286 Pages • 218,271 Words • PDF • 18.1 MB
+ Guide+ Masters+ Dungeon
Uploaded at 2021-09-19 22:14
Report DMCA
PREVIEW PDF
C D
E
R
S
I
G
E N
E
D R
S
I A R T
T
D I R E C T O R
JESSE DECKER, JAMES JACOBS, ROBIN D. LAWS, DAVID NOONAN, CHRIS THOMASSON D E V E L O P M E N T
T E A M
BRUCE R. CORDELL , ANDY COLLINS, STEPHEN SCHUBERT E
D
I
T
O
R
E D I T O R
KIM MOHAN D E S I G N
M A N A G E R
CHRISTOPHER PERKINS DEV E L OP M E N T
M A NAG E R
C
O
V
E
O F
R P G
G R A P H I C
R & D
R
T
I
S
T
A R T I S T S
D E S I G N E R
DEE BARNETT C
A
R
T
O
G
R
A
P
H
E
R
TODD GAMBLE GRAPHIC
PRODUCTION
SPECIALISTS
ERIN DORRIES, ANGELIKA LOKOTZ
BILL SLAVICSEK P R O D U C T I O N
A
KALMAN ANDRASOFSZKY, MITCH COTIE, ED COX, STEVE ELLIS, WAYNE ENGLAND, EMILY FIEGENSCHUH, RANDY GALLEGOS, BRIAN HAGAN, GINGER KUBIC, RAVEN MIMURA, WILLIAM O’CONNOR, MICHAEL PHILLIPPI, VINOD RAMS, WAYNE REYNOLDS, DAN SCOTT, RON SPENCER, ARNIE SWEKEL , FRANZ VOHWINKEL
STACY LONGSTREET D I R E C T O R
R
MATT CAVOTTA
JESSE DECKER SEN IOR A RT DI REC TOR R P G R& D
D & D
DAWN MURIN
I N T E R I O R S
MICHELE CARTER, CHRIS THOMASSON, RAY VALLESE, PENNY WILLIAMS M A N A G I N G
S
M A N A G E R S
JOSH FISCHER, RANDALL CREWS
I M A G E
T E C H N I C I A N
SVEN BOLEN
Based on the original DUNGEONS & DRAGONS® rules created by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson and the new DUNGEONS & DRAGONS game designed by Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook, Skip Williams, Richard Baker, and Peter Adkison. This WIZARDS OF THE COAST® game product contains no Open Game Content. No portion of this work may be reproduced in any form without written permission. To learn more about the Open Gaming License and the d20 System License, please visit www. wizards.com/d20.
U.S., CANADA, ASIA, PACIFIC, & LATIN AMERICA Wizards of the Coast, Inc. P.O. Box 707 Renton WA 98057-0707 (Questions?) 1-800-324-6496
EUROPEAN HEADQUARTERS Hasbro UK Ltd Caswell Way Newport, Gwent NP9 0YH GREAT BRITAIN
620–86317–001–EN 987654321 First Printing: June 2005
Please keep this address for your records
DUNGEONS & DRAGONS , D&D, DUNGEON MASTER, d20, d20 System, WIZARDS OF THE COAST, Dungeon Master’s Guide, Player’s Handbook, Monster Manual, all other Wizards of the Coast product names, and their respective logos are trademarks of Wizards of the Coast, Inc., in the U.S.A. and other countries. All Wizards characters, character names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks owned by Wizards of the Coast, Inc. Distributed to the hobby, toy, and comic trade in the United States and Canada by regional distributors. Distributed in the United States to the book trade by Holtzbrinck Publishing. Distributed in Canada to the book trade by Fenn Ltd. Distributed worldwide by Wizards of the Coast, Inc., and regional distributors. This material is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Any reproduction or unauthorized use of the material or artwork contained herein is prohibited without the express written permission of Wizards of the Coast, Inc. This product is a work of fiction. Any similarity to actual people, organizations, places, or events is purely coincidental. Printed in the U.S.A. ©2005 Wizards of the Coast, Inc.
Visit our website at www.wizards.com/dnd
Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4
Chapter 2: Adventures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 Adventure Pacing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 Using Published Adventures . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 Usable Material . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 Linking a Published Adventure . . . . . . . . .38 Simple Fixes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 A Change of Direction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40 Traps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40 Archetypal Locations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47 Battle in the Sky. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47 Burning Building . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48 Evil Crypt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50 Flooding Dungeon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 Ice Bridge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52 Lava. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53 Restrictive Tunnels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55 Treetop Village . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56 Special Encounters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57 The Chase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57 Crowds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58 Mobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59 Miniatures and Encounter Building . . . . . . .61 Warbands as Roleplaying Encounters . . .61 Alignment-Based Encounters . . . . . . . . . . .62 Using Terrain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62 Making it Fair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62 Battle Grid Terrain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63 More Encounter Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65 Sample Treasure Hoards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71 Chapter 3: The Campaign . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73 Beginning and Ending a Campaign . . . . . . . .73 Your Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73 Campaign Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74 Campaign Concept . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76 Campaign Closure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77 Starting Level . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78 Race and Class Requirements . . . . . . . . . . .78 Modified Alignments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79 House Rules or Expanded Rules . . . . . . . .80 The Pregame . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .80
Chapter 4: Saltmarsh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . About Saltmarsh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Notable NPCs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Town Councilors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . City Watch and Militia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Guild Leaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Religious Leaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Other Notable Citizens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Life in Saltmarsh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Exploring Saltmarsh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
119 119 120 120 120 120 120 120 121 122
Chapter 5: Nonplayer Characters . . . . . . . . Contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gaining a Contact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Uses for Contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hirelings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Adventurers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Specialists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sample Specialist Prices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Unique Abilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Unique Ability Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . Sample Complex NPCs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reading the Statistics Block . . . . . . . . . .
153 153 153 154 154 154 155 157 157 158 160 173
Chapter 6: Characters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 Students and Masters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .175 Apprenticeship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .175 Mentorship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179 Running a Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180 Teamwork Benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189 What Is a Teamwork Benefit? . . . . . . . . . 189 The Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
Teamwork Benefit Descriptions . . . . . . . 190 Acquiring a Companion Spirit . . . . . . . . 194 General Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196 Specific Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198 Designing Prestige Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 The DM’s Role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 The Players’ Role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 Why Create a Prestige Class? . . . . . . . . . . 203 Prestige Class or Standard Class? . . . . . . 204 Naming and Core Concept . . . . . . . . . . . 204 Designing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204 Basic Features of Prestige Classes . . . . . 206 Designing Abilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207 Costs and Balancing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208 PC Organizations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .210 Campaign Benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .210 Constructing a PC Organization . . . . . . .210 Order of Ancient Mysteries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212 The Shining Crusade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .216 Red Knives Thieves’ Gang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219 Guilds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223 Chapter 7: Magic Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229 Magic Item Signature Traits . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229 Signature Trait Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . 229 Learning a Signature Trait . . . . . . . . . . . . 230 Applying a Signature Trait . . . . . . . . . . . . 230 Identifying a Signature Trait . . . . . . . . . . 231 Assigning a Signature Trait . . . . . . . . . . . 231 Bonded Magic Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231 Creating a Bond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231 Bonding Rituals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232 Bonding Ritual Descriptions . . . . . . . . . 233 Magical Locations as Treasure . . . . . . . . . . . 235 Placing Magical Locations . . . . . . . . . . . . 236 Nature of Magical Locations . . . . . . . . . . 236 Magical Location Descriptions . . . . . . . . 236 Armor Special Abilities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250 Synergy Abilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250 Magic Armor and Shield Special Ability Descriptions . . . . . . . . 250 Weapon Special Abilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253 Synergy Abilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253 Magic Weapon Special Ability Descriptions . . . . . . . . 253 Specific Weapons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 262 Rings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263 Rods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 264 Wondrous Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 266 Weapon and Armor Templates . . . . . . . . . . . 273 Template Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .274 Crafting a Templated Item . . . . . . . . . . . . .274 Finding a Templated Item . . . . . . . . . . . . .274 Feycraft Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .274 Fireshaped Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275 Githcraft Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .276 Gloryborn Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277 Hellforged Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277 Pitspawned Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 278 Soulforged Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 279 Artifacts in Your Campaign. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 279 Reasons to Introduce Artifacts . . . . . . . . 279 Minor Artifacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 280 Major Artifacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281 Removing an Artifact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282 Destroying Artifacts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282 Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 285
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1: Running a Game . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Your Job as DM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 The Big Question . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Secondary Priorities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Play Styles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Know Your Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Postgame Analysis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Player Traits and Incentives . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Your DMing Style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 Balancing Differing Tastes . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 Ground Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22 At the Table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 Communication Is Key . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 Paying Attention . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 Keep it Moving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 Away from the Table. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 Prioritizing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 Improvisational Aids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 Communication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 Mediation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35 Selfishness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36
Medieval Society . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81 Buried Glories, Recent Dangers . . . . . . . . .82 Monarchs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82 Lords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83 Knights and Footmen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84 The Monarch’s Court . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86 Villages and Villeins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87 Towns and Cities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88 50 Rumors and Hooks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88 People at Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .90 Mercantile Guilds and Occupations . . . . .90 Nonmercantile Guilds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95 Other City Dwellers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .97 Establishments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98 Inns. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98 Eating Halls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98 Taverns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99 Shops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99 100 Instant NPC Agendas . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99 Laws and Punishment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 Law Rank . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 Administration of Justice . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Writs of Outlawry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Trial and Sentence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Other Forms of Government . . . . . . . . . . .105 Building a City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 Geography Is Destiny . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 How Big Is the City? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 The City’s Buildings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 How Many Buildings? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Fill in the Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Magic Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Elements of a Magic Event . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 The Active Event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .111 Stopping the Event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .111 Example Magic Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .111
3
INTRODUCTION
Introduction
4
Being a DM is a big job. You’ve got all those rules to master, a cast of thousands to portray—heck, you’ve got a whole world to create. The size of the DM’s job is why you’re holding Dungeon Master’s Guide II. The 320 pages of the Dungeon Master’s Guide was sufficient to get a campaign world thriving, but it just scratched the surface of what’s possible. Truth-in-advertising time: Here’s 288 pages, and it’s just a second scratch on the surface of what’s possible. But what a scratch! Whether you run a game that’s one kick-in-the-door battle to the death after another, or one fraught with tense negotiations and political intrigue, there’s something in here that can help you out with the big job of being DM. Here’s a sample. Flip through the book and check out the following: Adapting to Different Play Styles (page 7): The psychodramatist, the cool guy, the brilliant planner, the outlier, and the lurker. Who are these people, and how can you keep them all happy at the same game table? Preparation (page 32): How to get ready for the game if you’re under time pressure; step-by-step checklists for 1 hour of prep time, 2 hours, 3 hours, and more. More Traps (page 40): Tired of yet another spikebottomed pit? Here you’ll find fire summoning traps, painful hobbling traps, trapped weapons, fey rings, and spell turrets. Many are built at multiple Challenge Ratings so you can find one that’s appropriate for your characters—or maybe just a little bit tougher. Exotic Encounter Locations (page 47): Goodbye, 20-foot-square dungeon room. Hello, ice bridge, evil crypt, treetop village, and burning building! Encounter Tables (page 65): Every DM knows that PCs don’t always go where you planned. Now you’re ready with a fun encounter when their whims or overconfidence take them into an infernal vortex, a sewer tunnel—or the wizards’ guild late at night. Medieval Society (page 81): If the characters go really far afield, they might find themselves in a different nation or culture altogether. Now you have everything from systems of government to political plots to random rumors to make every part of your setting come to life. Laws and Punishment (page 101): Player characters often wind up on the wrong side of the law—sometimes justly, sometimes unjustly. Here’s how to handle the arrest, the trial, and the sentence . . . or at least the part of the sentence that the characters serve before they prove their innocence or bust out of prison. Magic Events (page 109): When you’re creating the climax to an adventure, you want a magic event such as the sudden appearance of a burning eye on the horizon or
the gradual growth of an inky blackness that grows larger with each life it consumes. Saltmarsh (page 119): D&D veterans will remember Saltmarsh as the site of an adventure published in the early 1980s. Now it’s back as an example of a fully detailed town. You can either put Saltmarsh in the world you create, or call it by another name and use the information for one of your own towns. Unique Abilities (page 157): Sometimes you want an NPC that’s unaccountably weird. Now you can create characters with extra limbs, fey spirits, or beings that are just “abysmally wretched.” Complex NPCs (page 160): At one time or another, every DM has needed a statted-up bounty hunter in a hurry. Now you’ve got one, plus other DM staples such as the tribal shaman, the cultist, and the martial artist. Businesses (page 180) and PC Organizations (page 210): PCs do more than just delve into dungeons. Whether they want to invest their loot in a merchant caravan or take over the local thieves’ guild, you’re ready. Teamwork Benefits (page 189) and Companion Spirits (page 194): We’ve got two new ways for the players at your table to act like a team: teamwork benefits that represent experience and specialized training, and companion spirits that grant magical powers to the PCs and their allies. Magical Locations (page 235) and Magic Items (beginning on page 250): We haven’t forgotten that players spend as much time with the “blue books” as the DMs do. In addition to new items (and new ways to customize the ones you’ve got), we offer magic locations that grant you powers beyond what mere trinkets can offer. Being a DM is indeed a big job—but it has a commensurately big reward. You get to create entire worlds, fueled only by your own imagination. You get to play every dastardly villain, every savage beast, and every comic-relief innkeeper. You get to ensnare your fellows in intricate webs of plot and scheme. Best of all, you get to look up from your dice and your notes every now and then to see your friends hanging on your every word—or laughing uproariously because they’re having such a good time. You’re making that happen. So look up every once in a while and bask in the joy you’ve created. Do it enough, and you’ll never want to relinquish your spot at the head of the table.
WHAT YOU NEED TO PLAY Dungeon Master’s Guide II makes use of the information in the three D&D core rulebooks: Player’s Handbook, Dungeon Master’s Guide, and Monster Manual. It doesn’t directly reference any other books, but it draws on the accumulated heritage of D&D supplements published since 2000. Although possession of any or all of these supplements will enhance your enjoyment of this book, they are not strictly necessary.
Illus. by A. Swekel
game of DUNGEONS & DRAGONS is an experience you and your players create together. As a Dungeon Master, you lead the way, bouncing between roles as author, actor, umpire, and traffic cop, as the situation demands. Though these might seem like unrelated roles, each calls on one key skill: communication. By brushing up on your skills as a communicator—both as talker and, even more important, as listener—you can transform from a good DM into a great one.
YOUR JOB AS DM Your job as a DM is simple: to make the game fun for the players and for yourself. No other goal takes priority over this one. You are not trying to please anyone outside your gaming group. You won’t find a single right or wrong way to have a good time, nor a single ideal style of play you and your group ought to be working toward. Increase your group’s fun quotient by following these simple principles: Read Your Players: Few players, even when directly prompted, can tell you outright what they’re looking for in a D&D game. By observing indirect cues, you can get
a better read on your players than they can usually give you directly. Something for Everyone: Once you know what your players want, you can take steps to cater to each of them, collectively or in turn. Keep the Energy Level Up: Maintain your focus and sense of excitement. Use simple presentational techniques to project that excitement to your players. Keep It Moving: As in any form of entertainment, pacing is everything. Learn to nudge, shape, and prod the action to minimize boredom without taking away your players’ sense of control over their characters’ actions. Be Prepared: Whether you’re blessed with loads of prep time or cursed with too little, ensure that you use the time you have to your best advantage.
THE BIG QUESTION Whenever you worry that a session might be taking a turn for the worse, pause for a moment and ask yourself: Are we having fun? If you look around the room and your players are leaning forward in their seats, energized, smiling, and enthusiastic, the group is already having fun, and you’re doing a superb job whether you’re ready to
5
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
admit it or not. Relax, pat yourself on the back, and keep doing what you’re doing, even if it doesn’t match the unwritten rules of DMing in your head. When you’re on a roll, go with it, not with theories you think you “should” be using. If, however, you look around and see a group of blearyeyed, distracted, or annoyed gamers, take a deep breath and calmly assess the situation. Using the tools found in this chapter, you can set the situation right before the players even notice they’re unhappy.
SECONDARY PRIORITIES DMs sometimes follow priorities that get in the way of a fun game. The goals they set are not necessarily bad, but can cause problems when they come ahead of the ultimate goal of entertaining the group. Fidelity to Prepared Background: Many DMs, after working with feverish devotion on their carefully imagined fantasy worlds, come to value their background information more than the experiences of the players who explore it. Given a choice between creating an exciting scene that moves the story along or remaining true to their notes, these DMs cling to the notes. Instead of thinking this way, you should make your world serve the game, not the other way around. No part of your world is set in stone until it becomes part of the game. You might have an emotional connection to some elements of your material, but your players don’t, because they haven’t encountered those elements yet. Running a game is its own pursuit, with its own creative responsibilities. It’s not a substitute for being a novelist. Look at your background information as a work in progress, subject to instant revision if the moment demands a change that would result in greater entertainment. This statement remains true whether you’re revising the personality of a
shopkeeper, changing the location of a clue, or slicing a few centuries of history out of your millennia-long saga of the westfaring elves. Internal Consistency: Even details that do become part of the game can be fudged on occasion. You shouldn’t change details the players vividly remember, because that punctures their belief in your imaginary world. Minor background details, on the other hand, should never be allowed to get in the way of an entertaining choice. Distances are a good example; few players have an emotional investment in them. Let’s say you established three sessions ago that it takes two days to get from the village to the dungeon. Now you have a chance to do an exciting chase sequence from one location to the other, if you’re willing to ignore this previously established but relatively inconsequential fact by dramatically narrowing the distance. If no one else will notice or care about the change, allow the continuity error. Historical Accuracy: The standard D&D world is a colorful fantasy environment that draws on certain beloved images from medieval history, from kings to knights to castles. History buffs are often tempted to incorporate their knowledge of the real medieval era into their games, foregrounding esoteric cultural differences, nasty facts about disease and medicine, and the period’s confining social structure. If you are such a DM, ask yourself if you’re increasing the players’ enjoyment by implementing these details, or merely giving yourself the chance to indulge your superior knowledge of the subject. Will your players enjoy your efforts to realistically clamp down on their PCs’ personal freedom, or do they, like most players, play D&D partly for a vicarious sense of power and control? Maintaining Authority: Players aren’t alone in their quest for power. DMs, given responsibility for everything from world creation to the placement of traps to control
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs CHIN UP! Most problems that crop up while running a game stem from one of two sources. One, discussed at length throughout this chapter, lies in the need to harmonize different tastes within the group, with all the tricky communication issues that entails. Second is self-confidence. Many DMs who do a fine job and bring their players back to the gaming table week after week needlessly beat themselves up. They fret over their skills because they measure themselves by an impossible, imagined standard. Don’t use the advice in this chapter as a yardstick to hit yourself with. You don’t have to use any of the exercises given here to be a good DM. Your job is to entertain your group. Running a game can be an intimidating task that calls on a huge variety of unrelated skills: memory for rules, a head for numbers, imagination, verbal agility, and sensitivity to group moods. Most dauntingly, it requires the confidence to take center stage in front of a group—an act that terrifies many self-assured people. Anyone who does even a half-decent job of DMing should be congratulated just for trying to marshal these skills.
6
Just as players have different tastes, so do DMs. Our tastes tend to match our skills. No one is equally adept at all the tasks that running a game entails. If you’re best at improvising dialogue and thinking up plot lines, you’re likely to run games with a storytelling bent. If you’re the type who easily retains rules detail, you’re probably great at running combats in which the monsters use their obscure spells and special abilities to maximum effect. If you’re best at designing a setting and doing extensive prep work, you can dazzle your players with gorgeous maps and entice them to explore the far reaches of your world. You don’t expect your players to be equally good at everything, so don’t expect it of yourself. Be aware of your weak spots and take measures to counteract them. A little compromise in other directions can go a long way; no one expects you to be infinitely versatile. Most important, be aware of your strengths, and give yourself credit for them. If you are reading this book at all, and you care about improving your game, you are probably already a better DM than you think you are.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
nitpickers might resist efforts to revise trivial details. A group of players who know a lot about medieval civilization likely places a high priority on historical flavor, and enjoys a level of detail that would revolt or anesthetize a group of action-loving dungeon-raiders. In such a case, your focus on historical reality will be a source of fun, not an obstacle to it.
Illus. by S. Ellis
Campaign building takes hard work, but it can also be fun
CHAPTER 1
PLAY STYLES “Make the game fun for your players and yourself” might be a simple statement, but it isn’t self-evident. Many DMs, including experienced ones, believe in an unwritten set of rules for “good roleplaying.” They worry that they’re failing as DMs if they aren’t gently nudging, if not outright shoving, their players toward an abstract pinnacle of quality gaming. Not coincidentally, DMs who believe in an objective set of rules for good roleplaying generally fi xate on a set of standards that match their personal tastes. DMs who prefer characterization and narrative believe that these are the most important elements of a game. They worry when their players fail to engage with their elaborate, intrigue-laced story arcs.
RUNNING A GAME
over the conversation in the room, sometimes let that power go to their heads. The greatest power you have is the power of refusal, to thwart your players’ attempts at action. As anyone who has worked in a job with a petty bureaucratic component can tell you, the power of refusal can be fun. The power to say no, to assume social authority over our friends, is seductive but must be avoided. Although you need the respect of your players to keep a game session focused, always remember that your authority is a tool and not an end in itself. Like any tool, it goes awry when you assault your coworkers (in this case, your players) with it. Your authority should create fun for everyone. It should never be used to create fun for yourself at the expense of your players. The worst possible answer to the question “Are we having fun?” is “No one else is, but I’m happy.” On reflection, you might find that another treasured hallmark of your DMing style makes the game less fun. If so, you should always be prepared to set it aside. It’s entirely possible that a trait or preference for play style that your last group loved just doesn’t work for your current group. As always, the unwritten rules must change according to the tastes of your current group. Seasoned
7
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
DMs who love skirmish tactics might tear their hair out when their players wander with glazed eyes away from their fondly detailed battlemats. History buffs cringe as their players make anachronistic references and give their characters names such as “Biff McNasty.” In none of these cases are the players playing the game incorrectly. DUNGEONS & DRAGONS can be enjoyed in these and many other ways. Every group’s ideal style differs according to its makeup. It changes over time as players drop in and out, and as each player’s interests evolve. Even the same group of people will want different elements in their game from week to week. Outside factors such as mood and energy level often require adjustments in play. If one of your key players has just come from a frustrating student council proceeding or an exhausting day of meetings at work, you might need to scuttle your plans for an evening of tense political drama and steer the PCs toward last-minute, cathartic orc-bashing.
KNOW YOUR PLAYERS
POSTGAME ANALYSIS
After a game, when the players have gone home but the session is still fresh in your mind, stop to jot down a few notes. Below are examples of two simple charts you can use to focus your thoughts. On the first chart, under the heading Highlights, list the session’s stand-out sequences. One or two highlights is plenty, but if you have a long session with lots of key moments, add them all to the mix. For each highlight, under the Key Players heading, note the players who took a leading role or who seemed to visibly enjoy themselves. If every player in the group took enthusiastic part in a scene, congratulate yourself and list them all. For each highlight and each player, under the heading Payoff, jot down a few words expressing what the player seemed to like about the scene. Highlights Shopping expedition
Key Players Margie Ken
Payoff Loves bargaining; loves magic items. Got to talk about his character’s back story with blacksmith. Got to use her new magic items. Kicked kobold booty. Freaked out by hissing noises and creepy atmosphere. Got to be heroic and act like a paladin. Killed the dragon. His high AC paid off. Got to interact with princess. Got to sneak up on dragon. Scored good hits against dragon.
Knowing what your players want is a matter of simple observation. When the room pops to life—when players Kobold fight Margie start talking in an animated manner, when everyone is trying to get in on the action, when they lean forward in Russell Janie their chairs and their gestures become larger, you’ve hit on something. These moments, when the game catches fire, offer Rescue George a bit of a challenge, because these are the times when of princess your attention is most in demand. You need to keep the players’ excitement stoked. You also need to play your Ken role as subtle traffic cop, directing the proceedings so that everyone gets a chance to contribute in a reasonable, Steve understandable order. Without killing the moment by Russell stopping to analyze it, take note of what you’ve done to get the players going. See who seems most interested—and who’s tuning out. Most DMs already do this, although usually not consciously. pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs DECODING THE CHARACTER SHEET Character sheets provide a wealth of clues to help you decipher your players’ desires. They function much like order sheets, telling you what kinds of situations the players want their PCs involved in. Players select their abilities hoping to use them in play. To make them happy, create encounters that make this possible. A player who gives her fighter straightforward combat abilities wants to kick butt. She might also just be a casual player looking for the easiest PC to play. A player who plots out a full twenty levels of character advancement before the character’s first session, or who maximizes the character’s ability to deal damage at each level, is probably a power accumulator. Explorer types tend to favor rogues, bards, and rangers, gravitating toward social and observational skills. Maxed-out stealth skills suggest a specialist player, as do more exotic character classes, such as paladin or monk. Specialists also often play psionic characters.
8
An unusual character concept with less optimized abilities points to an outlier. A character sheet that comes complete with a complicated narrative tells you that you have a player who focuses on story or roleplaying. If this narrative is full of threads you can easily weave into your campaign, the player is probably story-focused. If it dwells instead on the character’s emotional state and behavior, you’ve got a player asking you to supply some high drama. Most players’ character sheets will feature more than one of these clues. Few players are completely one-dimensional, instead displaying several traits in different proportions. Try to find overlap where you can, and plan your sessions accordingly. If three of your four players show stealthy character preferences, you probably want to plan for more specialist adventures. If all four characters are also optimized for combat, be prepared to run several fights each session.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
The second type of chart is for recording moments (if any) when the action bogged down and a player or two grew bored or irritated. Identify the scene under the Weak Points heading, list the players who were affected, and make a note under the Problem heading that summarizes the reason for the difficulty and perhaps mentions a solution. Don’t feel as though you must come up with a weak point for a session that went well for the duration. Problem Puzzle too hard; maybe should have supplied diagram of room Got bored when problem couldn’t be solved by magic items
Once you’ve completed a number of these session reviews, you can get some valuable information by reordering the results in a master list for each player. By reviewing the sheets, you get a sense of the situations that hook your players’ attention, and those that leave them cold.
PLAYER TRAITS AND INCENTIVES By becoming aware of the particular emotional impulses that give your players a sense of reward, you can pinpoint the techniques you need to use to make your game more fun. Take your notes on your players’ traits—either the detailed results of a series of Session Review Charts, or informal notes from memory. You are now going to translate these into the incentives you can use to keep your players on the edges of their seats. Any element that increases a player’s involvement in your campaign can be an incentive. The term is borrowed from the business world, where it’s used to describe any element of a corporate environment that motivates an employee to participate in the company culture (and thereby increase her productivity). The D&D game offers a number of powerful, built-in incentives. Conveniently for the harried DM, most players respond to more than one. Identifying one, two, or even three traits for each player will help you determine the best mix of incentives to incorporate into each game session.
Accumulating Cool Powers One of the game’s central incentives, the pursuit of ever-mightier powers, is also the easiest to put into play because the accumulation of experience is central to the D&D game. Powers can be anything that increases a PC’s effectiveness, from increased attributes to feats to spells Kicking Butt to magic items. Our daily lives often make us feel powerless. We have Almost all players enjoy adding these goodies to their our regular routines, and we are forced to confront an character sheets. They plan ahead, carefully weighing endless array of demoralizing annoyances. D&D allows their options, deciding what they will pick next. New abilities are a gift that keeps on giving: Players feel a sense us to forget the indignities of our daily lives and exercise
CHAPTER 1
Key Players Everybody, but especially Russ and Ken Portcullis trap Margie
RUNNING A GAME
Weak Points Puzzle hall
of reward when they gain experience points. They get the sense of reward all over again when the experience points garner them new abilities. When they actually get to use their abilities in a game situation? You guessed it—they experience that sense of reward again. This incentive appeals to one of the most reliable human motivators: ambition. The instinct to collect valuables has been hardwired into the human brain since Homo sapiens first roamed the grasslands searching for nuts, berries, and the occasional tasty mastodon. Throughout history people have been awarded status according to the desirability of their possessions. Players who love to pump up their characters are simply taking this principle and translating it into game terms. Because pumping up is so straightforward and popular, some DMs deride it. But there’s nothing inherently wrong with seeking more power for your character. Do Monopoly™ players feel guilty about putting hotels on Park Place? Of course not. As a DM, realize that “power gamers” are your ally because motivating them is straightforward. Any encounter offering experience points contains a rock-steady incentive to draw them in. Almost any scene you devise to appeal to any other player’s taste can also be made into a power gamer’s delight by dangling an alluring treasure, a generous XP reward, or a coveted magic item. More so than other kinds of players, power gamers can be self-entertaining. They can derive great enjoyment from D&D even when they’re not at the gaming table. They’re dreaming up future variations on their character sheets and poring over supplements looking for new options. All that time mastering the nuances of his character means that a power gamer might know the rules concerning his own abilities better than you do. A player who has this trait won’t be shy about expressing his opinion about how the rules ought to work. Don’t look for ways to say no to him—find ways to say yes. Create encounters where he’s meant to gain new powers and show off his current abilities. As long as you make him work for his power-ups, there’s no problem in doling them out. Though most DMs think of power accumulators as those players who seek out the abilities that give them the biggest bang for the smallest cost, this isn’t necessarily the case. Players whose characters methodically acquire the requirements for a prestige class for storytelling reasons can be just as focused in pursuing their goals, so they are just as easy to motivate with another batch of experience points.
9
Illus. by S. Ellis
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
10
the simplest, most primal fantasy of vented frustration: excitement and sense of vicarious mastery fight lovers are looking for. Make the scene come alive. Supply a bonelaying a suspenseful, fast-paced thrashing on a horde of crunching description when a player, especially a combat deserving bad guys. fan, dishes out a particularly mighty blow. Keep the focus This incentive gets the blood pumping. It makes players on the characters engaged in the fight, and not just on the feel powerful and in control. Combat fosters the game’s dice rolling on the table in front of you. biggest sense of jeopardy; never are the PCs at greater risk The challenge in dealing with action-oriented players for more sustained periods than when the fighting starts. is keeping their attention between battles. If you let them Understand that players who have this trait come to the go too long without a good scrap, they might find one you table specifically for this heady mix of feelings. You don’t weren’t planning on. Tavern fights are always a popular have to convince them to get as excited about other aspects of the game to consider yourself a good DM. If you and your choice for bored smiters of evil. They might surprise you group love skirmishes and want to run them all night long, by attacking NPCs who were supposed to provide them you are playing the game as well as anybody else. with resources or information, or by launching sudden Some combat fans are dedicated rules crunchers who frontal assaults on superior foes. This syndrome is easily cured: Always have a quick, fun comb the Player’s Handbook and other supplements for the battle in your back pocket—villains ready to kick down the perfect combinations of weapons, feats, and maneuvers. Other players just want the simdoor and attack—for times when the fight fans get restless. plest character sheets possible, so they Brilliant Planning can get to the bashing right away. Not all diehard combat enthusiasts long to leap heedlessly At first glance, butt kickers are into melee. Some hope to be rewarded for clever, careful at least as easy to please as power play, in which the group gains maximum advantage while gamers. Players who have this exposing itself to minimum risk. These brilliant planners trait tend to stay happy if you might be historical or military buffs, able to discourse at keep the enemies coming. length on real-world combat tactics. Players who have this However, supplying lots of fights is no substitute trait might simply be cautious by nature. Some gamers for running battles have been trained to play in this style by previous DMs, that are truly excitwhose adversarial styles relentlessly punished each tiny ing. As you run PC mistake. Brilliant planners have fun working out their plans, coorcombats, keep dinating them with the other players, and then executing in mind the them perfectly. Though these players don’t want easy victories, they’re perfectly happy to win in an anticlimactic rout, where the PCs’ use of terrain, tactics, spells, and abilities takes out the foe in a few decisive blows. If you deliberately circumvent a brilliant plan to make the resulting fight more action-packed, these players might feel cheated. Give these players a chance to shine by creating the occasional set-piece encounter in which their strategic skills can take center stage. Have the group storm a fortress, citadel, or urban environment. Give the PCs a way to secure accurate maps of the area to be invaded. They might accomplish this goal through scouting, espionage, magic, or some other means—perhaps one that gives another player time in the spotlight before the brilliant planner takes command. As you prepare the encounter, allow for at least one clever strategy that, if followed, gives the group a significant chance of decisive, one-sided victory. In play, while the brilliant planners brilliantly plan, you can always modify your notes so that any especially fun and creative scheme the planner dreams up also has a chance of working. Brilliant planning lays the groundwork for victory on the field
CHAPTER 1
Puzzle Solving Another key pleasure of the D&D game is the chance to solve puzzles and mysteries. The incentive of puzzle solving lies not only in the opportunity to demonstrate one’s cleverness, but also in our deeply rooted impulse to make patterns out of apparent randomness, to bring order to chaos. The world around the players might seem inexplicable and out of control, but when faced with a puzzle encounter, they know that a solution exists, if they’re smart and determined enough to find it. A good puzzle or mystery also plays off a fundamental dynamic of fictional entertainment, in which frustration slowly builds and is then overcome and released. For many players, the more they wrack their brains trying to work out a riddle or identify the key to a spatial puzzle, the more they want to succeed. When they do figure it out, their sense of triumph is proportional to the frustration they suffered earlier. Puzzle solvers are especially gratified by these two impulses. Concrete thinkers are drawn to simple abstract puzzles, including memory tests, word scrambles, riddles, and pattern identification exercises. They might also like trial-and-error puzzles, such as a group of levers that must be pulled in a particular sequence to open a doorway. Generally, the more real brainpower involved in completing a puzzle, as opposed to mindless systematic effort, the happier a classic puzzle solver will be. The puzzle type favored by more intuitive thinkers is the mystery or investigation, where interpersonal skills such as diplomacy, interrogation, and insight into personal motives come into play. While an abstract puzzle is typically confined to a single encounter, a mystery can take one or more sessions to solve, and generally takes place in a city or town. Common investigation types include
the identification of murderers or other criminals, and discovering the location of a villain’s hideout. Espionage scenarios, in which the PCs must purloin maps or documents, or surreptitiously capture enemy operatives, for example, offer a mix of elements appealing to both the mystery fan and the brilliant planner. Abstract puzzles provide a definite challenge to the DM, since some players tend to hate them. Frustration levels are highly variable from one person to the next. One player might grow bored with a puzzle and want to abandon it after a few minutes of trying, while a true puzzle fanatic regards that same time period as one of mounting excitement. Frustration level corresponds to one’s talent for puzzles: Players who aren’t good at them give up quickly. Satisfying both puzzle fans and antipuzzle players in the same group can be tough. Try to create situations where nonpuzzlers have something to do while the enthusiasts furrow their brows. A dungeon room featuring a puzzle might also have an area to search or an occupant to question. Place puzzles in areas of the dungeon the party can easily return to, so that the puzzlers can think about them as exploration continues, returning to them when a solution occurs. If the group runs across a puzzle encounter at a suitable time, call for a break. The puzzle solvers can work away while their comrades focus on snacks and chatter. Session-long mysteries are easier to balance with other hooks. You can fold fights, tactical situations, drama, travelogue, and other elements into the adventure structure, so that other players get their key moments while the investigation fans gather clues. Story-oriented players are inherently satisfied by the structured nature of a mystery scenario. Mystery adventures pose their own specific challenges, and can provoke as much frustration as any riddle or trialand-error test. For both types of puzzle solver, your main diffuclty is to find puzzles and mysteries challenging enough to produce a sense of gratification when solved, but not so hard that they can’t be overcome. It is difficult to strike a balance even when you know your players well. A puzzle that is a cinch for one player might stump another. Accept that you will occasionally strike the wrong balance. Err on the easy side; a puzzle that gets solved too quickly feels like a nonevent, but a puzzle that stops the session dead is far worse. Build in fail-safes so that the session can continue if the solution to a particular puzzle remains elusive. Avoid placing puzzles in bottleneck points—if the PCs must solve a puzzle to get through a door, see to it that they have plenty of opportunities for other encounters if they don’t open it. None of the encounters on the other side of the puzzle door should be necessary for the adventure’s successful completion.
RUNNING A GAME
Provide players who have this trait with specific strategic goals, and create special group XP awards if the goals are attained. Hostage rescue is always an appropriately heroic activity. For example, the PCs might be assigned to rescue a merchant and her retinue from bandits. You can award an XP bonus for each innocent left unscathed at the raid’s end. Ingenious plans, when successful, confront you with the dilemma of anticlimax. If a big chunk of game time culminates in a quick victory, the brilliant planners are delighted, but other players might wonder what all the fuss was about. Remedy this problem by playing up the positive consequences of the quick victory. Have the local authorities throw a victory banquet for the PCs. Have grateful citizens shower them in rose petals. Award medals—or, better yet, prestigious magic items. Allow interactionoriented PCs chances to make important contacts with influential NPCs. Use oracles and prophecies to show story enthusiasts how they changed the course of history.
11
Illus. by R. Gallegos
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
A similar principle applies to mysteries, where a block in the chain of information can be as much of an obstruction as a physical one in a dungeon complex. Some adventures, for example, provide only one way for the PCs to find any given clue. If the PCs take some action that stops them from finding the tidbit of information they need to move forward, the adventure stops cold.
suspiciously familiar white wizards, sinewy barbar ians, or pale-complexioned fighter-sorcerers, as well as a range of other characters translated from other genres into fantasy terms. Drizzt Do’Urden, a character from the FORGOTTEN R EALMS® setting, has spawned a legion of PC drow characters over the years. Some self-typecasting players fixate on extreme quirks unique to themselves. They might always play hotheaded Playing a Favorite Role philosophers, morose bandits, dumb guys, Many players like to play the antisocial spellcasters, or some other spesame type of character over and cific combination of game statistics and over. The attitude and trappings personality type. of that character provide a highly Some DMs believe that players who specific incentive that the player create endless variations on the same basic PC are bad roleplayers. According to this thefinds endlessly rewarding. ory, players are supposed to be like actors, able Ninjas and assassins are perhaps the to take on a wide range of roles. Indeed, it might most common specialty, with bards get frustrating at times to keep coming up with fresh and other performer types comencounters to engage a player who always plays the same ing in a close second. Players who like particular animals and want to basic PC. Since D&D is about having fun, and players play characters who either have these who typecast themselves clearly find it reassurcreatures as pets or are from anthroing or profoundly satisfying to do so, the DM pomorphic races also fit into this should be ready to meet the challenges incategory. Other specialist players volved in entertaining players who have might prod you to let them play this trait. a winged or flying PC. The most obvious types, though, offer some equally obOften a player’s favorite role vious answers. For instance, is a version of a classic character from the ninja plays to the desire fiction, comics, TV, or the movies. If to harmlessly cross dangeryou’ve been playing for long, you have A winged elf might be a favorite role doubtless already run into your share of for one of the players in your campaign ous boundaries, to be both deadly
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs THE INDISCRIMINATE THIEF In many beginning groups, the first taste of conflict between PCs—and their players—occurs when a rogue’s player decides to have a little fun on the side by having his character steal from the rest of the party. Inevitably, the rogue gets caught, leaving the other PCs to figure out how to stop her from doing it again. This scenario can be entertaining, provided that the players regard the rogue’s behavior as harmless mischief. Some players, however, want their characters to respond logically to the problem, by kicking the rogue out of the group, or worse. The players would respond harshly, after all, if an NPC rogue tried to rob them. Players who get emotionally attached to their characters’ possessions might take it personally, leading to an unpleasant argument. Rogues who habitually rob their friends might be acting as deliberate spoilsports. If so, you need to deal with them
12
as you would any incorrigibly selfish player (see Selfishness, page 36). More likely, though, party-robbers are telling you that they want more chances to use their rogue skills and abilities. They have ranks in Sleight of Hand, for example, and want a chance to use the skill. The group might want that character to spend her time jimmying locks and disarming traps, but her player didn’t choose a rogue character in the hope of becoming a glorified locksmith. She wants her character to be sneaky, clever, and felonious! Solve the problem by creating opportunities for rogue players to act roguishly. Design city scenes in which a little underhanded activity furthers the plot. Devise a combat encounter in which the rogue can sway the outcome by relieving a spellcaster of a powerful staff or other item. Add an encounter with unsympathetic rival adventurers whose leader has a set of dungeon keys swinging from his belt.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
CHAPTER 1
Illus. by M. Cotie
Supercoolness Many players, especially those focused on particular favorite types, pursue an additional incentive—the fantasy of being icy cool and in command. Legions of movie heroes vicariously satisfy this same desire. The supercool players want to feel as masterful, in control, formidable, and intimidating as their fictional models. This emotional payoff is tough to sustain in a game. When movie characters fail, it’s usually to make the audience members feel a sense of loss, which heightens their sense of vicarious victory when the hero ultimately comes back against impossible odds to mete out satisfying justice against the bad guys. D&D characters, even high-level ones, fail more frequently than their counterparts from fiction and movies.
RUNNING A GAME
Roleplaying games create suspense by allowing for the possibility of fatal, even disastrous, failure whenever the heroes put themselves at risk. D&D characters also routinely fail at run-of-the-mill, consequence-free tasks when players roll poorly. When such a situation arises, the game might turn into a comedy of errors, robbing the typecast player of his coolness factor. You can’t—and shouldn’t—shield the typeplayer from failure, but you can see to it that your descriptions of her failures enhance, rather than detract from, her sense of coolness. When she’s stuck deep in a dungeon, coated in blood and slime, do your best to make the details seem tough and gritty, rather than funny and humiliating. Ask yourself how the scene would play out if it were an action movie sequence with Sean Connery, Viggo Mortensen, or Michelle Yeoh playing the PC’s part. If you get laughs from the rest of the group, dial it back. If your group includes a class clown, you need to keep an eye on the tone, squelching any running commentary when it threatens to make the specialist’s treasured character type appear buffoonish or undignified. When supercool characters succeed, especially after a string of failures, play up the description to emphasize their extraordinary coolness. Critical hits provide excellent opportunities for showcase descriptions, as do death blows. Whenever possible, NPCs who are not adversaries should display their awe for a supercool character. Unless the PC has an above-average Charisma score and reasonThis half-orc always remains cool in the face of danger able social skills, he gains no particular
and subtle. This stereotype offers a fantasy of quiet superiority. Its fans hope for chances to sneak around and strike from the shadows. In another situation, someone who always plays kindly wizards wants the occasional chance to sit down, smoke some pipeweed, and dispense avuncular advice to wide-eyed NPCs. The closer a player’s chosen type hews to a preexisting character class, the easier your job is. Look at the character’s signature abilities and make sure they play a pivotal role in the adventure you’re running. If not, modify the adventure accordingly.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs THE FORBIDDING PALADIN Paladins are popular among some specialist players because the class’s combination of useful abilities and restrictive moral code gives players of paladin characters considerable social power within the group. Typically, the presence of this type of character sets up a dynamic in which the other PCs must petition the paladin for permission to carry out any slightly sneaky plans they might make. All character interactions in your group come to revolve around the paladin. The rest of the players must either continually bend to his will or conspire behind his back. Either way, he becomes the center of attention. A feedback loop can occur as the other players, resentful of the paladin’s place in the spotlight, work even harder to thwart and frustrate him—thereby giving him even more attention and influence.
If your group is new and has not experienced this syndrome before, let it play out for a while. It serves as a useful set of training wheels for those players interested in exploring their character’s emotions and motivations. Once the dynamic grows tiresome (which might happen quickly with an experienced group), expert handling on your part is required. Use discussion-shaping techniques (see Communication Is Key, page 26) to truncate any verbal sniping between the paladin’s player and the rest of the group. Bring disputes to a head as soon as possible. By skipping to the bottom line, you might be able to drain conflicts of their emotional charge, so that both the paladin and his adversaries move on to other sources of emotional satisfaction within your game. Players who love paladins might be budding psychodramatists (see Psychodrama, page 14).
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
13
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
game benefit from this recognition of his coolness. It’s entirely possible to have high regard for someone without wanting to help him.
that could serve as plot springboards. Staple plot devices include missing relatives, readymade conflicts with preexisting enemies, weapons with exotic histories, and deep, dark secrets the character hopes never to see revealed. Each implies a plot development the character wants either to bring about or to prevent. In a mixed group, you can keep story-oriented players happy with a touch of plot between dungeon encounters. With groups featuring a player who has this trait, you can use the convention that plot unfolds in town and game elements occur in the dungeon. In this model, the players maintain a home base in a community that is large enough to supply them with equipment, money-changing services, and a bustling exchange market in magic items, and is also a bubbling pot of political upheaval, romantic intrigue, and eerie mysteries. When the characters leave the dungeon to heal their wounds and sell their excess loot, the story fans can go off to interact with NPCs and further any ongoing plot threads. After allowing these to advance for a while, you can let the action fans and brilliant planners tug the group back to the dungeon again, or draw them into melees and strategy arising from the urban storyline. If your entire group prefers deep-immersive storytelling, you won’t just weave in a bit of narrative for your story-loving player—instead, you will have to balance the various plot threads that interest each participant.
