Arthos on 24th Dec, 2015 - 1:59am
If I was born a twin, I would have been first, because I'm a Barbarian with fast movement.
I am thinking I will be a monk. Now as a half elf I get a +2 on the ability score of my choice I would like to move the 15 to a 17 also. If that is ok with you. That should give me the ability scores of 17, 17, 14, 13, 9 and 9. If that is ok with you. Here is my other d 100 roll too.
Well I don't want you to lose out on playing Diarmadhim. Go ahead and reroll I want players and am welcoming anyone who has a desire to play. I'll give you a penalty though, simple enough. Something minor like another major childhood event roll which could end up traumatizing to your character but hey, fun stuff happened that year I guess.
Also, yes that works just fine. Remember you get two favored classes. Please specify them and I'll put it into your character notes for reference. You gain a bonus HP and skill point for the class. If you could please roll a d6 for your starting age, 2d8 for height, 2.8x5 for weight as well thank you.
Edited: Arthos on 24th Dec, 2015 - 2:11am
KNtoran, apparently for a half elf and that number your unusual homeland is in the forest and you gain access to the log roller regional trait.
Ken, need one more roll of the d100 thank you. But for the other rolls here is as follows:
73–77 Adopted You were not raised by your birth family, but taken in by another family within your race or culture. Roll twice instead of once on Table: Parents' Profession—once for your birth family and a second time for your adoptive family. You gain access to traits granted by both sets of parents. (So roll one more time for your adoptive parents professions.)
Your mother was a Serfs/Peasants You gain access to the Poverty-Stricken social trait.
And lastly, 21–25 Death in the Family You were profoundly affected by the death of the relative closest to you—a parent, grandparent, favorite sibling, aunt, uncle, or cousin. This death affected you profoundly, and you've never been able to let go of it. You gain access to the Reactionary combat trait and the Deny the Reaper story feat.
That last one is great since your dad died I suppose you just never got over it.
Malcolm, Artificer is perfect and works. and you already know, roll to see if your the younger or older one and the mentioned rolls I have told the others to work on, thanks!
We will go over the traits you have access to and which ones you can pick after all the rolls are done and over with so you can finish building your character. This portion is just to flesh out the foundation and set up an idea of what has happened in your life filling in some major holes and allowing you to critique what is missing.