Good For What Ales Ya

Good For What Ales Ya was opened two generations ago by the Ironkeg clan after a family quarrel drove a pair of brewer-siblings into this sloping trade road. Built into a natural hollow beneath a dwarven tramway, the tavern has weathered a small rockfall, a short-lived smuggler's ring, and one full winter siege by frost ogres. Over the years it became known for its imported small-batch beers from mountain microbreweries and for taking in wandering adventurers who prefer their ale loud and their bargains louder.

Tavern

Good For What Ales Ya

Good For What Ales Ya was opened two generations ago by the Ironkeg clan after a family quarrel drove a pair of brewer-siblings into this sloping trade road.

8Amenities12Menu Items8Known Patrons6Plot Hooks
Bromli Ironkeg

Tavernkeeper

Bromli Ironkeg
DwarfFighter

Keeper's Species

Dwarf

History

Good For What Ales Ya was opened two generations ago by the Ironkeg clan after a family quarrel drove a pair of brewer-siblings into this sloping trade road. Built into a natural hollow beneath a dwarven tramway, the tavern has weathered a small rockfall, a short-lived smuggler's ring, and one full winter siege by frost ogres. Over the years it became known for its imported small-batch beers from mountain microbreweries and for taking in wandering adventurers who prefer their ale loud and their bargains louder.

Quirks

Every full moon night someone is encouraged to 'claim the Keg-Oath' and recite a noisy toast to the mountain. Those who fail the rhyme must buy a round. The tavern has a tradition of stamping patrons' coin pouches with a small iron rune for entry during busy nights. If a fight starts, the proprietor rings a carved iron bell and the brawlers are given a strict ten-minute grace to settle things before the house policy fines the loser in ale and chores.

Lore

Local dwarven lore says the stone beneath the tavern is veined with 'singing iron' that makes well-brewed ales come alive. Patrons joke that the casks have memories. Old miners whisper the Ironkeg founders once served in the hold guard and left with a blessing and a curse: protection from the mountain and an appetite for loud songs. Many of the tavern's signature beers are brewed in tiny family cellars deep in the hills and carry the names of lost halls and questionable ancestors.

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