Story Most neophyte groups are best served by simple, straightforward dungeon bashing. However, a certain percentage of players, not long after they grasp the roleplaying concept, want more than a series of doors behind which monsters and treasures can be found. They find their greatest sense of excitement in D&D’s narrative aspects. For these players, the game is like a movie or television show, but one in which they’re taking part in the story. Players who have this trait are not content with one incentive: They look to a D&D game for the full gamut of emotions you feel in a compelling narrative, from humor to horror, from suspense to celebration. Story-oriented players want plot threads and continuing characters. They want to take part in exciting events that unfold from simple beginnings, become gradually more involved and compelling, and then develop into exciting climaxes—preferably at the end of an evening, just like a night at the movies. Players drawn by this incentive are simultaneously easy and difficult to please. They are self-starters who provide material for you to work with and take your game in surprising new directions. To make full use of their contributions, though, requires a flair for improvisation. If such a player makes a sudden decision for his character Psychodrama that takes your campaign story in an unexpected direction Players can be drawn to D&D’s roleplaying aspect without (which is not uncommon with players of this sort), this especially caring about taking part in a wider story. Their situation can be tough to adjust to, especially if you’re more incentive is psychodrama. These players want to explore comfortable with carefully prepared adventures than with the psychology of their characters from the inside out. making the story up as you go along. Seekers of psychodrama might supply you with detailed Story-oriented players typically supply you with a detailed written backgrounds on their PCs, focused primarily on background for their characters, which includes one or their emotions, behavior, and perceptions. Though psychodrama players might create any type of character, they more plot devices for you to pick up on. Go through the generally favor PCs who exhibit dark moods and extreme back story with a highlighter and single out the passages
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs CASE STUDY: FROM SPRINGBOARD TO STORY Heather is a story-oriented player who provides you with a page of background information on her character, Julian. As you read through it, you highlight a number of promising plot devices, but the one that sparks an immediate idea is the bit that describes Julian as an exile from the neighboring kingdom of Tantara. According to Heather’s description, Julian was wrongfully convicted of sedition against his brother, Tantara’s cruel ruler. You have already decided that your campaign’s home base will be the city-state of Kish, a rich but often conquered trading port that sits inconveniently at a crossroads between three powerful nations. (Another of your reliable players is a brilliant planner and military buff, and you want to lay the groundwork for skirmishes and maybe even an invasion.) Combining this basic background idea with Heather’s background, you decide that Kish is home to a beleaguered ethnic
14
group. These people are the descendants of Tantarans who put down roots in the city when their country occupied Kish. They want Tantara to invade Kish again, restoring them to their old positions of power. Turning this player’s choice from background into a story, you decide that Naxo, the leader of the Tantaran minority, will approach Julian and regale him with accounts of their oppression. This decision gives you at least two possible directions to go in, depending on how Heather reacts. She can try to help the Tantarans in the city, putting her at odds with its leadership. Once this scenario plays out, you can pull a switcheroo—Naxo could try to betray Julian to his brother, hoping to curry favor for an invasion. From this simple line in Heather’s character description, you have added detail to your setting, tailored to draw your PC into it. You also have set up a number of situations you can advance a bit at a time between dungeon expeditions.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
CHAPTER 1
RUNNING A GAME
behavior. A character description featuring a traumatic lightly, this approach can be harmlessly fun and cathartic. Pitfalls abound when a hidden real-world emotional agenda pivotal event that shapes the character’s actions is a sure fuels a player’s choices, however. In such cases, you need a sign of a dramatist. strong sense of the dramatists’ personal boundaries, as well These players want you to present them with difficult choices that they can then examine from their PCs’ intense as those of the other players. If your other players expect point of view. No matter how inconvenient it might be for an evening of escapist entertainment, they probably don’t want to join your drama-seeker on a journey to plumb the the group, they won’t take any action that violates their depths of emotion. sense of the characters’ inner lives. They identify strongly with their characters while at the same time viewing D&D When a player’s dramatic explorations get too heavy for as primarily a creative pastime. Like brilliant planners, they the rest of the group, you need to muster your sharpest hate to be reminded that the game is a fictional construct. people skills. If strong feelings are at play and you’re not These players want to believe in the proceedings from their sure why, it’s often best to back off. Call a break. Send the character’s point of view. They might therefore strongly game in another direction until the player can separate resist any suggestions that they alter their character portrayhis personal issues from the game. als to achieve a game objective or move the story along. To D&D is an infinitely customizable vehicle for wish fulfillment, but it shouldn’t be used as therapy by people in do so is to attack their sense of creative control. In fact, challenges from other players, which psychodraserious need of it. As DM, it is never your place to attempt matists can respond to by asserting the integrity of their to solve your players’ real-life problems, or to suggest that they seek help. If you realize you’re about to say something characterizations, might serve to confirm their sense of from the DM’s chair that goes beyond the normal bounds artistic integrity. In this tricky dynamic, dramatists get a of your friendship with the player, it’s time for you to take sense of reward when they thwart or refuse the rest of the a break. group. Your challenge as a DM is to provide players who have this trait with other reward moments so they don’t Irresponsibility have to create them at the group’s expense. Popular culture has always provided a harmless outlet for As with any other incentive, you have to respect fantasies of rebellion and general irresponsibility. Viewdramatists’ desires as valid and give them a fair share of ers love outlaws and rebels, whether they’re gangsters, gratification. Identify the sorts of scenes that would best gunslingers, or frat boys fighting for their right to party. highlight the character, and satisfy the dramatist’s urge In real life, people must obey countless rules every day, to refuse. Create NPCs the dramatists will conflict with from the necessary to the petty and frustrating. Although so they don’t have to use the other PCs as foils for their inner struggles. Whenever possible, place these signature most people don’t really want to be crooks and outlaws, moments early in the session, defusing a player’s building and most would hate to live next to a fraternity house, urge for moments of defining conflict. many people fantasize about being able to flout authority Some drama-seekers use their roleplaying characters to and live by their own rules. The most popular heroes indirectly explore their own emotional issues. If handled from the world of entertainment are not irreproachable
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs CASE STUDY: ADDING DRAMA Kirk loves to explore the psychology of his character, the halfling rogue Hassa. Kirk has established Hassa as a habitual loner who distrusts society. According to his detailed back story, Hassa grew up as an outcast, shunned by the people of his conformist village after his father was falsely hanged for murder. Over the last few sessions, Hassa has reluctantly bonded with the rest of the PCs, a process that has entertained Kirk while occasionally irking the other players. You have decided to take the pressure off them by giving Kirk a chance to highlight this character trait through NPC interactions. You create a halfling NPC called Eric Treefoot who approaches Hassa when he next shows up in town. You design Treefoot as a foil—a minor character who provides a contrast to a more important one—for Hassa. He’s everything that Hassa hates— pushy, compulsively social, chatty, and a staunch upholder of halfling conformity. Treefoot greets Hassa as a long-lost friend and tries to pressure him into joining a new halfling mutual aid society he’s establishing in town.
When you play the scene out, Kirk has Hassa shrink from the persistent Treefoot, just as you expected. Kirk is content, because you have given him the chance to play out Hassa’s big theme—his outsider’s loathing of normal society. The other players are happy not only because you made the scene entertaining to watch, but because for once they’re not the ones struggling to win over Hassa’s trust. Afterward, they pat him on the back for giving that snooty old fogey the treatment he deserved. Kirk now has an additional reason for his character to like the PCs. Hassa goes back into the dungeon with them, his thirst for drama momentarily slaked. You already have plans to bring back Treefoot next session. Maybe he will show up with a gift, or insult Hassa with unwelcome news about the family that disowned him. As you make a list of possibilities, you might find that Treefoot can provide you with material for weeks to come.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
15
Illus. by W. Reynolds
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
16
boy scouts. They’re the antiheroes, vigilantes, mavericks, create their own opportunities. They’ll bust up taverns and troublemakers most people would secretly like to be, when they’re supposed to be gleaning clues. They’ll if only for an hour or two. brazenly attack villainous authority figures that you Don’t be surprised, then, when your players adopt these expected them to deal with carefully. Bored players might role models and become anarchic, outsider heroes. They decide to break character to have their PCs engage in might fight for the cause of good, but that doesn’t mean pointless vandalism. they want to take orders or live according to the constraints Head them off at the pass by building the occasional bar of polite society. brawl into the plot. Give them lesser authority figures to In the real world, medieval society had little place for defy—preferably visibly corrupt ones that even a lawful outsiders. Its very foundation was the careful arrangement good character can feel justified in defying. Create situof people by hereditary rank. Nobles sometimes enjoyed ations in which a pyrotechnic destruction of property considerable power to misbehave as long as no one of serves not only the plot but the cause of good. higher rank bore the brunt of their rebellion. Those people Few players pursue irresponsibility as their primary lower on the social scale were quickly squelched when they incentive, but many, especially the butt-kickers (see page 9) stepped outside the boundaries of feudal law. A legendary and outliers (see page 17), resort to this sort of behavior outlaw such as Robin Hood seized the medieval imaginawhen they are bored. Give them a taste of action on your tion precisely because he did what no one could. terms, in encounters that won’t derail your adventure or A successful D&D setting, though, should offer the PCs the imaginary realism of your world. the opportunity to break the rules just like an Errol Flynn character because the genre expectations demand it. Many Setting Exploration DMs enforce a logic-based view of crime and punishment, Humans have survived and prospered because they are rather than an escapist one. They might be too engaged innately curious. They want to know what’s over the next horizon, whether that plant is edible, and whether that clay with notions of historical accuracy, or feel a need to keep jar contains a stack of gold pieces or a snake. their players in check. Any dungeon raid is an exercise in exploration, from Instead, realize that a certain number of your players adopt the fictional personas of D&D characters to play out the creation of a map to the opening of mysterious doors the same harmless antiauthority fantasies that pop culture to see what’s on the other side. Like historical explorers, promotes on a weekly basis. Don’t fight this impulse— most adventurers don’t think their job is done until the satisfy it. If you don’t, site in question is scoured of every last bit of loot. Some players, however, get their greatest enjoyescapist players will ment from exploration activities. They volunteer for dungeon-mapping duty and linger in fascination over largescale maps you hand out. Their PCs chomp at the bit to head off to the far corners of your world. Explorers are easy to please—all you have to do is stock the world with
When characters act irresponsibly, it’s easy for a brawl to break out
CHAPTER 1
RUNNING A GAME Illus. by R. Mimura
interesting places and other elements for them to dis- The Outlier The D&D game assumes a high degree of group cohecover. They don’t necessarily need a lot of drama or action—give them a library to putter around in, or a new sion, in which a team equipped with complementary culture with strange customs to learn about, and they’re talents bands together to slay monsters, gather treasure, hooked. Their restlessness makes them reliable advancand gain XP. Both the rules and the typical activities ers of the plot. A willingness to blunder into unknown involved in adventuring reinforce group unity. Some situations always helps players, though, get their keep a game moving. emotional charge by subHowever, explorverting this dynamic. ers’ wanderlust can These players have the inspire them to move outlier trait. They revel on from a carefully in being different and developed environplaying by their own ment you have stocked rules. In short, they love with plots and characto play oddballs. ters meant to Outliers are fairly easy sustain months to spot from their charof play. If you acter sheets. They enjoy trying out weird characwant to keep the party tied to a ter concepts and strange home base, provide mixtures of abilities. enough dark Unlike power accumuand exotic corlators, who try to find the most useful combinaners to keep the tion of powers, outliers explorer busy. Since curiosity experiment in the other is your friend, take direction, hoping to care not to punish create characters on the it. Let explorers get cusp of unplayability. Outliers enjoy playing into interesting trouble, but nothing so oddballs for the same deadly that the group reason that some people can’t overcome the embrace eccentricity in hazards. real life. By rejecting the Engage your explorer rules that most people characters by providing follow, they define success Explorer characters might encounter unique creatures like this one attractive maps of your on their own terms— terms they can more easily meet. They enjoy the confusion world. If you’re not a cartographer, you can rely on published maps or find nice maps on the Web. Investigate the and consternation they cause in others, taking it as posworld of mapping software; a number of powerful proitive reinforcement. Some players who have this trait grams make it easy to create visually stunning dungeon create incompetent or mediocre characters to immunize and overland images. themselves from the emotional consequences of failure. Think of explorer players as tourists who like to safely Because they set themselves up to fail during character visit nonexistent lands. Fill your world with atmosphere. creation, setbacks don’t sting so much. Failures are not Check out real-world books by top travel authors such only expected—they become victories, according to the as Jan Morris, Tim Cahill, or Redmond O’Hanlon; use outlier’s self-defined, contrarian criteria. them as inspirations for arresting descriptions of your Since much of the outlier’s fun comes from upending world. Describing everything in a travel writer’s exquisite the group’s pursuit of its goals, the outlier’s activities can detail would be mentally exhausting, but a few set-piece sow seeds of frustration among the rest of the players. descriptions per session should capture your explorers’ Most outliers are one step ahead of you on this score, imaginations. Remember to engage all the senses by employing a defense mechanism that keeps the other PCs referring to sounds, smells, tastes, and climate as well as from stuffing the outliers’ characters down the nearest the sights of your setting. pit trap. They bring the brunt of their failures on themselves, ensuring that they suffer enough self-directed ill
17
Illus. by R. Spencer
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
18
Outlier characters are likely to find themselves alone in perilous situations
consequences to make any additional punishment redundant. By playing their failures for laughs, outliers postpone confrontations over their antics. Most people respond to slapstick humor because they’re pleased to only be observers of the mayhem. Few people don’t enjoy seeing someone in a worse spot than they are in, especially if the person in trouble brought it on himself. The mood will sour if the outlier’s goofball decisions lead to an outcome in which the party suffers a significant loss, such as a humiliating defeat in a climactic encounter or the death of another player’s character. Brilliant planners are particularly likely to lose their cool in the face of deliberate failure. Dramatists dislike outliers because they can’t find a good in-character reason to trust them. Head off potential confrontations by supplying encounters, preferably early in each session, that give an outlier chances to amusingly sabotage his own character. Create scenes in which the PC can get captured, caught in traps, outsmarted by townsfolk, dumped in the mud, or otherwise suffer comic humiliation. Design these encounters so that the outlier’s antics can’t bring catastrophe down on the rest of the party. Even better, devise encounters in which the class clown’s comeuppance benefits other PCs—preferably those least amused by them. The problem with being an eccentric is that doing so becomes tedious when everyone around you acts likewise. If your entire group consists of oddballs, you might need to run a completely silly minicampaign to get it out of your players’ systems. However, a profusion of oddballs in your game might point to a style imbalance on your part. If the players find success in your campaign impossibly difficult, they might fall back on eccentricity as a coping mechanism. You might need to ease up on the difficulty of encounters or the harshness of your setting to get them to settle back into more usual approaches. Clowning tends to get out of hand when players get bored. When it becomes an epidemic, especially among players who are usually more focused, you’re likely
overlooking the players’ true desires. Perform a new review of their tastes and make adjustments to your campaign to better meet them. Not all outlier PCs are comic loonies. A player who creates a scholarly noncombatant type in a battle-heavy campaign is also trying to tell you something by opting out of your game’s standard activities. Others might be story- or drama-driven players who want you to facilitate their experimentation with hard-to-play PCs.
CHAPTER 1
RUNNING A GAME
Lurker As you observe the tastes of your players, don’t be surprised if you can’t pin down a particular player’s traits. You look back on the night’s gaming and can’t think of a single in-game moment in which she asserted herself or even showed signs of having a good time. Yet she returns, week after week, rolling dice when prompted, rarely drawing attention and never taking center stage. Though it’s possible that this player has a rare incentive you just haven’t discovered yet, it’s more likely she’s a lurker. This term originated in Internet culture, where it refers to someone who reads a forum or a mailing list without contributing to it. Players don’t differ only in their tastes; degree of commitment also varies. Lurkers show up and participate to a degree, but might not learn many of the rules, take part in discussions, speak in character, remember campaign details from week to week, or otherwise distinguish themselves as players. At times you might forget the lurkers are even there—which is fine with them. They might attend your games chiefly because the rest of their friends are there. If so, they might devote only partial attention to game events, instead choosing to read, play on their laptops, or sketch in a sketchbook. Lurkers might also
be extremely shy folks who have a perfectly fine time so long as you never push them to take a more active role or to provide you with specific feedback. Even inattentive lurkers can be assets to your group. They might fill out the party by playing a necessary character class no one else is interested in. Lurkers often take the role of “second chair,” playing a class that is useful to duplicate. They might add brute force, additional healing, or extra spells without stealing thunder from players more interested in playing their characters to the hilt. Don’t underestimate the social role of the lurker. Your lurker might be the person who makes sure another player attends, or who drives one or more players to your game. If disputes arise, it’s calming to have somebody in the room who doesn’t contribute to a tense situation. If you have one or two such players, do your best to make them feel welcome and comfortable. Sometimes lurkers come out of their shells and blossom into more active players, and you should pay enough attention to them to bring them along if that happens. Mostly, though, the lurkers call for your acceptance. Recognize that it’s okay for them to be shy or laid-back—and that you’re not failing as a DM by not setting their imaginations on fire.
YOUR DMING STYLE Running a game requires a great deal of time and energy. The players spend some time on their character sheets as they increase in level between sessions, but most of the burden of prep time is on you. During play, you must maintain focus and concentration for the entire evening, resting only during break time—and even then, you’re likely to be called on to answer questions and deal with other in-game issues, when what you need is time to rest your brain.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs CASE STUDY: SELF-DEFEAT MADE SAFE Inika is an outlier player who would rather see Grund, her inquisitive half-orc bard, fail entertainingly than contribute to a group success. She’s been doing a good job of playing the class clown and getting away with it so far, but over the past few sessions some of the players have grown steadily less amused by Grund’s misadventures. The most visibly annoyed players are Ramon, the group’s brilliant planner, and Josie, who would like a more serious atmosphere in which to pursue her character’s dark and stormy moods. This session you plan to run a long-awaited assault on a citadel full of undead. Ramon has been prepping all week to present his tactical plan to the group. Josie is looking forward to her character’s confrontation with the main villain, a vampire who happens to be her sister. Left to her own devices, you suspect that Inika will try to inject some unwanted comic relief into the scenario, probably by letting her curiosity get the better of her at a crucial moment. First, you listen as Ramon details his plan. No fool, he has given Grund an apparently idiotproof job that plays to Inika’s
tastes as a player. As the assault begins, Grund is to distract the human guards at the outer gates. Ramon figures that even if she messes up, the guards will still be distracted. Ramon has been clever, but you still want to give Inika a chance to get the clowning out of her system before the big scene begins. By doing so, you can devote your focus to Ramon’s plan and Josie’s drama during the actual event. The night before the assault, as the other characters prepare, you give Grund an amusing distraction—a strange, luminous lizard scampers past him while he’s on watch outside the PC’s inn. Inika decides that Grund’s curiosity gets the better of him, as is consistent with her character. As Grund follows the lizard, he faces a series of comic obstacles. He gets himself locked in a cellar, then gets paint dumped on his head, and completes the evening by falling through a skylight into the main hall of a nunnery. If you were a literal-minded DM, you might punish Grund for acting foolishly. However, Inika enjoys it when her character plays the fool, and you’re trying to protect the rest of the party from distractions and ill consequence. As a result, the worst he suffers is embarrassment.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
19
Illus. by V. Rams
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
20
Adaptability allows these characters to stay in control in the face of a fiery onslaught
Given the extra work you put in, you might be asking glaze over at the mere mention of advanced skirmish why you need to worry about the players’ tastes. Shouldn’t tactics. Maybe you don’t have a head for numbers and find you run the game the way you want and let the chips fall it hard to keep track of initiative and Armor Class during where they may? Don’t you have your own stylistic prefera lengthy battle sequence. You might be uncomfortable ences? Shouldn’t you be able to express them? thinking in character, or find it hard to create vivid sensory detail to satisfy the explorer types. Of course, you do have preferences and quirks, just as Don’t let your discomfort or a perceived lack in some area players do. Those preferences will be strong enough that get you down. Every DM has a particular set of strengths you will express them whether you try to or not. Even if you take all the advice in this chapter completely to heart, and weaknesses. You won’t be able to please every player you won’t be obliterating your own style. By expanding equally. No one expects you to. your bag of tricks and learning to make the game enjoyable No matter what their stylistic preferences or sharpest for players of all sorts, you’ll enormously increase the fun skills are, truly entertaining DMs have a few traits in content of your games. common. These are discussed below. DM styles often correspond in large part to player preferences. You will be better at using certain hooks Adaptability Your game doesn’t exist without players to play in it. Leave than others. You might like to run simple fight scenes, room for their decisions to shape the game. Always be ready in which case you’ll find it easy to keep your butt-kickers happy. If you’re a tactical enthusiast with a mental database to change your plans to suit events as they develop, and to of classic military engagements in your head, pleasing the appeal to the specific tastes of your players. brilliant planners comes as second nature to you. Budding Some people think superbly on their feet. They seem novelists excel at story and drama. If you prefer to spend adaptable, but they really don’t have to change their ideas the bulk of your prep time on world creation and fondly at all, because they don’t come up with them until the detailed maps, you will have the explorers coming back moment they need them. They rely on the input supplied for more. by their players to stimulate their creativity. If anything, Conversely, there will likely always be a popular element they might rely too much on improvisational abilities and of D&D that you have to strain to deliver. Your eyes might fail to prepare when necessary.
BALANCING DIFFERING TASTES The difficulty in balancing different player tastes depends on two factors: the extremity of their preferences and the group’s collective willingness to compromise.
Homogenous Groups Some DMs need make no conscious effort to balance their players’ competing desires, because their players don’t have any. These groups are all composed of happy monster slayers, story gamers, or some other complementary combination of tastes. If you are such a DM, count your blessings. Through sheer demographic happenstance, you are already five or six steps ahead of most roleplaying groups. You can focus on strongly presenting the elements your group enjoys, and never have to fret about some players growing restless while you cater to their friends’ tastes. Groups of new D&D players might be more harmonious in their tastes than experienced ones. When they first start out, players thrive on a steady diet of butt-kicking and power accumulation. Traditionally, a taste for less visceral hooks, such as story or curiosity, develops later.
CHAPTER 1
A ninja character needs unusual challenges to test her special skills
Illus. by W. O’Connor
A Facilitator, Not a Dictator Few people enjoy being bossed around or constantly placed in a position of inferiority. For most of us, an ordinary day at work or school already offers enough chances to shut up and follow instructions. In our entertainment, we seek fantasies of freedom and wish fulfillment. No one would go to see an adventure movie in which the hero is constantly abused without ever getting a chance to overcome her tormentors. Yet some DMs, including quite experienced ones, regard their games as opportunities to exert gleeful power over a group of hapless players. Most of these individuals realize that relentlessly punitive DMing isn’t much fun for the players, but they still enjoy (perhaps subconsciously) the occasional power trip. Many good DMs, after minimal prompting, happily reel off anecdotes about the devious tricks they’ve pulled to force their players into a preferred style of play. DMing is not about making you feel powerful. A select few players do take delight in an adversarial dynamic in which you ruthlessly
punish their characters for their smallest miscalculations, misjudgments, and slips of the tongue. These group members tend to be the brilliant planners and puzzle solvers, who want you to provide them with a tough environment over which they can triumph. However, even these folks want to prevail in the end. They want to be challenged, not pummeled. For most players, a successful DM is more a detached facilitator than a maniacal, controlling drill sergeant. You need to maintain a certain authority to keep attention focused on the game, but this authority is a tool, not an end in itself. Remember, the goal is for everyone at the table to have as much fun as possible.
RUNNING A GAME
Other DMs work better with extensive preparation. Advance thinking can be just as adaptable as on-the-spot decision making. As you prepare your settings, scenes, and encounters, find ways to tailor them to your players’ various preferences. Anticipate different player choices and your responses to them. The better you know your players, the easier tailoring adventures becomes. Always be ready to alter published adventures or source material, just as you would your own creations. To do so, you must know the material thoroughly, as you would if you made the adventure yourself. Then you should change a few elements to mark it as your own territory. Change a shopkeeper to suit one of your favorite funny voices, add a few extra rooms to a dungeon, or alter the description of a cave entrance to suit your local terrain. Next, go through the material, highlighting the bits that the players are likely to interact with in the near future. Find ways to punch it up with your players’ favorite hooks. More on this subject can be found in Chapter 2.
21
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
For those who like those elements, it’s tempting to conclude that they’re somehow more valid or sophisticated, because they “evolve” out of another style of play. Others argue that fighting and puzzle solving are the pure form of the game from which artsier types have strayed. Both arguments are just some players’ way of claiming an objective superiority for their personal preferences. When you play with the same harmonious group for a long time, the quirks of your group’s style might come to seem like the only way to play. You might be in for culture shock if a new recruit joins, or if you’re forced to find a new crop of players for some reason. Should that happen, you can return to this book for tips on incorporating the unfamiliar expectations newcomers bring to your table. Until then, enjoy the luxury of your group’s common approach.
Supercoolness: Provide an opportunity for appropriate NPCs to acknowledge the character’s abilities. Story: Insert a scene that advances an ongoing storyline. Psychodrama: Introduce a character for the PC to interact with, one echoing the character’s inner struggle. Irresponsibility: Provide a buffoonish authority figure to harmlessly bedevil, or an impressive structure to spectacularly demolish. Exploration: Insert a travelogue moment. Outlier: This type can usually find ways to be a nonconformist without your help. Lurker: Let the lurker be distracted and happily contribute from the shadows.
GROUND RULES When you first assemble a new group of players, explicitly mention the ground rules under which your game will run. Often these rules refer to the standard choices you make whenever you DM. On occasion you might wish to change a technique to suit the mood or theme of a specific campaign.
22
Mixed Groups Next to a group with very similar tastes, a group with varied tastes might prove easiest to deal with. Either all the players like to mix up their play, or there’s one strong proponent of each style at your table. Ensure that you devote a solid chunk of time to each player’s signature House Rules moment, and you’re set. Inform your players in advance of any modifications you During prep time, review each adventure, confirming intend to make to the published rules. Your house rules that it includes something for everyone in your group. probably affect, directly or otherwise, the relative utility Roughly gauge how much play time each encounter and cost-effectiveness of various PC abilities. Players will take, whether it’s a room in a dungeon or a scene in should know about them before they create their chara plot-based scenario. Look out for danger spots—long acters. If you can’t predict the effect your rules have on stretches of game time in which one or more players PC abilities, you should probably think about them some have no opportunity for signature moments. Create new more before adding them to your game. sequences or moments in which these elements do come Though many DMs enjoy tinkering with rules, rememinto play. ber to balance the positive benefits of any rules alteration Also, work up a modular sequence for each of your against the time it takes your players to learn them. The group’s major hooks, ready to be dropped into nearly any longer your list of house rules, the more intimidating your adventure. When you see that a player has gone too long without a rewarding moment, reach for the prepared scene game will seem, especially to players who don’t enjoy rules and move the group toward it as quickly as you can without for their own sake. making the shift apparent to the group. House rules are covered in greater detail on page 80. Here are some examples of prefabricated audience pleasers, broken down by incentive. Information Flow Accumulating Cool Powers: Provide a chance to gain In a straight dungeon adventure, the party sticks together a magic item. Announce a special XP reward (equal to a most of the time. In a city-based intrigue or investigation, standard encounter at the character’s current level) for the they might frequently split into smaller teams accordcompletion of a task. ing to their specialties. To one degree or another, some Kicking Butt: Insert a gratuitous but lively battle PCs will gain information and undergo experiences not against slightly inferior opponents. shared by their comrades. You can handle the unshared Brilliant Planning: Create a dangerous situation that information issue in several ways, all of which require can be circumvented by use of a clever scheme. player cooperation. Tell your players ahead of time which Puzzle Solving: Add a puzzle. model you plan to use. Favorite Role: Create a situation requiring the use of High Secrecy Mode: The players know no more than the specialist PC’s defining gimmick: something to sneak their characters do. When a PC participates in a scene into for the ninja, a narrow precipice to balance on for the or encounter and the others are not present, you take acrobatic adventurer, and so on. him aside, most likely into another room, and run the
CHAPTER 1
Fleance discovers a drow sorcerer and falls under her spell
Illus. by F. Vohwinkel
which a drow sorcerer, Zz’urzab, is imprisoned. The drow casts a charm person spell on Fleance. Zz’urzab draws a map of the complex and shows Fleance a room with a lever on the wall. If the lever is pulled, an otherwise impregnable trap door in the bottom of the drow’s cell will open up, allowing him to escape. The charmed Fleance agrees to steer his friends to this chamber, even though it’s packed with dangerous creatures and is completely barren of treasure. Then he will pull the lever, freeing his new ally. After further agreeing not to tell his allies about Zz’urzab, Fleance departs, returning through the crawlway. At this point, you return with Derrick to the main game room. “Nothing in there but rocks and bat guano,” Derrick tells the other players. He then proceeds to follow Fleance’s agreement with Zz’urzab, leading the group into relatively profitless trouble. What Derrick doesn’t know is that, in a similar secret scene played out last week, one of the other PCs, the wizard Redmoor, learned that the drow sorcerer who killed his family was recently seen in the area, and probably plans an assault on the kingdom. The sorcerer’s name was Zz’urzab. High secrecy uses the principle of surprise, in which the players have a feeling that something’s afoot and hope to find out what it is. To make it work properly, you should
RUNNING A GAME
encounter there. If one or two characters are somehow excluded from a scene, they are asked to leave the room while the rest continue playing. Even in the presence of the other PCs, a character might learn some tidbit of information unknown to the other characters. For example, she might see a clue with a high Spot check result, or perhaps one of the characters has the scent ability. In some groups, the convention is that all such facts are instantly revealed to the entire group. In others, characters sometimes keep secrets; the player decides what to reveal and when. In such cases, you communicate any private discoveries to players with written notes. An especially secretive group could run a deeply Machiavellian game with each player using a laptop with a wireless modem, using instant messaging to zap hidden information and hush-hush instructions back and forth. Example: While exploring a cavern complex, the party discovers the entrance to a ductlike crawlway that only Derrick’s character Fleance is small enough to squeeze into. While Fleance is working his way into the passageway, you play out the scene as usual, in front of the other players. As soon as he’s out of earshot, you grab some dice, escort Derrick out onto your back deck, and run the rest of the scene for him alone. Fleance crawls through the passageway and winds up inside a cramped chamber in
23
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
24
routinely take group members aside to share mundane, uninteresting secrets with them. Otherwise everyone will know something important is up every time you take a player aside for a private conference. When the player returns, the rest of the players might be prone to relentlessly grilling him until he gives up the goods. High secrecy helps players believe in the reality of the world; they don’t have to split their awareness between what they know and what their characters know. Players who value a strong belief in the fictional reality of the world and their characters prefer this approach. They include players whose tastes run to drama, tactics, and puzzle solving. The disadvantage of high secrecy is that it forces you to leave members of the group idle while running scenes in which their characters aren’t present. This dead time breaks energy and focus, making it harder for you to get uninvolved players reengaged with the game when they get to act again. This cost of the high secrecy approach might seem especially high when you’re secretly imparting irrelevant, boring information as a smokescreen for later revelations that really matter. Spectator Mode: In this situation, players are allowed to watch scenes they don’t participate in, even if they learn secrets the active PC wouldn’t want them to know. Players are expected to maintain a distance between what they know as audience members and what their PCs know. When a player seems to be acting on information gained by watching a scene she didn’t take part in, the DM steps in to remind her of the barrier between character knowledge and player knowledge. If need be, you can rule that the character can’t perform a proposed action, because it’s motivated by information he doesn’t possess. Example: The above example with Fleance and the drow plays out as follows in spectator mode. The entire group sits in as Derrick rolls to get through the crawlway and continues to watch as he meets Zz’urzab and is charmed. Derrick knows the name Zz’urzab as soon as he hears it, because he got to watch the scene from last session in which the identity of Redmoor’s archenemy was revealed. Redmoor hasn’t shared this information with Fleance, so Derrick plays his PC’s ignorance in good faith—he carries on as if the name means nothing to him. Redmoor’s player, Alessandra, slaps her forehead in chagrin as Zz’urzab charms Fleance and convinces him to aid his escape. When Fleance returns to the other characters, the other players are obligated to play their characters as though they lacked knowledge of what just happened in the other room. When Derrick says, “Nothing in there but rocks and bat guano,” Alessandra asks if she can make a Sense Motive check. You ask her to justify why Redmoor would take this action, when he normally trusts Fleance. Unable to come
up with a justification that does not rely on knowledge her character doesn’t have, Alessandra groans and readies herself for trouble with her archenemy. Spectator mode operates on the principle of suspense, as in a movie when the audience knows what the protagonist doesn’t—that a killer is lurking overhead, for example. Film director Alfred Hitchcock argued that suspense was more powerful than mere surprise, because it builds tension over time. A moment of surprise comes out of nowhere and is over in a moment. In the above example, the players will spend a good part of the session waiting to see what happens when the other shoe drops. The chief advantage of spectator mode is that it keeps all the players in the same room, engaged with the proceedings even if some of them aren’t participating directly in the action all the time. In a tense game, players enjoy periods of respite when they don’t have to make any decisions, and someone else is stuck in a tight spot. Story-oriented players tend to especially enjoy this approach. Spectator mode reduces the pressure on you to keep the party together, allowing players who want to pursue private agendas the freedom to do so. Explorers like spectator mode because it allows their characters to poke around a location without having to persuade other party members to come along. Specialists can experience their signature moments more easily on side missions; it’s tough to be a stealthy ninja when trailing an entourage of clanking, armor-clad knights and chatty halflings behind you. Spectator mode helps you cater to mischief-makers and oddballs, who can get into trouble without bringing the ill consequences of their actions down on annoyed fellow players. A major drawback of spectator mode is that you have to keep track of who knows what, because players can easily become confused. The suspense of knowing that bad events are brewing might be too frustrating for some players. Drama-oriented players might feel it breaks the illusion of fiction, which is most vivid for them when they can put themselves completely in their characters’ mindset. Because it reduces the social pressure to avoid side missions, players more interested in straight-up fighting and looting scenarios might also dislike spectator mode. They want their specialists, explorers, and mischiefmakers to stick with the group, so that the evening can be more closely devoted to the efficient harvesting of experience points. If you choose to play in spectator mode, you also have to decide how much kibitzing to allow from players whose characters are not taking part in the scene at hand. You can either announce a policy in advance or feel your way through and decide on a case-by-case basis. Your choices include the following options. Audience Only: Spectator players are expected to quietly follow the exploits of active characters. By keeping the
CHAPTER 1
Takebacks It might be tough to know whether a player is definitively announcing her character’s actions or is merely thinking out loud. Sometimes a player announces a decision in jest, or without due thought, and then reacts in appalled surprise when you start rolling dice and narrating the grim results of her rash decision. To avoid this situation, make clear your policy on announced actions.
No Takebacks: When players tell you their characters are taking an action, that action is then taken. You roll dice as required and adjudicate the result, no matter the outcome. If the players want to think out loud, they should phrase their musings carefully. Even if a player is just joking, the action happens. If the player acts without confirming the facts of a situation, that’s too bad: Being clear on the dangers before acting is an essential part of the game. Most groups find this rule unduly punitive, but those that lean decisively toward combat, tactics, and XP gathering might appreciate the Spartan rigor. Jokes Okay: You won’t be so adversarial as to hammer a player for an occasional suggested action that’s meant as a joke. But all apparently serious instructions to the DM occur as announced. Takebacks Okay for Clearly Nonsensical or Misinformed Actions: Sometimes players decide to act without taking into consideration facts that would be obvious to their characters. Let’s say a gaping chasm lies just on the other side of a dungeon doorway. You intend the chasm as an obstacle for the group to navigate, not a trap. After the PCs open the door, but before you can describe the chasm, a player tells you his character is stepping carefully across the threshold. Taken literally, this declaration means the PC plunges headlong into the yawning abyss. No reasonable adventurer would fail to see the drop, however, so this action defies common sense. Instead of rolling to see how much falling damage the PC takes, you can interrupt the player, explain the situation, and caution him against announcing actions before his character has surveyed the basic terrain. From the DM’s chair, it’s not always apparent how much of a scene the players are accurately picturing, even when you have extensively described it to them. You might have all the details clearly in mind, but it’s all too easy for players to miss a key phrase or imagine a room layout different from the one on your map.
RUNNING A GAME
scene focused, they help the scene move faster and get back in the action sooner. Comments Only: Off-stage players are allowed to make comments on the proceedings, but can’t communicate advice or other useful information to the focus player. As is the case with any game, the degree of side commenting is kept within reason—a little can add to the sense of fun and camaraderie, but too much gets the group off track. Comments and Advice: Sessions are generally more brisk and more fun when the players are making good decisions. When the group is together, players can confer to come up with the best ideas. If you want your PCs to act like fictional heroes who make poor decisions only for dramatic purposes, allow them to continue soliciting advice from the group. When advising a spotlight character, off-stage players should not advance their in-character agendas, but instead do their best to provide suggestions in the active PC’s best interest. They’re not playing their PCs as if they’re in touch with the spotlight character by cell phone. This communication occurs strictly in the realm of player knowledge. Whichever choice you make, you might also want to permit side scenes, in which off-stage players find a quiet corner to play out scenes in character without you, planning future activities, swapping information, or making arrangements to present to you when you wrap up the side mission. Ask them to move out of earshot if you find their byplay distracting.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs TOP 10 WAYS TO RUIN YOUR GAME 10. Confuse your players with constant additions to your house rules list. Whenever possible, change rules in the middle of an encounter. 9. Use your game to achieve the power over others that eludes you in real life. Make each session a test of your players’ appetite for punishment. 8. Run games while suffering from extreme sleep deprivation. Compensate by overdosing on caffeine. To increase the chances of a mid-game brain crash, start the game without having eaten properly. 7. Encourage players with dominant personalities to hog the spotlight. Wallflowers deserve to be trampled. 6. When the players become frustrated, allow their frustration to feed yours. Openly display your irritation with them. 5. When your players get up the nerve to directly suggest ideas
4. 3.
2.
1.
to make the game more fun for them, reject their input. How dare they question your magnificence? Browbeat shy players into participating more fully. In a naked bid for attention, demand that the players participate in detailed after-session dissections of your gaming style, even though they seem relatively happy with the game as is. Engineer ways for your real-world disputes with friends to manifest themselves within the game environment. Create scenes and encounters that are thinly veiled reenactments of your players’ painful personal experiences. DM in a style geared exclusively to your own personal tastes, as if you were running a one-on-one game for yourself. Create an intellectual ideology explaining why your way is the only way to play. Scream its finer points at your players as they head out the door to find a new DM.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
25
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
Even in a plot-oriented game, players can easily make on hand for a shot of nutritional energy when your brain bad decisions that their characters would not. The charstarts to freeze up. Perform a set-up ritual while waiting for players to arrive: acters know the world better than the players do, and you As you move your furniture into place and assemble your should always be forgiving when players propose actions notes, dice, and miniatures, allow your mind to forget that wouldn’t make sense in the world. For example, you your daily preoccupations and shift into game mode. might have established that the elves in your campaign Think of a few events that are likely to occur in the observe a certain etiquette when greeting outsiders. A ranger character who grew up with elves would know the game. Review the special attacks of monsters the party protocols inside out, having used them hundreds of times. will likely encounter. The player has only heard about them once, in a lengthy You might play at a club or in someone else’s house, in explanation you provided to the group six weeks ago. If which case you will be traveling to the site, just like the she tells you her character marches up to the elf queen and rest of your group. If so, take a few moments alone when launches into a list of trade demands, most groups would you arrive to get yourself focused on the task of gaming. consider it unfair if the queen’s guards then carted off the Then rejoin the group. PC. Instead, interrupt to remind the player of facts that Drawing off the Social Energy are obvious to the character, then allow her to act. Now that you’ve focused your attention, it’s time to forget the game for a bit, as you give your group’s social energy a chance to dissipate. You’ve figured out what your players like and have prepared D&D is first of all a social activity; when your players an adventure that delivers their favored hooks. The final get together they will want to chat—about the weekend’s ingredient to truly wow them is an exciting presentation hit movie, current events, or the disasters of the day. A style at the table. little preliminary chit-chat is never a waste of your game Good communicators know how to attract and hold time. It builds a sense of commonality and friendship the attention of others. Great communicators do that, but that motivates the group to work together. A reservoir of more important, they learn to pay attention to others. This goodwill is crucial when differences of taste or opinion principle sounds simple, but it’s amazing how many DMs arise. Besides, you probably want to chat for a while, too. ignore this advice. You’ve prepared your mind; now it’s time to relax before you get rolling. COMMUNICATION IS KEY By giving everybody a chance to discuss off-game topics, Many imaginative people appear shy and withdrawn you reduce their appetite for digression during the game because they’re accustomed to living inside their own itself. If your players arrive separately, they probably thoughts. D&D, with its combination of number crunchstraggle in over about half an hour or so. The arrival ing and fantastic imagery, draws more than its share of coincides perfectly with the ideal chat time. Late arrivers brilliant introverts. Some would-be DMs who fit this should understand if they get less than their share of the profile have convinced themselves that effective commuusual jawboning time. nication is beyond them. They should take heart: Effective Segue into the game itself as the last late arrival gets communication is a mechanical skill that can be learned settled in, or when the energy level in the room peaks, through applied effort, similar to learning a computer as judged by the group’s collective volume and body language or becoming a trivia expert. language. Chat time should be a chance for you to rest your voice Mental Focus and brain; there’s no need for you to dominate it, since To hold other people’s attention, you must first maintain you will be the focus of attention for the remainder of the your mental focus. Your brain operates like a muscle; it session. However, if two or more players have an antagonistic friendship dynamic that can slip from good-natured won’t perform well if it’s tired. Before the session begins, sniping to actual hostility, by all means step in and subtly make sure your mind is fresh and ready to go. If possible, head them off if a discussion grows too heated. Try to steer take a nap before your game starts. If you don’t have time the conversation back to more pleasant socializing before or the opportunity, at least rest yourself mentally. beginning the game. Bad feelings at a session’s outset are Eat properly before the game. While you shouldn’t put tough to overcome. yourself in a state of pythonlike torpor by overeating, your brain won’t operate properly if you’re running low on calories. Foods laden with sugar and grease give you a Projecting Energy and Confidence short-term mental energy boost but will cause you to crash To command attention during the game, you must first a few hours later. Avoid overcaffeinating. Keep fresh fruit appear visibly interested in what you’re saying. Keep an
AT THE TABLE
26
CHAPTER 1
Your Speaking Voice If you can talk off the top of your head, clearly and entertainingly, you will be perceived as a good DM, even if your technique in other areas could use polishing. Conversely, poor speaking habits can distance your players, making them feel uninvolved with the campaign, no matter how
good you are at rules adjudication, world creation, and adventure design. Good vocal delivery is not a matter of speaking in loud, exaggerated tones or adding emphasis with broad gesticulations. A high-energy approach can be invigorating in small doses but becomes wearying over an entire session. Riveting DMs speak in a low-key way, using the focusing techniques described in the previous section. Are you good at listening to the sound of your own voice? Most people aren’t. Try to vary the pace of your speech as much as possible. Be expressive. If you’re good at funny voices, use them; they provide a welcome jolt of variety. Though sometimes you want to sustain a serious mood, usually it’s more important to keep the players engaged. Make an audio recording of a small chunk of a game session so you can listen to yourself DM. You will probably be appalled by the sound of your own voice—almost everyone is. After you get over that, listen to your speech patterns, specifically for variance in rhythm. Do you speak in a constant, predetermined rhythm? If so, you might be lulling your players to sleep. Also check to see if you talk in a monotone, with a regular, unvarying pitch. A monotone voice is not only tranquilizing; it’s hard to understand, because the speaker fails to emphasize crucial words in a sentence. As it processes speech, the human mind relies on emphasis to quickly interpret meaning. Because information is difficult to extract from a monotone, the brain usually tunes out a droning speaker after a short period. Both a lullaby rhythm and a monotone can be cured through some quick if slightly traumatic effort. Corral an understanding friend to run a practice game with you. Record one of your sessions on tape as you consciously try to vary your rhythm to fit the content of your speech. Say goodbye to your monotone delivery by punching out the critical words in each sentence. In either case, make yourself exaggerate wildly until you get the hang of it. Then turn your delivery back down to a normal mode of speaking. Another way to punch up your voice is through mimicry. Find monologues you like, either dramatic ones from movies or television shows, or standup comedy routines.
RUNNING A GAME
eye on your own body language. If you slump back lazily in your chair, you might seem bored. If you fidget with dice or pens, you might appear distracted. Constant flipping through the rulebook or adventure might make you seem scattered and unprepared. Instead, sit forward in your chair. Use your hands to express what you’re saying; when you’re not speaking, keep them still. If you are an incurable fidget, you can hide this habit by doodling, provided you keep your pages hidden behind a screen. To your players, it will seem as if you’re taking constant notes. If you use this trick, you should be looking into the room, at your players, and not at the paper. Your goal is to project a quiet, controlled energy that draws your players in. When you speak, make eye contact with the person you’re addressing. Learn the secret of charismatic people: They use subtle cues to signal their intense interest in, and approval of, those around them. Be engaged by your players, and they will be engaged by you. When you’re speaking to more than one player, move your point of eye contact around the room. Avoid furniture arrangements in which one player is hard to see, unless he’s a shy gamer who deliberately tries to stay out of the spotlight. Quietly charismatic people display another key quality: You can always see them thinking. Top-notch film actors display this quality. Closely study a movie featuring a performance by an actor such as Humphrey Bogart, Kevin Spacey, or Julianne Moore. Note how attuned these performers seem to everything around them. See how alive their eyes are, how tiny shifts in facial expression speak volumes. With these performances in mind, plunk yourself in front of a mirror and try to use your eyes and face to project a similar state of high awareness. You might not win an Academy Award by mastering this trick, but you will gain a new, unobtrusive authority at the gaming table.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs PREPARED TEXT Sections of prepared text (sometimes called readaloud text) can either provide information in a dense, well-written package, or bore your players. These sections are useful tools in published adventures if descriptive language doesn’t easily roll off your tongue. When you’re unexpectedly forced to pull an adventure out of your collection and run it without any prep time, prepared text is a godsend.
