Why Thunderstone Needs a Decision Guide
Thunderstone is not hard because the premise is complicated. It is hard because every person Henry meets has an incomplete story, and the stone moves through several hands before the real choice appears.
The trend search around this quest is practical: players want the stone, but they also want to know whether giving it away is a mistake. The best page has to cover both route and outcome.
Thomlin Is Not the End
Kona sends you toward Thomlin, but his stone is not the clean answer. You may need speech, leverage or a fight just to learn that the trail continues.
Do not spend the whole quest assuming the first owner has the real item. The point is to follow the chain through Peter and Hensel until the military camp opens the real lead.
Freeing Hensel
The military camp is the highest-risk section. If you enter by day and alert everyone, the fight becomes much worse. Night stealth lets you thin the camp and catch some enemies unarmed or asleep.
Free Hensel, speak to him and keep following the social trail. This quest is built as a relay: each answer points to the next person.
Final Choice
Giving the Thunderstone to Kona fits her request and can support follow-up context. Returning it to Thomlin gives a different reward path. Keeping it is tempting if you value the item effect more than the quest's social resolution.
Save before the final handoff. A player-focused guide should not pretend there is only one correct answer; the correct choice depends on role-play, rewards and how much you value permanent utility.
FAQ
Where do I start The Thunderstone?
Start with Kona in Grund in the Kuttenberg region after Speak of the Devil.
Should I keep the Thunderstone?
It can be valuable to keep, but giving it to Kona or returning it to Thomlin fits different reward and role-play goals. Save before deciding.
Source and accuracy note
This page combines official edition and publisher context with community-discovered route information. It avoids copying competitor screenshots or proprietary maps. When a route is community-led rather than fully verified, the map labels it accordingly.