In most cases, though, you should regard prepared text as training wheels. These sections provide a good model of the sights, sounds, and moods you ought to be describing, but are best used as a backup. If you’re a classically trained actor, you might be able to read any text with riveting results. Most ordinary mortals sound more interesting even when fumbling for the right word than while reading aloud. Whenever possible, paraphrase prepared text from adventures, moving quickly to the salient points.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
27
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
Look for anecdotal comedy, as performed by Bill Cosby or Jerry Seinfeld, rather than comics who specialize in one-liners. Pay attention to the way these comedians vary speed and pitch to hammer home the pivotal thoughts in each line. Learn to perform them for yourself, line by line, inflection by inflection. Try to tell a story of your own in this borrowed voice. Then tell the same story in your own voice. Difficulties with both tone and rhythm are not uncommon among very bright people, especially those who were early readers as children. They tend to speak in the same voice they hear in their heads as they read. If you have to work on how you speak, don’t feel bad—it’s just more evidence of your unquestionable intelligence.
Parcel out exposition in short bursts. Leave spaces so players can ask questions. Let them feel their way through the information you want to present in an order they find accessible. Answers elicited by the players will always be much more memorable than facts you supply to them unbidden. Everybody gets lost in the middle of a thought from time to time. When you find yourself blathering, stop and ask yourself the central questions of any verbal communication: What is my purpose in saying this? Why should the people listening to me care? Answer these questions, and you will know what to say—and what to leave out.
Staying on Point Props Your players won’t clearly follow what you’re saying if Props, ranging from maps and other handouts to miniatures to physical puzzles, are useful not just for providing you’re not sure yourself. Whether you’re describing a information, but for refocusing player attention. When dungeon scene or a courtship with a princess, keep your you pull out a prop, you change the energy in the room. mind on the events currently transpiring in the game. Try especially to use props that get players out of their Before embarking on a lengthy explanation of any sort, seats and gathered around a single point in the room. stop and ask yourself what your players need to know at A handout that is passed around the table is useful, as this moment. is providing a copy for each player. Providing only one As a DM, it’s too easy to miss the forest for the trees, copy is often better, since it forces all the players to especially when faced with a subject you fi nd particugroup together. larly interesting, whether it’s a house rule for attacks of Props are excellent weapons in the continual war against opportunity or the cultural norms of nomadic peoples. brain fog. The use of a prop gets your players’ synapses An explanation that lasts for more than a few minutes firing in a different way, as they switch from processing is probably too long. If your group is sitting in rapt attention, you should continue your current fascinating verbal information to their visual senses. It also gets monologue. Chances are, however, that your players everyone to congregate at a single point, subliminally begin to tune out after absorbing two or three salient reinforcing group unity. (Getting your players to move from their seats is less important if you play sitting around points from your fi rst minute or so of speech. Even in a a table; in that case, you can create a break by contriving formal lecture setting, people take in only a few bits of information at a time; the rest is taken down as notes and a reason for everyone to leave the table to look at a prop is forgotten even as the scribbles hit the page. A D&D stashed elsewhere.) game is not a lecture; if you bombard your players with Look through your house for odd, portable objects and streams of information, most of it will go in one ear and ask yourself how they might figure in a D&D encounter. out the other. Avoid choosing anything too silly, such as a kitchen gadget.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs MINIATURES AS PROPS Miniatures are essential tools for running D&D fights. Used creatively, though, they can also serve as attention-focusing props outside combat. Try to preserve a sense of mystery with the miniatures you intend to use. Keep the NPC and creature minis hidden away when not in use. You wouldn’t let actors peek out from the wings before their appearance onstage, so don’t let your miniatures reveal themselves ahead of time, either. Avoid causing visual confusion by idly fidgeting with them. Reveal them with a flourish—if you’re doing it right, your players will perk up as soon as you reach for your minis carrying case. With an appropriate floor plan to go with them, minis could be used to lay out the positioning of characters in a crime scene.
28
Minis can also be used in character-driven scenes. You could place them in an opening tavern scene, so the players recognize an important NPC from her miniature when they later encounter her in the dungeon. You can also allow miniatures to drive the plot. Set up an opening scene in a marketplace or prison yard, and see which minis the players are drawn to. Improvise a plot line around the ones the PCs seek out for interaction. A miniature could even create pathos. Introduce the players to a healthy patron character; later, pull out a second version of the figure, modified to display hideous wounds or the symptoms of a debilitating curse.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
As already mentioned, getting attention is about paying attention. By learning to read and heed your players’ body language, you can tell whether you need to add excitement, ease up the pressure, or keep the room’s energy level right where it is. Bored or disengaged players slump in their chairs. They fidget or flip through books. They take off their glasses. When someone’s talking, their eyes are aimed at the ceiling or down at their books, rather than toward the speaker. To reengage them, look to your own energy level. Lean forward in your chair. Slightly increase the volume and speed of your voice. If the party is in a town or other open-ended environment, cut to a new scene or introduce an NPC. In a dungeon room, toss in a new clue or sensory detail, even if you have to add one that isn’t in the adventure as written. If possible, make this new element a favorite incentive for one or more of the players—or at least a sign that such a scene is on the way. Overwhelmed, frustrated, or upset players also move away from you, retreating into their chairs. They don’t
CHAPTER 1
PAYING ATTENTION
slump; they tense up. They put their heads in their hands or run fingers through their hair. Decrease the sense of confrontation by relaxing your own body language and moving back from the table. In a calm, quiet tone, sum up the situation that’s got them stumped, in a way that both minimizes their dilemma and suggests a number of actions they might take to get out of trouble. If the obstacle is a dispute between players, maintain the same basic tone, but use the tips given later in this chapter on mediation. Tired players yawn, rub their eyes, and blink. They find it difficult to find the right words when they speak, or to perform simple calculations or remember what they just rolled. Sleepiness is contagious; one yawn breeds another. When the group seems tired, chances are that they caught it from you—you’re the one whose brain has been working the hardest. If you’re far from your usual quitting time, call a break for snacks, chatter, and fresh air. If you’re near to the end of your session, pack it in early. When you’re tired, it’s harder to accept input from others and easy to make decisions based on irritation and momentary expedience. You’re better off leaving the players wanting more than plunging ahead into a morass of sluggish, sleep-deprived play.
RUNNING A GAME
But anything from a knickknack to a mysterious machine part might spark an idea for a puzzle or an interaction with an NPC. Not all props are physical objects. Whenever you engage the players’ senses, you engage their attention. The use of strategically cued music or sound effects works the same way; music in particular is strongly emotional, and even a quick snippet of it can completely alter a group’s mood. If you want to really focus attention, plunge the room into darkness as the group’s light sources are compromised. Or break out an aromatherapy kit to waft some dungeon smells at the players.
KEEP IT MOVING As a DM, you interact with players whose attention spans have been assailed by the ever-accelerating pace of today’s movies, TV shows, and video games. Genre audiences absorb information faster than ever before, and they expect to be bombarded with thrills. Your D&D game will never be as fast-paced as the latest summer blockbuster, and your players know it. What they get in place of brilliant cinematography and eye-popping special effects is direct participation in the experience. Though you should never
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs USING A LAPTOP A laptop computer can help you stay on top of your game, as long as you don’t allow it to steal your focus away from your players. Sitting behind a laptop creates an instant air of organization, implying that you have an incredible depth of information at your fingertips. By storing information on your hard drive, you can avoid the pile of loose pages that fill up any DM’s gaming table. You can create information on your world in a series of hyperlinked word processing documents, allowing you to access anything you need quickly. Prepared lists of locations, proper names, and creature statistics blocks can also be called up quickly and easily on a computer. Some DMs access the D&D rules by downloading the Standard Reference Document (SRD); when they need an obscure rule, they can locate it quickly with a search function. You might want to investigate the wide variety of DM-aid programs available commercially or as freeware. With the help of these tools, you can create anything from a randomized NPC to a trove of treasure with a few keystrokes.
Any simple graphics or drafting program can be set up to keep track of character position or initiative order, allowing you to move images or blocks of information around quickly and easily. Mapping software allows you to create beautiful cartographic images during your prep time, and then display it in full color to your players, revealing rooms and secret features as they explore. You can display illustrations or photos to help players visualize the PCs’ surroundings. In both cases, you refocus player attention by bringing them together to look at the same image at the same time. However, a laptop can be as alienating as it is helpful. When it is not in use, you should make sure the laptop sits off to one side; it should never block your players’ view of you. Until you become deft at unobtrusively activating programs and viewing documents on the fly, you will take the focus from the players and transfer it to something they can’t see. While you’re working, you’re missing crucial cues—if the players are engaged with the game at all.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
29
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
sacrifice player involvement for speed, in general the faster you can make your game go, the better. Speeding up Combat Whether you run a traditional combat-heavy dungeon exploration game or focus on investigation and intrigue, your fight scenes should be as thrilling as their cinematic equivalents. Make them come to life with speed and imagination. Nothing is more boring than another rote episode of bleary-eyed dice rolling. Take breaks either before or after a fight scene, never in the middle of one; you will dissipate whatever excitement you’ve generated and find it hard to pick up where you left off. If the group seems tired as a fight sequence looms, take a break. Tired minds turn even an epic battle into an exercise in tedium. Tracking Initiative The most effective way to keep up the pace during a fight scene is to move swiftly between active characters. Unless keeping track of the initiative order mentally comes as second nature to you, you should always use some method that allows you to cycle quickly to each character’s turn. Try out the following initiative tracking methods to find the one that works fastest for you. Index Cards: Use index cards to represent the PCs, and a blank card of a different color to represent each opponent’s turn. On each card, write the character’s (or enemy’s) name and the minimum information you need for the encounter. Some DMs want Armor Class only. Others want to know what sensory abilities (scent, darkvision, and so on) the PCs might have. When initiative is determined, put the cards in initiative order. Go through the cards
in order each round. Change the order as necessary for readied or delayed actions. Whiteboard: If you have a whiteboard, chalkboard, easel pad, or other large writing surface handy, write the initiative order on it. Assign an alert, combat-oriented player to help you out by calling out the next actor, and to adjust the order as delayed actions occur. Musical Chairs: During combat, ask the players to shift places around the room, physically placing them in initiative order. The players might grumble a bit if they favor a particular seating arrangement or spot at the table, but it’s worth disturbing their sense of territoriality to speed up the fight. Better yet, have the group stand around the table, grouped in initiative order. Standing adds an increased sense of urgency and makes order of action immediately apparent. If you still have a difficult time keeping track of initiative, have your players help out by using a prop—a fake scepter or plastic sword—to pass off like a baton to the next active player after each completes his or her turn. Tracking methods falter when accounting for delayed or readied actions. You forget to have the character act, or the player forgets. In the musical chairs method, have delaying or readying players step several paces back from the table. When they choose to act, they swoop back in, squeezing into a new spot, and snatching up the baton of action. This method adds a fun physical element to what is too often a moment of confusion. For added entertainment, require a battle cry or cool description of his character’s action from any player taking a delayed or ready action. To help standing players quickly track hit points and used spells, go to an office supply store and invest in some
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
30
SAMPLE MOVE DESCRIPTIONS
SAMPLE QUIPS AND BATTLE CRIES
• He sidesteps neatly and brings his lion-headed hammer raining down between your shoulder blades! • She roars, revealing her lizardlike tongue, and skitters at you with her rapier slashing the air. • It slithers with surprising speed from the pile of barrels and snaps at you with 6-inch-long teeth. • You see that its stinking claws are flecked with bits of rotting meat! • Hissing and blinking their tiny red eyes, they skitter around, trying to outflank you. • [Attack of opportunity] Casually, without even looking at you, it flicks its spiky tail at your head. • [Poor roll] It lunges for you but clumsily misses, squealing in outrage. • [Wounded creature makes good roll] As if lent new anger by its horrible wounds, it hurls itself at you, rattling your bones with a fearsome blow. • [PC damaged by fire attack] Tiny curls of crisped fiber fall in front of your eyes. You realize they’re your eyebrows.
• “Stand down, poltroon, or face the wrath of my spinning blades!” • “You’ve thwarted me for the last time, do-gooders!” • “Me eat stupid wizard’s bones!” • “In the name of my ancestors, I destroy thee!” • “Taste cold steel!” • “Die!” • “Die, I told you—die!” • “I’ll put you in your grave, impetuous rogue!” • “Master says you our enemy! So you our enemy!” • [Drooling noises] “Youse smellses tasty. . . .” • “For every wound you inflict on my boon companions, I’ll return the favor a thousandfold!” • “The bards will sing songs of this epic battle!” • “You’re good, adventurer—but not good enough.” • “I’d let you live, but I’m a willing servant of evil.” • “In the name of all the dark deities, I shall spill your blood.”
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
cheap clipboards. They can then make notations without breaking stride.
wants to howl, “Yaaaarrggghhh!” every time her character swings a weapon, give her the bonus. Let players know that it’s okay to plan in advance by writing move descriptions and catch phrases on index cards, ready for appropriate use. You should feel free to do the same for your creatures and enemies, if you fi nd it hard to improvise them on the spot. Tailor descriptions to each monster type and include them in your encounter notes.
CHAPTER 1
RUNNING A GAME
Prerolling Some DMs prefer to roll attacks and damage for their monsters and NPCs in advance. With a spreadsheet program, you can create pages of random numbers in whatever range you need. Label each page with a tab telling you which die it simulates, so you can grab quickly for your d20 page or d12 page as needed. (You could just as well group the less common dice in columns on a single printed spreadsheet.) Maintaining Pace outside Combat Each time you need a roll, use and cross out the next entry In combat, you must ward off confusion and keep on the relevant page or column. imagination alive when the dice start to roll. However, Prerolling might or might not be faster for you, dependthe most deadly pacing dilemmas occur outside combat ing on how adept you are at swapping sheets of paper sequences. around. Some players might feel inexplicably cheated if Unstructured scenes of interaction, planning, and they don’t see you tossing dice on the table; for many, the exploration slow down when the players can’t figure out rhythm of rolling dice is the essential punctuation in a what to do next. They might not see clear options for forward movement, or they might have too many choices combat scene. to select from. In the heat of battle, characters decide what Color Commentary to do and then act on their own. At other times, decisions Don’t let the players’ visualization of the world and their are made by the group. Sometimes these discussions, characters vanish when the dice come out of their bags. during which the players interact in character, provide Keep track of the numbers, but also work to stoke the more fun than any fight or NPC interaction. However, group’s visual imagination. At the beginning of a fight, they can just as easily bog down into frustration, argumost DMs describe the opponents and their surroundings. ment, and inaction. Take your description one step further: During the fight, even as you zip through the initiative order and keep track Shaping Discussion of your creature tactics, throw in the occasional line of Moments of player discussion can be a DM’s best friend. colorful description or throatily screamed dialogue. Using They give you a chance to rest up as the players take these little bits of added description takes more time at center stage. However, even as you review notes for an the table, but makes the fight seem faster and more fun. upcoming encounter or just sit back and let your brain Especially low or high rolls on your part, either on attacks idle, you should still remain attentive to the mood of the or damage, cry out for play-by-play commentary. See the room. Conflicts between players flare up during group Sample Move Descriptions and Sample Quips and Battle planning. These times are also when demoralization and Cries sidebars for examples. gridlock can set in. Encourage players to add their own fun descriptions Some old-school DMs believe in a strict noninterventionist approach to player discussion. In theory, the players of moves, and to call out frenzied battle cries. In pivotal should have absolute freedom to plan without the DM fights, announce a small XP bonus for the encounter horning in. In practice, though, the players often end up to each player who adds at least one move description confused and frustrated. Through subtle nudging, you or entertaining catch phrase during battle. Enthusiasm can prevent planning sessions from getting off track or matters more than originality; if your butt-kicker player pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs TURTLING Sessions might gridlock when players go into a defensive posture, having their characters stage their planning sessions in some impregnable location where you can’t realistically move the story along by introducing new characters and situations. In gamer jargon, this activity is known as “turtling.” Although you can still move the situation forward by shaping the discussion, you should look at this behavior as a symptom of another problem. You might have created a world so dangerous and punitive that your players feel they need to hide themselves away from it, in which case you want to ease back on its hazards.
The setting should challenge the players without terrifying them into trembling inaction. Some players are inherently cautious and pessimistic, and engage in turtling even in the face of threats their PCs are capable of overcoming. You might find that players have learned to do this while playing in unnecessarily harsh games run by other DMs. Once ingrained, these habits are hard to overcome. Address the problem directly: Tell the players that they’re not outmatched, and their characters can succeed through bold action.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
31
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
dragging on without a resolution. As you listen to player in to bring it toward a resolution only when the energy peaks, or when nonparticipating players, who might not deliberations, make a note of each viable suggestion a be so interested in the playacting aspect of D&D, reach player floats. Never interrupt a discussion that seems to be progressing toward a resolution. However, if the playa point of visible boredom. ers have been talking in circles for more than about five You can learn other lessons by listening carefully to planning sessions. Keep track of the sorts of challenges minutes without adding any new options to the list, step that tend to foster group gridlock, and avoid them in in and quickly summarize the discussion, concisely listfuture adventures. Planning sessions help you grade ing the various choices mentioned so far. In most cases, your ability at imparting information—if the players refocusing the discussion in this way is enough to get the players moving to a conclusion. are regularly confused, you need to express yourself Sometimes group gridlock results when the players more clearly. reject all their options, including those that are perfectly If you’re improvising your way through a plot-oriented reasonable. Whether this rejection comes from one adventure, the players’ discussions can give you better ideas for subsequent scenes than the ones you already had strong-minded player or the entire group, you can get in mind. the group to rethink their options by not only listing the options mentioned so far but also the pros and cons of each. Without being heavy-handed, phrase the objections to good options in a way that urges players to reconsider Good preparation away from the table improves your rejected choices. performance at it. Most of your prep work will be devoted If the group seems stuck without any options, review to the creation of adventures and your world. Both of these the information the PCs have at hand. Nudge the group topics are covered in detail in subsequent chapters. This toward the clues their characters should have picked up the first time around, without spelling the answers out section looks at preparation work specifically geared to for them. helping your game run smoother, faster, and in a more You should intervene immediately when you hear a entertaining manner. player make an argument based on information the character would know to be incorrect. The player might have PRIORITIZING The more time you have to prepare, the more freedom you misunderstood a description you provided or be making have to tailor the game to your tastes and those of your a false assumption. The character, who lives in the world players. Time is precious, though, so you need to use what and perceives it firsthand, wouldn’t forget basic details you have to your best advantage. of his own experience. Any planning based on wrong information will be pointless and confusing, so head it One-Hour Preparation off the moment you see it happening. If you spend 1 hour preparing for your game each week, In an investigative scenario, gridlock might result use that hour to: when the players hunker down to plan and theorize without having gathered sufficient information to make good decisions. When you see the players experienc• Select (if you haven’t done so already) a published ing this difficulty, come right out and tell the players adventure. they need to dig up more facts. The group might have • Skim the adventure. With your session length in mind, categorize each scene or encounter based on huddled up because the players don’t know where their PCs should look next. In this case, continue to shape the the likelihood that your players will run through discussion, prompting them to list possible avenues of it during the upcoming session: definite, possible, investigation. Chances are this activity will get them unlikely, not possible. thinking again; if not, provide a few options to get • Review each “definite” encounter in depth. them started. Though it’s more rewarding when players For combat encounters, review the special attacks answer these questions themselves, movement is always of enemy combatants, including any modifiers or preferable to quagmire. tactical situations arising from terrain or other unique It is possible for a group to have a great time even when encounter aspects. Highlight any special senses that their PCs disagree and their plan is going nowhere. If the might come into play. Review enemy combat tactics, players are thoroughly engaged with dialogue in characif supplied. Create them, if not. Take notes to fi x this ter, clearly having fun, and keeping the disagreements information in your memory. on the character level, lean back and enjoy the show. The For interaction encounters, make a note of NPC players have turned what might have been a dry planning motivations. What do they want from the adventurers, session into a fun scene of character interaction. Step and how do they try to get it? Select an easily played
AWAY FROM THE TABLE
32
CHAPTER 1
RUNNING A GAME
character quirk for each important character—a quavery Three-Hour Preparation voice, poor vocabulary, or shifty gestures. As above, but also: For investigative encounters, highlight each relevant clue. Note how the adventurers are meant to get it; come • For a dungeon adventure, create two new encounters up with at least one alternative way to find the clue if designed to appeal specifically to one or more players, this tactic fails. or alter an existing one to relate specifically to their hooks and character goals. Find a way to connect them • Make a chart cross-referencing all the definite encounters with a list of your players and their hooks. If one or to your published adventure. Spend half an hour on each. As weeks go by, make sure everyone gets a custom more players is left without a defining moment of fun encounter eventually. Start with the players you find in any of the encounters, find a suitable encounter and hardest to cater to, casual players excepted. create notes on how to add that element during play. • If you’re running an investigative or story-driven (For example, you might have no chance to affirm the supercoolness of your resident supercool character. But adventure, create and populate at least one new location you do have a scene where villagers can be rescued from in your campaign’s home base. For example, you can monsters, so add a note reminding yourself to play up the detail a library, the secret vault of a magic item dealer, or awe the rescued peasants feel toward this character.) the sheriff’s prison compound. It need not relate to the • Review each “possible” encounter. adventure at hand; it can be a place the PCs are likely to For combat encounters, quickly review special attacks visit at some point down the line. Spend fifteen minutes by noting page numbers in the rulebooks where they on a map, another fifteen on point-by-point description can be found, if not described for quick reference in the of the various sections of the location. Create a statistics adventure. Read through combat tactics. block for at least one character found at the location, and For interaction encounters, note NPC motivations; a description, including a motivation or past history highlight a salient point for each NPC. involving one of the PCs. In a line or two of text, invent a connection to any previous locations you have created, For investivative encounters, highlight clues; add so you can lead PCs from one to another. the scene to a flowchart connecting it to other such Optionally, you can spend half an hour additionally encounters. populating a location you created during a past week. • Skim each “unlikely” encounter. The more likely the party is to continue visiting a locaTwo-Hour Preparation tion, the more time this exercise warrants. If you spend 2 hours preparing for your game each week, Four-Hour Preparation do the above, plus: Devise an adventure of your own, building in favorite elements for each player. Notate it to highlight special attacks, • Review each possible encounter in depth; review each clue locations, and character motivations, as desired. unlikely encounter. • Devote any remaining time to creating one or more If you’ve created characters and locations during improvisational aids (as described below). past 3-hour preparation phases, and you’re working on
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs PLAYER PREPARATION A baseline dungeon exploration campaign requires little commitment from players between sessions. Their out-of-game communication with you will be confined to seeking approval for unconventional abilities or items to add to their character sheets. These requests are best handled by email, assuming both of you have access to it. The players can submit their character changes at their leisure, and you can respond in a spare moment or during your preparation time. XP expenditures for the creation of magic items can be approved in this fashion or in person during the chatter phase preceding actual play. The more your campaign concerns itself with setting, story, and character, the greater the opportunity the players have to take part in preparation. They can add to their histories, create allies and other friendly supporting characters, and, with your approval, help design friendly places and people in their home base. Subcontracting world creation is a great way to increase the commitment of players to your campaign.
Naturally, only creatively inclined players will be interested in such an undertaking. A website with mutual posting privileges provides a satisfying way of organizing your efforts. You can even invite participation from Internet acquaintances around the world. Using chat or Web-based roleplaying clients, you can run side encounters for one or two players. You can also confer or play by phone, and online dice rollers keep everybody honest. If you prefer not to separate player knowledge and character knowledge, you might find between-session solo play essential. PCs can perform side missions without leaving the rest of the group in thumb-twiddling mode. You might also be tempted to run them for players who just can’t get enough of your game. Beware, though: You can easily alienate less involved players through apparent favoritism. No one wants to show up at a session to find out that another PC gained two levels during an all-night chat game—or even that a character died offstage, and has now been abruptly replaced by a new character.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
33
a city-based adventure, save time by devising a storyline making use of as many of your preexisting places and people as you can smoothly shoehorn together.
Illus. by K. Andrasofsky
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
IMPROVISATIONAL AIDS
34
Even in the most straightforward dungeon-based game, PCs eventually head to town in search of rest, recreation, and the chance to spend hard-earned loot. Whenever they enter an unstructured environment, your skill at improvisation will be tested, as the PCs head off in unexpected directions. Deal with this contingency by preparing for spontaneity. Devote preparation time to the creation of improvisational aids, which help you quickly add detail to your world as questions arise. These aids are basically lists of names and ideas that are ideally suited to piecemeal creation. Keep a rough version of this list handy wherever you go, so you can jot down ideas in odd moments of spare time. Some essential improvisational aids are discussed below. Lists of Names, by Race and Gender: Memorable, appropriate fantasy names are tough to dream up spontaneously. Keep a list on hand for NPCs you create at the spur of the moment. Personality Traits: In a few words apiece, create personalities you can quickly bolt onto barmen, clerks, city guards, courtiers, and other walk-on characters as the need for them arises. Use bold surface traits that you find easy to describe or play: scruffy, fussy, blustery, softspoken, angry, mournful, foul-smelling, impertinent, and so on. Tavern Names: PCs visit plenty of taverns in their careers, usually in search of information. Traveling PCs stay at a huge number of inns. Keep a list of inn and tavern names handy. Since few people were literate during the medieval era, taverns tended to have visual names that could be easily depicted in painted images or sculptured signs, such as The Red Oak, The Elk and Boar, The Bent Plough, The Mermaid, The Bell and Castle. (See the sidebar on page 98 for one approach to generating names for such places.) Other shops will usually be named after their proprietors; signage reveals the type of business but not the name. So you can go to your proper name list when identifying armorers, blacksmiths, and other craftsfolk. Rumors and Red Herrings: Make a list of a dozen or so stories making the rounds of local gossips. Use them when you need conversation filler as PCs talk to NPCs who have little to add to the main plot. If you’re running an investigation scenario, be careful not to create anything too interesting; the group might become entranced by a colorful rumor and mistakenly incorporate it into their theory of the case. Especially intriguing rumors might
send the group off in search of an improvised adventure, which is great if you’re good at running them. Otherwise, make sure that your background detail is less interesting than the main story. Stats for Spontaneous Urban Opponents: Whether they tend to run afoul of the sheriff’s men or skulking thugs, PCs in an urban environment get into fights at the drop of a helmet. Keep game statistics on hand for a group of generic urban opponents for the party. As the group reaches high levels, it should no longer be bothered by ordinary street muscle. Authorities or criminal leaders have to hire specialists to take on the party, in which case you should create a balanced enemy adventuring party ready to take them on. Whatever the group’s level, keep these characters available as reactive opponents who strike only when the PCs ask for trouble.
TROUBLESHOOTING Almost every problem a D&D group encounters boils down to a clash in tastes, compounded by a lack of communication between a DM and the players. Sometimes DMs feel that their players are playing improperly or even incorrectly. These players prefer style X, but the DM prefers (or thinks the players ought to prefer) style Y. Sometimes the players want a DM to cater more to their wishes, but are rebuffed because the DM places her ideas about game style above the enjoyment of the players. Throughout this chapter, concrete solutions have been provided that solve most minor problems in a group—providing authority figures for the rabblerousers to rebel against, allowing supercool characters to be supercool, providing enemies for fight fans to vanquish. These examples are all ways of sharing a general piece of advice you might find useful: Don’t fight your players’ desires—satisfy them. Satisfying players does not mean giving away your game. Almost every player wants, over the long run, to be challenged. Power-hungry players might think they want you to immediately rocket them to 20th level, but the fun of that would last only a few moments. Through reasonable in-game effort, the players should be able to experience their chosen emotional thrills on a regular basis.
COMMUNICATION If you’re working to balance all the players’ tastes and still having a bad time, it’s time to sit down and communicate directly with the players. You might have mistakenly identified your players’ tastes. Most players will be reluctant to offend you. They might be dissatisfied without being able to explain exactly why. Overcome this initial reluctance by asking indirect questions. Ask them to identify their favorite moments in
MEDIATION Any discussion involving the formation of a plan of action will include differences of opinion between players. When different opinions begin to result in hostility between players, you need to step in, calm flaring tempers, and mediate your way to a happy solution. The best way to deal with disputes between players is to head them off before they start. Confl icts often arise if players use the game to play out real-world grievances with one another. This sort of conflict, in which sarcastic comments lead to genuine insults and then to a sudden death duel between PCs, tends to occur when players get cranky, bored, or frustrated. By following the techniques in this chapter—keeping up the pace, maintaining focus, balancing player tastes, and calling breaks when the group tires—you should be able to keep these eruptions to a minimum. If you remember to step in and guide discussions as they begin to founder, you can put emotional distance between the two disputing players. In a detached way, list the pros and cons of each player’s approach. Let them use you as a neutral sounding board as they make their arguments. In most cases, doing so defuses the tension enough to prevent hard feelings. PC-against-PC conflict arising from personal hard feelings between players should always be headed off. These fights lead to even more hard feelings if a PC is seriously hurt or killed, and these conflicts disrupt the fictional illusion of the game when characters fight for no good reason. Such fights usually end in the death of one character, which stops the game as the survivors cart the PC’s body off for resurrection or the player rolls up a new character. Noncombatants might feel smugly superior to those who fight each other or, more likely, they grow annoyed. Either way, they add to the group’s downward spiraling mood. When a fight is about to break out, immediately call a break. After the break is over, ask the players if they still want their PCs to fight. Is this dispute really worth the
CHAPTER 1
RUNNING A GAME
your game, and the ones that stick out as unsatisfying. If they have had more fun in past campaigns or with another DM, get them to recount their positive experiences there. No matter how constructive it might be, criticism is tough to give and hard to take. By keeping the discussion specific but indirect, you can zero in on your players’ true desires without recrimination or hurt feelings.
A young adventurer is about to set foot inside a tavern hassle, not to menfor the first time tion the level a dead PC might lose if the fight results in a character’s death? If the players still want their PCs to fight, suggest a hefty wager over a nonfatal duel as an alternative. If even this solution won’t satisfy them, the dispute is probably about issues between the players that you’re in no position to resolve. Ask them one more time to set aside
35
Illus. by M. Phillippi
RUNNING A GAME
CHAPTER 1
their feud. If they still want their characters to duel to the death, let them have their catharsis; it’s better than if they fought in real life.
36
best interpersonal skills and deal with them gently, so they don’t get defensive, and firmly, so they realize their overbearing behavior won’t get them the gratification they want. Look the disruptor in the eye and speak in a SELFISHNESS calm, low voice. Phrase your request for better behavior The one problem you can’t solve simply by balancing in a firm but nonaccusatory manner: out varying tastes is that of the disruptive player. On the (Cut-Up) “Let’s focus, okay?” surface, there might seem to be many species of disrup(Digresser) “Let’s stay on topic.” tive player. One example is the rules lawyer, who knows (Spotlight Hog) “I’ll get back to you in a bit. [Other the rules better than you do, constantly quibbles with player] hasn’t had a chance to act yet.” you about them, and tries to leverage this knowledge to With rules lawyers, clearly establish the amount of his character’s advantage. Another sort of argumentative rules discussion you will allow during a game. Give player focuses not on the rules but on picking apart your rules lawyers a brief period of time in which to make rulings on cause and effect, especially when his chartheir case—no more than a minute or two. Make it clear that any ruling you make acter is at a disadvantage as a result of them. You might during a session is final for its duraencounter the DM emeritus, a player who tion, and that no further argument usually runs a game and tries to surreptitiously hijack yours. You might will be entertained. Explain that rules have to deal with a class clown, arguments slow the game down who cares only about cracking and are no fun for anyone else the group up, or their cousins, to listen to. Keep the spirit of the digressers, who can’t pass the game in mind as you rule. up an opportunity to discuss If a rules lawyer’s argument unrelated tangents. The ridiculously favors the player dreaded spotlight hog is at too low a cost, it is unespecially difficult; he doubtedly bogus, wording technicalities notwithwants to talk and act all the time. This standing. Allow players player is the first to to appeal your rulings jump in with a reonly after a session is sponse, the last to over, and then preferably by email. (A relinquish the floor, written response seems and is always ready more like work and might with an interruption. These traits are all symptoms cool your lawyer’s jets.) Warn your of the same syndrome, expressed in players in advance that you’ll listen to Greedy goblins let no one near their treasure slightly different ways according to the one further argument or read one email, troublemaker’s game tastes and personality type. The root and then decide conclusively. Rules lawyers are occaproblem is selfishness: These players are more interested sionally right; even so, you might instinctively want in attracting attention to themselves, and in fulfi lling to refuse them every argument because they drive their own desires, than in contributing to a mutually you crazy. Make sure you give their arguments fair, if entertaining game. Lacking a sense of boundaries, quick, consideration. they’re ready and able to exert pressure on you until you Respond to other argumentative players in the same way. Though you should never reverse your adjudication acquiesce to their desires. People don’t change ingrained behavior easily, if at all. of an event, you might review a case and conclude that Attempts to permanently reform a disruptive player end you made a bad call. If so, affirm the results but tell the only in frustration and deepening hostility. Instead, set player you’ll do it differently next time. yourself the goal of efficiently managing the effects of the If you find that a disruptive player’s habits can’t be player’s selfishness. Don’t get annoyed; try to maintain a managed, or that it takes too much of your focus to do sense of wry detachment. so, you’re faced with the extreme step of uninviting Selfish players are rarely conscious of their behavior, him from your group. Most people put up with mildly at least while it’s occurring. Most don’t see themselves selfish players to avoid a decisive confrontation. Doing as consistently running roughshod over others, and will so is usually the right decision; no game is more back off if you call them on their behavior. Muster your important than a friendship.
Illus. by A. Swekel
hapter 3 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide provides building blocks you use to construct dungeon, wilderness, and urban adventures. This chapter offers even more encounter and adventure components, such as new traps, rules for adventuring in some archetypal locations and situations, and random encounter tables keyed to sites that often pop up in settings and adventures. However, a great adventure is more than a collection of encounters—it’s a cohesive narrative full of action, suspense, and thorny choices for the player characters. This chapter begins with advice for taking your adventures to the next level, whether the stories are ones you create or published adventures you’ve purchased.
ADVENTURE PACING Pacing is a matter of finding the happy medium between full-throttle action and the gradual building of wonder and tension. No adventure should have long periods of description when the PCs are simply listening to you talk, but it shouldn’t be nonstop combat, either. Although adventures resemble short stories or novels in that they tell a story and are written down, they have more similarity to movie screenplays. In fact, treating
your adventure like a movie is an excellent way to plan an adventure. The standard adventure should be easy to split into three acts: a beginning, a middle, and an end. The beginning lays out the situation and plot of the adventure to the players. Not all secrets and surprises are revealed, but enough of the plot should be apparent that the PCs realize a new adventure is starting. The beginning of an adventure can be as simple as a single roleplaying encounter or as complex as a foray into a bandit lair. As a general rule, the first act should be relatively light on combat; allow the characters time to settle in to the themes and atmosphere of the adventure before rolling for initiative. The beginning act of the adventure should take no more than a single session to play through. If your opening act is more complicated than that, you’ve gone too far. The middle act of the adventure is generally the largest of the three. A middle act typically lasts for anywhere from one to a dozen sessions, but can take longer. Still, if your middle act goes on for too long, you run the risk of players losing track of their goals or of them getting distracted and failing to follow through with the primary plot line.
37
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
The final act of the adventure, as with the beginning, should not last more than one session. Typically, the final act consists of action that complements the overall theme of the adventure. Usually, this means a large battle with the primary villains of the piece, but it could just as easily be a roleplaying encounter or a complicated puzzle. The logistics of pacing are difficult to quantify, since they depend on several factors. The players’ knowledge of the rules, the number of players, the number of NPCs you have to run, the amount of game time that has passed during the session, and other aspects all combine to complicate the issue. When designing an adventure, resist the temptation to put in scores of minor encounters. If you have a choice between putting in an encounter that has little to do with the adventure’s plot and one that does, you should opt for the one that does. Keep in mind that the D&D rules are designed so that a group of PCs gains a level once every fourteen encounters or so. In this regard, the number of encounters you can run the PCs through is a limited resource. Too many encounters, and the next thing you know, the PCs are too high in level for the final encounter you had meticulously designed to challenge them.
USING PUBLISHED ADVENTURES
38
The generation of NPC statistics is another time-intensive task in constructing a usable adventure. D&D is a game with a heavy foundation in math, and while most DMs eventually become adept at churning out a variety of NPCs with detailed backgrounds and complete statistics, published adventures provide an excellent resource for pregenerated characters. Look for an adventure suitable for the level of the PCs and start flipping. You’ll likely encounter plenty of statistics for villains and NPCs you can insert directly into your campaign. Even if the background, personality, or physical description of the NPCs doesn’t fit your specific needs, you can easily alter all these things. With the math done for you, you can spend time coming up with interesting flavor to support the new addition to your campaign. One last tip: If you’re looking for lots of NPC statistics, try hunting through urban adventures. Dungeon crawls tend to feature monsters straight out of the Monster Manual and other sources, and publishers frequently abbreviate their statistics to save space. But urban adventures provide a higher percentage of classed NPCs, giving you more statistics for your dollar.
LINKING A PUBLISHED ADVENTURE When you add a published adventure to your ongoing story, you need to consider two important questions: how to connect your current campaign thread, if any, to this inserted adventure, and how to extract the characters from it and divert them back to the main campaign when they’re done.
A lot of Dungeon Masters only use adventures they create for their own campaigns. They feel that any purchased adventure requires too much work to fit in the campaign world they have so carefully crafted over multiple sessions, that the plots Hook Them In of published adventures lack the color and flavor of their If you have an opportunity to do so, the best way to link campaigns, or that published adventures deviate too greatly a published adventure to your home-brew campaign is to from the grand, overarching plan they have for their camplant story hooks early on. Two or three sessions before paigns. But with just a little tinkering, a published adventure you plan to begin the published adventure, take a look can be an excellent resource for any DM. Linking one to a through it and find an NPC, location, or plot point that larger campaign structure doesn’t have to be intimidating you can work into the current adventure. These three or require massive restructuring, and published material elements work the best for this purpose, since they’re provides an excellent resource for the DM with little time the most modular. (In other words, they can be dropped to prepare for an upcoming session. into a preexisting location or situation with little or no modification needed.) USABLE MATERIAL NPCs can appear and disappear nearly at your whim, Even if you decide that a published adventure doesn’t suit provided the players don’t believe them to be hostile your campaign needs as written, a closer look is likely to (thereby provoking a fight). A nonaggressive NPC is a uncover valuable material. Most published adventures good kind of character to pick up and introduce early. A feature professionally rendered maps. Drawing maps is townsperson who earlier seemed helpful and friendly is one of the most time-consuming steps in planning an likely to gain the characters’ ear when it’s time to begin adventure, and pulling a map or a series of maps from a the published adventure. But if a fight is more to your published source can provide you with the foundation for liking, use a villainous lackey or two to pick a fight with an adventure custom-made for your campaign. Sometimes the characters. A few sessions later, when the PCs are just looking at the maps can provide the inspiration for a exposed to the hook of the published adventure, allow new adventure. Even if you ignore plot, setting, and story them to find out that the hook might be connected to the details, the maps in the adventure might be worth the troublemakers they fought a few days earlier. The PCs are price of the entire product. likely to be interested in uncovering the connection.
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Locations can likewise be effective linking tools. An merchant later approaches the PCs with the hook for NPC in the current adventure might mention adventurthe published adventure, the PCs feel as though this is a ing in the region you plan on sending the characters to threat they saw coming, and they feel great for putting in the published adventure, or the PCs might discover the pieces together. that a major campaign villain comes from the location in question. You could also plant a partial map from the Bringing Them Out Exiting a group of characters from a published adventure published adventure in the current adventure. Placing it on the person of a main villain is especially likely to pique is easier than getting them into it. One simple method is to the player characters’ interest. plant a villain from your home-brew campaign in the final encounter of the published adventure, either in addition Plot is perhaps the strongest linking tool of all. Most villains have their hands in a variety of schemes. You could to or in place of the adventure’s villain. You can also use plant a note or an item in a current villain’s stronghold that cameo appearances by NPCs from your main campaign points toward the published adventure; when the characters in the course of running the published adventure. These see a connection later, they are likely to want to pursue it. appearances remind the characters of their main goals, and you can use them to provide minor clues that lead the You might also allow the PCs a chance to overhear a conversation, intercept a message, or just see the current villain characters to the hook for the next adventure. conversing with a stranger who is connected to the hook A jarring exit, in which the characters suddenly learn they’ve been on an adventure that deviates from the main of the published adventure. When you reveal the hook, the campaign plot and had nothing to do with their primary characters are that much more likely to bite. The following example uses each of the elements above. goals, can also be very effective. Your main campaign Three sessions before the published adventure (a volcanic villains look much more nefarious and smart if it seems dungeon crawl) is to begin, the characters are embroiled as though they duped your characters down a false path. This sort of “exit strategy” can be frustrating for the players, in your current homemade adventure. The villain they’re however, and is best used sparingly. pursuing is a nefarious baron who dabbles with dark, necromantic magic and is known to have contacts within the local thieves’ guild. As the PCs embark on a mission to SIMPLE FIXES snoop around the villain’s country estate, they encounter If you don’t have the luxury of advance planning, you can a merchant on the road heading away from the estate, still use simple fi xes to insert a published adventure into your current campaign. Discard the published adventure’s looking pale and in a near-frantic hurry. hook and insert something appropriate to your campaign. The merchant is actually an important NPC lifted from The hook doesn’t have to openly lead to the adventure. If the published adventure to be run in a few sessions. He provides the PCs with good advice about a group of undead the PCs think they’re pursuing a long-term goal in the lurking up the road, earning their trust. When the merchant campaign because of the hook, and then end up on the later encounters the PCs in the published adventure, they published adventure, they probably won’t realize they’re been sidetracked. Even if they do, you can offer tantalizing will feel as though they already know him and can trust clues to keep them thinking they’re headed in the right his information, but more important, his appearance as an direction (a note, a mural on a wall, or some other clue that important player in this new adventure won’t be jarring. ties to your main campaign plot line). Again, as mentioned The PCs proceed to the baron’s estate and find a partial map on an important cohort of the baron, detailing a dark in Bringing Them Out (see above), your main campaign series of twisting passages and a few chambers with areas villains seem all the more powerful and dangerous if marked “Danger! Lava!” Perhaps the map even has notes the characters think these NPCs are responsible for the in the margins mentioning the baron’s meeting with a diversionary adventure. The following fairly straightforward changes can help “Dark Master of Fire Magic.” The map makes no sense to the characters now, but it’s actually the first few chambers you render published adventures more usable in your of the map from the published adventure. If you can home campaign. Proper Nouns: Players might be less enthusiastic about photocopy the map and actually provide a handout, the an adventure that’s set in a specific world, such as the players will be all the more likely to remember the map FORGOTTEN R EALMS setting or the EBERRON setting, because later. You’ve also dropped a plot hint here, indicating a it features places or people unique to that setting. connection between the baron and another evil force, a Look for nouns beginning with capital letters. Changspellcaster who specializes in fire magic. Finally, when the PCs return to town after defeating the ing these names is extremely easy, and quickly gives an baron’s forces at the estate (or perhaps the baron himself), adventure the appropriate tone and feel for your campaign they find a couple of houses on fire, one of which happens world. It’s surprising how big a difference simple name to belong to the helpful merchant from earlier. When that changes can make.
39
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
40
Setting: If you’ve ever picked up a published adventure, flipped through it quickly, and said, “This adventure is great, but my campaign takes place in the deep jungle, and this one is set in the desert. I can’t use this,” you’re not alone. An adventure won’t work if the setting doesn’t match, but setting is one of the easiest and quickest things to alter. Look for key words tied to the setting in descriptive text, and swap out nouns or adjectives for ones that better fit the setting you want. In this way, a hot desert quickly becomes a steamy jungle, while the dungeon ruins you wanted to feature remain the same. These simple alterations can even be done on the fly. Before describing a room to your players, take a quick look through the text and take note of setting-specific words. Read around them or swap them out as needed; your players probably won’t even notice. Structures: Like setting, the style of buildings can be a deterrent to using a published adventure. If you’ve set your PCs up to expect to explore a lost temple, but an adventure you want to run is set in a monastery, you can make minor changes to descriptions of the monastery to suit your needs. Make a list of ten elements you associate with a temple (such as a series of training dojos or meditation chambers). From time to time, add one of these flavor elements to a room description. Buildings are fairly interchangeable, requiring only minor adjustments to flavor text with an attention to setting (as described above) to alter them for use in your own unique adventure. Monsters: Monsters can likewise be changed, if you feel it necessary. If salamanders are the main villains of the desert adventure, consider creatures suitable for the jungle, such as lizardfolk, ettercaps, or yuan-ti. Pages 318–319 of the Monster Manual feature a great resource for swapping monsters: a list of monsters ranked by Challenge Rating. Sometimes, swapping monsters isn’t necessary, although it might seem to be. A lost temple populated by fiery salamanders might require a small bit of explanation to justify, but the mystery of the presence of these out-of-place creatures will likely intrigue the players. Levels: The character level that a published adventure is written for can be one of the most troublesome elements to alter. Check the adventure itself; some feature sidebars detailing ways to scale adventures for characters of multiple levels. But you might look at an adventure designed for 10th-level characters and pass it over if your party is only 5th level, thinking it would be too much work to modify in any significant way. This is where a good library of published adventures comes in handy. Consider pulling statistics for NPCs and villains from an adventure of the appropriate level and porting them directly into the adventure you want to run. Likewise, use the table on pages 318–319 of the Monster Manual to trade monsters of inappropriate CRs for monsters that suit your group’s speed. This amount of work for a
typical 32-page adventure probably won’t take more than an hour, unless you need to add significant numbers of statistics blocks. If that’s the case, you can always find monsters of the appropriate CR to sub in for NPCs. Physical Methods: The best way to make these changes is to insert information directly into the adventure, if a particular change is small enough. For more substantive changes, footnote the portion of the adventure that you want to modify, add to, or delete. The footnote provides you with the information you need to find the secondary source material you want to add to the adventure—whether it’ a monster from Monster Manual III, a pregenerated NPC from Chapter 5 of this book, or an item or spell of your own creation that’s already in your adventure notebook.
A CHANGE OF DIRECTION Running a published adventure as written can be a way for you to inject some variety, and perhaps some renewed vitality, into your players’ game experiences. You can use a published adventure to take the PCs in a drastically different direction. For instance, if your campaign features a lot of battlefield warfare, an adventure that focuses on espionage can be an interesting change of pace. Likewise, if your group tends to favor espionage and stealth-based approaches to adventuring, sending them on a classic dungeon delve can give them an unusual challenge and provide you with a chance to stretch your DM skills. Even the most diehard interaction-oriented players usually enjoy a bit of hack-and-slash from time to time, especially if they believe the adventure has a purpose. A published adventure might also enable you to take things in a new direction in a quite literal way. If your campaign takes place exclusively underground, suddenly sending the player characters to explore a dark forest or a volcanic mountain range provides a twist, even if the style of adventure is the same. The adventures that players remember years after a campaign is ended tend to be those that break the mold—adventures that spin them around and turn their world upside down, if only for a brief time. A published adventure used in the middle of an ongoing campaign could turn out to be just such a memorable episode in the lives of the players and their characters.
TRAPS Traps are a staple of D&D adventures—especially dungeonbased ones—and Chapter 3 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide details a large number of traps of both mechanical and magic nature: pit traps, hails of needles, flame strike traps, monster summoning traps, and worse can be found on pages 70–74 of that book. Yet these traps are generally simple and generic. The following section presents new traps for your game, Most of them are more complicated
than the traps in the Dungeon Master’s Guide, and some of them can be scaled up and down in Challenge Rating.
BOOBY TRAP (CR 1/2)
CHAPTER 2
Illus. by M. Cotie
The booby trap is commonly encountered in kobold lairs, goblin warrens, orc-infested hills, and regions inhabited by savage humanoids. Booby traps, unlike most other traps, are fairly easy to set up. A DC 20 Craft (trapmaking) check and 1 minute of work is all that’s required to set up a booby trap. A trapmaker can rush a booby trap’s creation and attempt to craft one as a full-round action, but doing so entails a –10 penalty on the Craft (trapmaking) check. Failure on this check by 5 or more indicates DUST CLOUD the trapmaker springs the trap and TRAP (CR 4) is affected by it. When this sort of trap The components required to is triggered, a cloud build a booby trap vary wildof swirling, blinding, ly. Parts can be purchased for 50 gp, or a character damaging dust is concan scrounge the parts jured in the area. The from the surrounding trap is more an irritant environment with a sucthan anything, but creatures immune to its cessful DC 20 Survival effects find it particucheck and 10 minutes larly useful. of work. Booby traps are usually The cloud has sevCR 1/2 traps. Creating a eral effects. Creatures more dangerous booby in the area must make trap generally requires a Fortitude save or be powerful magic, or blinded while they retime and resources, main within the cloud or both. Additionand for 3 rounds afterally, booby traps ward. Creatures in the on their own aren’t cloud also take 2d6 a significant difpoints of damage each round they remain in the ficulty; the true threat arises when area. Damage reduction the trap-setter uses of any kind reduces the a booby trap to gain damage from the swirling, a favorable combat stinging sand. Creatures position over the vicwithin the cloud have concealment from other tim. Several sample booby Kobolds look on from hiding as Lidda falls prey to their booby trap creatures within 5 feet; creatraps are described below. tures farther away have total concealment. Ranged attacks Alarm: CR 1/2; mechanical device; touch trigger; no from bows, crossbows, or slings made within or through reset; bells ring when triggered (nearby enemies make the cloud are deflected as if they passed through a wind wall a DC –5 Listen check, modified by distance, to hear the spell effect, and spellcasting while within the cloud requires bells); Search DC 15; Disable Device DC 15. a Concentration check (DC 15 + spell level). Duster: CR 1/2; mechanical device; touch trigger; no reset; fragile container of fine powder (Atk +5 melee touch, The dust cloud trap is common among creatures that blindness for 1d3 rounds, DC 12 Fortitude negates); Search don’t need to rely on normal vision to track intruders, DC 15; Disable Device DC 15. and among creatures naturally resistant to the trap’s fairly Knockback: CR 1/2; mechanical device; touch trigger; minor damage. Grimlocks, especially tribes of barbarno reset; heavy swinging weight makes a bull rush attempt ians, favor the use of this trap. Their blindsight allows
ADVENTURES
as a Medium creature with 14 Strength; Search DC 15; Disable Device DC 15. Sticker: CR 1/2; mechanical device; touch trigger; no reset; sharp spike (Atk +6 melee, 1d6); Search DC 15; Disable Device DC 15. Tripline: CR 1/2; mechanical device; touch trigger; no reset; trip cord makes a trip attempt as a Medium creature with 14 Strength; Search DC 15; Disable Device DC 15. Weapon Grabber: CR 1/2; mechanical device; touch trigger; no reset; bar or noose attempts to disarm a held object or weapon (Atk +6 as a Medium creature); Search DC 15; Disable Device DC 15.
41
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
them to walk directly into the cloud and find enemies despite those enemies’ concealment. Such tribes favor the Spring Attack feat, which minimizes the damage they take, or they fight with reach weapons from the edge of the conjured cloud. Dragons likewise favor this sort of trap. Their scales are hard enough to negate the damage of the cloud, and their blindsense enables them to locate enemies accurately enough for breath weapons or area spells. Any creature with blindsight could use this trap to guard a lair, especially those that favor melee attacks, since the cloud is so disruptive to ranged or spell attacks. Dust Cloud Trap: CR 4; magic device; location trigger; automatic reset; magic effect (conjured cloud of swirling sand lasts for 5 rounds, blindness while in cloud and for 3 rounds afterward, Fortitude DC 14 negates blindness, 2d6 points of damage, damage reduction of any kind applies, creatures in cloud have concealment within 5 feet and total concealment beyond, ranged attacks in cloud are deflected, casting spells requires Concentration check (DC 15 + spell level); Caster level 5th; Search DC 28; Disable Device DC 28. Cost: 3,200 gp, 282 XP.
ENERVATION/ENERGY DRAIN TRAP (CR VARIABLE) Enervation and its higher-level version, energy drain, are powerful and deadly spell effects. It’s no real surprise, then, that an enterprising wizard or sorcerer created a trap to feature their potent magic. Several versions of this trap exist. The most basic form is a single enervation ray. From there, multiple enervation rays, firing at multiple targets, make the trap more deadly, until at its most powerful energy drain replaces the enervation effect. Some of these traps use location triggers, while others have proximity or touch triggers. Creatures that favor this trap would usually have immunity to negative energy, making this a prime device for intelligent undead to use in their lairs. Liches and vampires, especially, find the trap to their liking, since the enervating effects weaken potent foes before the undead face them personally. Enervation/Energy Drain Traps No. of CR Spell Rays 5 enervation 1 7 enervation 2 7 empowered enervation 1 9 chained enervation* 1
42
Negative Caster Levels Level 1d4 7th 1d4 (two targets) 7th 1d4+1/2 11th 1d4 (primary), 15th 1d2 (secondary) 10 energy drain 1 2d4 17th 12 energy drain 2 2d4 (two targets) 17th *While this version of the trap fires only a single ray, the primary ray branches out from the first target, striking all other creatures within 30 feet of the first. These secondary targets, if struck, gain only half as many negative levels as the primary target.
Enervation Trap: CR 5; magical device; proximity trigger (target within 40 ft.); automatic reset; spell effect (enervation, 7th-level wizard, Atk +10 ranged touch, 1d4 negative levels); Search DC 29; Disable Device DC 29. Cost: 12,000 gp, 1,120 XP. Chained Enervation Trap: CR 9; magical device; proximity trigger (target within 60 ft.); automatic reset; spell effect (enervation, 15th-level wizard, Atk +14 ranged touch, 1d4 negative levels at first target, Atk +14 ranged touch, 1d2 negative levels at every creature within 30 ft. of first target); Search DC 29; Disable Device DC 29. Cost: 30,000 gp, 2,400 XP. Energy Drain Trap: CR 10; magical device; proximity trigger (target within 65 ft.); automatic reset; spell effect (energy drain, 17th-level wizard, Atk +15 ranged touch, 2d4 negative levels); Search DC 34; Disable Device DC 34. Cost: 76,500 gp, 6,120 XP.
FEY RING (CR 4, 7, OR 10) Fey rings are chaotic and dangerous, concentrated wells of unpredictable magic found only in areas where fey are commonly encountered. A fey ring typically appears as an arrangement of small, pallid mushrooms growing in a 30-foot-radius ring. A character with the nature sense ability can identify a fey ring with a Knowledge (nature) or Survival check as if she were a rogue using Search to find traps. A fey ring affects anyone who steps inside the ring with a random, potent magic effect. Worse, it exudes a strange mental lure out to a distance of 300 feet; any creature that approaches to within 300 feet must make a DC 20 Will save or become compelled to walk toward the fey ring and enter it. Once the victim enters the fey ring, this compulsion vanishes and can’t affect him again until the next sunrise. If a nonfey character enters a fey ring, roll d10 and consult the table below to determine what sort of fell magic effect targets the character. A fey creature (including any creature with at least one level of druid that makes its saving throw against the randomly determined magic effect of the fey ring) that enters a fey ring is suffused with beneficial energy and gains a +4 sacred bonus to its Charisma score for 1d6 hours. A creature can gain this bonus only once in a 24-hour period. The random magic effects generated by a fey ring depend on the nature of the ring. Minor fey rings generate the equivalent of a 2nd-level spell cast at caster level 5th; moderate fey rings the equivalent of a 5th-level spell cast at caster level 10th; and major fey rings the equivalent of an 8th-level spell cast at caster level 20th. Spell effects that normally affect an area only affect the creature. You can easily generate alternative lists of random effects for other spell levels.
Fey Ring Effects Minor (CR 4) d10 (DC 13) 1 Blindness/ deafness 2 Scare 3 4 5
Moderate (CR 7) (DC 17) Mind fog
Summon nature’s ally V Daze monster Song of discord Hold person Baleful polymorph Hypnotic pattern Insect plague
Major (CR 10) (DC 22) Finger of death Reverse gravity
FIRE SUMMONING TRAP (CR VARIABLE) This dangerous magical and mechanical device is typically used to trap an entire room or corridor. At its most basic, the trap consists of two elements. The first involves a flammable gas expelled from hidden vents in the floor. Small alchemical lighters also concealed beneath the floor ignite when the trap is sprung and the gas released, causing the trapped area to erupt in flame. The flames continue to billow throughout the area to a height of 5 feet for at least 1 minute (10 rounds), at which point the gas supply is usually exhausted. Targets in the area are entitled to Reflex saves each round to halve the fi re damage. The second element of the trap also poses a great threat. In the round after the flame in the room ignites, a fire elemental (or more than one) is summoned into the chamber. The summoning apparatus is triggered by the same mechanism that releases the gas. As a result, disabling the gas mechanism also prevents the elemental from being summoned. The table below provides the details for multiple versions of the trap, and two sets of sample statistics follow the table. The CRs assume the PCs can leap clear of the fire and do not have to simply stand and endure the fire damage for the 1-minute duration. If the PCs cannot escape the flames, or if escape is difficult (the trap is at the bottom of a pit, for example), the CR should be increased significantly (by at least 2, and possibly more).
Caster Level 5th 9th 9th 11th 11th 13th 13th 15th 15th 17th 17th
Fire Summoning Trap: CR 5; magic and mechanical device; location trigger; manual reset; alchemical effect (5d6 fire, 20-foot radius for 10 rounds, DC 14 Reflex half) and spell effect (summoned Small fire elemental after 1 round, stays for 5 rounds); Search DC 28; Disable Device DC 28. Cost: 15,000 gp, 600 XP. Fire Summoning Trap: CR 9; magic and mechanical device; location trigger; manual reset; alchemical effect (11d6 fire, 20-foot radius for 10 rounds, DC 16 Reflex half) and spell effect (summoned Large fire elemental after 1 round, stays for 11 rounds); Search DC 32; Disable Device DC 32. Cost: 49,500 gp, 2,640 XP.
CHAPTER 2
Fey Ring: CR 4, 7, or 10; magic trap; location trigger; automatic reset; randomly determined magic effect; Search DC 20; Disable Device DC 30. Cost (minor): 3,000 gp, 240 XP. Cost (moderate): 22,500 gp, 1,800 XP. Cost (major): 60,000 gp, 4,800 XP.
Elemental(s) 1 Small 1d3 Small 1 Medium 1d3 Medium 1 Large 1d3 Large 1 Huge 1d3 Huge 1 greater 1d3 greater 1 elder
ADVENTURES
Whirlwind Maze Otto’s irresistible dance 6 Chill metal Wall of thorns Power word stun 7 Summon swarm Flame strike Scintillating pattern 8 Gust of wind Plane shift Horrid wilting 9 Summon nature’s Slay living Summon nature’s ally II ally VIII 10 Sound burst Feeblemind Temporal stasis The DC given for each type of fey ring indicates the save DC to resist the spell’s effects, if a save is allowed.
Fire Summoning Traps Reflex CR Damage DC 5 5d6 14 6 7d6 15 7 8d6 15 8 8d6 15 9 11d6 16 10 11d6 16 11 13d6 17 12 13d6 17 13 15d6 18 14 15d6 18 15 17d6 19
HAUNTING TRAP (CR 5) Haunting traps typically appear in areas where undead are found: graveyards, haunted houses, evil abandoned temples, and the like. They are never consciously created. Rather, they are the result of powerful emotions that have infused an area with raw spiritual power. Since haunting traps are mind-affecting, creatures with immunity to such effects (such as intelligent constructs, undead, and the like) use them to gain an advantage over their prey. Haunting traps are magic traps, and in a way, they are undead as well. Both detect magic and detect undead can reveal the aura of a haunting trap (the aura is of moderate strength), but these spells do not reveal the source of the aura, since it suffuses the area entirely. A haunting trap is keyed to an alignment as well (most, but not all haunting traps, are lawful evil), so the appropriate spells that detect alignments can also serve to identify a trap’s aura. A haunting trap covers a 30-foot radius, usually in the shape of a hemisphere resting on the surface of the ground but sometimes as a sphere centered on a point in space. Since a haunting trap is created when a creature in the throes of a particularly powerful emotion is killed, a body of some sort is often in evidence inside the area unless the trap is particularly old or creatures use the area as a hunting ground. Any creature within the area of a haunting trap immediately notices a sudden drop in temperature. Additionally, the creature must make a DC 20 Will saving throw
43
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
44
or become affected by the haunting’s emotional power. Monsters that don’t need to walk make use of this trap Each haunting is focused on a specific emotion, but the in their lairs. Beholders particularly enjoy rigging a few game effect always duplicates one of the following spells: hobbling traps in their homes, as do dragons. Creatures with the capability to cast alarm often rig the spell to confusion, crushing despair, enthrall, fear, or Tasha’s hideous coincide with the triggering of the trap so they can be laughter. Rare haunting traps have beneficial effects such alerted when someone sets it off. Such creatures enjoy the as rage or even good hope, but most have negative effects. opportunity to rain destruction down on targets pinned These effects manifest at caster level 10th. A haunting trap bolsters undead, even if the trap’s alignto the floor by the barbed spikes. ment is good. An undead creature within the influence of Hobbling Trap: CR 6; mechanical device; location a haunting trap receives a +2 insight bonus to its Armor trigger; automatic reset; floor spikes (Atk +16 melee, 1d4 spikes per target for 1d4+4 each); hobbling barbs (creatures Class and on Will saving throws, and +2 to the DC of any damaged by spikes are pinned and must make Strength mind-affecting special attacks the undead has. check, DC 20 + 1 per spike that damaged it, to pull free; Since haunting traps are, on some level, themselves undead, they can be bypassed or destroyed by a cleric who damaged creatures are hobbled as by caltrops); Search DC channels positive energy. Treat the haunting as a 10 HD 20; Disable Device DC 20. Market Price: 8,200 gp. undead; if a cleric manages to turn it, the trap is rendered inactive for 1 minute. If a cleric destroys it, the trap is SEPARATION WALL TRAP (CR VARIABLE) forever disarmed. This mechanical device is not a trap on its own, but an Haunting: CR 5; magic trap; location trigger; autoaddition to other traps to make them deadlier. A separation matic reset; confusion, crushing despair, enthrall, fear, or wall trap is simply a reasonably thick (often no more than 1 Tasha’s hideous laughter (Will DC 20 negates); Search DC 25; Disable Device DC 25 or turn (see above). Cost: 14,000 foot) stone or iron wall that quickly slides into place when gp, 1,120 XP. triggered. It is used to separate invading groups, triggering behind the creature that activates it and separating that HOBBLING TRAP (CR 6) creature from its companions. The trap can also seal off This mechanical trap is one of the few kinds that has an exit to prevent an intruder from seeking safety from lasting repercussions for its victims. When it is triggered another threat. (always by means of a pressure plate or similar trigger, A separation wall can be built to slide out from a wall, based on a creature passing over the trap on foot), razorthe floor, or the ceiling of a chamber, and when activated sharp, 10-inch-long barbed spikes erupt from the floor into it always fits flush against the other surfaces of the surthe feet of those in the trapped area. Creatures struck by rounding passage or room. the spikes take damage, and the barbs keep them pinned Separation Wall Trap: CR 1*; mechanical; location trigger; manual reset; sliding wall (used to separate groups in place. Pinned creatures are immobile but not helpless, or make other traps more deadly, DC 20 Reflex save allows taking a –4 penalty to their AC. The trap resets only after each creature in the target area moves clear. Most often, the adjacent creature to jump to the opposite side of the wall trigger for the trap is placed in the middle of the trapped before it seals); Search DC 20*; Disable Device DC 20*. area so that it affects as many creatures as possible. Market Price: 1,000 gp. Pulling free of the spikes is painful, requiring a Strength A nastier version of the separation wall trap features check (DC 20, + 1 per spike that damaged the creature). A long, razor-sharp spikes or blades that pop out of the wall creature that pulls free takes damage from each spike that once it slams into place. They can potentially affect any damaged it again as the barbs tear at its feet. In addition, creatures in squares adjacent to the separation wall. Separation Blade-Wall Trap: CR 3*; mechanical; locaany creature damaged by a hobbling trap is reduced to tion trigger; manual reset; sliding wall (used to separate one-half speed because its foot is wounded. This movegroups or make other traps deadlier, DC 20 Reflex save ment penalty lasts for 24 hours, until the creature is allows adjacent creature to jump to the opposite side of treated (DC 15 Heal check) or it receives at least 1 point the wall before it seals) and blades (Atk +10 melee, 1d4 of magical healing. Versions of this trap feature spikes made of special materiblades per target for 1d4+2 each); Search DC 20*; Disable als such as adamantine or alchemical silver, depending on Device DC 20*. Market Price: 3,200 gp. the nature of creature the creator was warding against. Other *If used in conjunction with another trap, increase versions feature magically enhanced spikes with greater the base trap’s CR rather than counting this as a separate attack and damage bonuses, increased critical threat ranges, encounter. The CR should increase by at least 1, but if the or even the wounding weapon special ability, resulting base trap’s danger is dramatically increased, the addition in continued damage even after a creature pulls free. The of a separation wall could increase the CR by as much as CR of these variations could increase from +1 to +3. 4 (such as if it’s used in conjunction with a crushing wall
trap, described on page 74 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide, or the CR 15 version of the fire summoning trap, above). In addition, if used in conjunction with another trap, the separation wall’s Search and Disable Device DCs are equal to the base trap’s or 20, whichever is higher.
SPELL TURRET (CR 2–10)
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
A spell turret is a highly dangerous magic trap that blurs the line between trap and construct. Powerful wizards use spell turrets to guard important reaches of their guild or tower. Priests install them in the burial vaults of particularly favored devotees. A spell turret is generally located at one end of a long hallway or room, and is mounted on a wall, floor, or ceiling. When inactive, the turret merges with the material of the surface on which it is mounted and cloaks itself with a nondetection spell to hide its magical aura. A spell turret has a visual trigger that utilizes true seeing to a range of 120 feet; it can be programmed to recognize creatures by creature type, creature race, or even specific individuals. Creatures the spell trigger recognizes do not trigger it by approaching within 120 feet, nor does the spell trigger ever target them once it is activated. If a spell trigger casts an area spell, recognized targets might accidentally suffer the effect of the spell if they are in the wrong place at the wrong time. Programming a spell turret to recognize a new type, race, or individual (or removing a type, race, or individual from memory) requires 8 hours of work by a spellcaster with the Craft Wondrous Item feat, but does not cost gold pieces or experience points. If a spell turret detects an unrecognized target, it immediately activates. When it does, it emerges from the wall quickly and quietly with a flash of colorful light; each spell turret looks different, since their creators personalize them. One turret might resemble a crystal lance, another a leering gargoyle, and still another an outstretched arm. All four of the stored spells in a spell turret must be of the same level, from the same spell list, and from different schools. Once activated, a spell turret immediately begins casting one of the four spells stored within it at the rate of one spell per round, pausing only on every fi fth round to magically repair 4d8+20 points of damage to itself. A turret targets the closest unrecognized creature, and has a 360degree arc of fire. A spell turret’s caster level is always equal to the caster level at which the stored spells are available; thus, a spell turret that fires 3rd-level cleric spells does so at caster level 5th, and one that fires 6th-level bard spells does so at caster level 16th. The order in which a turret casts its spells is set; it cycles through them in the same order each time. A spell turret’s CR equals the level of spells it fires +1. Spell Turret: CR 1 + spell level; Diminutive magic device; visual trigger (true seeing); automatic reset; four different spell effects cast once per round in set order, no spells cast
every fifth round but spell turret self-repairs 4d8+20 hp; Search DC 25 + spell level; Disable Device DC 25 + spell level; AC 7; hardness equal to material turret is mounted on (minimum 5); hp 200. Common spell turret spell selections include the following. Burial Vault Spell Turret (7th-level cleric spells): Dictum, repulsion, destruction, summon monster VII. Cost: 45,500 gp, 3,640 XP. Sacred Grove Spell Turret (5th-level druid spells): Summon nature’s ally V (to summon an animal), stoneskin (on summoned animal), animal growth (on summoned animal), call lightning storm. Cost: 22,500 gp, 1,800 XP. Treasure Vault Spell Turret (4th-level wizard spells): Confusion, phantasmal killer, fear, ice storm. Cost: 14,000 gp, 1.120 XP. Wizard’s Guild Spell Turret (9th-level wizard spells): Energy drain, meteor swarm, power word kill, imprisonment. Cost: 76,500 gp, 6,120 XP.
TRAPPED WEAPONS (CR 2+) The discovery of powerful magic weapons in a monster’s hoard is a DUNGEONS & DRAGONS staple. Unfortunately, the smarter monsters usually figure this out, and lay traps to combat the theft of their treasures. Some monsters seed their treasure with cursed items. Others use spells such as glyph of warding to protect favorite items. Particularly mean-spirited creatures (such as kobolds) take this one step further and trap the weapons themselves. Unless the trap is spotted, the weapon itself seems normal and perfectly functional. The first time it is used (usually in combat), the trap springs. Trapped weapons fall apart dramatically, dealing no damage to a creature they are used against: A sword crumbles into pieces, a bow breaks in half as its string is drawn back, an axe head flies loose and shatters. As the weapon breaks, the handle breaks open as well, allowing a large number of spring-loaded spikes and hooks to burst out and into the wielder’s hands. The trapped weapon detailed below is a standard example. If the trapmaker can afford it, applying poison to a trapped weapon’s hidden spikes and hooks is a highly effective way to increase its lethality. Trapped weapons are typically master work weapons; only very rarely are they magic weapons, since the activation of the trap destroys the weapon. Nystul’s magic aura is an effective way to make a trapped weapon look magic. Monsters with specific types of damage reduction often trap weapons of the appropriate material and leave them in obvious locations in their lairs, perhaps as trophies. A werewolf, for example, might seed his cottage with trapped silver longswords. If a rogue successfully disarms a trapped weapon, it can be used as a standard weapon of its type. Resetting the weapon to be trapped requires a second successful Disable Device check.
45
Illus. by W. England
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Trapped weapons come in all shapes and sizes
Trapped Weapon: CR 2; mechanical device; touch trigger; repair reset; spikes (2d6 damage, Reflex DC 20 negates); Search DC 25; Disable Device DC 20. Market Price: 3,000 gp.
WATER SUMMONING TRAP (CR VARIABLE) Like the fire summoning trap described above, this trap combines nonmagical and magical elements. At its most basic, a water summoning trap, when triggered, begins to rapidly fill a room with water. Based on the construction (and CR) of the trap, the room might fill only partially with water, slowing movement for creatures unaccustomed to a watery environment, or it might fill entirely, as is the case with the water-filled room trap described on page 73 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide. These traps always affect a closed-off room or a sunken chamber, so the water doesn’t escape. They are frequently combined with separation wall traps (see above). In addition to the water, each version of the water summoning trap summons one or more water elementals. These creatures attack until slain or for the duration of the summoning effect.
46
The size and number of elementals summoned varies, depending on the depth of the water in the trap and the trap’s Challenge Rating. As borne out by the table above, water in these traps typically fills the trapped area to one of four depths: 1 foot, 4 feet, 10 feet, or to the ceiling. In a room with a 10-foot ceiling, there’s no difference between a 10-foot-deep version of the trap and one in which the water fills the room to the ceiling. The 10-foot-deep version assumes it is located in an area that has a ceiling high enough for a Medium or smaller creature to tread water and still be able to breathe. The effects of the different water depths are as follows. 1 Foot Deep: As in a shallow bog (see page 88 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide), movement in this depth of water costs 2 squares for each square traversed, and the DC of Tumble checks in such an area increases by 2. 4 Feet Deep: As in a deep bog (see page 88 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide), it costs Medium creatures 4 squares of movement to move into a square with this depth of water. Small or smaller creatures must swim, and tumbling is impossible. The water provides cover for Medium creatures, while smaller creatures gain improved cover (+8 to AC, +4 bonus on Reflex saves). Medium or larger creatures can crouch to gain this improved cover, but any creatures gaining the
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
benefit of the improved cover take a –10 penalty on attacks an ancient crypt. Consider using the following locations against creatures that aren’t underwater. to spice up the adventures you create. 10 Feet Deep: Water of this depth is treated as calm water. Creatures of Medium size or smaller must make BATTLE IN THE SKY Aerial battles create vivid images of daring and danger that DC 10 Swim checks each round to move through. can stick with your players for the length of a campaign. Characters that fail a check must hold their breath or Whether their characters are fighting on rooftops, along begin drowning (see page 304 of the Dungeon Master’s castle battlements, or even on an airship, the heightened Guide). When underwater, characters can move in any direction as if flying with perfect maneuverability. Creatension caused by the threat of a potential lethal fall makes tures fighting while in water of this depth must contend for a great deal of fun. Such battles also allow characters to with the combat modifiers found in Table 3–22: Combat use combat maneuvers they might otherwise not consider, Adjustments Underwater, page 92 of the Dungeon Master’s such as bull rushes. When running a battle in a high locaGuide, even if their opponents are not also in the water tion, you need to consider several elements. (swinging a sword at a flying opponent, or one standing on land, is as difficult as swinging one at an opponent in Height the water). Creatures out of the water gain the benefit of The altitude of the combatants determines not only how higher ground against creatures in the water (+1 bonus much damage a falling character takes, but in extremely lofty environments, how long it takes a falling character to on melee attack rolls). reach the ground. This latter piece of information might Ceiling: This trap functions exactly as the water-filled room trap, page 73 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide, with the not seem important, but a feather fall spell lasts for only 1 added complication of the summoned creatures. round per level, and a character who casts the spell too soon might end up taking full falling damage as if the The tables below provide the details for multiple versions of spell had never been cast. the trap, and a set of sample statistics follows the tables. A falling character reaches terminal velocity (roughly 130 miles per hour, or nearly 200 feet per second) within the first Water Summoning Traps round of a long fall. That means a character falls roughly Elemental Size Caster Level 670 feet in the first round. After that, a character falls about Small 5th 1,150 feet each round. If a fall is from a great height and lasts Medium or 1d3 Small 9th several rounds, a character using feather fall needs to wait Large or 1d3 Medium 11th Huge or 1d3 Large 13th to cast the spell until impact is imminent, since the short Greater or 1d3 Huge 15th duration might mean the spell expires before the character Elder or 1d3 greater 17th touches down safely. In general, a character must activate the effect within the last round before impact would occur. The ————— Elemental Size ————— Water S M or L or H or G or E or exact distance from the ground can vary greatly depending Depth 1d3 S 1d3 M 1d3 L 1d3 H 1d3 G on the caster level of the feather fall (a 1st-level caster must 1 ft. CR 5 CR 7 CR 8 CR 9 CR 10 CR 11 activate with only 60 feet to spare or take damage, while 4 ft. CR 6 CR 8 CR 9 CR 10 CR 11 CR 12 a 20th-level caster could activate the spell at a height of 10 ft. CR 6 CR 9 CR 10 CR 11 CR 12 CR 13 Ceiling CR 7 CR 10 CR 11 CR 12 CR 13 CR 14 1,200 feet and touch down safely), but for simplicity’s sake, allowing a character to simply specify that she is waiting Water Summoning Trap: CR 8; magic and mechanical until the last round of her fall before activating the effect device; location trigger; manual reset; multiple targets (all is both fair and expeditious. targets in a 10-ft.-by-10-ft. room, which fills to a 4-ft. depth) and spell effect (1d3 summoned Small water elementals Footing With the danger of a fall at hand, players become focused after 1 round, stay for 9 rounds); Search DC 30; Disable on precision when moving their characters in combat. On Device DC 30. Cost: 22,500 gp, 1,800 XP. most types of terrain, characters shouldn’t need to make Balance checks to maintain their footing. However, high terrain features patches of tricky footing that require BalAfter a while, even the most gung-ho group will grow ance checks, if only to heighten the feeling of danger. tired of yet another in a series of nameless dungeons Scree—shifting gravel—doesn’t affect movement, as described on page 89 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide. However, with doors to be kicked in, orcs to be slain, and treasure when combat occurs on scree near the edge of a precipice, chests to be opened. Fantasy literature is full of exciting consider forcing a choice on the characters (and NPCs or adventures that feature climactic encounters everywhere from the raging caldera of a volcano to the sinister calm of enemy creatures, as well). Each combatant must make a
ARCHETYPAL LOCATIONS
47
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
48
DC 10 Balance check each round it fights on scree while adjacent to the edge of a drop. Failure means a character slips over the edge, but can make a DC 15 Reflex save to catch himself. If combatants are fighting on a slope that contains scree, the Balance check DC is 12 (gradual slope) or 15 (steep slope). Characters can eliminate the need for the Balance check if they take a penalty on their attack rolls made when fighting in these conditions. The penalty is –2 on flat ground, –4 on scree on a gradual slope, and –6 on a steep slope. With this rule, characters who have little or no Balance skill (or large armor check penalties) can choose stability and safety (at least from falling) at the expense of less accuracy. Other types of terrain can force similar checks, including loose marbles or ball bearings on the ground, an oil spill, or ground vibration due to an earthquake or potent magical effect. Guardrails reduce the danger of falling in high environments. Balance checks made near a guardrail drop to DC 5. Guardrails (hardness 5, hp 10, break DC 18) typically aren’t very strong, however, and might shatter under repeated strain or under the impact of weapon blows. A creature using the bull rush maneuver (see below) to push a character against a guardrail can attempt a free DC 18 Strength check as part of the action to burst the railing and push his opponent right through. Success means the guardrail gives way, but the creature being pushed receives a DC 15 Reflex save to grab the edge before plummeting to the ground.
attacks for gaining the advantage of higher ground against an opponent.
BURNING BUILDING In the real world, cities pay firefighters to rescue civilians from burning buildings. These brave individuals risk their lives to enter a house on fire to bring victims out. In a D&D world, people are rarely so lucky. If the PCs are ever unfortunate enough to be caught in a building when it catches on fire, they might find themselves in the difficult position of trying to find their way out through smoke- and flame-fi lled rooms. Conversely, they might act the part of firefighters themselves, putting themselves in harm’s way to rescue unconscious or panicked citizens. After all, how many fantasy towns actually feature anything like a contemporary fire department? A building might be fully or partially engulfed in fire. If it is fully ablaze, smoke and heat dangers are constant in every room, although smoke is concentrated on upper floors (see Smoke, below). If it is partially ablaze, sections of the structure are safe for travel, and the characters need worry only about the part of the building currently on fire. In such an instance, assume that the fire engulfs another 10-foot-by-10-foot area of the building in each passing minute. Fires can move faster or slower as you desire; pick a rate that keeps tension high but still gives the PCs a chance to be heroes. Fires are most effective as threats for lower-level parties that don’t have access to spells that grant great resistance to smoke or fire, or that lack flight and teleport magic. When the characters first enter a burning building, have them roll initiative. Although they’re not necessarily entering combat, establishing an initiative order helps when you need to track a fire’s progress or the damage the PCs take.
Bull Rush, Grappling, and Magic The bull rush maneuver consistently proves the most effective combat maneuver when fighting near a drop. Even if a character or creature lacks the Improved Bull Rush feat, it might be worth provoking an attack of opportunity to end a fight quickly by sending an enemy plunging into a deep abyss. The presence of guardrails near a drop-off can make Smoke bull rush attempts more difficult. Creatures attempting to As described on page 304 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide, a resist a bull rush that would push them through or over a creature that breathes heavy smoke must make a Fortitude save (DC 15, + 1 per previous check) or spend a round chokguardrail gain a +4 bonus on checks to resist. ing and coughing. A creature that chokes for 2 consecutive Another potentially lethal tactic involves grappling an rounds takes 1d6 points of nonlethal damage. Smoke also opponent. If a creature manages to grapple a foe and pin provides concealment to any creatures within it. Finally, it her, the creature can then move near edge of a precipice and drop or throw the pinned creature over the side. Doing makes Search checks (such as those made to find unconso requires a successful grapple check, followed by a DC 15 scious civilians or companions) difficult. Search checks Strength check. Succeeding on the grapple check but failing in smoke are made at a –4 penalty. See Rescue, below, for the Strength check means the creature retains hold of the Search DCs for finding unconscious victims of fires. grappled opponent, but she is no longer pinned and does not go over the side. Failure on the grapple check means Heat As stated on page 303 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide, extreme the opponent is still pinned but doesn’t go over the side. Telekinesis (and similar types of magic) becomes a potent heat (such as in a fire) deals lethal damage. Creatures breathforce in these battles. It provides arcane casters a way to ing the air in these conditions take 1d6 points of lethal damage per minute. A character must also make a Fortitude potentially end the combat quickly. save every 5 minutes (DC 15, + 1 per previous check) or take Finally, remember that on stairs, rooftops, or other an additional 1d4 points of nonlethal damage. Wearing sloped terrain, characters can gain the +1 bonus on melee
armor or heavy clothing imposes a –4 penalty on the save, and those wearing metal armor or who come into contact with hot metal are affected as if by a heat metal spell. Finally, remember that a creature that takes any nonlethal damage from heat exposure suffers from heatstroke and is fatigued. The character suffers from this fatigue until healed of the nonlethal damage.
Hazard Collapsing floor Collapsing ceiling Explosion Backdraft
Collapsing Floor: Collapsing floors can be resolved like a pit trap. Allow a character in a room with a collapsing floor a DC 15 Reflex save to leap clear. Failure indicates the character falls to the story below, taking 1d6 points of falling damage per 10 feet that he falls, along with 2d6 points of fire damage. He is liable to take further fire damage in ensuing rounds, as described in Heat, above, Rescue unless he finds a way out of the new chamber, which might A burning building is most effective as a dramatic eleor might not be in flames itself. ment if innocent townsfolk are at risk inside. Entering Collapsing Ceiling: Collapsing ceilings also allow a the building to rescue the citizens lets the characters feel heroic and gives them opportunities to receive civic character a DC 15 Reflex save to leap free, but the results awards for bravery. of failure are even more terrifying. Failure means the character takes 2d6 points of damage and 2d6 points of fire To find a conscious citizen inside a burning building, a damage from the falling debris. He is also buried beneath PC can make a DC 15 Search check (taking 10 and taking the ceiling debris. A buried creature takes 1d6 points of 20 are not allowed). Success means a civilian has been nonlethal damage and 2d6 points of fire damage per round. located. Remember to apply the –4 penalty on Search Getting free requires a DC 20 Strength check (the DC checks for smoke, if it’s a factor at the time. This check might be higher if you decide that something particularly takes at least 5 rounds to perform, unlike normal Search heavy fell on the character from above). checks, since it represents a character combing through Explosion: Many buildings, even normal homes, hold multiple rooms, trying to pinpoint the source of a faint substances that don’t mix well with fire. An oil supply or a noise or locate rooms likely to hold people. For each increcloud of grain dust might catch fire, or maybe an alchemiment of 5 by which the check result exceeds 15, reduce the cal formula is exposed to too much heat. Explosions vary in number of rounds by 1. A successful DC 15 Listen check severity based on their cause. At minimum, an explosion also reduces the number of rounds spent searching by 1, deals 3d6 points of fire damage in a 20-foot-radius burst. as coughing citizens inadvertently lead the characters to More severe explosions mimic the effects of fireball spells, their location. Finally, a DC 20 Knowledge (architecture
CHAPTER 2
d20 1–5 6–13 14–16 17–20
ADVENTURES
Hazards A burning building holds further hazards than fire and smoke. Building structures grow weak as fire eats away at their supports, and floors and ceilings can collapse around the unwary. Some buildings also contain hazardous chemicals or explosive materials (granaries, for instance, are notorious firetraps due to the grain dust filling the air), and every building with little ventilation might hold a deadly backdraft. In areas of a building that are on fire, a character has a 10% chance of encountering one of the hazards described below. This chance increases by 10% for each minute a room has been on fire, to a maximum hazard encounter chance of 50%. If a hazard is present, roll d20 and consult the following table.
dealing 5d6 points of fire damage or more. A good rule of thumb is to set the number of damage dice of the explosion equal to the level of the party (maximum of 10d6 for a group of 10th level or higher). Explosions might deal more than fire damage. If a room holds items that can be turned into shrapnel, consider adding another 2d6 points of damage to the burst. Such shrapnel might include pieces of metal (jewelry), glass (from windows or display cases), or wood (from multiple small pieces of furniture). Backdraft: A backdraft occurs when a fire burns very hot, but has little or no oxygen. When a source of oxygen is suddenly introduced into the area, fire erupts from the source of heat, engulfing the unwary and causing terrible burns. A backdraft works like an explosion, but careful characters can check for its presence (unlike with an explosion). A DC 20 Search check on a door or wall near a potential backdraft can warn a character that entering the room is not a good idea until it is ventilated first. Likewise, a DC 25 Spot check near a potential backdraft site results in a character noticing small wisps of smoke being sucked beneath a door or into cracks in the walls, floor, or ceiling as the backdraft prepares to ignite if given an appropriate amount of oxygen. A backdraft explosion deals 5d6 points of fire damage in a 30-foot-radius spread (Reflex DC 15 half). Other Hazards: Unique environments might contain unusual hazards. At a wizards’ laboratory, all manner of odd creatures might be trying to flee the fire. Glass equipment would be exploding, dangerous materials melting, and toxic clouds of gas forming as a result of certain substances melting or mixing together. Depending on the nature of a particular burning building, add one or more hazards of your own to the table above.
49
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
and engineering) can reduce the search time by 1 round, as Evil Crypt Spell Effects d% Result the PC realizes from the building’s layout where bedrooms 01–05 Aid: All denizens gain a +1 morale bonus on and likely congregation areas can be found. attack rolls and on all saves against fear effects, Finding unconscious townsfolk is more difficult. The plus 1d8+10 temporary hit points. Creatures with immunity to mind-affecting spells and abilities do Search check DC begins at 20, with the same modifiers not gain these bonuses. and time constraints as described above. Although D&D 06–15 Bane: All intruders take a –1 penalty on attack has specific rules for carrying capacity, it’s difficult to rolls and on all saves against fear effects. imagine a human-sized individual carrying more than one Creatures with immunity to fear or mind-affecting spells and abilities are unaffected. or two creatures of his own size. To simulate this (and to 16–20 Bless: All denizens gain a +1 morale bonus on prevent stronger characters from walking out with piles attack rolls and on all saves against fear effects. of unconscious townsfolk), assume a character can carry Creatures with immunity to fear or mind-affecting only one creature one size category larger than he is, two spells and abilities are unaffected. 21–30 Cause Fear: All intruders must make a DC 11 creatures of his size category, or four creatures one or more Will save at the start of their turn each round or size categories smaller than he is.
EVIL CRYPT
50
An evil crypt is any location that has been consecrated to the service of evil deities and is now the home of undead. An evil crypt is usually haunted by not only undead, but also by cultists who worship the undead, spellcasters who seek to use undead as tools and minions, or evil outsiders attracted to the fell energies that surround the area. Those who dwell in crypts generally rely on darkvision to see; evil crypts are rarely, if ever, illuminated. Walking through a partially ruined evil crypt counts as moving through dense rubble. Incorporeal undead are particularly effective in this kind of terrain, since they can simply pass through the rubble and thus gain significant mobility over intruders. Stone sarcophagi are common features of evil crypts. These coffins stand upright or in repose on their backs, and might be found in niches along the wall or in the middle of a room. A sarcophagus in the middle of a room can provide cover. The constant presence of undeath, combined with the fell attentions of sinister deities, invests an evil crypt with a continual unhallow effect (caster level 20th). This effect can be destroyed by Mordenkainen’s disjunction, but lesser dispelling magic only suppresses the effect for 1d4 rounds. Hallow cast in the area suppresses the effect as well, for as long as the hallow effect lasts; if it is dispelled, the unhallow effect returns. The unhallow effect infuses the area with the effect of a magic circle against good. All creatures in the crypt gain a +2 deflection bonus to their Armor Class against attacks by good creatures, and a +2 resistance bonus on all saving throws against good attacks. No creatures in the area can be possessed, nor can mental control be exercised over any of them. Finally, nonevil summoned creatures cannot use natural weapons against any creatures in the area, and they recoil if an attack requires touching the warded individual. This protection against summoned creatures ends if the protected creature attacks the summoned creature, or tries to force the barrier against the blocked
31–40
41–45 46–55 56–65
66–70
71–75 76–85
86–90 91–100
become shaken for 1 round. Creatures with 6 or more Hit Dice are immune to this effect, as are creatures that have immunity to fear or mindaffecting spells and abilities. Darkness: All denizens are shrouded in shadowy light, and gain concealment. Any spell with the light descriptor of 2nd level or higher counters this effect as long as the light spell is in effect. Death Ward: All denizens have immunity to death spells, magical death effects, energy drain, and negative energy effects. Deeper Darkness: As darkness, above, except that a light spell must be 3rd level or higher to counter the effect. Dispel Magic: All intruders are subjected to an area dispel on their turn in initiative. The dispel check of this effect is +10; for full details, see page 223 of the Player’s Handbook. Freedom of Movement: All denizens can move and attack normally, even under the influence of magic that impedes movement, such as paralysis, solid fog, slow, and web. All denizens automatically succeed on grapple checks made to resist a grapple check, as well as on grapple checks or Escape Artist checks made to escape a grapple or pin. Denizens can also move and attack normally underwater. Invisibility Purge: All invisible intruders have their invisibility negated. Protection from Energy: Select one form of energy (acid, cold, electricity, fire, or sonic). All denizens gain immunity to this energy, absorbing up to 120 points of damage from that energy type per day. Resist Energy: Select one form of energy (acid, cold, electricity, fire, or sonic). All denizens gain resistance 30 against that form of energy. Silence: All intruders must make a DC 13 Will save each round to resist becoming silenced, as the spell, for 20 minutes. At the end of this duration, if the intruder is still in the crypt, he must save again to resist the effect.
creature. Spell resistance can allow a creature to overcome this protection and touch a warded creature. All turning checks made to turn undead in the unhallowed area take a –4 penalty, and turning checks to rebuke undead gain a +4 profane bonus. Finally, evil crypts with an unhallow effect have one additional spell effect tied to the crypt. You can roll d%
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
to determine the effect, or simply choose an appropriate Rising Water For simplicity’s sake, keep the water rising at a set level effect from the following table. The effects target either throughout the dungeon. A rate of 1 foot per round is fast the denizens of the crypt (who all worship the same evil enough to keep tension high and the PCs moving. A slower deity) or all intruders (who worship a different deity). A rate gives them too much time to escape. You’re not lookcreature that worships the deity to which the evil crypt ing to kill them, only to keep them aware of the danger. is dedicated is treated as a denizen, not as an intruder. If your group is particularly mobile, consider a faster rate, FLOODING DUNGEON with water pouring in from multiple sources. An encounter involcing a flooding dungeon works in a similar fashion to a chase scene. In this case, though, the Hazards This encounter works best in a multilevel dungeon for characters are being pursued by implacably rising water. various reasons. A flat dungeon either floods too quickly They have only so much time to escape the dungeon’s confines before they become trapped and drown. The (if it floods from every direction) or it’s too easy to escape possible addition of innocents in need of rescue com(if it floods from a single direction). But no matter what pounds the danger. dungeon you use, you can use a variety of tricks to keep the tension even higher. Water Sudden Waves: The PCs enter a room so far untouched A dungeon being flooded with water isn’t a true threat by floodwaters. From a door nearby, a wave of water then comes bursting into the room, instantly filling it to a depth unless the water is moving swiftly. When you use this of 1 foot and requiring everyone within to make a DC 15 encounter, then, assume the water is moving fast. If a Balance or Strength check or fall prone in the water. The character in fast-moving water makes a DC 15 Swim check, the force of the water deals 1d3 points of nonlethal water then continues to rise at the normal rate. damage per round. After a failed check, the character must Obstructions: If the flood gets ahead of the PCs for immediately succeed on another check or slip beneath even a round or two, the entire layout of the dungeon can the water’s surface and risk drowning (see below). In a change as the force of the water shifts debris. Consider blocking off the exit, forcing the PCs to clear a path before normal fast-moving water environment, the Swim check the waters get too high or to find another way out. represents fighting a current; in a flooding dungeon, it represents the rush of water filling a room, and the barrage Vary the Flow: Give the characters respite from time of debris it pushes before it, slamming into anything in to time as the water fills numerous small niches and its path. Checks of this difficulty need only be made if chambers behind them. This is an especially useful trick the characters are in a room filled more than 4 feet deep. right before a sudden wave or right after the characters In a room filled with 4 feet of water or less, the DC drops discover an obstruction blocking their path. Just don’t to 10. wait too long before the waters start creeping back up. Water from an underground source or from a large body Swimming to Find the Exit: Introduce submerged of water in a nontropical region is likely to be fairly cold, chambers or passages that require the characters to swim but not of a temperature to cause characters difficulty as underwater to find their way out. If they don’t know how they flee. In exceptionally cold water, characters take 1d6 far they need to swim, so much the better. When the points of nonlethal damage per minute of exposure due characters plunge into the water to find their way, have to the onset of hypothermia. them make DC 10 Search or Survival checks to know the Characters might risk drowning in a flooding dungeon. right way to go. If the strongest swimmer takes one end of a A character who goes under can hold her breath for a long rope to mark a safe passage to follow, allow characters using the safety line a +4 bonus on this check. number of rounds equal to her Constitution score. After Waterfalls: A waterfall suddenly gushing from cracks this time, she must make a Constitution check (DC 10, in the ceiling, from an overhang, or from a balcony can be + 1 per previous check) every round to keep holding her a tremendous shock. If it dumps directly on the characters, breath. When the character fails the Constitution check, they must make DC 15 Balance or Strength checks or she begins to drown. In the first round, she falls unconfall prone, and the room is immediately filled with 1 scious (0 hp); in the second round, she drops to –1 hp and foot of water. is dying; and in the third round, she drowns. In areas of deep water, movement becomes difficult. Entering a square with water 1 foot deep requires 2 squares Rescue of movement, and the DC of Tumble checks increases by 2. A dungeon filling with water can be terrifying if the PCs Entering a square with water 4 feet deep requires 4 squares know that slaves, prisoners, or other nonhostile NPCs are of movement. Small or smaller creatures must swim at this relying on the heroes to secure their freedom. Numerous depth (Swim DC 15), and tumbling is impossible. groups of captives in need of rescue further complicate the
51
Other Options Your dungeon need not flood with water. Consider flooding it with lava if it’s near a volcano or a seismically active region, sand if it’s in a desert, or toxic gas anywhere. Lava deals damage as described on page 304 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide, sand slows creatures and presents the same drowning risks as water, and toxic gas might act as a poison (dealing ability damage) or be flammable.
ADVENTURES
ICE BRIDGE An ice bridge is a good example of a hazardous location, since it connects two relatively close but otherwise inaccessible locations, whether it’s the opposite shores of a partially frozen river, the walls of facing cliffs, or the tops of two frozen structures. The ice bridge depicted in the illustration is a span that bridges a crevasse in the high mountains. Locations such as these make great settings for encounters, since adventurers can be funneled toward them with relative ease. Even PCs with good Jump modifiers or the ability to fly might be forced to seek out a bridge to cross a chasm, especially if the wind is strong or they are traveling with companions who can’t fly and are too heavy to carry. Illus. by E. Cox
CHAPTER 2
scenario. Forcing the PCs to split up adds a whole new level of tension. While rescuing NPCs, the group’s speed is reduced to that of the slowest NPC (unless the characters opt to leave someone behind). Assuming a nearly panicked group not in peak physical condition, this probably lowers the entire group’s speed to 20 feet. Unconscious NPCs might need to be carried. Assume a character can carry one creature one size category larger than he is, two creatures of his size category, and four creatures one or more size categories smaller than he is.
52
Crossing the Bridge An ice bridge is a slippery surface. Anyone walking on it must make a DC 10 Balance check to move at half speed along the surface for 1 round. A failure by 4 or less indicates the character can’t move for 1 round. A failure by 5 or more means he falls prone. He can try to walk at his full speed with a –5 penalty on the check. If he is attacked while trying to balance, he is considered flat-footed unless he has at least 5 ranks in Balance. If he takes damage while balancing, he must make another Balance check against the same DC to remain standing. The Balance check becomes much more dangerous near the edges of an ice bridge. If a character moves through a square that overlaps the edge of the bridge (no matter how much of the square remains ice bridge and how little remains open air), he must instead make a DC 22 Balance check. If the character falls prone, he might slide across the icy surface. The chance for sliding and the direction he slides depends on
An ice bridge beckons adventurers to a swift death
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
the situation that made him fall. Simply falling while trythe surface of hardened lava, but the surface remains hot ing to move brings a 25% chance of a 5-foot slide in the and can still cause damage (see Contact with Lava, below), since the interior remains molten. In particularly large lava direction he was moving. This assumes he has moved 15 flows, the interior can remain molten for years. feet or less when he falls; he slides an additional 5 feet if he has traveled more than 15 feet in the current round. Sliding can provoke attacks of opportunity if the charac- Proximity Dangers Lava is blisteringly hot, and the nearby air temperature in ter slides through a threatened square. Falling as a result of being attacked brings a 50% chance areas of lava can be dangerous. of a slide directly away from the direction of the attack. Horizontal Proximity: A character who approaches The character slides for 5 feet in this case. within 30 feet of a substantial (at least 10-foot square) If a character slides while on a square occupied by the source of lava is exposed to hot conditions (above 90° F) bridge’s edge, or if he slides into such a square, he immediand must make a Fortitude saving throw each hour (DC ately falls off the edge of the bridge and takes falling damage; 15, + 1 per previous check) or take 1d4 points of nonlethal the crevasse in this case is 50 feet deep, so falls into it cause damage. Characters wearing heavy clothing or armor 5d6 points of damage. In addition, the bed of the crevasse of any sort take a –4 penalty on their saves. Characters is littered with jagged shards of ice. A falling character is reduced to unconsciousness begin taking lethal damage attacked by 1d4+1 of these shards. Each shard has a +10 (1d4 points in each 1-hour period). attack bonus and deals 1d4+5 points of damage on a hit. Vertical Proximity: A character who passes over the surface of lava without contacting it is still exposed to Destroying an Ice Bridge superheated air. Within 31 to 100 feet, the air temperature An ice bridge is fairly solid, but not so solid that it can’t is hot (see Horizontal Proximity, above). be destroyed. The bridge maintains a fairly consistent At 30 feet or closer, the air temperature above exposed thickness of 15 feet, but each 5-foot square that is destroyed lava is severe heat (above 110° F). A character must make brings a cumulative 20% chance that the entire bridge a Fortitude save once every 10 minutes (DC 15, + 1 per shatters. The bridge also shatters if a creature makes a sucprevious check) or take 1d4 points of nonlethal damage. cessful Strength check to break it; the break DC decreases Characters wearing heavy clothing or armor of any sort by 10 for each 5-foot section of bridge destroyed. take a –4 penalty on their saves. Characters reduced to The bridge can support up to four Medium creatures or unconsciousness begin taking lethal damage (1d4 points one Large creature at a time. If more than that number of per each 10-minute period) unless they fall into the lava, creatures occupy the bridge at one time, the bridge breaks. at which point things get much worse. Poison Gas: Lava is sometimes associated with pockets Area spells can damage the bridge as well. Since the bridge is a nonmagical unattended object, it automatically of poisonous vapors or gas. Generally, a large area of lava fails any saving throw against a magical effect. Fire energy has a 10% chance of venting poisonous gases. In these bypasses the bridge’s hardness and deals 150% normal situations, anytime a character is close enough to a source of lava to have to make Fortitude saves, he must also make damage. Cold damage does not affect the bridge. Acid a DC 15 Fortitude save once per round to avoid taking 1 deals one-quarter normal damage, electricity and sonic point of Strength damage. All such characters must make effects each deal full damage, and sonic damage (like fire a second save 1 minute later or take another 1 point of damage) bypasses the bridge’s hardness. Strength damage. Creatures on the bridge when it breaks fall into the chasm (see above) and are also buried by the ice bridge’s rubble as if by an avalanche (see page 90 of the Dungeon Contact with Lava Molten lava deals 2d6 points of fire damage per round of Master’s Guide). exposure, except in the case of total immersion, which Ice Bridge: Hardness 10; hp 180 per 5-foot section; deals 20d6 points of fire damage per round. break DC 75, minus 10 per 5-foot section destroyed. Damage from molten lava continues for 1d3 rounds after LAVA exposure ceases, but this additional damage is only half Lava-filled areas are one of the most inhospitable terrains that dealt during actual contact. known. Nevertheless, several iconic D&D monsters (such Lava cools after about 5 minutes, and its surface becomes as red dragons, fire elementals, and fire giants and their hard enough to walk on, but it remains dangerously hot salamander and thoqqua minions) have immunity to fire for 4d6 hours. A creature takes 1d6 points of fire damage and can be encountered living near, or even in, large rivers if it touches partially cooled lava, except in the case of and lakes of molten rock. Lava, while horrendously hot, isn’t continual contact (such as when a creature walks along hot enough to melt rock or metals. Exposed lava cools fairly the surface of cooling lava), which deals 2d6 points of fire quickly. Within 5 minutes, a Medium creature can walk upon damage per round.
53
Moving in Lava Molten lava is a liquid, but it is far more viscous than water. As a result, it is difficult to swim through lava. Creatures might be able to do so, but their swim speeds are halved, and the DCs required to swim in lava are twice those in normal water.
Lava Calm Flowing Erupting
Swim DC 20 30 40
Characters wielding bludgeoning and piercing weapons while immersed in lava take a –4 penalty on attack rolls and deal only half damage on a successful hit. A character under the effect of freedom of movement can swim through lava is if it were water, and can fight without penalties. The best method of moving through lava is with a burrow speed. A creature can move through lava at its full burrow speed, and it takes no penalties on attacks with weapons. Lava and Water Lava cools quickly when it comes in contact with water, but as it does, it causes water within 30 feet to boil. Boiling water deals 1d6 points of fire damage, unless a character is
Illus. by M. Phillippi
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Until lava cools completely, there’s also the chance of stepping on a particularly thin crust and plunging through into the molten lava below. Each round a creature walks or stands on partially cooled lava, there’s a 5% chance of breaking through. In this case, the creature takes 2d6 points of fire damage (Reflex DC 15 negates) from the molten rock. Withdrawing a limb from a sudden crack like this can be tough, since the edges of the crack quickly cool and make extraction difficult. Pulling free of this situation requires a DC 15 Escape Artist check. Once the limb is removed, the creature continues to take 1d6 points of fire damage for 1d3 rounds as the lava cools.
54
Krusk avoids being pulled into the lava while he takes a swing at a salamander
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
fully immersed, in which case it deals 10d6 points of fire Movement in Cramped Spaces Any creature fighting in a cramped space loses its Dexdamage per round of exposure. terity bonus (if any) to Armor Class. Beyond that, the In relatively shallow bodies of water (less than 300 following adjustments apply, depending upon the prevailfeet) where there is more water than lava, exposed lava ing conditions. explodes with shocking force into a blast of volcanic Narrow or Low: An area that is smaller horizontally than glass. Any creature within 30 feet of such an explosion takes 3d6 points of fire damage and 3d6 points of slashing a creature’s space or smaller vertically than a creature’s height damage (Reflex DC 20 half). A violent explosion like this falls into this category, so long as the constricted dimension depletes the majority of the lava and typically seals any is at least one-half the creature’s space or height, respectively. A creature in such a space moves at half its normal speed volcanic vents; if more magma remains below, it takes 4d6 hours for it to build up enough pressure to seep back because of the cramped conditions, and running and into the water. charging are impossible. The cramped creature takes a –2 circumstance penalty on attack rolls with light weapons and In deep underwater areas (such as undersea volcanic trenches), water pressure is so great that it prevents boila –4 circumstance penalty on attack rolls with one-handed ing and violent explosions, even when in contact with weapons. It cannot use two-handed weapons at all. water. This water is still heated by the contact with lava, Narrow and Low: An area that is smaller in both the though, and creatures immersed in it take 4d6 points of horizontal and vertical dimensions than the creature’s fire damage per round of exposure. space falls into this category, so long as each of the constricted dimensions is at least one-half the creature’s RESTRICTIVE TUNNELS space or height, respectively. A creature in these condiClassic villains for lower-level characters include tions moves at one-quarter normal speed and takes attack goblins, kobolds, and derro. These notorious races, penalties equal to twice those indicated above. Crawl-Navigable: An area less than one-half but at least despite their wildly different physical appearances and abilities, have one thing in common: their size. As Small one-quarter of the creature’s height is crawl-navigable. The creatures, they gain a bonus to their Armor Class and on creature can move through each space by falling prone attack rolls, but the advantages of being small needn’t and crawling at a speed of 5 feet (1 square), but it must stop there. Out in the open, large groups of organized remove medium and heavy armor, backpacks, and other goblins, kobolds, or derro can be a menace, but in their bulky equipment (although they can be dragged along lairs they can be outright deadly simply because the size behind). The normal penalties for being prone apply. The of a comfortable home for them is a major inconvenience only ranged weapon a creature in a crawl-navigable space for most of their enemies. can use is a crossbow. Low ceiling tunnels don’t just come into play when Awkward Space: An awkward space is narrower than fighting goblinoids. Natural caverns often constrict down narrow, lower than low, or smaller than crawl-navigable, to narrow passageways and low ceilings; these areas make but not quite a tight space. A creature in such a space can natural haunts for smaller creatures such as chokers and move 5 feet (1 square) with a DC 15 Escape Artist check. darkmantles. The reverse is also true. A group of Medium Fighting in an awkward space is possible only with light PCs can gain substantial advantages by luring a dragon weapons, and the creature takes a –8 circumstance penalty on its attack rolls. The only ranged weapon a creature in or a giant into narrow confines. an awkward space can use is a crossbow. Restrictive tunnels can impede movement in two Tight Squeeze: A tight squeeze is an area larger than the ways; they can have low ceilings, forcing tall creatures creature’s head but smaller than its shoulders, as described to crouch or even crawl. They can also have narrow widths, forcing larger creatures to squeeze through tight in the Escape Artist skill description. The creature can openings. move 5 feet (1 square) with a DC 30 Escape Artist check. Fighting in a tight squeeze is impossible. Tunnel Constriction Attack Penalty Attack Penalty Attack Penalty Ranged Constriction Move Penalty1 Light Weapon2 1-Handed Weapon2 2-Handed Weapon2 Weapon Narrow or low 1/2 speed –2 –4 Unusable Any Narrow and low 1/4 speed –4 –8 Unusable Any Crawl-navigable 5 ft. only –4 –8 Unusable Crossbow only Awkward space Escape Artist (DC 15) 5 ft. –8 Unusable Unusable Crossbow only Tight squeeze Escape Artist (DC 30) 5 ft. Unusable Unusable Unusable Unusable 1 A creature moving through cramped quarters of any constriction loses its Dexterity bonus (if any) to Armor Class. 2 Treat piercing weapons that are jabbed at the target as one size category smaller.
55
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Weapons in Cramped Spaces community’s members. Buildings within a given commuSome weapons are more suitable for use in limited space nity usually don’t differ more than 20 feet in elevation. than others. Piercing weapons that jab rather than slice at an opponent are treated as one size category smaller than Roads in the Sky normal for the purpose of calculating the wielder’s penalty Buildings in villages on the ground are connected by roads, on attack rolls. Such weapons include the dagger, short whether of cobblestones or earth. In a treetop village, roads sword, rapier, spear (any type), and trident, but not the pick, take different forms. On and around individual trees, scythe, gnome hooked hammer, or spiked chain. wooden staircases spiral up the trees’ trunks to wooden Attacks with ranged weapons take penalties appropriplatforms built among the branches. Some communities ate to the weapons’ sizes in narrow or low conditions. favor strict safety measures, but most villages use simple Crossbows are the only ranged weapons usable in crawlhandrails. Accustomed to the dangers of treetop living, navigable and awkward spaces, but attacks made with them the citizens don’t think twice about ascending the narrow still take size-appropriate penalties. stairs or walking near the edges of the wooden platforms near their homes. The game statistics of the stairs, platOther Movement Modes forms, and guardrails can be found in the table below. The rules for moving in cramped spaces above assume a Usually, stairs and platforms are constructed, but magical cultures can shape these structures from living wood. creature using a land speed. Other movement modes are Elves are particularly fond of this building method. Shaped handled somewhat differently. platforms or stairs have double the hit points and weight Burrowing: A creature that uses a burrow speed takes capacity of their constructed counterparts. Exceeding its no penalties to movement or on attack rolls with light weight capacity causes a stair or platform to break in 1d4 weapons in cramped spaces. Remember that a burrow speed allows movement through solid rock and stone only rounds, sending anything or anyone in that space plumif the creature’s description indicates such; otherwise, a meting to the ground below. creature can only burrow through loose earth. To connect trees to one another, treetop communities Climbing: Climb speeds have no use in areas with low typically use a series of bridges. For gaps of 10 feet or less, ceilings, but in narrow vertical spaces they are treated as wooden bridges suffice. For greater distances, the denizens construct rope bridges consisting of a single foot rope if the creature were using a land speed. A Climb DC has and two hand ropes. Stringers connect the three ropes a –10 penalty if the climber is in a cramped space. Flying: A winged creature can use its fly speed without periodically to keep swaying to a minimum. These rope modification in low areas. A creature that flies without wings bridges can be a great source of action if battle erupts in (using magic) can also use its fly speed in crawl-navigable a treetop community. areas. Fly speeds cannot be used in other cramped areas. Swimming: In narrow or low flooded areas, a creature Treetop Roads Hit Break Weight Balance can swim at its full swim speed in low or crawl-navigable Type Hardness Points DC Capacity DC2 areas, and at half its swim speed in narrow or narrow and Stairs 5 20* 23 500 lb.1 10 low areas. Platforms, bridges 5 20* 23 500 lb.1 8
TREETOP VILLAGE
56
Guardrails 5 10 18 150 lb. 20 Rope (bridge 0 8 23 400 lb. 123 or swinging) 1 Magically shaped wooden structures have twice the hit points and weight capacity of constructed structures. 2 Balance DCs apply only in combat or if the DM feels them necessary. For foot traffic on stable structures in reasonable weather, Balance checks are not required. 3 The Balance DC increases to 20 if balancing on a single rope.
Forested regions are popular places to set adventures. They’re common in fantasy settings, and popular races such as elves and gnomes inhabit wooded areas. A treetop village provides an interesting and fun location to have a dangerous encounter. Fans of fantasy have read about such places or seen them depicted in movies. The swashbuckling action of swinging on vines and ropes, combined with precarious skirmishes on rope bridges or on twisting stairs and Combat: Bridges, Platforms, and Stairs Battle on the bridges, platforms, and stairs of a treetop comwalkways. makes for memorable action sequences. munity can be an exhilarating—and lethal—encounter. Buildings in the Branches Fighting while adjacent to the edge of stairs, platforms, or The structures common to a treetop village are the same wooden bridges requires a DC 5 Balance check each round. as in any village. Visitors will see shops, restaurants, and The danger is not extremely high due to the presence of other businesses, as well as private residences. Buildings guardrails. In the absence of guardrails, the DC rises to 8. are usually built 50 to 100 feet above the ground, depending Creatures gain a +1 bonus on melee attack rolls if fighting on the type of trees and the individual preferences of the above their opponents on stairs.
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Fighting on a rope bridge is a different matter. SwingA character can’t reach a height more than 20 feet above his starting point unless he climbs the rope on which he’s ing a weapon while on one of these precarious bridges is difficult. Attacks with slashing and bludgeoning weapons swinging en route. Swinging on a rope has a flat speed have a –2 penalty on damage rolls. Since the ground is of 40 feet, so generally, a swinging character can gain additional elevation equal to one-quarter his speed as part effectively mobile, such blows lack their usual power. of the swinging action. A character can make two Climb In addition, different attack types are made at a penalty, checks to gain elevation in this fashion if the swing is depending on whether or not a creature has a hand free long enough to constitute a double move (a gap of greater to grasp one of the two guide ropes. Finally, a combatant than 40 feet). The Climb check DC to ascend a swinging on a rope bridge must make a Balance check each round rope is 20, which is more difficult than for a stationary, or slip off the bridge. A falling creature can attempt a DC 15 Reflex save to arrest his flight and grab the ropes of the unknotted rope (DC 15). If the swinging rope is knotted, bridge, but even if successful, the falling creature is likely the Climb DC drops to 15. at the mercy of his opponent. The ropes of a rope bridge can be cut. For each cut Combat: Swinging A character can make a single attack at the end of a swing, guardrail rope, the DC of Balance checks made on the provided his swing for the round is less than 80 feet (a bridge increases by 5. If the bottom walking rope is cut, double move on a swinging rope) and the attack is made combatants fall unless they succeed on a DC 15 Reflex with a weapon he can wield in one hand. He gains the save to grab one of the remaining ropes. benefits of a charge (+2 on the attack roll and –2 to AC) Rope Bridge Combat on the attack, and he might gain the benefit of higher Attack Balance ground (+1 on the attack roll). Making a ranged attack Attack Type Penalty DC while swinging is possible only with a ranged weapon the One-handed melee (off hand free) –2 10 1 character can wield in one hand. Making an attack at the Two-handed melee –4 15 One-handed ranged –2 10 end of the swing requires a character to take a –2 penalty Two-handed ranged –2 10 on the Strength check for the swing, since he’s swinging 1 For this purpose, this category includes characters with one hand (see above), unless he has the Quick Draw wielding a weapon and carrying a heavy shield or another feat, a glove of storing, or another ability that allows him to piece of equipment. draw a weapon as a free action. In this case, the character Swinging on Ropes and Vines can swing using both hands and draw his weapon a splitSwinging on a rope is a staple of the swashbuckling genre, second before making his attack. and a visit to a treetop village is likely to provoke the question of how to perform this daring feat. Executing a successful swing is fairly easy. Making it look good is Other creatures provide as much opportunity for unique another matter entirely. encounters as locations. Interactions with large groups, To perform a swing on a vine or rope, a character must particularly in heavily populated areas, create their make a DC 5 Strength check. The DC is 10 if the charown hazards. acter is carrying a medium load, and 15 if the character is carrying a heavy load. If the character wants to swing using only one hand, he takes a –2 penalty on the check. THE CHASE A dramatic chase has become a classic staple of the action A character can also release a rope at the end of a swing if and fantasy genres. They give fast characters a chance to his trajectory carries him to a height over his destination. show off, and provide uncertainty and tension as players The character can make DC 15 Jump and Tumble checks scramble to pursue an important villain. to reduce falling damage from a planned release, just as if Chases can be resolved fairly easily while still maintainhe were jumping from any height to a lower elevation. ing a high level of drama. The first thing to consider is A character can swing from one point to another with speed. If the pursuer and her quarry have the same speed, just this simple check if his destination is at the same the pursuing character needs to gain speed advantages in elevation as where he begins the swing. A character can gain as much as 20 feet of elevation with a swing, provided the course of the pursuit to catch her opponent. The one he covers enough horizontal distance. For every 5 feet to being chased, meanwhile, has the opportunity to introduce obstacles to slow down his pursuer. be gained in elevation, a character must swing at least 20 feet horizontally. For example, if a character wants to swing If the characters have different speeds, the matter is more from a platform 60 feet above the ground to a platform 70 easily settled. Each round, compare the speeds of the two feet above the ground, the platforms must be at least 40 involved in the chase. If the difference in speed is in favor feet apart. of the pursuer, she closes the gap between the two by that
SPECIAL ENCOUNTERS
57
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
difference each round. If the speed difference is in favor of the fleeing character, the gap widens by that amount. Most chases don’t allow the participants to use the run action (×4 speed), and consist only of double move actions.
58
Steep slopes, however, require characters to spend 2 squares of movement to enter each square of steep slope. A slope covered with debris is even more difficult to deal with; characters entering a debris-filled square on a slope must spend 3 squares of movement.
Pits and Gaps In a chase, pits and gaps can be excellent obstacles. Speed Types of Chases When planning a chase scene, consider setting it where being equal, the character with the better Jump check you can add unique terrain elements to make the event modifier is likely to have an advantage during a chase memorable. A chase through a cramped sewer, where that involves leaping over a gap. A character who fails by PCs need to squeeze to pursue their prey, is a perfect less than 5 on a Jump check to clear a gap can attempt a example. Moving into a narrow space takes 2 squares of DC 15 Reflex save to grab the lip on the far edge. Pulling movement, and creatures can squeeze into an area half up from such an edge requires a move action and a DC as wide as they are. Combine that with a foot (or more) 15 Climb check. of water and the occasional passage with a low ceiling, Debris and you have a dank, miserable chase your characters In a given round during a chase, there’s a 10% chance that won’t forget. the terrain contains debris a creature being chased can Likewise, consider a chase across a series of mountain scatter to slow down his pursuer. In urban environments, glaciers. Chasms open up beneath the characters and their prey’s (or pursuers’) feet on occasion, requiring Jump the chance increases to 30%. The chased character can checks or DC 15 Reflex saves to avoid dropping hundreds make a DC 10 Strength check as a free action to tip debris over behind him as he runs. Success on this check scatters of feet into an icy gap. The terrain is also slick with ice in debris over a 10-foot-square area in the path of the pursuer, places, requiring DC 10 or higher Balance checks from making the area the equivalent of dense rubble. Difficult involved parties to keep their footing. terrain requires a character to spend 2 squares of movement Consider the following situations or environments in (per square) to enter. Failure means the chased character which you can run your own chase scene: not only fails to knock the debris over but spends a move action trying to push the pile over and then recovering. • Across a rooftop or series of rooftops If you wish, you could provide a chased character with • Through a crowded marketplace larger piles of debris to spill. For each additional 10-foot• Through a series of forest paths square section the character tries to turn into difficult terrain, • Across a series of sand dunes the DC of the Strength check increases by 5. The character • Through a labyrinth of urban alleyways doesn’t need to try to tip over the entire pile of debris, and can choose to knock over as much or little as he likes. Failure CROWDS on these higher DC checks has the same result. Crowds of people most often occur in large cities, but the Some kinds of debris might not need to be toppled rules presented here can just as easily work for caverns over. Perhaps oil or another slippery surface covers an area teeming with hundreds of goblins, stampeding animals, through which the chase proceeds. Maybe the creature or even tangled forests of sentient, writhing plantlife. being chased runs into a crowd or through a building. Crowds are usually not antagonistic toward the PCs, Different situations might call for different adjustments or but their presence can severely limit movement and adds skill checks. As a general rule, if debris is of the sort that a new factor to the use of area spells. It isn’t necessary to impedes a character’s progress, it can be treated as dense put every member of a crowd on the map when a fight rubble. Even a crowd could be treated as rubble if keeping breaks out or when the PCs are forced to chase an enemy a scene moving is more important than dealing with a through the area. Instead, just indicate which squares on crowd’s reaction to being pushed around. If debris is of the the map contain crowds. If a crowd sees something obvisort that causes unsure footing, use a Balance check. ously dangerous, it will move away at 30 feet per round on initiative count 0. For detailed rules on handling crowds Incline as an entity, refer below to Mobs. Running up inclines should be common in chases. Whether Directing a Crowd: It takes a DC 15 Diplomacy check the characters involved sprint up peaked roofs, up stairs or DC 20 Intimidate check to convince a crowd to move in a particular direction, and the crowd must be able to to higher elevations, or up a hill, an incline can make for hear or see the character making the attempt. It takes a an interesting chase element. As described under Hills Terrain, page 89 of the Dungeon full-round action to make the Diplomacy check, but a free Master’s Guide, gradual slopes have no effect on movement. action to make the Intimidate check.
If two or more characters are trying to direct a crowd in different directions, they make opposed Diplomacy or Intimidate checks to determine whom the crowd listens to. The crowd ignores everyone if none of the characters’ check results beat the DCs given above.
CHAPTER 2
Traffic Flow Traffic is a specific form of crowd that appears on roadways and open areas. Any crowd that moves at least its speed in a round is considered to be in traffic for the remainder of the round. Although roads are built to ease traffic, they can still become rather crowded and difficult to navigate. In settlements, these conditions can cause significant problems to characters, especially when combat or a chase breaks out. Traffic can be categorized into four distinct categories. Sporadic: Sporadic traffic covers the range of traffic from lightly crowded down to empty roads. Movement is not impeded by sporadic traffic, and no Reflex save is necessary when moving against the flow of traffic (since for the most part, there’s no appreciable traffic to flow in the first place).
ADVENTURES
Movement in a Crowd People in crowds are packed together tightly, sometimes shoulder to shoulder. As a general rule, a single 5-foot square occupied by a crowd of Medium creatures contains three Medium creatures. These cramped conditions make moving in a crowd difficult. It takes 2 squares of movement to move through a square occupied by a crowd. The crowd provides cover for anyone who does so, enabling a Hide check and providing a bonus to Armor Class and on Reflex saves. A character who ends his movement in a stationary crowd square finds it difficult to do anything but move with the crowd. He takes a –2 penalty on attack rolls, Reflex saving throws, and all skill checks that are affected by armor check penalties, and he loses his Dexterity bonus to Armor Class. Being in a stationary crowd square counts as vigorous motion for the purposes of spellcasting (requiring a DC 10 Concentration check). A character who ends his movement in a crowd square that moved in the last round faces an additional danger. He can take a full-round action to stand his ground, he can take a full-round action to move with the crowd, or he can try to resist the crowd’s motion. A character who tries to resist a crowd in this manner must make a DC 15 Reflex save. Success indicates that he takes the same penalties as for being in a stationary crowd, except that the action constitutes violent motion (requiring a DC 15 Concentration check to cast spells). Failure indicates that the PC loses all actions for the round and is subjected to a trip attack. The crowd has a +8 bonus on the opposed attack roll to resolve the trip attack. If the character is knocked prone, he is trampled for 2d6 points of damage.
Lightly Crowded: Large gaps and open areas typify traffic at this level. Moving through a lightly crowded roadway does not provide cover, nor does it impede movement. Moving against the flow of traffic can still be dangerous, but the Reflex save to avoid being knocked prone is DC 12. If a character takes a move action to avoid oncoming traffic, he gains a +4 bonus on his Reflex save. The effects and damage of failing this saving throw are the same as for heavily crowded traffic. Heavily Crowded: Heavily crowded roads contain crowds, but these crowds only impede movement if a character is moving against or across the flow of traffic. A heavily crowded road presents an additional danger—the chance of being knocked over and crushed by the press of traffic. A character who moves against the flow of traffic must make a DC 15 Reflex save to avoid being knocked prone by the traffic. If the character takes a move action to avoid oncoming traffic, he gains a +4 bonus on this Reflex saving throw. A character who is knocked prone takes 2d6 points of bludgeoning damage from being trampled and crushed in the round he is knocked prone and in each additional round he remains prone. In most cases, traffic becomes jammed 1d4 rounds after a character begins taking damage. Jammed: Jammed traffic occurs only when an obstruction prevents passage along a roadway. A dense, standing crowd of people, horses, carts, and wagons can be very difficult to move through. A jammed road consists of stationary crowds.
MOBS An angry mob represents the most dangerous form of crowd. An angry mob might or might not be enraged at the PCs, but as a general rule the mob mentality overrides the desires and goals of an individual in a mob, and PCs who happen to get in the way could find themselves the focus of the mob’s rage. A mob is treated as a single entity similar to a swarm, except that it is made of larger creatures. A mob can be composed of Small, Medium, or Large creatures, but all the individual creatures must be of the same type. A mob that incorporates a crowd of goblins and a crowd of chokers is best modeled by two separate mobs. You can use the following template to create specific types of mobs. “Mob” is an acquired template that can be added to any Small, Medium, or Large creature. Generally, mobs are transitory; after forming, a mob lasts for, at most, 1d4+1 hours before breaking up. Most mobs break up naturally far sooner, once the condition that caused their formation is no longer a factor. A mob uses all the base creature’s statistics and special abilities except as noted here. Size and Type: A mob is a Gargantuan creature composed of either forty-eight Small or Medium creatures or twelve Large creatures. The mob’s type remains unchanged from the base creature.
59
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Hit Dice: A mob has a single pool of Hit Dice and hit points. All mobs have 30 Hit Dice; this number represents the mob’s mentality and physical mass rather than its race or class, since the individual members of a mob don’t use their own abilities or experience to aid the whole. The type of Hit Dice rolled is set by the mob’s racial Hit Dice, not any class levels the mob might have. Thus, a mob of commoners would roll d8s for hit points, not d4s. Reducing a mob to 0 hit points or lower causes it to break up, though damage taken until that point does not degrade its ability to attack or resist attack. Mobs are never staggered or reduced to a dying state by damage. Initiative: A mob’s initiative modifier is always +0. Speed: A mob’s speed is 10 feet slower than that of the base creature. Armor Class: As the base creature, modified by –4 for the mob’s Gargantuan size. Base Attack: Since all mobs have 30 Hit Dice, their base attack bonuses are set depending upon their type. Mob Type Base Attack Bonus Fey or undead +15 Aberration, animal, construct, elemental, giant, humanoid, ooze, plant, or vermin +22 Dragon, magical beast, monstrous humanoid, or outsider +30
60
Grapple: As base attack bonus, modified by +12 for its size, and as appropriate for its Strength modifier. Attack/Full Attack: Mobs don’t make standard attacks. Rather, they are treated similar to swarms in combat. A mob deals 5d6 points of bludgeoning damage to any creature whose space it occupies at the end of its move, with no attack roll needed. Mob attacks ignore concealment and cover. A mob’s attacks are nonmagical, unless the base creature’s attacks are considered magical. Damage reduction applies to mob attacks. Space/Reach: A mob occupies a square 20 feet on a side, but its reach is 0 feet. In order to attack, it moves into an opponent’s space, which provokes an attack of opportunity. It can occupy the same space as a creature, since it tramples over and moves around its victim. A mob can move through squares occupied by enemies, and vice versa, without impediment, although a mob provokes an attack of opportunity if it does so. A mob can move through openings large enough for its component creatures. Larger mobs are represented by multiples of single mobs. The area occupied by larger mobs is completely shapeable, though the mob usually remains in contiguous squares. Attack Options: A mob’s mentality is fueled by emotion; as a result, the individual creatures that make up the mob are unable to use any attack options that require actions, such as breath weapons, spell-like abilities, and the like. If the base creature has attack options that affect the damage it deals (such as poison, energy drain, ability
damage, improved grab, constrict, rend, or swallow whole), those special attacks function normally on any creature damaged by the mob. Attack options such as gaze weapons that function constantly continue to function normally. The save DCs for any of these attacks should be recalculated based on the mob’s 30 Hit Dice. In addition, mobs gain one or both of the following attack options. Expert Grappler (Ex): A mob can maintain a grapple without penalty and still make attacks against other targets (normally, attacking other targets while grappling imposes a –20 penalty on grapple checks). A mob is never considered flat-footed while grappling. Trample (Ex): A mob that simply moves over a creature and doesn’t end its movement with that creature in one of its occupied squares can trample the creature. A trampled creature takes damage equal to 2d6 points + 1-1/2 times the mob’s Strength modifier. The victim can either make an attack of opportunity against the mob or make a Reflex save (DC 25 + the mob’s Str modifier) to take half damage. Special Qualities: A mob retains all the special qualities of the base creature. In addition, it gains the following special quality. Mob Anatomy (Ex): A mob has no clear front or back and no discernible anatomy, so it is not subject to critical hits or sneak attacks. A mob cannot be flanked, tripped, grappled, or bull rushed. Unlike standard swarms, mobs are made up of relatively small numbers of individual creatures, so spells or effects that target specific numbers of creatures can have an effect on a mob. Each specific creature that is slain, disabled, or otherwise incapacitated by spells or effects that target specific creatures bestows two negative levels on the mob. A mob that gains negative levels equal to its Hit Dice breaks up as if reduced to 0 hit points. Negative levels gained in this manner are not the result of negative energy (and thus cannot be blocked by death ward or removed by restoration), but never result in permanent level loss. A mob takes half again as much damage (+50%) from spells or effects that affect an area, such as splash weapons and evocation spells. Although mobs are treated as one creature, it sometimes becomes necessary to determine the fate of a specific individual caught up in the mob. If a mob is dispersed by nonlethal attacks, there are no casualties. If the mob is dispersed by lethal attacks, assume that 30% of its number are slain and 30% are reduced to 0 hit points. To determine a specific individual’s fate, simply roll d%: a result of 01–30 indicates death, 31–60 indicates the victim is reduced to 0 hit points, and a roll of 61–100 indicates the victim escapes relatively unscathed. Saves: A mob’s saving throws are calculated as for a 30 HD creature of its type. A mob’s base good save is +17, and its base bad save is +9.
Riot (Mob of Humans)
CR 8
LN Gargantuan humanoid (mob of Medium humans) Init +4; Senses Listen +4, Spot +4 Languages Common AC 6, touch 6, flat-footed 6 hp 135 (30 HD) Fort +11, Ref +9, Will +17 Speed 20 ft. (4 squares) Melee mob (5d6) Space 20 ft.; Reach 0 ft. Base Atk +22; Grp +34 Atk Options expert grappler, trample 2d6 Abilities Str 11, Dex 11, Con 11, Int 10, Wis 10, Cha 10 SQ mob anatomy Feats Improved Initiative, Great Fortitude, Improved Bull RushB, Improved OverrunB Skills Listen +4, Spot +4
Stampede (Mob of Light Horses)
CR 8
N Gargantuan animal (mob of Large animals) Init +0; Senses low-light vision, scent; Listen +3, Spot +3 AC 10, touch 7, flat-footed 9 hp 195 (30 HD) Fort +19, Ref +18, Will +9 Speed 50 ft. (10 squares) Melee mob (5d6) Space 20 ft.; Reach 0 ft. Base Atk +22; Grp +36 Atk Options expert grappler, trample 2d6+3 Abilities Str 14, Dex 13, Con 15, Int 2, Wis 10, Cha 6 SQ mob anatomy Feats Endurance, Improved Bull RushB, Improved OverrunB, Run Skills Listen +3, Spot +3
When building encounters, DMs use a variety of methods to select the particular NPC types and monsters they use. With the advent of the D&D Miniatures skirmish game, however, you have a new method for creating unique encounters. The principles involved in creating a competitive, viable warband can apply to creating interesting D&D roleplaying encounters.
WARBANDS AS ROLEPLAYING ENCOUNTERS You begin the process of warband creation for the skirmish game by selecting a faction. The skirmish game has four factions, each based on an alignment: lawful good, lawful evil, chaotic good, and chaotic evil. Each faction also represents a unique style of play. For example, lawful factions tend to be slow and deal less damage than chaotic factions, but they have higher AC and attack values. These basic principles of factions and warband construction can lead to the generation of interesting roleplaying encounters. Take a warband you have constructed for use in the skirmish game. At your next D&D session, use the roleplaying statistics on the back of the miniatures stat cards and introduce a roleplaying encounter with your skirmish warband. The warband might seem like a disparate group of normally unassociated creatures, but that’s part of the fun. Even if the group is composed of monsters your characters have faced before, this encounter still has a unique flavor. By placing the monsters in a new setting, with different allies from those the characters would normally expect, it’s as though they’re facing a brand-new monster. You’ll find that the abilities that complement each other so well in the skirmish game do so just as well in the D&D roleplaying game. Skirmish warband design focuses on combining miniatures with abilities that cover for each other’s weaknesses. These well-rounded warbands attempt to prepare for any eventuality, whether they might face a fast, hard-hitting warband or a high-AC juggernaut. Groups based around spellcasters or ranged attackers have beefy bodyguards to keep them out of melee. Groups based around a couple of tough, fierce melee combatants have spellcasting backup capable of enhancing their effectiveness in combat. No matter what challenge the characters throw at the group, these groups should have an answer. The skirmish-based group might not have a potent offense in any one category to throw back at the PCs, but its versatility should keep the characters on their toes. Different warbands focus on perfecting one particular tactic, using it at the expense of all others. These warbands might consist of hard-hitting creatures that deal tremendous amounts of damage but have relatively few defenses themselves, or they might be nearly indestructible
CHAPTER 2
Sample Mobs The following statistics blocks, presented in a new format, describe two common forms of mobs, the riot and the stampede. For details of the new format, see page 173.
MINIATURES AND ENCOUNTER BUILDING
ADVENTURES
Abilities: A mob’s abilities are the same as the base creature, except that its Intelligence, Wisdom, and Charisma scores drop to 10. If the base creature’s Intelligence, Wisdom, or Charisma scores are already lower than 10, they do not change. Skills: Same as the base creature; do not recalculate based on the mob’s 30 Hit Dice. The mob’s new Intelligence, Wisdom, or Charisma scores might grant some skills different modifiers. Feats: Same as the base creature; all mobs gain Improved Bull Rush and Improved Overrun as bonus feats. Organization: Solitary, pair, or gang (3–12 mobs). Challenge Rating: 8, or +2 if the base creature’s CR is 7 or higher. Advancement: —. Level Adjustment: —.
61
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
creatures that deal very little damage. This type of focus also translates well into the D&D roleplaying experience. When the characters encounter a one-dimensional group, they’ll need to develop a strategy that takes advantage of its weaknesses. When that moment of discovery comes, the characters will feel gratified at their tactical superiority, and you can take satisfaction in knowing you have provided your players with a new type of play experience. In general, applying the same strategies you use when constructing skirmish warbands to roleplaying encounters makes for a great change of pace. The groups of unique, mixed opponents keep the PCs guessing, always trying to figure out the next tactic they need to adopt to overcome your next band of villains.
ALIGNMENT-BASED ENCOUNTERS Even if you don’t directly bring a skirmish warband into your roleplaying game, you can still use warband-building principles when putting together roleplaying encounters. The generation of warbands based on alignments results in effective, distinctive groups. In the skirmish game, each warband has a particular feel that coincides with its alignment, as described above. Using the principle behind each faction, you can generate roleplaying encounters that play to the strengths of skirmish factions. Combine slow, methodical, defensive units and make them lawful evil. Create several encounters of quick, offensively oriented chaotic evil minions. As you repeatedly throw these groups at your characters, the PCs gradually learn the best strategies for dealing with such groups. They will want to cast detect law and detect chaos, just for the tactical edge such alignment-based information can gain them. Adopting these tactics gives them a feeling of satisfaction for paying attention and remembering their tactical training. This level of tactical play mimics how seasoned adventurers would probably react to such encounters in the course of their adventures. When you break out of the mold and throw fast, high-AC monsters at them, such encounters will be more effective, memorable, and challenging for being starkly different.
USING TERRAIN
62
The miniatures skirmish game can also teach you how to use terrain more effectively in your campaign. The terrain section in the Dungeon Master’s Guide provides a wealth of information on varying encounters that many DMs don’t use. Once you’ve played a few skirmish matches, however, you’ll realize how tactically important terrain can be, and how it can be put to effective use in your roleplaying game. The simple presence of difficult terrain on the miniatures terrain tiles makes encounters interesting and tactical. The same principle applies to the roleplaying game. Dungeons should not be made up entirely of smooth stone floors,
perfect for tumbling on or charging across. After playing the skirmish game and using terrain to your warband’s advantage, consider applying the same lessons to monsters and villains in your roleplaying game. Why would a beholder smooth out the floors in its lair? It doesn’t use them, and it’s to the beholder’s advantage to make it difficult for invaders arriving by foot to fight and attack. How about aquatic creatures? Why would kuo-toas, with their fantastic maneuverability in the water, ever lair anywhere that wasn’t at least partially flooded? In even a few feet of water, they gain a tremendous tactical advantage over interlopers. Burrowing creatures should choose lairs in areas with tight, twisting corridors that allow them to attack from the walls, floor, or ceiling with impunity. Dungeons should favor the creatures that live there, and this attention to the tactical realities of terrain doesn’t have to be limited to the skirmish game. After all, the monsters live there; why wouldn’t they make their homes comfortable and defensible? Consider the following additional ideas. • Flying monsters with ranged attacks favor lairs with high ceilings. • Burrowing monsters function well in tight, twisting corridors. Such terrain allows them to set up ambushes nearly at will, and introduces the possibility of using cave-ins to separate groups of intruders. • Creatures with climb speeds favor sheer, smooth walls and ceilings in their lairs. They don’t need to make Climb checks all that often, so why make climbing easier for invaders? • Straight, open ground favors creatures that prefer charging in combat. Minotaurs, mounted opponents, and other monsters that gain benefits from charging live in places that allow them to use that ability frequently.
MAKING IT FAIR Springing difficult dungeons (in terms of terrain) on your characters is likely to increase your players’ frustrations in the short term. You want them to have fun, so allow them an opportunity to recognize troublesome terrain when they first enter it. If they enter a room that requires them to traverse a foot of water, consider giving them a Knowledge (nature), Knowledge (dungeoneering), or Survival check, or, in the right circumstances, even a level check to recognize the effects water will have should combat ensue. Most players won’t have memorized the appropriate terrain rules in the Dungeon Master’s Guide, but the adventurers should know better, realizing that wading through water will affect their speed and maneuverability. Providing them with an in-game way to “recall” these effects encourages players to gain ranks in often-ignored skills. Likewise, rogues know that light rubble increases their Tumble and Balance check DCs. Rangers and druids know the effects
of light and heavy undergrowth on movement. Give the characters the chance to make checks to recognize tricky terrain and respond accordingly.
BATTLE GRID TERRAIN
Every DM has had to come up with an adventure or encounter on the spur of the moment. If you need to draw a map quickly, you probably don’t have time to fill in every square with the relevant symbology for each terrain type. Instead, draw the boundaries around each type of terrain with a solid line, then mark the terrain type with the appropriate symbol near the middle and circle it to indicate that everything in the contiguous area within the boundary shares the same terrain type as the circled symbol in the middle.
OVERLAPPING TERRAIN The technique described under Drawing Quickly helps keep battle grid clutter to a minimum, but sometimes you need to represent multiple types of terrain in the same area. The symbols presented below can overlap when necessary with little impact.
ELEVATED OR DEPRESSED TERRAIN Terrain of higher and lower elevation is quite common—so common, in fact, that some terrain elements use elevated or depressed terrain as part of their own features. Indicating an increase or decrease in elevation is simple. At the center
CHAPTER 2
DRAWING QUICKLY
ADVENTURES
With prepainted miniatures readily available, more groups have begun to use battle grids in their everyday games. Each group is likely to have a different way of representing terrain elements, using a variety of colored pens. With a simple black pen, however, you can quickly sketch every terrain element you might need using the symbology illustrated on page 64. These symbols provide quickly recognizable elements for your battle grid that are easy to sketch, can be done on the fly, and can be represented using only a black pen. If you have pens of other colors, feel free to use them as you see fit, but having a set of symbols that require only a single pen color means the game can go on even if colored pens aren’t available. One last thing to keep in mind: When drawing on a battle grid, use the lines of the grid to mark the edges of your terrain types. Don’t draw lines differentiating terrain through the middle of squares. This small amount of precision saves you a great deal of confusion and debate at the gaming table. If the players can tell at a glance which square is open ground, which is a slope, and which is covered in water, they won’t slow your game down by asking questions, or complain later that your map wasn’t clear.
of a gradually elevated area, such as a hill, sand dune, or the top of a slope, put a plus sign, followed by a number indicating the height at that elevation in feet. For a gradually depressed area, use a minus sign followed by a number representing the low point of the depression in feet. If you want to track all the elevation changes on a gradual rise or depression, you can mark the changes at each change in terrain height. Note these changes using dotted lines, and mark the new elevation in feet next to each line. On a steep slope, the change will be marked every inch (every square) on the battle mat (indicating a 5-foot increase in height for each 5 horizontal feet). On a gradual slope, the change will be marked every two inches (2 squares). See Slopes, below, for details. Simply marking the edge of the drop-off can indicate cliffs, chasms, and trenches. Specify whether the terrain drops down (relative to where the characters are on the map) with a minus sign followed by a number indicating how far down the chasm goes in feet. If the terrain calls for a cliff, use a plus sign followed by a number indicating the new height in feet. Water depth can also be indicating using dashed lines for each depth change. A minus sign in the middle of the body of water followed by a number indicates the maximum depth. If you would rather the PCs remain unaware of this information, don’t include a number.
TREES Trees in the Dungeon Master’s Guide come in three varieties: light, medium, and dense. However, medium and dense trees have the same impact on movement, so you don’t need symbols to represent all three types. A symbol for light trees and one for dense trees is enough. A forest canopy can be represented as elevated terrain (see Elevated or Depressed Terrain, above).
LIGHT AND HEAVY UNDERGROWTH Light undergrowth can be represented with a single slash drawn diagonally across a square, and heavy undergrowth by a pair of crossed lines (an X).
WATER Water in D&D essentially comes in three depths that matter: shallow (depths up to 1 foot), deep (depths up to 4 feet), and everything deeper, when all Medium and smaller characters are forced to swim. These water depths should also be used to represent bogs. To indicate a body of water, mark off the area, and signify that the area is filled with water using wave marks. Shallow water is marked with a single wave, deep water by a double wave, and anything deeper than that with a triple wave. Elevation differences in water, should you find it necessary to mark them, can be indicated as described in Elevated or Depressed Terrain, above.
63
64 CHAPTER 2 ADVENTURES
To indicate flowing water, use arrows to indicate the direction the water travels, and note the speed of the water next to the arrow.
SLOPES
In addition to light and heavy undergrowth, your characters might encounter other sorts of difficult terrain. Light rubble, dense rubble, and scree all have an impact on character movement and ability checks. Indicate light rubble by marking an X with a single vertical line through its center, dense rubble by an asterisk, and scree by a wavy X.
QUICKSAND To indicate quicksand, specify the area and mark the center with an exclamation point. This symbol can also be used to mark any sort of terrain hazard. The player characters have many ways of noticing terrain hazards using their skills and other abilities. This symbol is quite effective at calling such a hazard to their attention without necessarily letting them know exactly what it is. Multiple different hazards on the same map can be marked with multiple exclamation points.
HEDGEROWS AND WALLS
BERMS AND SAND DUNES Berms are earthen defensive hills that are steeper on one side than on the other. Sand dunes, while they are natural formations, essentially work the same way. Mark off the area of a dune or berm and indicate the crest with a single dashed line. Notate the peak with a plus sign followed by the elevation in feet, and indicate further that this is not a normal hill by drawing three dots in a circle in the middle of the dune. The elevation increase on one side of a dune or berm is steeper than on the other, so your dashed line should be closer to one side of the formation than to the other. To differentiate a berm from a dune, mark the edges of a berm as shown in the accompanying diagram.
CHAPTER 2
RUBBLE AND SCREE
To indicate an ice sheet or other slippery surface, mark off the relevant area and use a forked Y shape to denote the slick conditions. This symbol is also quite effective at noting the area of a grease spell.
ADVENTURES
Slopes come in two varieties: gradual and steep. Steep slopes are those of 45 degrees or more, and gradual slopes are those of less than 45 degrees. To indicate a steep slope, you should have a vertical elevation increase of 5 feet up for each 5 horizontal feet traveled. To mark such a slope, your elevation lines (see Elevated or Depressed Terrain) should be marked every inch on the battle grid. Gradual slopes can be marked every two inches, indicating that the elevation increases by 5 feet for roughly every 10 horizontal feet traveled.
ICE SHEETS
MORE ENCOUNTER TABLES The Dungeon Master’s Guide provides a large number of generic encounter tables for specific terrains. Yet, PCs often find themselves in areas that are anything but generic. The following encounter tables have specific themes that represent some of the iconic locations D&D heroes stumble into time and time again. The monsters and hazards encountered on these tables are (for the most part) standard examples of their kind; unique NPCs and monsters should usually be encountered in climactic areas that the DM has planned out beforehand. These tables can help generate encounters to throw in front of the PCs as they make their way to a climactic area. Some of the encounters on these tables are not creature encounters, but are instead hazards, obstacles, or structures. Rolling up one of these relatively stationary encounters doesn’t make sense if you’re generating encounters while the PCs camp, so if you get a result like this, either reroll or skip down to the next encounter on the list.
The D&D game differentiates two kinds of walls (and hedgerows): low and high. A low wall (5 feet high or lower) can be marked with dotted lines that show the boundaries of the wall. A plus sign on the wall followed by its height in feet lets the players know how high their characters Abyssal/Infernal Rift (Average EL 6 or 15) This area features a rift between the Material Plane and must climb or jump to circumvent the wall. High walls (more than 5 feet high) should be indicated either the Infi nite Layers of the Abyss (represented by the same way, except that you use a solid line to mark the Abyssal column on the table) or the Nine Hells of the edges of the wall. High walls need to be climbed Baator (the Infernal column). Foul inhabitants of these planes have begun to creep forth into the area, along with rather than jumped, so the solid line quickly reminds material creatures drawn to the vortex that leads to these you and your players what skills will come into play in dark planes. The closer to the rift the characters draw, the the encounter. symptoms of the rift become more pronounced, and they FENCES should have a greater number of encounters as a result. Note a fence by drawing a solid line and marking it with Most of the encounters in a region of planar bleed will be an X at various spots along the fence’s route. Note the hostile, but some consist of run-ins with looting bandits elevation of the fence. or panicked wanderers who have gone astray.
65
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Abyssal/Infernal Rift Encounters (Low to Mid Level) Abyssal Infernal d% Encounter Encounter EL 01–09 1d4+2 babau 1d3+1 chain devils, 10 2 bearded devils 10–19 1 bebilith 2 erinyes 10 20–29 Half-fiend Half-fiend 9 human cleric human cleric 30–39 1 bodak 1 erinyes 8 40–48 1 succubus 1 hellcat 7 49–56 Bugbear looters Bugbear looters 7 57–61 1d3+2 dretch 1 chain devil 6 62–69 Lost merchant Lost merchant 6 caravan caravan 70–77 Cloud of acidic vapor Cloud of burning vapor 5 78–87 Blighted landscape Blighted landscape 4 88–94 1 quasit 1 imp 2 95–100 1 dretch 1d3+2 lemures 2 Abyssal/Infernal Rift Encounters (High Level) Abyssal Infernal d% Encounter Encounter 01–05 1 balor 1 pit fiend 06–11 1 marilith 1d4 horned devils 12–22 Nalfeshnee troupe 1 horned devil (1 nalfeshnee, 1 hezrou, 1d4+1 vrocks) 23–33 Celestial hunter Celestial hunter 34–50 Glabrezu troupe Ice devil troupe (1 glabrezu, (1 ice devil, 1 succubus, 1d6+6 bearded devils, 1d4+1 vrocks) 1d4 bone devils) 51–65 6 goblin looters 6 goblin looters 66–77 1d3+1 hezrou 1 ice devil, 2 hellcats 78–85 2 retrievers 2d3+4 hellcats 86–95 3 vrocks 1d4 bone devils 96–100 1 retriever 1 hamatula
66
EL 20 17 16
16 15 15 14 13 12 11
checks. The characters should receive an experience award for successfully negotiating with the paladin as if they had overcome him in battle. Lost Merchant Caravan: The caravan consists of a pair of wagons led by a terrified merchant (expert 4) and accompanied by four equally terrified hired hands (expert 1) and four guards (warrior 2). All nine have witnessed the ravages of the region, and the merchant, who is normally familiar with the area, can’t find his way out. They’ve already outrun one attack by lower-level demons or devils; it’s only a matter of time before they can’t escape or something truly horrific finds them. Paranoid and desperate, the merchant’s initial attitude is hostile, and he must be persuaded (Diplomacy DC 25 or opposed Intimidate) to call his guards to stand down at the sight of the PCs. If the characters manage to convince the merchant that they mean no harm and can help his party, they receive experience as if they had defeated the company in battle. If they lead the merchant from the area personally, he rewards the characters with 500 gp. Cloud of Acidic/Burning Vapor: The Abyss and Baator are planes unfit for habitation by the normal denizens of the Material Plane. In the area of the vortex, the occasional cloud of acidic or flaming vapor erupts from the ground in a 30-foot-radius spread. Creatures in the area take 8d6 points of acid or fire damage (depending on the type of cloud; see the table above). A successful DC 14 Reflex save negates half the damage. Blighted Landscape: Signs of the planar rift can be seen throughout the area, growing easily noticeable the closer the PCs draw to the vortex. The blighted landscape is an especially grotesque result of the rift. Trees are warped and seem to be screaming in agony as their limbs drip a viscous substance eerily reminiscent of blood. The earth and rocks are blasted as if by extreme heat, and one or more animal carcasses look to have been torn apart and partially devoured by something with sharp talons and teeth. Goblin Looters: A thieves’ guild from a distant city has sent six of its powerful members to track down a merchant caravan (this could be information they needed to retrieve or an item they were to recover). The guild members are all 10th-level goblin rogues; use the NPC rogue statistics on page 123 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide.
Half-Fiend Human Cleric: The cleric can be found on page 147 of the Monster Manual. Bugbear Looters: Bugbears have waylaid a merchant wagon, slaughtering all its members and then looting the wagons. When the characters arrive on the scene, 2d6 of the goblinoids are poking through the remains of several burned-out wagons. A pair of bugbears serves as sentries on the road, and might even spot the PCs before they spot the bugbears. The creatures’ initial attitude is hostile, so negotiating with them is difficult (Diplomacy DC 35). The bugbears attack until half their number has been killed. See page 29 of the Monster Manual for bugbear statistics. Celestial Hunter: This is the 11th-level hound archon paladin found on page 17 of the Monster Manual. The Blue Dragon Domain (Average EL 14) The blue dragon domain encounter table can be set in any archon’s superiors detected the planar rift and sent him remote mountainous region, or even underground. A pair to investigate. His initial attitude is unfriendly, but if the of mature adult blue dragons lairs in this region, and their PCs make a DC 25 Diplomacy check, the paladin offers presence has had a noticeable impact on the surrounding any information he has learned about the region and the cause of the rift. If the result of the Diplomacy check is 40 environment. Few normal animals are to be found here. or higher, the archon offers to join the PCs, provided their Aside from the dragons and their large brood, the primary goal is also to determine the cause of the rift and put a stop dangers here are the numerous evil cloud giants they’ve to it. The presence of a cleric or paladin devoted to a good dominated, along with the rocs the giants use as scouts deity in the group grants a +4 bonus on these Diplomacy or even mounts. Aside from this, only a few monstrous
predators lurk in the region now, feeding on giants when they let down their guard.
Illus. by E. Cox
Dragonslayers: This could be a single 16th-level character, or an adventuring party of four 12th-level characters. In either case, their goal is the same—they seek to kill the blue dragons that lurk in these mountains. Their goals might be honorable, but they could just as easily be born of greed for the dragons’ hoard, in which case they’ll see other adventurers as dangerous competition. Cloud Giant Scouts: These two cloud giants ride trained rocs and scour the ground below for intruders. Lost Ruins: This small ruined village is now inhabited by all sorts of dangerous creatures and hazards. Use the table in Lost Ruins, below, for encounters in this area. Trained Rocs: These rocs have been trained by the giants to patrol this region. They know to attack anything smaller than Huge size on the ground, and typically carry off such intruders to a nearby giant camp. Avalanche: In nonsnowy mountains, this could just as well be a rockslide. Rules for these natural disasters appear on page 90 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide.
CHAPTER 2
EL 16 16 15 14 14 13 13 13 12 8 7
ADVENTURES
Blue Dragon Domain Encounters d% Encounter 01–05 1d2 mature adult blue dragons 06–10 Dragonslayers 11–20 1d8 cloud giants 21–30 2d4 yrthaks 31–40 2 cloud giant scouts 41–55 1d4 juvenile blue dragons 56–60 Lost ruins 61–70 2d4 elder arrowhawks 71–85 1d6 trained rocs 86–95 1d2 behirs 95–100 Avalanche
Graveyard (Average EL 7) A cemetery is a great place to stage an encounter, especially at night. The characters will be expecting an ambush or surprise, so draw out the tension as long as possible with false alarms and mysterious sights or sounds just at the limits of the characters’ perceptions.
A blue dragon surveys its domain from a mountain peak
67
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Graveyard Encounters d% Encounter 01–04 1d3+1 spectres 05–08 1d4 5th-level human ghost fighters 09–13 1d3+1 ghasts and 2d6 ghouls (pack) 14–16 1 greater shadow 17–21 1d4+1 vampire spawn 22–30 2d6 ghouls (pack) 31–39 1d4+1 shadows (gang) 40–47 1d3+2 wights (gang) 48–55 1d3+1 ghasts (gang) 56–61 1 wraith 62–72 2d6 human zombies 73–83 2d6 human skeletons 84–88 2 graverobbers 89–92 1 allip 93–97 2 hyenas or coyotes 98–100 Covered empty grave
EL 10 9 9 8 8 7 7 7 6 5 5 5 4 3 2 1
Haunted Building Encounters d% Encounter 01–05 1 greater shadow 06–10 1d4 wraiths 11–20 1 5th-level human fighter ghost 21–30 1d8 shadows 31–40 1d6 allips 41–55 1d8 Medium animated objects 56–65 Haunting trap 66–80 1d8 Small animated objects 81–100 Sinister manifestation
EL 8 8 7 7 6 6 5 5 —
Sinister Manifestation: This feature can be a strange creaking sound, blood running from the walls, a half-glimpsed figure in a mirror reflection, an unexplained smell of fresh roses, or nearly anything else that fits the building’s theme. If the need for game mechanics arises, assume the manifestation functions as a major image (caster level 5th).
Graverobbers: The graverobbers are 2nd-level rogues looking to unearth a corpse to loot or sell to a broker of Humanoid Tribeland (Average EL 2) bodies (or body parts). Use the sample NPC statistics found This humanoid tribeland is a region of rugged, barren hills on page 123 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide. The graverobbers with few stunted trees and lots of caves. Several tribes of can be reasoned with, left alone, or attacked. Their initial loosely allied humanoids, many of which use trained animals attitude is unfriendly, requiring a DC 25 Diplomacy check as guard beasts, dominate these lands. In these areas, the most to successfully negotiate with them. They might also be powerful rule the least powerful; in this case, bugbears rule cowed into submission by an Intimidate check, or bluffed the orcs, goblins, hobgoblins, kobolds, and gnolls. Humaninto leaving or surrendering. oids often have unique combinations of character levels, but you should reserve these types for individual enemies and Hyenas or Coyotes: Hyena statistics can be found on characters the PCs might encounter. The encounters on the page 274 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide; use hyena statisfollowing table represent standard humanoids. tics for coyotes. Choose hyenas or coyotes depending on environment. Hyenas favor arid climates, and coyotes Humanoid Tribeland Encounters temperate climates. d% Encounter EL Covered Empty Grave: This is an empty grave covered 01–05 1d4 bugbears 4 with canvas in preparation for a burial on the following 06–10 1d6 gnolls 3 day. Assuming the PCs visit the graveyard at night, treat 11–15 Adventurers 3 16–20 1 ogre 3 this as a camouflaged pit trap, which can be found on page 21–25 1 dire wolf 3 70 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide. In the day, the covered 26–35 2d4 hobgoblins 2 pit is easily spotted; reroll this encounter in that case. 36–45 1d8 orcs 2 46–55
68
2d4 goblins
2
56–60 1 dire weasel 2 Haunted Building (Average EL 6) 61–65 1d4 hyenas 2 A haunted building is just that—anything from a cottage 66–80 2d4 kobolds 1 (with one encounter) to a mansion (with several encoun81–85 1d6 dire rats 1 ters) to a huge castle (with dozens of encounters). Haunted 86–100 Booby trap 1/2 buildings should have a history and reason for their Adventurers: This is a group of four 1st-level adventurers. haunted state, but they don’t necessarily need a sinister They might be seeking out the humanoids to offer their ser“boss monster” hidden within; some haunted buildings vices as mercenaries, or to kill them. Whatever their purpose, are simply infested with undead. Haunting Trap: A haunting trap is a supernatural trap they react to another band of adventurers warily at best. that fills an area with overwhelming emotion such as fear Booby Trap: A booby trap is a minor trap meant to be or remorse. Details on haunting traps appear earlier in this merely humiliating or startling, but which is sometimes chapter on page 43. capable of actual harm. Booby traps are detailed earlier in Animated Objects: These should be animated suits of this chapter on page 41. armor, pieces of furniture, topiaries in a garden, or even tapestries or statues that have fallen under the influence Lost Ruins (Average EL 12) Lost ruins can be found anywhere: in remote mountain of the structure’s haunting force. Small animated objects ranges, tangled jungles, searing deserts, or uncharted islands. can include knives, curtain cords, or statuettes.
The sample lost ruins presented here happen to be located deep in a trackless desert, but the theme of the creatures encountered fits well with any similar city abandoned long ago and resettled by strange and exotic monsters.
Sewer Encounters d% Encounter 01–05 1 giant crocodile 06–10 1 carrion crawler 11–15 1 otyugh 16–25 Gang of thieves 26–30 1d4 wererats 31–35 1 gelatinous cube 36–40 1 ghast 41–50 Roll on Slum Encounters table 51–55 1d6 ghouls 56–65 2d6 dire rats 66–75 1 rat swarm 76–85 1d8 stirges Lich and Minions: This encounter is with an 11th-level 86–90 Poisonous gas 91–95 1d6 Medium monstrous centipedes lich (possibly one that once lived in the city before it became 96–100 1d8 Small monstrous centipedes abandoned) and its 1d6 mohrg servants that accompany it
Sewer (Average EL 3) Sewer encounters can be used in any region under a city: catacombs, storm drains, ancient ruins, and caverns. Since the PCs, in theory, can easily escape a sewer and retreat to safety in
Gang of Thieves: This is an encounter with 1d8 1st-level rogues or 1d4 2nd-level rogues. Typically, these rogues belong to a thieves’ guild, but sometimes they’re just creepy thugs. Poisonous Gas: A pocket of poisonous gas or rancid air has become caught in a section of sewer. The gas is invisible but has a strong, acrid stench; a creature with the scent ability automatically notices the proximity of poisonous gas before entering the dangerous
A giant crocodile rises up out of the sludge in a sewer tunnel
Illus. by M. Cotie
on its mission to protect it from harm. The lich might want to retrieve a magic item from elsewhere in the ruins, or perhaps it simply wants to wander its old homeland.
EL 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1
CHAPTER 2
EL 14 14 13 13 12 12 12 12 12 11 10 9 9
ADVENTURES
Lost Ruins Encounters d% Encounter 01–05 Lich and minions 06–10 1d6 dread wraiths 11–15 1 beholder 16–20 1d4 stone golems 21–30 1 Colossal monstrous scorpion 31–35 1 purple worm 36–45 1d8 hellwasp swarms 46–55 1d4 rakshasas 56–65 1d4 Gargantuan monstrous scorpions 66–70 1d6 gynosphinxes 71–80 1d3 behirs 81–90 1d8 basilisks 91–100 1d4 Huge monstrous scorpions
the city above, you can use this table for 1st-level characters with relative safety, assuming your players know when to retreat! This encounter table complements the Slum Encounters table (see below) quite well; both are of the same EL and monsters encountered in one can often be encountered in the other.
69
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
area. Anyone breathing poisonous gas must make a DC 13 Fortitude save or take 1d4 points of Strength damage; the initial and secondary damage is the same. Poisonous gas pockets typically fill 1d6×10 feet of tunnel and last for 3d6 minutes before dissipating naturally. Slum (Average EL 3) Of all the various districts found in fantasy cities, the slum districts are the likeliest places for the characters to run into someone or something looking for a fight. You can use this encounter table to generate combat encounters in other districts of a city as well, but you shouldn’t make a practice of it. The threat of dangerous encounters is one of the things that defines a slum and makes it a place where only the desperate would want to live. Slum Encounters d% Encounter 01–05 1d4 wererats 06–15 Gang of thieves 16–25 Roll on Sewer Encounters table 26–35 Press gang 36–40 1 lunatic 41–50 1d6 feral riding dogs 51–55 1 rat swarm 56–70 1d8 dire rats 71–85 1 pickpocket 86–100 1 diseased beggar
EL 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 1 1
that suffuses the forest keeps the trees and vegetation alive in unusual climates, so a sylvan forest can be found in areas such as mountaintops, deserts, arctic tundras, or even underground. Sylvan Forest Encounters d% Encounter 01–05 Fey mound 06–15 1 treant 16–25 2d4 pixies 26–40 2d4 centaurs 41–50 1d8 pegasi 51–60 1d6 satyrs with pipes 61–65 Fey ring 66–70 1 lillend 71–75 1 nymph 76–85 1d6 unicorns 86–100 1d6 dryads
EL 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 6 6
Fey Mound: Fey mounds are the burial locations of the fey. These magical regions are treated as hallowed ground (as the hallow spell) and have additional effects such as lesser geas, deeper slumber, hallucinatory terrain, and confusion. In addition, all fey mounds are guarded. To determine what kind of guardian protects the mound, roll again on the table (rerolling any result of fey mound). Fey Ring: A fey ring is a dangerous area infused with potent fey magic and delineated by a ring of small mushrooms. Fey rings are detailed on page 42.
Gang of Thieves: This is an encounter with 1d8 1st-level rogues or 1d4 2nd-level rogues. Typically, these rogues Underground Cavern (Average EL 7) The dark places beneath the surface can prove deadly to the belong to a thieves’ guild, but they could just as easily be unwary. The bulk of the encounters below are for mid-level pirates, gypsies, or unscrupulous city guards. Press Gang: A press gang consists of a group of 1d6 1st-level characters for good reason. Low-level PCs venture underwarriors that seeks to overwhelm victims and force them ground at their own risk. As a haven for the vast majority into hard labor on a ship. In landlocked cities, they could of D&D’s most popular, famous monsters, underground be a gang hired to collect replacements for a workhouse. terrain has a great deal of appeal. Don’t hesitate to spring Lunatic: A lunatic encounter is typically an encounter one nasty surprise after another on the characters. Roll with a 3rd-level rogue who works alone, mugging people on the table below frequently, and don’t hesitate to add a or simply killing them to satisfy some debased urge. favorite monster of your own to the list. Pickpocket: This is an encounter with a lone 1st-level rogue with Sleight of Hand +8. The pickpocket usually Underground Cavern Encounters d% Encounter EL chooses a fighter, cleric, wizard, or similar character who 01–08 1 aboleth and 2d3+2 skum1 9 doesn’t look particularly observant; if caught, the pick09–20 4 drow raiders (slaving party) 9 pocket tries to flee. 21–28 1 greater earth elemental 9 29–34 1 mind flayer 8 Diseased Beggar: This is a 1st-level commoner who 35–43 1 umber hulk 7 is infected with the shakes or slimy doom (or any other 44–51 1 spectre 7 disease that infects by contact). The beggar might not look 52–61 Kuo-toa patrol (1d3+1 plus 1 3rd-level whip) 7 particularly diseased (a DC 15 Heal check correctly inter62–68 1 drider 7 69–75 1d3+1 violet fungi (patch) 6 prets the sores or tremors); anyone who takes pity on him 76–85 10 dwarf warriors (patrol) 5 and donates money comes in contact with him and must 86–94 1d4+1 troglodytes (clutch) 4 make a Fortitude save to avoid catching the illness. 95–100 Toxic mushroom tangle 3
70
Sylvan Forest (Average EL 7) The standard sylvan forest is a temperate, trackless, and remote woodland not settled by humanoids. The fey magic
1 This encounter should be used only in an environment featuring an underground lake, river, or other large body of water. Reroll if you roll this encounter in an improper environment.
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
Drow Raiders: When first encountered, the initial a cloud of toxic spores. Such characters must make DC 15 attitude of these slave traders is hostile. Only the most Fortitude saves or be exposed to the equivalent of insanity charismatic of player characters (someone who makes a mist (initial damage 1d4 Wis, secondary damage 2d6 Wis). DC 35 Diplomacy check) can convince the dark elves not to attack. Even then, they’re likely to betray the characters Wizards’ Guild (Average EL 10) at the first opportunity. A wizards’ guild can cover a wide range of similar locations. The following statistics block, presented in a new format, It might represent a large guild located in a city, a remote describes an individual drow raider. For details of the new tower run by a wizard and his numerous apprentices, or format, see page 173. a large monastery or magical school. This guild is lawful evil in alignment; guilds of different alignments have Drow Raider CR 5 different outsiders found within their walls. Male drow fighter 4 NE Medium humanoid (elf) Wizards’ Guild Encounters Init +1; Senses darkvision 120 ft.; Listen +2, Spot +2 d% Encounter EL Languages Drow Sign Language, Elven 01–05 Guildmaster 12 06–10 1 barbed devil 11 AC 16, touch 11, flat-footed 15 11–20 1 stone golem 11 hp 26 (4 HD) 21–30 1 rakshasa 10 Immune sleep; SR 15 31–40 Wizard 10 Resist +2 on saves against enchantments 41–45 Spell turret trap 10 Fort +6, Ref +2, Will +1 (+3 against spells and spell-like 46–50 1d4 efreeti 10 abilities) 51–60 1d4 erinyes 10 Weakness light blindness 61–70 1d8 bearded devils 9 71–85 1 shield guardian 8 Speed 30 ft. (6 squares) 86–100 1d6 apprentice wizards 8 Melee mwk rapier +7 (1d6+4/18–20 plus poison) Base Atk +4; Grp +6 Atk Options poison (DC 13, unconscious 1 minute/ Guildmaster: The guildmaster, a 12th-level wizard, unconscious 2d4 hours) wanders the hall of his guild to keep an eye on his students Spell-Like Abilities (CL 4th; 1d20+4 to overcome SR): and guild members. He is giving another group a tour 1/day—dancing lights, darkness, faerie fire (determine type by rolling on the table a second time, Abilities Str 14, Dex 13, Con 10, Int 10, Wis 10, Cha 11 rerolling any result of guildmaster) 15% of the time. Feats Dodge, Great Fortitude, Mobility, Weapon Focus Wizard: This is one of the guild’s teachers or research(rapier), Weapon Specialization (rapier) ers. Typically, a wizard is encountered as she wanders Skills Climb +7, Jump +7, Listen +2, Search +2, Spot +2 Possessions masterwork rapier, masterwork chain from one area of the guild to another, absently muttering shirt, light shield, masterwork hand crossbow with to herself or reading a scroll of ancient runes. 20 poisoned bolts, 2d6 gp Spell Turret Trap: These dangerous magical traps are detailed on page 45. Dwarf Warriors: These dwarves are within a mile of Apprentice Wizards: This encounter is with a number of 5th-level wizards; they react to dangerous-looking intrudthe stronghold they call home. Their initial attitude is ers by running to find the nearest senior wizard for aid. unfriendly unless one of the characters is also a dwarf, in which case their attitude is indifferent. At the very least, they want to escort the characters to their home SAMPLE TREASURE HOARDS You don’t always have time to build up tailor-made treasures for interrogation. The dwarves are not hostile and do not for all the monsters the PCs fight, especially those that they attack unless provoked. The characters can convince the might encounter as a result of a random encounter in the dwarves to let them go on their way with a successful wilderness. These sample treasure hoards can be used as DC 25 Diplomacy check. A DC 40 check convinces the is, or you can adjust them as you see fit. dwarves to give the PCs directions or invite them back to their home for a free night of dwarven hospitality and the opportunity to replenish supplies (and possibly purchase EL 1 (300 gp) Coins: 4,544 cp, 646 sp, 55 gp items of fine dwarf craftsmanship). Toxic Mushroom Tangle: The monstrous denizens of Goods: 2 gold bars (10 gp each), freshwater pearl (10 gp), the underground aren’t its only threats. Patches of toxic carved wooden bookends (80 gp) subterranean flora abound, and the toxic mushroom patch Item: Flask of holy (or unholy) water (25 gp) represents just such an encounter. Characters can make DC 20 Knowledge (nature) checks to recognize the threat before EL 2 (600 gp) entering the patch. Those who enter the area are exposed to Coins: 1,400 cp, 220 sp, 124 gp, 3 pp
71
CHAPTER 2
ADVENTURES
72
Goods: Shard of obsidian (10 gp), copper pyramid EL 10 (5,800 gp) Coins: 4,230 sp, 800 gp, 31 pp inscribed with religious runes (50 gp) Goods: 10 bloodstones (50 gp each), single pearl earring Items: Potion of cure light wounds, potion of spider climb (150 gp), silver ring set with jade (300 gp) EL 3 (900 gp) Items: +1 light crossbow, masterwork dagger (302 gp), Coins: 3,569 cp, 743 sp, 171 gp 2 doses of antitoxin (100 gp), darkwood buckler (65 gp), Goods: Golden pearl (100 gp), 2 rock crystals (50 gp scroll of searing light each) Items: 6 flasks of alchemist’s fire (20 gp each) in marble, EL 11 (7,500 gp) velvet-lined coffer (225 gp), scale mail (25 gp), oil of magic Coins: 2,370 gp, 163 pp weapon (50 gp) Goods: 2 deep blue spinels (500 gp each), 2 pieces of amber (100 gp each), 1 peridot (50 gp), tome of elven fables EL 4 (1,200 gp) (50 gp), silver and moonstone ring (100 gp) Coins: 1,450 sp, 165 gp, 8 pp Items: Heward’s handy haversack (2,000 gp), oil of bless Goods: Blue quartz necklace (45 gp) weapon (100 gp) Items: Masterwork longsword (315 gp), elixir of sneaking, potion of mage armor, scroll of knock EL 12 (9,800 gp) Coins: 1,250 gp, 40 pp EL 5 (1,600 gp) Goods: 5 amethysts (100 gp each), aquamarine (500 gp), Coins: 1,135 cp, 866 sp, 437 gp, 24 pp platinum chain bracelet (850 gp) Goods: 2 red spinels (100 gp each), bloodstone (50 gp), Items: Pearl of power (2nd-level spell), potion of barkskin ivory and onyx chess set (500 gp) +2, ring of protection +1 Items: Scroll of bless (25 gp), potion of endure elements EL 13 (13,000 gp) (50 gp) Coins: 2,725 gp, 513 pp EL 6 (2,000 gp) Goods: 3 golden yellow topazes (500 gp each), 2 sardCoins: 2,650 sp, 310 gp, 12 pp onyxes (50 gp each), 2 pieces of obsidian (10 gp each), Goods: Silver dining plate (100 gp) mahogany chest inlaid with mother-of-pearl (300 gp) Items: Potion of cat’s grace (300 gp), +1 chain shirt (525 gp), Items: Masterwork padded armor (155 gp), potion of boots of the winterlands (2,500 gp) bull’s strength, scroll of protection from energy, wand of detect magic EL 14 (17,000 gp) EL 7 (2,600 gp) Coins: 790 gp, 54 pp Coins: 556 sp, 894 gp, 35 pp Goods: Masterwork cold iron longsword (330 gp), 4 garnets (100 gp each), 2 black pearls (500 gp each), gold necklace Goods: 3 pieces of amber (100 gp each), pair of silver (550 gp), bejeweled masterwork lap-harp (750 gp) and white gold candlesticks (300 gp), gold locket with Items: +1 glamered chain shirt, +1 keen scimitar, scroll hand-painted portrait of female elf (250 gp) Items: Masterwork battleaxe (155 gp), potion of cat’s grace of fireball (300 gp), scroll of mirror image (3rd) (150 gp) EL 15 (22,000 gp) EL 8 (3,400 gp) Coins: 3,520 gp, 624 pp Coins: 3,540 sp, 531 gp, 25 pp Goods: Emerald (1,000 gp), 2 gold statues of a human dancer (200 gp each), platinum holy symbol of Moradin (500 gp) Goods: 2 pearls (100 gp each), carved redwood locket Items: +1 silvered greataxe (2,340 gp), amulet of natural with gold leaf (150 gp), silver unicorn pendant (90 gp) Items: Cloak of protection +1, potion of cure moderate wounds, armor +2 (8,000 gp) wand of charm person EL 16 (28,000 gp) EL 9 (4,500 gp) Coins: 1,355 gp, 16 pp Coins: 405 sp, 1,269 gp, 44 pp Goods: 14 pearls (100 gp each), porphyry nymph statuette (800 gp), gold armband with dragon engraving (1,200 gp), Goods: 2 black pearls (500 gp each), 1 tourmaline (100 ivory and obsidian chess set (600 gp) gp), 3 bloodstones (50 gp each), small painting of a landItems: Adamantine bastard sword (3,035 gp), +1 shadow scape (200 gp), gnome-crafted porcelain urn (150 gp) elven chain, potion of displacement, ring of jumping, lesser Items: Cloak of resistance +1 (1,000 gp), scroll of spider metamagic rod (enlarge), gauntlets of ogre power climb (150 gp)
Illus. by A. Swekel
ome groups have little time for the world a basic introductory scenario and responding to the outside the dungeon, emerging from the interests of the players as they arise. You could throw depths only long enough to seek out healing, them at a series of unconnected published adventures, swap magic items, and find a vault to stash creating setting elements and themes only as the need their treasure. arises, improvising your way to an epic rivaling The Others prefer a game in which their heroic exploits Iliad in breadth and depth. If you’re like most DMs, however, you find spontahave an impact on the world around them. They want to explore the nooks and crannies of your setting, take part neity easier to manage when you plan ahead for it. By in exciting continuing plot threads, and rise in influence making a few simple decisions at the outset, you can as well as power. By weaving a campaign around the PCs’ give your campaign a sense of shape, turning it into adventures, you make their exploits more memorable, an experience players can get only from you. lending them a sense of importance like those of the great heroes of myth and literature. YOUR PLAYERS You can further enhance this feeling by creating a vivid Your campaign design decisions will differ dependsetting for the PCs to interact with. By taking a few key ing on your familiarity with your players. details from the real history of the Middle Ages, you can Established Groups add a sense of reality to their exploits. If you’re running a game for an established group with known quirks and preferences, your choices must factor in the advantages and drawbacks of familiarity. Some of the most entertaining campaigns ever run develIf you know your group well, you can take oped spontaneously, without much forethought on the their specific tastes into account as you plan. You part of their Dungeon Masters. You could run a blazingly know how much emphasis they prefer to place successful campaign simply by taking the PCs through on setting and story, and how much on smiting
BEGINNING AND ENDING A CAMPAIGN
73
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
74
monsters. Chapter 1 contains advice and information on these topics. Knowing their tastes, you can build hooks into the narrative guaranteed to get their juices flowing. If you happen to know that a few of your players are currently on a pirate kick, it might be time to dust off your long-simmering plans for a swashbuckling campaign. Likewise, you’re already aware of your players’ rockbottom demands for a setting. If a key player loses interest when she can’t play a ninja or fight drow, you know you must make both dark elves and Japanese-style assassins central to the action. If you’re running a game for straightahead combat enthusiasts, you’ll be planning for little nuggets of plot between stretches of swordplay. Conversely, a group mostly interested in intrigue and character development requires you to focus most of your planning on interesting NPCs, the schemes they’re hatching, and the social context in which they will be hatched.
player when you play in a semipublic space. You will also find it more difficult to maintain focus when running a game in an open environment where customers can traipse in and out at will. Both you and your players will have to concentrate on screening out conversations taking place around you. Especially extroverted DMs might enjoy the challenge this environment provides; you can play to the audience, even bringing them in for walk-on roles as crowd members and the like. The biggest network for organized D&D play is the RPGA. By joining as a DM or a player, you can not only sharpen your skills but also put yourself in touch with local gamers, some of whom will make fine recruits for your home campaign. For more information on the RPGA, visit the Wizards of the Coast website at www. wizards.com. The Internet is a gold mine for an isolated DM in need of new players. Using the search engine of your choice, you can quickly find any number of D&D and general roleplaying sites, many of which maintain dedicated player-recruitment pages or forums where you can post recruitment ads. If you live in a large city or university town bursting with likely players, you can tailor your ads to attract players whose tastes mirror your own. You can create your campaign concept (see below) and then craft fi fty words or so of pithy ad copy to reel them in. An ad screaming out for aficionados of good old hack-and-slashery will attract a different crowd of applicants than one promising gritty political intrigue in a historically accurate Renaissance Italy. If you live in a small town, you might have to widen your pitch to attract players of all stripes. With a smaller pool of potential recruits, you can’t afford to narrow your focus to a few types of players. Aim instead to assemble a mixed group, preparing to run a campaign with elements that appeal to all tastes. Send out a simple call for D&D players. Start by running a basic campaign with a standard ratio of fighting and looting to story and character, and set in an established fantasy world, such as the GREYHAWK or FORGOTTEN R EALMS campaign setting. Once you’ve been running for your players for a while and have drawn a bead on their tastes, you can consider restarting from scratch, with a unique concept geared directly to them.
Recruiting New Players You might, on the other hand, be starting out as a DM with a group of neophyte players. You might have lost the players from your last campaign to attrition or scheduling hassles. Perhaps you moved to a new town and find yourself having to recruit players from scratch. Though some DMs are happy to run for larger or smaller groups, the game tends to work best with four to six players. Unless you belong to a gang of friends who hang out together constantly, whether or not they’re involved in a DUNGEONS & DRAGONS game, you can expect to face attendance problems. If you recruit only the number of players you can comfortably handle, you might soon find yourself with less than a full house as players drop out or are unable to attend the occasional session. Instead, start with two or three more players than you actually want in your group. Soon the realities of busy lives will intrude, and the average number of players per session will fall within your ideal range. In a school or university setting, you might be able to plug into an existing network of players. See if a game club operates out of your school or local library. If not, give some thought to creating one. A few photocopied flyers could set the spark for an entire player community. Often, specialty game and hobby stores are hubs of player activity. Many provide bulletin boards for DMs to post recruitment notices. Others run in-store game nights and would be more than happy to schedule times and table CAMPAIGN STRUCTURE spaces for you to run your campaign on the premises. Even Start your creation process by choosing between two store owners who provide neither can acquaint you with possible campaign structures: an episodic campaign or a continuity campaign. the local convention scene and likely point you toward any existing clubs. Playing at a club or in a retail location gives you access to Episodic Campaigns a ready pool of players, but it also curtails your control over Episodic campaigns are composed of unrelated advenwho sits at your table. It’s tougher to uninvite a disruptive tures. The only common element between the adventures
CHAPTER 3
THE CAMPAIGN Illus. by G. Kubic
The minotaur at the end of the labyrinth is the final challenge in this adventure
given a specific assignment, an episodic campaign works is the presence of the PCs. In some cases, minor supporting characters might recur from one adventure to the well for reactive players who like to have their objectives next, but these NPCs are walk-on characters, such as shop supplied to them. owners, healers, and sages, who exist primarily to provide If you run your game best with detailed adventure notes, services to the party. Adventures remain self-contained; an episodic campaign suits your talents perfectly. Short, if an element of a PC’s background history comes up in disconnected adventures offer fewer opportunities for play, it is resolved immediately, never to be revisited. players to hit you with plot curveballs you’re not ready Each adventure has a distinct beginning and ending. to handle. When an adventure is over, its details can be forgotten. An episodic structure does not require you to run only one-session adventures. A well-stocked dungeon environIn some cases, PCs might have an ongoing problem or ment often takes more than one session to clear out. The goal, such as a curse, a grudge against a local warlord, adventures, not the sessions, remain unconnected. or an intelligent weapon with its own agenda. These remain complications to other adventures and never become the focus of entire sessions unto themselves. An Continuity Campaigns episodic campaign resembles a TV series such as Law & In a continuity campaign, one adventure leads to another, Order, where no knowledge of one episode is required to creating an overall story arc that builds over time. The PCs understand another. forge links to the world, advancing their relationships to An episodic campaign is a good choice for a group if, due key NPCs. Players must remember key characters and to spotty attendance, you’re running a game for an evermoments from one session to the next. Apparently minor details introduced in one session might turn out to be critishifting roster of players. An episodic campaign plays to the preferences of gamers focused on power accumulation, cally important weeks or months later. The PCs advance fighting, puzzles, rebellion, and oddball behavior. Since their own personal storylines as well as those of the group. each adventure typically begins with a scene in which the As a continuity campaign develops, the beginnings and PCs are pointed toward a dungeon complex or otherwise endings of specific adventures become more difficult to
75
Illus. by W. O’Connor
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
discern. Often you will run parallel plot lines at the same time, moving some to the foreground while others bubble away on the back burner. Players become self-starters, picking up each session where they left off and deciding which story elements to follow up next. For this reason, a continuity campaign appeals to selfmotivated players who like their PCs to seek out their own trouble. A continuity campaign’s emphasis on plot and setting elements attracts players interested in story, character, and exploration. Such a campaign is easiest to maintain when you can rely on the regular attendance of a core group of players. If you have such active players, they require a reactive DM, so if your strength lies in improvisation, this structure is for you. Stand-alone adventures can be incorporated into a continuity campaign, but typically you will adapt adventures created by others into your story arc. For example, you’re running a campaign in which the PCs have infiltrated the inner circle of an evil warlord. You purchase a published adventure detailing a haunted dwarf keep. The adventure assumes that the players are simply raiding the keep to loot it and lay to rest its horrifying ghosts. You create a new entry point into the adventure: The warlord, suspecting the PCs of betrayal, sends them to the keep to retrieve a nonexistent treasure, hoping the dwarf ghosts will dispose of them. The PCs still complete the adventure as written, but when they learn that the treasure is imaginary, they have advanced the overall story, possibly learning that the warlord no longer trusts them.
If you’re just starting out as a DM, or are running a game for relatively inexperienced players, a wildly original campaign idea is more trouble than it’s worth. Originality won’t impress new gamers; they have no standard experience to measure it against. You should familiarize yourself with regular play before trying to work variations on it. If you’ve been running games for years and feel a little jaded, but have recruited a crew of new players, your attempts to get fancy might confuse them. Instead, cast your mind back to your days as a beginning gamer and remember the sense of wonder that a simple kobold encounter or a trip to the corner magic shop provided. Challenge yourself to make the game as clear and accessible as possible for new players. See how simple you can make their starter campaign. Keep them entertained now, and they will be ready for your quirkier ideas later. Veteran players might be open to more adventurous campaign concepts that set your game apart from the others they have experienced over the years. They might be more accepting of experimentation with house rules or restrictions on the types of characters they can play. Keep in mind, though, that fans of story, character, and setting are more interested in campaign variation than are combat enthusiasts, puzzle solvers, and brilliant planners (who get their thrills at the encounter level). No matter how offbeat your concept is, boil it down into as few words as possible. A concept that can’t be summed up in a sentence or two will be more confusing than memorable.
CAMPAIGN CONCEPT The first step in creating a campaign is to arrive at a concept, a simple idea about the setting and the sorts of adventures the PCs will take part in. Although the basic idea should inspire your creativity, it must also attract your players. When choosing a concept, you should balance originality with accessibility.
76
In a continuity campaign, elders pass on their knowledge to up-and-coming adventurers
Steal freely from your favorite books and movies. A concept related to something your players already like and enjoy will get their imaginations kick-started quicker than an idea they have never encountered before. The concept need not suggest many months of play; it can summarize a simple situation you intend to develop into something more elaborate as the game continues. A few sample campaign concepts appear below.
CHAPTER 3
Party Concept Some of the above examples impose on the players a party concept. The PCs are more than a miscellaneous assemblage of heroic looters; they start play with connections to one another and a common goal. This approach requires collaboration between the players as they create their characters.
THE CAMPAIGN
• The people of a farming village hire adventurers to protect them from the bandit inhabitants of a nearby cave complex. • A lord given a land grant in wild territory hires adventurers to slay the creatures that infest it. • Mythic characters play at war and politics in a land reminiscent of ancient Greece. • The sons and daughters of a king form an adventuring party to increase their powers; the one eventually declared the mightiest becomes heir to the throne. • The PCs work for a magic item dealer, recovering wands and relics from adventurers who are behind on their installment payments. • History’s great heroes are summoned together by a wizard seeking allies against the Dark One, but due to a miscalculation in the spell, they appear as their young, inexperienced selves. • A hundred years after Chicago is overrun by orcs, intrepid raiders armed with magic and machine guns scale its massive walls on a hostage rescue mission.
The PCs start play knowing one another and appearing to some degree in each other’s background stories. Some party concepts might impose restrictions on the players. For example, if all the PCs are heirs to a throne, that concept implies that they are all of the same race. Some players might chafe at restrictive group concepts, while others enjoy the novelty. If you have one player who always must be an elf and another who will play only a dwarf, an “heirs to the throne” campaign won’t work. A group concept can reduce disagreements between players. They might still debate how things are to be done, but at least they can all work toward the same goals. Adding replacement PCs to a campaign in progress can be tough if you’re using a restrictive party concept. If the PCs are the last surviving members of a particular thieves’ guild, how do you fit in a new player several sessions later? You might end up adding a new character who isn’t as important to the plot as the others, or explaining why another survivor has suddenly surfaced. The easiest party concept to work with is the common patron: The PCs are all employees of the same patron, working to further his goals. The PCs have looser ties to one another and are no more than coworkers. This helps if you have a high death rate among PCs or players who drop in or out; the patron can always introduce a new hire to the rest of his crew.
CAMPAIGN CLOSURE If your campaign concept is based on a narrative idea, such as the completion of a specific goal, it will be a continuity campaign. You might also consider declaring ahead of time that it’s a closed campaign, with a definite end point. When the PCs attain the goal, the campaign is over. Using the above examples, the “heir to the throne” and “Chicago raiders” concepts could easily be closed. The first
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs CAMPAIGN PACK As you devise your campaign, compile pertinent information about it in a campaign pack, a handout you will supply to the players. Include in it all the information the players need to create their characters. It should tell players what to expect from your game. Focus especially on aspects of your game that differ from the norm and from campaigns you have run for them in the past. The campaign pack creates your players’ expectations. Start off with the campaign concept, expressing it as simply as you can. Because you don’t want to give away your big secrets, the concept you present to the players might differ from the one in your own notes. Still, it should reveal as much as you can about your premise without spoiling surprises. Make it as exciting as possible—think of it as an advertising blurb for your game. If you have a party concept, include that as well. Provide details about whether the campaign is open-ended or closed, its starting level, any restrictions on common choices of class or race, and
any new or nonstandard choices available. Lay out modifications to the alignment system, if any, and provide a list of your house rules, as well as references to any expanded rules you wish to bring in from other D&D products. Include a basic introduction to your setting, focusing on information of direct relevance to starting characters. If the history of your setting plays a role in upcoming plot lines, include it. If it’s just cool background detail, leave it out. Do the same with lists of prominent people, myths of the gods, rumors and legends, or any other background data you might have generated. Keep it short, sweet, and to the point; most players will merely skim your document if it tops out at a great length. Even if you’re running for eager players who devour your every word, you still should distill this material to its most important points. The process of sorting the central ideas from the side issues is as much for your benefit as it is for that of the players. To make it more enticing, jazz up your campaign pack with maps and clip art illustrations.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
77
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
ends when the new monarch is chosen, and the second when the hostages are rescued. This choice increases the sense of excitement, as players move steadily toward a final conclusion. It appeals strongly to story-oriented players. Closed campaigns are a fun choice if your group changes games and DMs on a regular basis, or if you know you’ll be able to run only a limited number of sessions. They allow you to experiment with far-out campaign concepts that might not sustain themselves over the long haul. However, power accumulators, who like to dream of what their character sheets will look like fi fteen levels from now, tend to dislike closed campaigns. They want their characters to grow as powerful as possible, extending the careers of their heroes for as long as they can. Even if your group’s average campaign lasts only a few months, they want to think their characters have the potential to continue forever. You could turn this attitude to your advantage, though. Any entertainer knows to leave the audience wanting more. If a closed campaign really clicks, you can always create a sequel, perhaps picking up with the characters years or even decades later. Just as they think their adventuring days are over, you can fi nd a new threat to occupy them.
STARTING LEVEL If you’re a new Dungeon Master or are running a game for new players, always start their characters off at 1st level. Character progression is integral to the game’s learning curve. Only when the group knows the game thoroughly should you consider starting a party at mid or high level. Certain groups prefer play at a particular level. Some like the sense of constant danger endured by fragile, low-level characters. Others prefer the range of options available from 4th to 7th level. Still others enjoy the wild
unpredictability of a high-level game where the powers fly left and right and interact in surprising ways. If your group has a preferred play level, consider starting a new campaign a level or two below that. Exotic campaign concepts might require PCs who are already accomplished heroes. The mythic Greece idea mentioned above calls for a gang of demigods. The concept suffers if the PCs can barely take a few punches. However, fidelity to a concept is less important than the group’s general preferences and familiarity with the rules. If a concept requires the group to play at a level they aren’t ready for or don’t like, find a new concept.
RACE AND CLASS REQUIREMENTS Some exotic campaign concepts require restrictions on the races and classes available to PCs. A few examples of such concepts: • The PCs stumble onto clues to the centuries-old disappearance of the world’s elves. • When demons infest a monastery, an elite squad of mace-wielding clerics moves in to drive them back to the infernal regions—not suspecting that this event heralds a full-scale invasion from the nether depths. • Forest-dwelling outlaws protect England from Prince John’s depredations while his brother, Richard the Lion-Hearted, is off at the crusades. No nonhumans or historically inappropriate character classes (barbarians, druids, monks, sorcerers, or wizards) need apply. Tread carefully before restricting player choice. If you have a player who always creates an elf or a bard, a campaign that doesn’t allow for her favorite character type won’t appeal to her. If your campaign concept derives its uniqueness mostly from the restrictions it imposes on players, don’t be surprised if your group responds without enthusiasm.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs PLANNING FOR THE END Adventure stories can be expressed as questions. Will Robin Hood save Maid Marian? Can Jack slay the giant? Will the Argonauts find the golden fleece? To determine when a closed campaign will end, express your narrative campaign concept in question form. The campaign concludes when the PCs answer that question. Inform the players that you’re running a closed campaign. They should also know the victory conditions in advance so they can plan their character progressions accordingly and, as the end draws near, make all-out sacrifices to achieve their goals. Players need not fully understand the campaign-ending victory conditions from the outset. Increase the stakes as the campaign progresses. For example, the PCs at first might think they’re merely pursuing personal vengeance against the nomadic raiders who razed their village. A few adventures in, they discover that the raiders are preparing a massive invasion of the civilized realms. As the climax approaches, they further learn that the
78
nomad leader is in thrall to an apocalyptic deity, and that if he destroys a particular temple in the capital city, he will bring about the end of the world. Plan carefully to see that the conclusive scenes of a closed campaign pay off. By centering the entire campaign on a set of victory conditions, you’re promising a big, exciting finish. Prepare that final sequence exhaustively. It must be exquisitely balanced, so the PCs don’t blow through the opposition too easily or get swatted like flies. Especially in a high-level game, it’s easy to be caught off guard by the effects of PCs’ and creatures’ abilities, particularly in combination with unusual encounter conditions. Set up the climactic sequence so that your resident tacticians have no chance to reconnoiter or plan in advance. Design the encounter with options that allow you to adjust its difficulty on the fly. Prepare additional creatures that can storm in if the PCs perform shockingly well, or gimmicks to help even the odds if they get crushed too soon. When in doubt, fudge die rolls shamelessly, feigning surprise at the results.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
CHAPTER 3
to alignment will disproportionately reduce the effectiveness of paladins and clerics, whose signature abilities depend on it. Beginning players find alignment invaluable as they first learn to add motivation and personality to their characters. Plenty of experienced gamers enjoy the rocksolid certitude of the alignment system and don’t want you mucking with it. They’ve come to vanquish evildoers, and the alignment system allows them to confidently identify enemies in need of smiting. That said, a group that prefers adventures revolving around intrigue and characterization might want to discard alignment altogether, or make it more fuzzy and subjective, as real-world morality usually seems. Many standard alignment-related spells can short-circuit a typical mystery plot. Television-show detectives would find their work easy if they had an array of detect evil spells at their disposal. You can create a world of subjective morality without completely discarding alignment. In this case, a wielder of alignment magic might be able to detect or target beings and objects that share her beliefs, along with those who oppose them. A user of the same magic with different beliefs might get another set of results entirely. For most campaigns, changes to alignment will be a simple matter of reinterpretation. As an example, consider a setting in which nobles adhere to a stringent code of personal honor. In this culture, it is not only acceptable but morally necessary to fight and kill people who insult you, provided that you do it within a tightly constrained set of social rules. In such a society, a lawful good person would be one who follows both the spirit and the letter MODIFIED ALIGNMENTS of the honor code. The lawful evil person would fight for Dungeon Masters planning unconventional campaigns his honor, but cheat to defeat his opponents. Chaotic good characters might ignore the rules of conduct and deny the might also consider modifications to the alignment system. nobility’s claim to special status. Alignment might even be Again, dramatic changes to a major rules component a matter of social class: the nobility is lawful, the merchant are not to be taken lightly. Many spells and magic items depend on the alignment system for their effect. Changes class neutral, and the working man chaotic. pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
THE CAMPAIGN
Consider game balance consequences before ruling out certain classes or races. Traps, creatures, and other challenges are balanced under the assumption that the PCs enjoy full access to the various abilities found in the Player’s Handbook. If you remove certain character classes from the players’ reach, the party might suddenly be floored by challenges that ought to be easy. In a world without clerics, undead become much more dangerous. Trivial hit point losses turn deadly when healing spells are hard to come by. A dungeon’s physical hazards become more lethal when the characters don’t have low-light vision or darkvision. Players respond better to bribes than to prohibitions. If your concept demands an all-cleric party, allow all races to treat cleric as a favored class. Give the players the option of adding a free level of cleric when creating their characters. (By encouraging them to play multiclass characters, you’re also ensuring that the PCs have the necessary abilities supplied by other classes.) Find ways to reconcile the surface elements of your concept with player preferences. In a campaign without elves, allow your elf-loving player to create a strangely feylooking human who secretly possesses an elf’s standard racial traits. Customize your campaign not by taking away races or classes, but by adding them. These new additions should heighten your campaign’s concept. By adding an exorcist class to your demon-smiting campaign, you make it instantly distinctive—especially for the players who take it.
RACES AS ARCHETYPES Some DMs running historically based campaigns find the widespread presence of nonhuman races incompatible with the society they’re trying to evoke. A group of history buffs might agree and accept the choice to eliminate them. It is, however, possible to have your cake and eat it, too, doing away with the outward appearance of nonhuman races while retaining much of the mechanical flavor that makes racial types so popular with players. Convert the races to archetypes. Instead of a separate species, each archetype represents a familiar stereotype from the world of popular fiction. Change physical descriptions so that they fall within human norms. Adapt personality notes to reflect a culturally appropriate stereotype. Ignore Relations, Lands, Language, and all other indications that the character hails from an unfamiliar culture. Keep as many racial traits as you possibly can, justifying any magical-seeming abilities as quirky talents.
For example, the dwarf could become a stout warrior, an aleswilling laborer with a squat build and a hard-nosed attitude. Explain her resistance to poison as the result of a hardy Constitution. Her darkvision becomes a natural family trait. Her affinity for Craft skills fits her background as a laborer. Likewise, the elf becomes a lithe, graceful human with a slightly otherworldly air. A friendly witch blessed him when he was young, accounting for his resistance to sleep magic and enchantments. His skill at observation checks simply reflects an unusual awareness of his surroundings. Convert the other races in a similar fashion. Each will require a slightly different treatment depending on the historical period you want to evoke. The clichés of ancient Egypt differ from those of feudal Japan. Make the connections between archetypes and nonhuman races clear to your players, so they can correctly choose their favorites.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
79
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
If your alignment system deviates from the norm, or if you’re keeping the system but altering the definitions, include this information in the campaign pack you prepare for the players (see the sidebar on page 77). Alignments can be confusing, so make your alterations, and the reasons behind them, as clear as possible. Alignments usefully telescope complicated issues of behavior and morality into a simple framework for the purpose of a fun adventure game. By widening the telescope or changing its focus, you can make your game memorable—or drive your players crazy with head-twisting philosophical questions. If you spend big chunks of each session dealing with alignment issues, you should probably rethink your approach.
HOUSE RULES OR EXPANDED RULES
80
fudge in favor of the players. If a character dies because of an ill-considered house rule, revert immediately to the established rules, leaving the PC alive and well. On the other hand, if a character makes out like a bandit thanks to an unbalanced ability skewed in her favor, let the player keep any past benefits from it, but modify the ability or ask her to trade it in for a standard one. Don’t take back a PC’s gains; instead, think of them as a levy you must pay for the privilege of treating your players as guinea pigs for your rules modifications. (You might have to dispense some compensating goodies to other players as well.) Some players love tinkering with the rules and will enthusiastically help you test-drive your concepts. Others fi nd it confusing or dislike the retroactive changes to game reality required by playtesting. As the campaign progresses, take periodic stock of the fun the new rules create, measured against the time and focus they take up. If they cost more than they’re worth, ditch them.
Whether introducing house rules of your own creation or expanded rules from another D&D product, always know why you’re doing it. You might wish to add flavor to your world with setting- THE PREGAME specific prestige classes, spells, races, or magic items. These A good game stems from good preparation, and not just on modular changes are the safest to make; if you find they’re your part. By holding a pregame session to introduce the too powerful (or not useful enough), you can always modify campaign, you can build unity, cooperation, and thematic them during play. cohesion into the adventuring party. Other rules changes should be made carefully, for Before the pregame session, convey to the players a reasons you make clear to the players. Include in your basic idea of your campaign and their part in it. If you have a specific campaign concept, lay it out for them in campaign pack a brief justification for each rules change. a few words. Inform them of any restrictions or availDistinguish between changes meant to evoke specific details of your world, and those that simply suit your own abilities concerning race or class. Ask them to work up tastes or desire to tinker with the rules. two or three ideas for different characters they might For example, you might enliven a pirate campaign by want to play. Send the players a cut-down summary of introducing or modifying combat maneuvers to let the your campaign pack. characters move more quickly across the terrain, and to Prepare for the pregame session by dividing your reward them for attempting breakneck moves involving campaign pack into two sections: one providing only the swinging ropes, chandeliers, and other hallmark props information the players need to generate characters, and of the swashbuckling genre. Assuming they want to play another providing general background information on pirates at all, your gamers should accept these alterations the campaign and the world. Keep the first part short and as part of the special atmosphere of this campaign. sweet; it should remind players of your house rules and any constraints (or extra possibilities) they face in creating Rules changes meant instead to address your sense of their PCs. logic or pet peeves with the system might be perfectly During the pregame session, introduce the players, enjoy justifiable, but you should make your reasons for using them clear. Be leery of changes that decrease the usefulness a bit of chit-chat, and then get down to business. Assume of a player’s favorite abilities, or that favor one race or class that your players have only skimmed what you sent over another. them, or have forgotten it entirely. Repeat the campaign Other players might know the rules at least as well as concept as concisely as possible. Provide examples of you, and they might present good arguments against your ways in which the players can tailor their PCs to your proposed changes. Hear them out. campaign. Hand out the character generation sections of As soon as you introduce new rules into your game, you your campaign pack. are turning your players into playtesters. Many untested or unfamiliar rules will explode on impact, displaying Choosing Classes surprising and unpleasant results when actually used in An effective D&D party provides a balance of class speplay. Prepare your players in advance for this posibility. cialties. Ask if any players have preferences for particular Reserve the right to alter obviously broken rules as you go roles in the party. Here your fight-loving players will along. When a new rule has an unexpected result, always put up their hands and ask to play warrior characters,
the specialists will call dibs on their specialties, and so on. In the average group, this will leave about half the players—those without strong preferences—to fill in the missing major classes.
Character Generation Now that the players have worked out connections between their characters and your world or story arc, and between each other, they can complete their game statistics. Having given this some thought already, they should have a head start and be able to complete their characters in an hour or two. This time might seem boring to you, but the players are involved in an engrossing activity and will be having fun. Take advantage of their work time to do additional preparation of your own. Incorporating Player Input While the players roll up their characters, you can think about ways to incorporate the newly invented character backgrounds into your game. Just as the players made the story more interesting by creating established relationships with each other, you can scan your NPC roster and find likely connections between them and the PCs. Try to find at least one NPC suitable for
CHAPTER 3
Building Party Loyalty With or without a party concept, you might find it useful to build connections between the PCs into their past histories. Ask the players to briefly describe their character concepts. Suggest to them that because their characters aren’t fully fleshed out yet, they should be open to incorporating ideas from other players into their own characters’ personal histories. Then ask each player to explain his or her character’s loyalty to at least two of the other PCs. Guide the choices so that every PC has a connection to at least two others. Provide examples if the players seem stumped: • “My character is Berenice’s brother. Although she is older, he’s always tried to protect her.” • “I owe her character my life; she saved me from a pack of ravening ogres.” • “His cleric converted my character to his faith; he’s been my spiritual advisor ever since.” • “He’s been my best friend for years. He’s the only one who knows about my family curse.”
THE CAMPAIGN
Connecting Characters to Concept If you’re using a party concept, quiz the players to find out how their PCs fit into it. Let’s say you’re running a game in which the PCs are reformed criminals who now serve as a major city’s constabulary. You’d ask each player why the PC became a criminal and how the NPC police captain inspired him to reform.
providing support and advice to each PC. If none of your prepared NPCs fit the bill, invent new ones. You might invent a bartender character who is a former pickpocket; he could serve as a mentor to a PC rogue. The party wizard might be on speaking terms with the crusty master of the university library, and so on. Not every connection need be benign; you might decide that your shadowy villain is also the mysterious figure who slew the paladin’s father, for example. Reserve the nastier associations for story and drama fans, who are more likely to enjoy them. The same sorts of players are likely to provide you with plot ideas in the form of character background. Consider how you might adapt your planned storyline to incorporate them. For example, if a player creates an amnesiac PC, that detail demands action from you. Let’s say your adventure involves a search for a missing wizard. You might decide that she can, when found, provide a clue to the PC’s identity. Players less interested in narrative can also help customize your game. Tell the players that you’re willing to entertain distinctive mechanical features, such as new spells for spellcasters, new magic items or feats for others, and so on. Instruct them to create features that relate to their characters or to the campaign concept. As with any new rules feature, you should judge their potency carefully before letting them into the game, and be willing to revise their rules on the fly to keep them balanced.
MEDIEVAL SOCIETY A successful DUNGEONS & DRAGONS setting is neither an authentic portrayal of medieval history nor an exercise in logical extrapolation from a fantastic premise. Instead, think of it as a medieval-flavored game environment. Your players expect to play in a world resembling the Middle Ages, but with the harsh, brutal, depressing, and serious elements stripped out. They want to explore an idealized realm of virtuous kings, shining armor, colorful tournaments, towering castles, and fearsome dragons. The setting might have its dark and challenging corners, but overall it offers a positive, escapist vision of good against evil. Historical accuracy should be ignored when it interferes with the game’s spirit of light-hearted fun. For example, out of respect for real-world beliefs, D&D includes only imaginary faiths. Few players want to explore a genuine medieval world view, in which issues of faith dominate all thought and culture. Nor would a strictly realistic economic system provide much entertainment. The cartloads of gold adventurers constantly haul out of dungeons is a fun game element, not a logical one. Had such vast quantities of wealth turned up in the real medieval world, its social structure would have been overturned nearly overnight. Kings and
81
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
nobles held power because they were the landowners in an agriculturally based economy. Realistically, they shouldn’t be in charge in a D&D world, but they are, because they’re integral to the fantasy. Escapism trumps literal logic. Likewise, your basic D&D world is usually a kitchen sink, using the imagery not only of the Middle Ages but also from ancient cultures across thousands of years of history. Dark Ages barbarians rub shoulders with Japanese samurai and pseudo-Egyptian priests. It mixes the elves and dwarves of epic fantasy fiction with the mighty-thewed warriors of pulp magazine sword and sorcery. If you were writing a novel, you wouldn’t want to invent a world that was merely a collection of popular clichés about the medieval and ancient periods. You would want to either evoke one particular period in a fresh and surprising way, or create an exotic place and time entirely from scratch. In a game, though, clichés are useful. They act as a kind of shorthand, making it easier for you to describe your setting in a few simple phrases and images. Your players already like and understand them. Don’t let a misplaced sense of literary snobbery get in the way of a good time. You can import many of the details of your world straight from Hollywood depictions, fantasy novels, and video games. Other reliable elements of a fun, medieval-flavored world appear below. Finally, in Chapter 4, we take this information and put it to use, describing a complete D&D town for you to use in your campaign. Warning: The information presented here consists almost entirely of generalizations and oversimplifications to help you create a fun, accessible D&D world. Try any of this on your medieval history professor, and she’ll flunk you faster than you can say Constantinople.
BURIED GLORIES, RECENT DANGERS In a standard medieval-flavored setting, civilization has slowly rebuilt itself after a period of chaos and catastrophe. Various ancient cultures have already risen, prospered, waned, and vanished from the earth. A great empire once controlled most of the known world, but over a period of centuries, overextended itself, lost its original fervor for conquest, and was fi nally overrun by barbarian hordes. The barbarians emulated the rulers of the empire, adopting the habits of civilization—only to be destroyed in turn by younger, hungrier barbarian tribes. Provinces split apart; besieged cities crumbled and fell. Warlords ruled successively smaller chunks of territory. The ruins of those ancient days litter the landscape, and their treasures lie buried beneath the earth. The culture of the old order has been replaced by a new one, and its science and philosophy have been largely forgotten. Over the past centuries, the wisest and bravest of the warlords, through valor in wartime and fair administration in times of peace, gradually expanded their lands. Now kings again rule nations, supported by noblemen who control large sections of land on their behalf. Towns have sprung up and grown into cities. Prosperity has returned, but the forces of evil gather on the fringes of civilization, hoping to overrun the realms of good and plunge the world back into ignorance and darkness.
MONARCHS Perched atop the pyramid of rank in medieval society is a king or queen, a hereditary monarch. Monarchs claim a license to rule granted by the gods themselves. (D&D deities, who are active in the world and communicative with their followers, might well provide visible signs of endorsement to kings who govern according to their divine agendas.)
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs EQUALITY AND HISTORY In the Middle Ages, as in most periods of human history, strict conventions governed the roles of men and women. Men fought, governed, ran businesses, created art, and determined religious doctrine. Women enjoyed responsibility and influence only in their own households. A few notable women flouted convention to wield as much influence as men. Examples include the teenaged military leader Joan of Arc; the queen and politician Eleanor of Aquitaine; and the mystic and composer Hildegard of Bingen. They broke the rules, but most women led constrained lives. The DUNGEONS & DRAGONS game treats male and female characters equally. Women are just as capable as men and face no barriers to careers as dungeon raiders. This choice keeps step with modern sensibilities. No gamer should have to play a male PC to have a good time. A world with full legal and social equality between the sexes would differ significantly from the Middle Ages. The eldest royal heir would ascend to the throne, regardless of gender. Powerful
82
lords would be duchesses as often as dukes. Religious hierarchies could well be integrated. Some favorite fairy-tale plots go out the window in an egalitarian Middle Ages. Princesses would become accomplished warriors, perfectly capable of rescuing themselves from dragons. Heroes performing great feats would not be rewarded with marriages to fair maidens. Most players want you to strike a balance between freedom from sexism and historical flavor. Play it by ear, fudge as necessary, and don’t look too hard at the contradictions. When a realistic portrayal of historical sexism would annoy or depress your players, tone down the history. When the details of an equal-opportunity world seem too modern or out of step with the medieval atmosphere, revert to history. In general, players dislike having sexist rules applied to themselves but don’t mind so much when those rules involve NPCs—provided that any discrimination is presented as a normal element of a stable society, not as brutal or demeaning.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
CHAPTER 3
THE CAMPAIGN Illus. by E. Fiegenschuh
A noble lord surveys his domain
When challenged by neighboring monarchs, rebellious nobles, rival claimants to the royal bloodline, or outright usurpers, kings must prove their legitimacy on the battlefield. Monarchs personally lead their forces into battle, seeking direct combat with their counterparts among the enemy. Trained from a tender age in the arts of war, they’re likely to be high-level fighters, paladins, rangers, or even wizards.
LORDS Some monarchs might govern through a large and sophisticated royal bureaucracy, but most do so through a system of land grants, serving as overlords to a number of lords, or land-holding nobles. These aristocrats enjoy a hereditary membership in the ruling class, generally descending from families who fought alongside the original warlord or conqueror who brought order to the nation during the dark ages. Some belong to newer bloodlines, having been ennobled by a past or present king in recognition of military victories, political favors, personal friendships, or large infusions of cash to the royal treasury.
Aristocratic titles vary from one kingdom to the next. From highest rank to lowest, with rarely used ranks appearing in parentheses, noble titles include (Archduke,) Duke, Marquess, Earl or Count, Viscount, Baron, (Baronet,) and Knight. Feminine versions of the titles include Duchess, Marchioness, Countess, Viscountess, Baroness, and Dame. Not all aristocrats are lords; some control no lands and instead attend the king as courtiers, who might be trusted advisors or mere social butterflies. Lords control large areas of land, or fiefs. The revenue of an estate derives from various fees and levies on its tenant farmers. In exchange for their domain, or absolute legal rights over their fiefs, they swear oaths of loyalty, or fealty, to their overlords. One who owes fealty to another is that person’s vassal. In a highly lawful nation, the breaking of an oath of fealty is regarded as one of the worst crimes imaginable, as bad as rape or murder. In more cynical realms, vassals revolt against their lords as a commonplace act of political power-mongering. The size of a fief does not necessarily correspond to a noble’s rank. A count might control a huge parcel of productive and strategically important land; a duke
83
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
might be stuck with a rocky sliver of gnoll-infested swamp. Because they’re inherited, ranks remain fi xed over generations, while fiefs change according to the king’s ever-changing political needs. The king might punish a vassal who displeases him by partitioning his lands, or reward an ally by adding to his territory at a neighbor’s expense. Wise kings change boundaries only after careful deliberation, if at all. Monarchs who do it capriciously provoke revolts. A vassal’s fortunes wax and wane with the size and agricultural productivity of his fief. If impoverished by his king, a vassal might suddenly find his oath of fealty less binding. A lord’s home on his estate is usually an impressive affair. If his lands are located in a peaceful, rarely invaded part of the kingdom, he lives in a magnificent but barely fortified manor. If he occupies lands of strategic importance, he lives in a well-fortified castle that functions not only as a home but also as a defensive stronghold in times of invasion. If his castle is sufficiently large and important, he might retain a castellan, an officer responsible for its maintenance and for commanding its defenses during attacks. (The governor of a fort, tower, or other stronghold controlled by the king is also called a castellan.) Lords might take a direct hand in the administration of their estates. Others allow functionaries to take charge of the details. The official who manages a lord’s estate is a bailiff or seneschal. While likely not of noble birth, a bailiff is nonetheless a vassal of his lord. A bailiff’s position might have been in his family for generations. He collects rents and taxes and takes responsibility for the upkeep of his lord’s buildings and properties. A bailiff commands a staff of men, including fighters and rangers ready to deal with poachers and recalcitrant tenants. He might also be in charge of the affairs in the lord’s household, hiring and managing servants, maintaining supplies, and keeping accounts. Lords with large estates and complicated affairs place household responsibilities in the hands of a separate official called a steward.
In most places, lords subdivide large estates, ceding portions to lower-ranking nobles, who become their vassals and pay them a portion of the rents, fees, and fines they collect from their tenants. In others, all fiefs are granted directly from the king to a lord. Religious institutions can also control fiefs. Land rights belong to a church, temple, or abbey, rather than to an individual lord, but the head of the institution otherwise acts as a landlord, earning rents and fees, and relieving farmers of their surpluses. In the Middle Ages, ecclesiastical landholders weren’t required to provide military forces to the king, and monarchs often schemed to curtail the church’s growing land holdings. In a D&D world, however, where high-level clerics, paladins, and monks serve ably on the battlefield, ecclesiasts might well be obligated to provide holy warriors to take part in royal wars. Clerics claim a loyalty outside the system of lords and vassals, placing their deities above their kings. Political tension between church and state inevitably ensues, as clerics claim exemption from royal authority and kings try to bring them to heel. Clerics might resist efforts to enlist them in wars they deem to be unjust or contrary to their faith. The attitude of clerics to royal authority differs by god. Priests of Heironeous and St. Cuthbert enthusiastically supply legions of plate-clad crusaders to smite the enemies of pious kings. The priests and abbesses of pacifistic or chaotic deities march their followers to war less eagerly. Usually, only the lawful faiths are sufficiently organized to maintain large religious institutions, manage estates, or participate in military campaigns. Stewards of religious estates will themselves be high-ranking clerics.
KNIGHTS AND FOOTMEN In exchange for the rents and levies he collects from his fief, a lord is expected to provide military assistance when the king goes to war. In some kingdoms, lords must hire, equip, and train forces, and personally take part in military campaigns. A
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs PLAYER CHARACTERS AS VASSALS Though few players like to take orders or swear oaths of undying, unbreakable loyalty to authority figures, certain groups might enjoy a campaign in which their characters belong to the household of a powerful lord. Passive groups who prefer to have their adventures handed to them might enjoy working for a benevolent nobleman. Power accumulators often react like kids in a candy store when their characters are given access to a well-stocked armory of magic items. Allow PCs to use the armory as a lending library, gaining one credit for each item they add to the lord’s treasury. If they have contributed six items, they can take six items of similar usefulness on each adventure. (Reusable items can be swapped only for objects of similar efficacy—a potion for a potion of ap-
84
proximately like value, and so on.) Many players will find this well worth the price of taking a few orders from a benign employer. Much of a vassal campaign unfolds as normal, with the PCs pumping themselves up with frequent trips to the dungeon. Now and then, campaign elements creep in, such as when the characters’ lord sends them on political errands or the king calls his forces to war. Aside from their choice of missions, the PCs keep their autonomy to make decisions. Their lord doesn’t care how they do something as long as it gets done. For groups who enjoy drama and history, you can slip in a few uncomfortable realities. The PCs could put down a peasant revolt led by enemy agitators, or experience a crisis when their beloved boss is thrown into the king’s dungeons and replaced by a conniving relative.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
CHAPTER 3
THE CAMPAIGN Illus. by S. Ellis
detailed legal agreement specifies the precise number of • Tamed or controlled creatures, from dire wolves to men and the equipment they bring with them. In other golems or even dragons cases, lords simply pay the king a war levy, and the king’s warlords use the money to equip, train, and garrison Where lords are directly required to provide forces to mercenary fighters. Kings who distrust the good will or the king, they maintain troupes of adventurers in their competence of their vassals choose the latter. They mainhouseholds, bound to them by oaths of fealty. Along with tain greater control over the quality and prompt attendance the armored cavalrymen, these elite warriors comprise of their forces. More importantly, vassals with fighters at the lord’s retainers. Between military campaigns, lords their disposal are tempted to make mischief, attacking one encourage adventurer-vassals to clear out dungeons, another or fomenting rebellion against the crown. Where especially if they’re unlucky enough to have monster-filled nobles enjoy the upper hand, the law allows them to use underground complexes on their own fiefs. Through their armed men for their own purposes when the king dungeon exploration, adventurer-vassals grow in power, making them more useful to the king and imparting glory does not require their services. Where kings maintain strong central authority, nobles might not use their forces and influence to their lords. for private warfare. In exchange for their service, a lord provides his retainOn the medieval battlefield, the ultimate fighting ers with meals, clothing, equipment, and an extremely machine was the armored cavalryman. Well-protected secure home base between fighters on horseback could control the moveadventures. Lords might ment of men on the battlefield, breaking maintain an inventory their lines. They were the tanks of of magic items, which their day. Thus, lords devoted much the adventurers can trade effort to training and supplying against or borrow as their missions require. Typithese fighters, who were generally low-ranking noblemen cally, adventurer-vassals called knights. keep magic items they The first blow against their discover until they die or leave the lord’s service, supremacy fell at the Battle at which point ownerof Agincourt, where, in a precursor to modern artillery ship reverts to the lord, warfare, well-trained English becoming part of his archers used longbows to hereditary estate. create a devastating rain Lords also muster of arrows, slaughtering a infantry units. Most raise vastly larger force of French footmen from among the knights and footmen. ranks of their farmers, Armored knights went out who are handed pikes of style for good after the and ill-fitting armor, and advent of halfway reliable pressed into service. They, firearms, which pierced too, are vassals of their plate mail even when lords, and their tenancy wielded by a moderagreements typically spell ately skilled shooter. out a particular number In a D&D world, of weeks per year when knights in cavalry they are required to fight for An unscrupulous advisor tries to influence his weary monarch their kingdom. Minor military formation might still prove formidable on the campaigns typically take place during the down time between planting and harvest—or battlefield, but magic and exotic creatures take a crucial so the beleaguered farmers fervently pray. place alongside them. The forces that lords must supply A kingdom surrounded by other civilized lands most include not only armored cavalry but also: commonly engages in low-intensity raiding campaigns, • Wizards and sorcerers (to cast fireballs and other kinds in which one king mounts an incursion into the territory of artillerylike spells) of another, seeking to exact tribute from fiefs and towns. • Clerics (to act as warrior-medics, rushing onto the Good-aligned characters might participate in wars of spoils battlefield to heal other high-level knights) even against those of like faith, provided they follow the • Rogues and rangers (to act as scouts)
85
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
rules of honorable battle, treating noncombatants and surrendering opponents with mercy. Battles against creature hordes or forces of evil can occur at any time, and such confl icts do not follow the rules of courtly warfare. When a kingdom’s survival is at stake, conscripted farmers can be kept on the battlefield for seasons at a time. Lost harvests spell famine, but that’s preferable to all-out conquest by orcs, ogres, or other minions of evil.
THE MONARCH’S COURT Monarchs delegate the details of governance to an official, likely a low-ranking noble but perhaps a well-educated
commoner. He might be known as a prime minister, chancellor, or chamberlain. These officials manage a small bureaucracy of royal functionaries. They collect revenues from the king’s vassals and taxes from any citizens, such as craftsmen and merchants, who pay directly to the royal treasury. Attentive monarchs make policy and charge their chamberlains with carrying it out. Others rely on their officials to set policy while they go off to war or fritter their time away in frivolous games of the court. If the monarch has not reached the age of majority, a regent rules in his place. The regent is often a blood relation of the monarch, such as an uncle or cousin. Evil regents might scheme to dispose of their charges and occupy the
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs RANDOM POLITICS Use the following table to create a quick political profile for any medieval-style kingdom. Roll randomly only when required to come up with an idea on the spot—for example, when detailing a distant kingdom or a place the PCs merely pass through. If you expect politics to play a large part in your campaign, pick an item from the table, based on your story requirements and the environment your players prefer. Better yet, create your own unique variation. When rolling randomly, you can skew the result toward a stable, well-run kingdom by adding a negative modifier to the roll. To skew toward evil and misrule, add a positive modifier. d% 01–17 18–24
25–28 29–31 32–33 34–35 36–40 41–50
51–53
54–56
86
Political Situation Wise king maintains the loyalty of landed nobility through his virtue; his policies are enacted by honest and competent officials. Virtuous, warlike king maintains the loyalty of landed nobility through the war spoils he brings them; his policies are enacted by honorable and skilled officials. Wise regent rules honestly on behalf of an underage monarch; nobles and officials dutifully obey his commands. Frivolous monarch blithely approves the policies of a wise chamberlain; nobles are largely fools, like their king, or support the chamberlain. Officials rule wisely in place of a mad, senile, or incapacitated king, keeping his condition secret from nobles and commoners. Sniveling, villainous king is kept in check by powerful, virtuous lords; officials do their bidding. Weak monarch rubber-stamps the decrees of a virtuous noble whose military might he fears. Virtuous, warlike king neglects domestic affairs to participate in foreign wars, taking landed nobles with him; an honest regent and officials run the kingdom in his absence. Virtuous usurper has seized the throne from a cruel but legitimate king; nobles agitate to seize power from the upstart commoner; newly installed officials execute the usurper’s wise policies. Decent but ineffective regent rules on behalf of underage monarch; ambitious lords rule their fiefs as powers unto themselves, withholding their debts to the crown.
d% 57–59
Political Situation Iron-jawed, warlike king maintains the loyalty of landed nobles, who fear his wrath; terrified and efficient officials enforce his will. 60–62 Indecisive king vacillates between the wishes of powerful nobles and intimidating courtiers, satisfying neither; officials indulge in petty corruption. 63–65 Wise king is undermined by scheming nobles; officials split between royalists and schemers. 66–68 Nitwit monarch obeys cruel whims of scheming courtiers; officials struggle in disarray. 69–71 Nobles band together to mount a rebellion against a cruel and ineffective king; civil war looms. 72–74 King is held hostage by a hostile neighbor; central authority has broken down as nobles rule their own fiefs, withholding from the crown fees and taxes that might be used for ransom. 75–77 Once-virtuous monarch, rumored to be ensorcelled, is kept in seclusion by corrupt courtiers; officials do their evil bidding. 78–80 Frivolous monarch blithely approves the policies of a corrupt chamberlain; nobles are largely fools, like their king, or are in the chamberlain’s pocket. 81–83 Weak monarch rubber-stamps the decrees of a cruel noble whose military might he fears. 84–86 Corrupt regent enriches himself while waiting for the monarch to come of age, stripping honest lords of their lands and awarding fiefs to his cronies. 87–89 Virtuous, warlike king neglects domestic affairs to participate in foreign wars, taking landed nobles with him; a corrupt regent and officials loot the kingdom in his absence. 90–92 Once-virtuous monarch has become cruel; terrified nobles and officials execute his evil commands. 93–95 Frivolous but lethally clever king keeps his nobles at court, where he capriciously punishes those who displease him; corrupt officials enrich themselves on the side while overtaxing his vassals and wretched subjects. 96–100 Corrupt usurper has taken the throne and smashed the nobility; his cronies and bodyguards cruelly execute his policies.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
VILLAGES AND VILLEINS In areas of cleared, relatively flat land, farmers gather together for protection in villages. In woodland or hilly areas, they live in scattered huts near the small plots of land they farm. Villages in comparatively safe areas of the kingdom form around churches or lordly manors, or along waterways. In areas frequently overrun by invaders, defensive position takes precedence over convenience; villages form on hilltops or around castles and fortresses. When danger threatens, the villagers defend from a hilltop position or retreat behind castle walls. Farming takes place in open fields and pastures outside the village, to which the farmers travel each day. Buildings are wattle-and-daub hovels or longhouses, made of timber reinforced on the outside with a layer of air-dried clay applied over a lattice of branches. Another common structure is the sunken hut—a hole dug into the soil, possibly with a wooden floor. It can be used for storage or as housing. The lord of a village is most likely an absentee knight or, if the landlord is a religious institution, a cleric. Both knight and clerical lord usually descend from noble families. Instead of dealing directly with this minor noble,
CHAPTER 3
abound. Ambitious lords must play the king’s games or risk losing their fiefs—or their lives. Few courtiers remain on top for long; the most successful among them boast high Charisma scores and have several ranks in Bluff, Gather Information, Intimidate, Knowledge (nobility and royalty), Listen, Perform, and Sense Motive skills. Typically, a king spends the bulk of his time at a grand palace located in his kingdom’s oldest or most prosperous urban center. Wealthy monarchs maintain additional palaces in picturesque or remote spots throughout their realms.
THE CAMPAIGN
throne themselves. They might spend their time as rulers enriching their own coffers, or they might rule selflessly for the good of the king and the people. Some continue to perform their administrative duties after the monarch comes of age, taking the title of chamberlain. Regents also rule when a monarch is absent. A warrior king who goes off to do battle against the forces of evil might leave a sibling or other close relative to warm his throne. If villains capture a traveling king and hold him for ransom, the regent takes over at home. Depending on his honesty, a regent might drag his heels in paying the ransom—or he might even have schemed to engineer the capture in the first place. Most monarchs surround themselves with nobles of their realm. Landless nobles attend the king as full-time courtiers. Some kings tether powerful landed nobles to them by insisting on their regular attendance at court. This gesture reinforces loyalty, or at least keeps rebellious dukes and counts under a watchful eye. Lords forced to spend long periods at court can manage their domains only from a distance and place great trust in their bailiffs. Serious kings rely on the wisest of these courtiers for political advice. The most influential courtiers have high Wisdom and Intelligence scores, and several ranks in Diplomacy, Gather Information, Knowledge (geography, history, and nobility and royalty), and Sense Motive skills. Warlike rulers expect their nobles to train alongside them, becoming great warriors and generals. In such an environment, courtiers gain influence according to their adventurous exploits and will be high-level characters. More frivolous rulers create a social hothouse atmosphere where wits, fl irts, and gossips prosper. The king elevates or demotes officials at a whim, shuffling his temporary favorites in and out of an ever-expanding number of ceremonial positions. Schemes and seductions
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs VILLAGE ENCOUNTERS Player characters entering an unfamiliar village should not expect a warm welcome. Fearful of raiders and unaccustomed to dealing with strangers, villagers regard adventuring parties as threats until proven otherwise. A villager approached by adventurers typically avoids conversation, seeking out a reeve, beadle, or priest to do the talking. Once summoned, the authority figure carefully questions the adventurers, hoping to divine their intentions. Farmers are a conservative lot and respond best to eloquent folk of obvious virtue, such as clerics or paladins. Villages on roads leading to well-known dungeon complexes greet adventurers with greater sophistication, though with no less suspicion. Most residents can tell stories of abuse at the hands of thuggish treasure-seekers. Inns exist only in villages on extremely well-traveled roads. In other villages, locals might be willing to lodge the PCs in their homes once the characters earn the trust of the commoners. This calls for delicate negotiation—peasant
hosts want to pocket any fees the adventurers offer them, while village officials try to divert those payments to their lord’s treasury (or their own purses). If the PCs are on friendly terms with a lord, they can procure a letter of safe passage that urges good treatment from villages throughout her fief. The peasants won’t be literate, but reeves, bailiffs, and priests can read and will obey their lord’s demands in most cases. Mid- to high-level adventurers face little resistance from ordinary villagers. In fortified villages, they retreat inside castle walls. Most villages are under a knight’s protection; that knight and his local peers will eventually attack adventurers who repeatedly raid a village. If they fail, the governing overlord will hire other adventurers to suppress the bandits harassing her serfs. Lords are highly motivated to ward off bandits. A lord who can’t keep order in her lands becomes a laughingstock at court. An aggressive king might use the failure as reason to strip her of her fief.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
87
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
village residents live under the command of a bailiff, who, like them, is a commoner. Other local officials, namely the reeve and his assistant, the beadle, report to the bailiff. These functionaries collect rents, levy fines, and muster able-bodied peasants for battle when war is declared. In particularly enlightened places, peasants might elect a reeve, who serves not only as an authority figure but also as their representative to their lord. Manorial officials enforce the lord’s privileges. A muchresented example is the ban, granting the lord a monopoly over grain milling. He might even claim the village’s supply of manure for use as fertilizer. Most peasants are serfs, also known as villeins. Their right to farm certain parcels of the lord’s land carries with it a series of obligations. They are more indentured laborers than slaves, but because they must discharge these obligations, they lack freedom of movement. Their main obligation is the week-work, a set amount of labor they must perform on the lord’s lands. A detailed agreement, complete with a schedule, lays out the tasks serfs must perform. The main task of these workers is plowing, but other obligations include tallage—a tax payable to the lord, almost always in produce. Cash is a rare commodity among serfs, which is why many of them eagerly help adventurers, who are known to be free with their gold pieces. Almost any passage in a serf’s life is taxable by his lord; for example, a fee called a merchet is levied when a serf marries off his daughter. Often, serfs enjoy rights to free land cleared by themselves or their ancestors. After fulfilling their week-work obligations, they plow, plant, and harvest their own lands, but even these are usually subject to taxes. As areas become more technologically and socially advanced, the lords begin to take a more direct hand in the activities of their farmers, pooling their labor to increase production. Serfs become more like employees, following instructions issued by the bailiff, reeve, and beadle, rather than working off their obligations at their own speed. Disputes between serfs are resolved by the lord at a legal proceeding called a hallmote. For more on medieval justice, see Laws and Punishment on page 101.
TOWNS AND CITIES
88
Cities exist at ports, on trade routes, and at strategic points that must be fortified against invasion. Most are built on the foundations of older cities from ancient times. Excavations often turn up the rubbish of extinguished civilizations, as well as the occasional treasure or a longsealed passageway to underground realms. Medieval cities are considerably smaller than their ancient or modern counterparts. The countryside thrives on agriculture, but cities depend on commerce, which is still slowly recovering from the collapse of the old
empires. A thriving center might boast a population of 10,000 residents. The continent’s biggest capitals reach, on average, five or six times that number. Towns and cities owe homage to a lord, usually the king himself, but sometimes a powerful noble. They owe their existence to charters, documents of agreement between city founders and the governing lord. According to the terms of each charter, the lord forfeits close oversight of city affairs in exchange for a general rate of taxation. City-dwellers, called yeomen or freemen, are not vassals of their lord or bound by obligation to work a particular plot of land. Adventurers typically hail from this ambitious class of merchants, tradesmen, and scholars. A typical city is governed by a lord mayor and a council of aldermen, who oversee a small staff of public officials, including magistrates and tax collectors. The mayor and his council are unelected. In some cities, they simply hand off their posts to chosen successors. Posts in city government change hands either at customary intervals—every two years, for example—or whenever the current occupants wish to retire. In other cities, the mayor and aldermen are selected by the heads of local guilds, professional associations who tightly regulate their members’ affairs.
50 RUMORS AND HOOKS 1
2 3
4 5
6
7
8 9
10
A bandit gang preys on wounded and weary adventurers as they straggle down the road from the dungeon to the city. A black cloak was stolen from the Burnt Bridge tavern last night; sewn into the hem is a treasure map. A gigantic egg appeared in the town square last night. No one knows what might hatch out of it, but it’s going to happen soon. A deity walks the city streets disguised as a humble mortal. A hot-tempered knight has promised all his lands to his brother if he is bested at the upcoming jousting tournament. A leading churchman has announced a heretical doctrine; his fellow priests have demanded that he recant, on pain of excommunication. A wrestler named Drón Goldentress will perform three great quests for anyone who can beat her in a match. Agitation grows in a neighboring land for a renewed war against the kingdom. An eerie dog with glowing eyes stalks the city at night. The magnificent sorcerer Furioso was bitten by it, and now he can barely remember his own name. Ditchdiggers unearthed an ornate tin casket the other day. They can’t figure out how to open it, but won’t let anyone else try, either.
11
12
13
15 16
17
18
20
21
22
24 25 26 27
28
29 30 31
32
33 34 35 The astronomer Harun the Subtle (see #28)
Illus. by W. O’Connor
23
CHAPTER 3
19
Goblins tunneled a good distance under the city walls last year, but the authorities covered it up. Grave robbers have been digging up the bones of slain adventurers. They must be working for a lich or evil wizard. Luriez the horse trader is auctioning off Bravo, a clever and magnificent steed. His former owner, a luckless mercenary, lost him in a dice game. Magic items sold by Antesos Three-Beard have a peculiar way of finding their way back to his shop after the purchasers die. Many of a famous knight’s heroic feats were in fact performed by his squire, a young girl dressed as a boy. Mercenaries have taken sanctuary in the temple; the high priests want them out but are forbidden by the tenets of their faith to expel them. Pound for pound, the most valuable treasure in town is not silver or gold, but the cache of saffron hidden in the spice merchant’s shop. Priestess Ciana has great healing powers, but those she raises from the dead sometimes take on her personality traits. Pulsing green lights are frequently observed near the abandoned mines south of the city. Recent rains flooded the catacombs beneath the city; strange things are floating to the surface. Someone is stealing all of the town’s church bells. Somewhere in the city, the priceless Altar of Kych is hidden in plain sight. The armorer Casabon just received a shipment of Zhenish steel, which will make fine blades for those who can afford them. The astronomer Harun the Subtle reports sighting a circle of new red stars in the sky. The Royal Astrological Society has offered a reward to anyone who can conclusively explain the meaning of this omen. The beloved singer Dulari has fallen prey to a terrible illness, one the healers can’t cure. The bullying city watchman Moyalva has been extorting money from the weak and helpless. The courtier Vivando has fallen out of favor with the king, who suspects him of having eyes for the princess. The exiled prince of Cadis unwisely dismissed a churlish servant who knows too much about his master’s business. The feathers that rained down on Beggar’s Alley last night came from the wings of battling archons. The floorboards beneath the Trembling Pig Inn are hollow and full of stolen gold. Pirates have disrupted grain shipments meant for the kingdom; starvation looms if traders cannot resupply in time.
THE CAMPAIGN
14
Drinking a poison surely meant for someone else, the meek baker Oswald dropped dead in a tavern last night. During the day, the headsman’s daughter appears rather homely, but under the moonlight, she is the fairest young maiden in the realm. Every hundred years or so, a black, venomous rain falls on the city, killing hundreds of people. A recurrence is months overdue. The Superordinate Six, a band of famed adventurers, have failed to return from an expedition to the Rat City ruins.
89
36 37 38
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
39 40
41 42
43 44
45
46
47
48
49 50
The high sheriff becomes violently enraged if anyone accuses him of having orc blood. The king is a usurper who has the real heir to the throne chained up in his basement. The king plans to build new watchtowers around the city. Laborers, once desperate for work, will soon be hard to hire. The king’s chief minister plans to step down, making way for his clever but abrasive protégé. The philosopher Frabreck has released another pamphlet arguing for the conquest of the orc lands, so that its peoples can be liberated from evil and placed under the king’s benevolent rule. The rancher Septimus is raising a flock of strange reptilian beasts on his farm. The retainers of an unpopular knight quelled an uprising on his lands by firing crossbows into an unarmed throng. The rich merchant Zaguant has learned that pirates have sold his son into slavery. The son and daughter of two rival merchant families eloped a few weeks ago. Both fathers offer a reward for the son: his father aims to protect him, but the girl’s wants him dead. Whenever a member of the murderous Lampedusa clan is slain, the weapon used to deal the death blow is permanently imbued with powerful magic. The young adventurer Brialda carries a shield bearing the crest of the Acatero family, even though, as an illegitimate daughter of that clan, she is not entitled to it. An ancient throne lies buried in a field nearby. Anyone who sits on the throne for an entire night will rise from it a wise man or a lunatic. They say that if you listen long enough to the water lapping against the shore near the statue of King Brand, you will hear the name of an innocent person you are fated to kill. They’re slaughtering more than just cows and sheep at the old abattoir down by the piers. Whenever ravens gather on the clock tower, a mighty hero dies.
PEOPLE AT WORK
90
Medieval city dwellers have different jobs and responsibilities from their rural counterparts. To keep profits and the marketplace stable, most workers who deal with any sort of industry belong to guilds. Most workers don’t have a choice of whether to belong to these guilds, since many businesses and customers will deal only with guild-run shops or laborers. Most city inhabitants begin their careers as apprentices in their early to mid teens. The workday is long and
grueling, just as it is for common folk of the fields, and if a city dweller cannot work, whether due to illness or injury, she is likely to lose her job. Health care, sick days, and vacation are innovations of the modern-day workplace that medieval D&D city dwellers do not enjoy. The following sections detail a number of guild types common to these urban environments.
MERCANTILE GUILDS AND OCCUPATIONS Chapter 6 details nine different categories of guild, but of those nine guilds, one in particular is more complex than the others. The various mercantile guilds of the D&D worlds are as varied as the number of monsters that lurk in its dungeons. Whereas the other eight guilds are fairly focused in the types of services they provide, mercantile guilds run from the artistic to the pedestrian, from bricklayers to alchemists. Simply put, mercantile guilds are the only ones to encompass the full potential of the Craft and Profession skills. Their members are the workers, providers, merchants, and crafters of the city, and in many cases a city’s success or failure hinges on these guilds. To many city dwellers, the guilds exercise greater power over day-to-day life than any other authority. In most cities, guilds are so powerful that in order for someone to practice an occupation, he must belong to the guild that governs it. Guildsmen jealously guard their privileges, keeping their membership rolls trim so the market for their services will not be flooded. Trades run in families; the son of a guild member in good standing will fi nd it easy to gain membership, where an outsider might be frozen out. Guild rules prevent members from unfairly competing with one another, often in ways that a modern businessman would find outrageously restrictive. For example, in many cities it is forbidden to call out to a customer currently standing at a competitor’s stall. Guild rules serve the prosperity and convenience of the proprietors, not the customers. Any legally permissible occupation practiced in a city has an associated mercantile guild. A guild’s influence varies depending on the status and importance of the trade. Trades might be subdivided to a seemingly absurd degree. Tradesmen, professionals, and other active guild members comprise about 10% of a city’s population. To determine a random citizen’s occupation, first roll on Table 3–1: Guild Member Occupation to determine the general type of work she does. Then go to one of the following nine tables (3–2 through 3–10) to find the character’s exact specialty. These tables can also be used to randomly determine the specialty of a random shop in a city, or the purpose of a merchant’s stall or caravan that a combat suddenly breaks into. Little can add more chaos to a battle than crashing through the back of a tent into a chicken butcher’s operation!
Table 3–1: Guild Member Occupation d% Occupation Type 01–04 Artisan (Table 3–2) 05–10 Construction (Table 3–3) 11–30 Craftsman (Table 3–4) 31–42 Food trade (Table 3–5) 43–67 Garment trade (Table 3–6) 68–80 Labor (Table 3–7) 81–85 Merchant (Table 3–8) 86–90 Profession (Table 3–9) 91–100 Service (Table 3–10)
Wood carvers add ornament to furnishings and architectural beams. They sculpt holy symbols and religious figurines. Some create images on wood blocks for printing. Table 3–2: Artisan Specialties d% Occupation 01–64 Jeweler or goldsmith 65–74 Painter (art) 75–88 Sculptor 89–100 Wood carver
Pop. 21 5 5 4
CHAPTER 3
THE CAMPAIGN
Each occupation table, under the heading “Pop.,” provides Construction an average number of active guild members in the given Carpenters make furniture and cabinets. They build the timber frames around which most of a city’s buildings are occupation in a medieval-style city with a population of constructed. Adventurers seeking floor plans to recent 10,000. For the artisan, craftsman, food trade, merchant, structures might grease a carpenter’s palm. and profession categories, this number typically refers Masons build the city’s most durable and expensive to the number of places of business, and does not count apprentices, employees, or family members working under structures, painstakingly mortaring perfectly cut pieces a proprietor’s roof. of stone into sturdy walls. Most of the occupations mentioned on each of these Painters cover a building’s wooden or plaster surfaces tables are discussed briefly in the text that follows the with paint, decorating them and protecting them from table. A few occupations have names that are fully descripwear. They mix their own paints; specific recipes are tive of their roles or functions, such as scabbard maker zealously guarded guild secrets. Roofers build roofs, most commonly with straw thatchand fishmonger. In such cases, no further information ing, which must be repaired frequently. Roofers can also is given. install durable but much more costly clay shingles. Artisan Jewelers make, repair, and sell jewelry. They cut gems and Table 3–3: Construction Specialties d% Occupation Pop. create settings from silver, gold, or other precious metals. 01–31 Carpenter 19 Adventurers seek them out to sell gems and jewels found as 32–66 Mason 21 treasure, or to convert heavy loads of coin to light, portable 67–77 Painter (building) 7 78–89 Plasterer 7 gems and jewelry. Jewelers are intimately acquainted with 90–100 Roofer 6 ebbs and flows in the city’s wealth—suddenly rich people buy from them, while nobles and burghers weighed down by debt sell. Jewelers won’t betray client secrets for free, but Craftsman they might be persuaded to answer adventurers’ questions Blacksmiths forge common items out of metal, from nails through bribes or intimidation. to horseshoes. They repair damaged iron items. A separate Painters were in low demand in an authentic medieval guild of arms dealers buys and resells existing armaments. setting. They created small icons depicting deities and Some blacksmiths are also skilled at crafting weapons and saints, but large-scale images were left to the weavers of armor, although these laborers are more rare. Most such tapestries. Portraits of private individuals had gone out craftsfolk are employed by nobles or the king directly to of style. Perspective, the use of line and draftsmanship manufacture arms and armor for their warriors, and they call themselves armorsmiths or weaponsmiths, not simply to create an illusion of three-dimensionality, had yet to the generic “blacksmith.” be introduced. Of course, in a typical D&D world, it’s Coopers make barrels. perfectly acceptable to fudge these rules; in a wealthy Glassblowers make drinking vessels, window panes, city, it’s not unheard of for painters to be much sought and other glass items. after as methods of preserving an important noble’s Harness makers specialize in making the various reins coronation at court or the foundation of a new temple. As a general rule, the more leisure time and less warfare required for riding and teamstering. They are looked down a city has to contend with, the more in demand artistic upon by their hated rivals, the more skilled saddlers. painters become. Kettle makers are coppersmiths specializing in the Sculptors create works of art out of stone, mostly to manufacture of kettles, pots, and pans. decorate churches and the homes of the wealthy. Less Locksmiths make and repair locks. They are both often, they create freestanding figures or monuments. expert lockpicks and ingenious creators of nasty traps to prick, slash, and otherwise deter thieves. Locksmiths
91
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
92
manufacture thieves’ kits; the honest ones will build kits from door to door and might work inside the manors only for adventurers whose pilfering furthers the cause of nobles and burghers. Although rarely allowed to stray far from the back entrance, they accumulate much of good. Less scrupulous locksmiths sell to all comers, and likely also enjoy extensive contacts within the city’s local gossip. criminal population. As such, they are a good source of Wagon makers build wagons, carts, wheelbarrows, and information and connections, if approached with the similar conveyances. necessary subtlety. Even a good-aligned locksmith is a Wheelwrights make and repair wheels; they act as supskilled poisoner, enjoying a license from the authorities pliers to the wagon makers. to keep small quantities of venom for use in his traps. The prevention of theft is, after all, an indisputably Table 3–4: Craftsman Specialties d% Occupation Pop. virtuous act. The license to possess poison is known 01–04 Blacksmith 7 as an attorage. Locksmiths face severe penalties, not to 05–11 Cooper 14 mention revocation of their rights of attorage, if caught 12–14 Glassblower 5 15–17 Harness maker 5 dispensing poison for use in something other than traps. 18–19 Kettle maker 5 They might not possess ingested poisons. They acquire 20–22 Locksmith 5 their poisons from apothecaries (see page 94). 23–30 Potter 15 Potters make ceramic items, from vessels to tiles. 31–33 Ropemaker 5 34–35 Rugmaker 5 No dungeoneer’s supply mission is complete without a 36–40 Saddler 10 stop at the ropemaker’s shop. 41–42 Sailmaker 5 Rugmakers make rugs, whether simple and unadorned 43–48 Scabbard maker 12 or colorful and elaborately woven. Wealthy people collect 49–68 Shipbuilder 40 (or other local specialty) expensive rugs and import them from great distances. 69–74 Soap maker 7 Well-heeled rugmakers deal in these luxury goods and 75–80 Tanner 10 will purchase artistic carpeting recovered from dungeons, 81–90 Tinker 30 provided that it’s still in acceptable condition. 91–94 Wagon maker 10 95–100 Wheelwright 10 Saddlers are leatherworkers specializing not only in saddles but also often in the creation of leather armor and other intricate garments. Food Trade Bakers are the town’s breadmakers. Guild regulations Sailmakers make and cut canvas. In great demand in prevent them from competing with the pastry makers, and port cities, they serve the adventurer’s market elsewhere vice versa. As every household in town sends someone to by selling tents and, per a special agreement with the the baker’s shop on a daily basis, a bakery is an even better ropemakers’ guild, their accessories. place than a tavern to spread or pick up a neighborhood’s Shipbuilders are specialized carpenters who build freshest gossip. sailing vessels. Only a few select ports have full-fledged Beer sellers brew and sell beer for household use. Despite shipbuilding industries. Otherwise, substitute another local industry on that line of Table 3–5. The product should guild rules, hot competition exists between beer sellers; be a high-value export item that can be shipped throughout each hawks her own distinct brews. Some specialize in the known world. Examples might include especially fine premium ales and sell to the wealthy; others make cheap, rugs, fabrics, or tapestries; a distinctive alcoholic beverage; honest brews for the common toiler. or some item of fantasy. Chicken butchers buy, butcher, and sell poultry. They Soap makers produce soap, glue, bleach, and lye. They bitterly envy the meat butchers. serve as the town’s renders, carting away horses and other Millers operate mills that convert grain into flour. dead animals to be boiled down into tallow. Their strong Most mills are situated close to the farms where grain is produced, but local lords typically enjoy a monopoly on smells and raw, ruined skin marks them as outcasts, and milling. Peasants farming free land often prefer to have their workshops are usually found in the slums or other its grain milled in the city, where the millers undercut less than desirable regions of a city. the fees charged by landowners. Unknown thugs Tanners, who make leather from the hides of cows sometimes sabotage urban mills; most folk assume such and other animals, exhibit a similar reek. Some make criminals have been hired by lords seeking to protect simple leather garments. The wealthy and numerous their privileges. shoemakers’ guilds vehemently police the activities of Pastry makers produce pies, mostly meat pies—a staple tanners to make sure they don’t sneak in some cobbling of the medieval diet. They also make fruit pies and a few on the side. Tinkers repair small household items, from metal pots simple desserts. A pieman’s stall, like a bakery, is an excelto damaged saddles. Unlike most tradespeople, they travel lent source of local gossip.
Glove merchant Hat maker Mercer Purse maker Shoemaker Tailor Used garment dealer Weaver
4 11 14 9 73 39 24 17
Table 3–7: Labor Specialties d% Occupation 01–04 Bleacher 05–14 Dungsweeper 15–35 Laborer 36–42 Laundress 43–71 Maidservant 72–77 Messenger 78–85 Porter Anyone using the Disguise skill to appear as a serf, 86–91 Teamster 92–100 Water carrier servant, or other low-ranking person will need to shop
at a used garment dealer. Not all her wares will be dodgy, though; fine clothing is an expensive luxury and is often sold to pay off unexpected debts. All but the poorest individuals in a medieval-style world will own more than a few changes of clothing.
CHAPTER 3
22–23 24–27 28–32 33–36 37–66 67–82 83–92 93–100
THE CAMPAIGN
Taverners run taverns. For more on taverns, see Weavers make fabrics. Some specialize in tapestries, large-scale images woven into fabrics and hung as decopage 99. rations inside the great halls of kings, abbots, nobles, Wine sellers provide wines, offering an even greater and burghers. variety of high-potency beverages than do beer sellers. They sell out of shops for home use, and they are not to be confused with wandering wine criers hired by pub owners Labor to advertise their wares. Bleachers toil in horrible conditions to whiten flour or linens. Table 3–5: Food Trade Specialties Dungsweepers are the lowest of the low in the labor d% Occupation Pop. unions. These people clean the city streets of refuse, horse 01–09 Baker 12 dung, and worse. Cities equipped with sewage systems 10–15 Beer seller 7 generally don’t have as many dungsweepers (who are 16–24 Chicken butcher 10 25–32 Fishmonger 8 usually called sewerers in this case). In cities without 33–40 Meat butcher 8 underground sewers, their role is critical in keeping a 41–46 Miller 7 settlement clean and healthy. Still, despite the important 47–62 Pastry maker 21 role the dungsweeper serves, his lot is a lonely one. 63–70 Spice merchant 7 71–90 Taverner 26 Petty laborers fan out through the city in search of 91–100 Wine seller 11 odd jobs and other menial work. They must refuse tasks over which other guilds enjoy exclusive rights, ruling Garment Trade out most of the obvious jobs adventurers might assign Most of the garment trade occupations are self-explanato them. tory and of little interest to the adventurer, so they’re not The guild of laundresses cleans clothing for houseall described below. holds whose members are too busy to wash their own The large number of furriers testifies to the popularity garments but not wealthy enough to afford full-time, of fur garments in a medieval-flavored world. in-house servants. A mercer is a textile merchant. Most textiles are made in Legally, only members of the messengers’ guild might the home and purchased as raw fabric. High-end mercers convey messages, written or verbal, from one person to purvey pricey brocades, silks, and exotic elven fabrics. another. Street urchins or laborers who take adventurAlthough the standard medieval footwear consists of ers’ money in exchange for messenger services are at a flimsy slipper, shoemakers are typically among a city’s risk of receiving a good beating, sanctioned by law. most prosperous tradesmen. Guild members undertake a solemn oath to protect Adventurers purchasing the standard outfits from the client confidentiality. Player’s Handbook will frequent a tailor’s shop. Ordinary Porters carry goods and other heavy items on foot. They are forbidden to carry water; this is the bailiwick of folk wear homemade or used clothing; custom-made garanother guild: the aptly named water carriers. Teamsters ments set their wearers apart. drive carts and carriages. They haul items from one place Table 3–6: Garment Trade Specialties to another and load and unload the materials beside their d% Occupation Pop. vehicles, but they won’t carry any goods one step farther. 01–03 Buckle maker 7 That’s a porter’s job. 04–21 Furrier 43 Pop. 5 32 40 9 40 8 8 8 12
93
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
94
Merchant Profession For general information on shops and sellers of goods, see Advocates assist defendants in criminal trials. In kingdoms Shops on page 99. with well-codified legal systems, they’re legal experts, Dealers in antiquities and curios are common in cities capable of reciting chapter and verse from the relevant frequented by adventurers and other treasure-seekers. law code. Where kings and lords rule by fi at, advocates They buy and sell figurines, statues, paintings, furniare popular minor nobles who trade on their personal ture, architectural decorations, and other sundry items relationships with relevant authorities. The former type of value. They purchase primarily from adventurers and must be aggressive and picky; the latter, friendly and sell to wealthy collectors of interesting or mysterious comforting. Player characters hiring advocates to defend bric-a-brac. In some cities, curios dealers are forbidden them should be sure to pick the right personality type for to traffic in items under the control of another guild. the legal system at hand. For example, they might be permitted to resell gems Apothecaries are medieval pharmacists; they supply and jewels only to members of the jewelers’ guild, and drugs, draughts, and medicinal potions, as well as the not to the public. Antiquities dealers are sources of ingredients to make such things. They provide advice on invaluable information—it is to their advantage to steer the proper use of medicines without encroaching on the their vendors toward the most promisingly lucrative rights of the physics’ guild. Like locksmiths, a few of the new looting sites. city’s most trusted, well-established apothecaries have A chandler is a general provisioner from whom adventurrights of attorage (a license from the authorities to keep ers can purchase miscellaneous items not covered by the poisons on their premises). Town councils and local lords alike might grant attorage permits to adventurers to buy charters of other guilds. Many sell mostly soap, bleach, and use poisons. These licenses typically cost 50 gp per paint, candles, and other household supplies. Others specialize in odd items favored by adventures, from caltrops year. Without them, possession of any poison is a serious to whistles. crime punishable by heavy fi nes, exile, or death. Most Cutlers sell knives, spoons, and other items of cutlery. jurisdictions completely forbid the formulation, sale, or Hay merchants sell hay and other feed for horses. In a use of ingested poisons, which most often figure in surtown where many people own exotic mounts, they sell reptitious murder. feed for those creatures as well. Cartographers, who make copies of maps, exist in Oil merchants sell cooking oil and fuel for lamps and cities where adventurers ply their trade. They are not lanterns. surveyors or explorers but skilled, specialized scribes Dealers in weapons and armor do not make their who can turn a party mapper’s rough scrawls of a dungeon layout into beautiful illuminated art. The accuracy wares; they buy and sell used equipment. The typical of their maps is based solely on the original works. adventurer spends much of his early career trading up at When a map is a copy of a copy of a copy, additional his local weapon dealer. These merchants know the new adventurers in town, though they take care never to burn a inaccuracies creep in over time, no matter how careful regular customer with indiscreet chatter. They might take the copyist. A reputation for discretion is essential to the finder’s fees to connect patrons to adventurers and vice cartographer’s trade. Adventurers zealously guard the security of their maps and have been known to express versa. They can also help parties recruit new members. violent displeasure when a copyist leaks details or, Some might even form syndicates, perhaps in concert with antiquities dealers or other merchants who resell worse, makes copies for sale to others. Cartographers dungeon loot, to equip, sponsor, and direct adventuring safeguard their premises and riddle their shops with parties of their own. traps to discourage thieves from helping themselves Wood sellers provide fuel for fires and furnaces. to the treasure maps under their care. Physics or chirurgeons diagnose illnesses, prescribe Table 3–8: Merchant Specialties drugs, and perform surgery. Many are low-level clerics. d% Occupation Pop. Some cater only to wealthy clients, while others provide 01–09 Antiquities or curios dealer 5 their healing gifts to all who need them, including dis10–35 Chandler 14 reputable adventurers. 36–43 Cutler 4 44–51 Hay merchant 4 In a world without printing presses, scribes make 52–59 Horse trader 4 books and documents. They can copy simple documents 60–75 Oil merchant 9 in a basic, readable script, or create gorgeous illuminated 76–91 Weapon or armor dealer 9 manuscripts in a decorative calligraphic style, complete 92–100 Wood seller 4 with vivid images highlighted in gold, silver, or magic paint. Scribes might be present to make records at official
proceedings, such as important trials. They also create Table 3–10: Service Specialties d% Occupation pamphlets, notices, and wanted posters. Table 3–9: Profession Specialties d% Occupation 01–15 Advocate 16–35 Apothecary 36–47 Cartographer 48–77 Physic/chirurgeon 78–100 Scribe
Pop. 6 5 2 15 5
01–34 35–40 41–48 49–60 61–65 66–100
Barber Bather Broker Innkeeper Money changer Stabler
Pop. 30 5 2 5 2 5
NONMERCANTILE GUILDS CHAPTER 3
THE CAMPAIGN
Mercantile guilds aren’t the only guilds that operate in Service towns and cities—they’re merely the most prolific. Other Barbers cut hair, provide shaves, and otherwise attend to guilds can often be found in settlements, although not in the personal grooming of their clients. Some also provide anywhere near the numbers of the mercantile guilds. In first aid and medical advice, or even perform surgery, to fact, it’s not uncommon for a town or city to be missing the acute displeasure of the physics’ guild. Those who representation by these other guilds, but as a city grows can afford good medical treatment do not seek it from a larger, it becomes increasingly more likely that members hair-cutter. Barbers often become confidants to their cliof these other guilds are present. ents, but they rarely spill secrets to adventurers—unless the price for talking greatly exceeds the potential loss Table 3–11: Nonmercantile Guild Professions d% Occupation Pop. of business. 01–04 Alchemist 10 In a truly medieval-flavored world, a bath is a rare event 05–16 Clerk 40 in any citizen’s life, occurring once or twice a year even 17–30 Criminal 82 31–34 Elected official 10 for the wealthiest and most fashion-conscious. Those who 35–42 Entertainer 45 wish to make the most of a special occasion go to a public 43–60 Guard 40 bath, where they receive a thorough scrubbing from a 61–63 Magical artisan 3 member of the bathers’ guild. 64–66 Magical tutor 9 67–74 Mirabicary 6 Brokers are middlemen who assist their clients in hiring 75–82 Priest 20 labor and services. They mostly serve the adventurer’s 83–92 Professor/tutor/sage 5 market by quickly and efficiently rounding up hirelings 93–100 Sellspell 5 and freelancers. They charge their clients a fee equal to Members of the alchemists’ guild—usually, wizards who 10–20% of a month’s wages for any hirelings they employ, have retired from active adventuring—are licensed to sell or 5% of the fee paid for a one-time service. Guild rules alchemical items, spell components, and other supplies keep these arrangements flexible, and brokers alter their for spellcasters. They sell alchemist’s lab equipment and terms when reasonable. other objects required for magical research. Some also deal Innkeepers run inns; their guild keeps competition in scrolls, wizards’ books, and occult tomes. Alchemist’s within bounds. For more details, see Establishments on establishments see plenty of magical shop talk; any page 98. spellcaster wishing to make contact with colleagues in Money changers exchange foreign coins for local town can quickly do so by getting acquainted with the currency and large denominations for small (and vice proprietors. Characters can use the Craft (alchemy) skill versa). For game purposes, a gold piece is a gold piece, but without belonging to the guild, which concerns itself only in a medieval-style world, each kingdom mints its own with vendors of occult supplies. distinctive coinage, usually with a picture of the current Clerks are similar to scribes, in that one of their primary monarch emblazoned on one side. Merchants in most kingdoms accept only local coins, so adventurers who cross functions is to record dictation from government meetborders must exchange their money from one currency ings. They also organize and catalog government files and papers, and manage the day-to-day bureaucracy of a city’s into another. In most instances, this dull activity can be political figures. assumed to happen between sessions. However, money All cities and towns have criminals, but relatively changers can also serve as fonts of information, as they’re few of them could be considered career criminals. This the first to know when a new band of adventurers comes category does not count the idle pickpocket, the woman lumbering into town weighed down by sacks of foreign who steals bread out of desperation to feed her family, or or ancient coin. Stablers run livery operations where travelers can leave the depraved lunatic who kills to satiate the quarrelsome their mounts to be groomed, fed, and sheltered. voices in his head. These are people who have turned to crime as a way of life, as a method to put food on the
95
Illus. by R. Spencer
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
This shopkeeper isn’t overly impressed by the treasure an adventurer wants to sell
96
table and to fund their excesses. These criminals don’t have any other job, and are often members of thieves’s guilds, assassins’ guilds, and the like. Almost all career criminals have a cover job; when you roll up a criminal, you should roll again to determine what profession he operates under on a day-to-day basis. Elected officials are those chosen by the community for a role in a city’s leadership. This category also includes those who come into the role of leadership through other means, such as by hereditary inheritance. Entertainers cover a wide range of talents, from singers to musicians, from carnies to ballet dancers. Many households and businesses retain armed guards for protection. The members of a guards’ guild, though, are freelancers—typically 1st- or 2nd-level fighters or warriors—who hire on for short-term assignments. Clients looking for defenders against tough opponents must go further afield than the guild and hire experienced adventurers. Guard guilds are much larger in lawless towns, where organized bandit bands frequently assault businesses. Magical artisans are divine, arcane, or psionic talents who use their magic to create works of art or magic items. They
generally don’t sell to the public, but work off consignment through a mirabicary or some similar merchant. Magical tutors are divine, arcane, or psionic talents who spend their time teaching students the ways of magic. Some tutor only one or two students at a time, while others are professors at magic schools who teach entire classes of hopeful wizards, priests, or psions. Favorite shopkeepers of adventurers everywhere, mirabicaries buy, sell, and trade magic items. Most are wizards or rogues of surprisingly high level. Their well-guarded shops boast an array of exquisitely hidden traps and mighty reinforcements. A mirabicaries’ guild relentlessly pursues anyone who tries to rob a member. It’s an easy matter for the typical guild to field a band of adventurers eager to hunt down and destroy any would-be bandits. Mirabicaries know all of a town’s most formidable dungeon-delvers and have magic items on hand to generously reward them for their services. They maintain close ties to local authorities and can have a writ of outlawry (see page 103) drawn up at a moment’s notice. Priests are almost always clerics, but can sometimes be druids, paladins, rangers, or any other divine spellcaster.
Adventurers interact in any significant way with only about 20% of a city’s population. The rest are children, the elderly, the infirm, household servants, hirelings, and other background characters. As already mentioned, half of the active characters in a city will be guild members. The remaining 10% fall into the following categories. Landed noble families often maintain manors in town. They take part in their own social affairs, but are usually forbidden by the terms of a city’s charter from taking part in its government. If a king maintains a court in the city, nobles can get all the politics they can handle there.
CHAPTER 3
OTHER CITY DWELLERS
Otherwise, they’re content to enjoy the diversions of the city, while at the same time remaining above it. The young bravos of noble families are notorious trouble-seekers, always on the lookout for an excuse to draw their swords. In the university district, armed noble sons and daughters might become an anarchic law unto themselves; ordinary citizens fear student riots. Mercantile guild members are small businessmen, but the titans of medieval-style commerce are the burghers, traders, and bankers who move goods on a nationwide or international scale. They run shipping concerns, import goods from far away, and maintain large warehouses. Burghers supply guild merchants with the items they sell. Unlike their social betters, the nobles, successful burghers have plenty of cash. One merchant house might employ dozens or even hundreds of workers as bookkeepers, teamsters, guards, and porters. They occupy grandiose mansions, employ large household staffs, and display their wealth openly. Still, even the shabbiest noble secretly looks down his nose at members of the merchant class, a prejudice most burghers feel acutely. As the importance of trade grows, many burghers seek political influence in keeping with their newfound wealth. Some gain prominence by marrying into relatively impoverished noble families, especially those without lands to profit from. Others squeeze money-hungry nobles by lending them sums they cannot repay. In some countries, the king himself might be up to his neck in debt to the merchant class, having taken out gigantic loans to fund his wars. Burghers must be careful not to take this too far; unjust kings can wipe out these debts at the stroke of a pen. But no king or noble wants to risk killing off trade altogether or souring other burghers’ desire to lend to them. With large coffers of cash at their disposal, burghers serve as excellent patrons for adventuring parties. They bankroll dungeon expeditions and are fervent collectors, paying handsomely for antiquities and other art objects. They might hire adventurers to rescue kidnapped relatives, clear trade routes of bandits, or explore distant lands in search of new markets or products. Many people join the clergy in a medieval-style setting. Inheritance laws provide for only the first son (or, in an egalitarian setting, daughter) to take over an estate or business empire when a noble or burgher dies. Many younger siblings are therefore put in the care of the church. Ambitious ones rise in a clerical hierarchy as priests. More humble types join brotherhoods or nunneries. They might be cloistered, meaning that they spend their days in an abbey far from civilization, engaged in scholarship, craft production, and contemplation. Cloistered clergy are rarely encountered in the city. More worldly brothers and nuns can be found in urban environments, providing for the poor or performing other everyday acts of devotion
THE CAMPAIGN
These are members of an established religion who lead prayer rituals for the citizens, offer their services and spells to the faithful, and generally work to better the teachings of their chosen deity to any who will listen. Cities are hubs of scholarship; many house relatively new institutions of learning known as universities. Scholars who teach at universities but also freelance as researchers and purveyors of information belong to the professors’ guild. Sages are independent scholars, often those whose learning derives from experience and direct observation; they fund their pursuits by advising adventurers and others in need of esoteric lore. Tutors are general educators mostly hired by wealthy households to teach young children. Many religious institutions also provide a general education to young men and women, either in exchange for donations or as training for novice clerics. Sellspells (the term is a variation on sellsword, a name given to mercenaries) are spellcasters who work magic for a price, often for commercial purposes. Typically low-level wizards, sorcerers, and clerics, sellspells usually serve useful but mundane ends. Disguise self is popular at festival times with rich clients who wish to assume an exotic or alluring new form at a party. Lullaby cures insomnia. Silent image augments commercial signs with arresting illusory images. Other commonly requested spells for hire include comprehend languages, detect magic, detect poison, identify, mending, purify food and drink, and speak with animals. Clerics who work as sellspells generally hand over their fees to the common treasuries of the churches and temples where they live and work. They won’t perform magic in furtherance of any cause that conflicts with their church’s doctrine. Most of their secular colleagues also avoid casting spells for evil purposes, as the majority of sellspells desire to be perceived as honest businessmen. Many sellspells retired from active adventuring after a taste of its dangers, and are sensitive to slights from those who question their retreat to a safe and comfortable life. They are extremely reluctant to travel outside the city limits, much less place themselves in physical danger, to cast their spells.
97
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
favored by their deities. Worldly deities encourage their priests to exercise political power; their priests can be found at court, petitioning lords to obey their godly commands. Many estates belong to religious institutions and require clerical functionaries to conduct business in town, selling their produce and banking the proceeds. Aside from a few unobtrusive holy symbols, some priests are indistinguishable from a town’s more prosperous burghers. They might hire adventurers to recover lost holy relics, rescue captured clergy, take righteous vengeance against the followers of evil deities, or accompany missionaries into hostile territory. Large cities, especially those where order has broken down, accumulate a class of the indigent—destitute people with no real means of support. Many have left surrounding fiefs after hardships or conflicts with relatives or the local lords. They might be refugees forced to flee their homelands by war or other disasters. Medieval cities offer little hope for the impoverished, except as recipients of charity. The guild system prevents them from competing with existing workers in nearly any category, so most live in despair and squalor. The most aggressive form criminal gangs, preying primarily on those around them, but also on adventurers and others who stray toward the cheap side of town.
ESTABLISHMENTS The following locations will commonly fi nd their way to the top of a list of places PCs want to visit. Most fulfill basic functions—a place to eat or sleep—but double as excellent resources for information or contacts.
INNS Actual inns of the Middle Ages were primitive—primarily, large halls offering bedding and floor space in a large common area. Few people traveled, and wandering traders and players often preferred to set up a wagon camp
outside town. However, in a world where adventurers often come stumbling into town laden with coins, inns offer this class of well-heeled vagabonds greater privacy and comfort. The typical inn includes a small common room where ale and simple breakfasts are provided to guests at set times. Inns are run by a family, perhaps augmented by a few chambermaids. Sometimes converted from large manor halls, they maintain a dozen or so rooms on two or three floors. Those catering to adventurers might offer vaults or lockboxes for the storage of treasure, trapped locks for the doors, and perhaps even magical alarm measures to alert guests to the approach of brigands or enemies.
EATING HALLS The restaurant, in which customers sit down at separate tables and order custom-cooked meals from a menu, is a postmedieval invention. In a medieval-style world, adventurers sup at eating halls: large, barnlike establishments where they rub elbows with fellow customers while seated together on long benches at gigantic tables. Everyone eats the same meal. It might change from day to day, but more likely, an eating hall serves only one signature dish, such as mutton or beef. Diners pay a flat fee and generally eat food and quaff ale until they can barely move. A meat dish is the main attraction, but grain dishes, from breads to porridges, make up the bulk of most meals. Root vegetables, such as beets, carrots, turnips, and parsnips, are served most of the year. Green vegetables include asparagus, cabbage, and spinach. Certain foods are eaten only by the lowly; in most places, a willingness to consume onions is a sign of a peasant upbringing. Newcomers in a neighborhood eating hall attract notice. The type of attention drawn depends on the local attitude toward strangers. Diners are talkative, shouting and laughing throughout the meal. The quality of the gossip varies according to
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs INN AND TAVERN NAMES Inns and taverns and DUNGEONS & DRAGONS seem as inexorably intertwined as roots in the earth. Campaigns can (and often do) begin in in these locations, and they’re usually some of the first places PCs seek out when visiting a new city. The NPC owners of the world’s inns and taverns realize this and try to give their establishments catchy and memorable names. d20 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
98
Adjective Black Green Red Golden White Blue Dripping
Noun Dog Horse Rat Fish Giant Dragon Vampire
d20 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Adjective Wet Drunken Tipsy Welcome Scurvy Rusty Dizzy
If you’re in a bind and the PCs have come to a town you only sketched out a few minutes earlier, you can use the following table to generate memorable names for inns and taverns. Simply roll d20 twice, once for an adjective and once for a noun, and presto—instant tavern name. Noun Elf Gnome Dwarf Orc Halfling Fool Wench
d20 15 16 17 18 19 20
Adjective Hungry Thirsty Sleeping Twisted Spinning Dancing
Noun Thug Pirate Priest Boot Bucket Tankard
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
Taverns range in sophistication according to the wealth of the neighborhood. In poor areas, a tavern is little more than an impromptu party in the home of a brewer. In the richest, they are well-appointed halls that sell dozens of quality wines. Whatever neighborhood they serve, pubs are always located in high-traffic areas—on major intersections, near public squares, and even adjacent to temples. In most pubs, it’s hard to tell whether the drinking is an excuse to gamble, or the gambling is an excuse to drink. Dice games are by far the most popular form of gambling. Gamblers caught with shaved or trick dice will be thrashed by enraged customers. Many taverns employ low-level spellcasters to ensure that dice have not been tainted by magic. Real medieval taverns were hotbeds of prostitution. If you prefer an idealized setting, you might want to omit history’s seedier details.
SHOPS A shopkeeper’s store is also his home. Business is most often conducted from a stall on the street in front of the building. Craftsmen act as their own billboards, working outside to attract the attention of passersby. Shutters separate one storekeeper’s wares from those of his neighbor. A storekeeper who maintains a large inventory usually leaves his customer to wait on the street while he heads into his shop to locate a requested item and bring it back out for inspection. This arrangement cuts down on armed robbery, since would-be thieves must linger in the full scrutiny of a busy commercial area. Shopkeepers might compete for customers, but they band together to discourage robbery.
100 INSTANT NPC AGENDAS When running campaign encounters, especially in a town or city environment, count on players to surprise you by seeking out encounters with walk-on NPCs you haven’t detailed. Whether their characters want to speak to merchants, burghers, servants, or criminals, this list of instant personalities and agendas is perfect for surprise NPCs.
1 Accusatory: believes the PCs are up to something, and isn’t shy about saying so. 2 Apologetic: desperately seeks the PCs’ forgiveness for a minor error, real or imagined. 3 Attentive: fixates on one PC, whom he tries to impress at the rest of the party’s expense. 4 Authoritarian: sees herself as the PCs’ superior and expects their head-nodding respect. 5 Avuncular: feels he’s learned life’s lessons and is eager to heap advice on any young person who will listen. 6 Battle-ready: seeks advice on an upcoming duel (or other confrontation) with an old enemy. 7 Blinkered: fi xes on an idea or course of action and won’t abandon it. 8 Boastful: wants the PCs to know how rich, strong, important, famous, or admired she is. 9 Cautious: terrified of making a mistake. 10 Chatty: loves to hear himself talk. 11 Chronicler: an amateur historian seeking information for the book she’s writing. 12 Clumsy: keeps dropping things or knocking them over and is too flustered to help the PCs. 13 Conspiratorial: plotting a crime or rebellion and wonders if the PCs are likely recruits. 14 Contrarian: eager to show his independence from conventional wisdom. 15 Cowed: won’t do anything that might arouse the wrath of an intimidating superior. 16 Cranky: has dealt with idiots all day and is sure she’s looking at another bunch of them. 17 Deluded: convinced he is a grand hero trapped in an ordinary person’s body, and wants the PCs to help him recover his real identity. 18 Despises locals: treats outsiders well and locals badly. 19 Drunkard: completely inebriated but does not want anyone to catch on. 20 Easily offended: constantly looking out for insults, which she will imagine if necessary. 21 Efficient: wants to cut to the heart of the matter, resolving it as quickly as possible. 22 Egotistical: wants to be flattered.
CHAPTER 3
TAVERNS
Don’t bother to create an interesting character for every single encounter. Many scenes are best left short and sweet, allowing you to move on to an entertaining scene that relates to the main adventure. Every so often, you should throw in a memorable character whose agenda has nothing to do with the main plot. This creates the illusion that your world is a living, complex place, not a mere backdrop for the adventurers’ activities. Often, players remember these improvised characters and come back to them, weaving them into the ongoing story of your campaign.
THE CAMPAIGN
the nature of the clientele. Members of certain guilds gather together at particular eating halls, so it might be possible for the adventurers to acquaint themselves with most of a city’s sellspell guild, for example, in the course of a single meal. High-class eating halls generally have more choices on the menu and can sometimes closely resemble modern restaurants. Many such establishments offer exotic fares, such as wyvern steaks, purple worm chowder, or castings of heroes’ feast spells.
99
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
100
23 Embittered: recently lost a legal judgment and wants to complain about it at length. 24 Ensorcelled: a grand hero, trapped in an ordinary person’s body, who wants the PCs to help him recover his real identity. 25 Exhausted: tired and simply wants to go home. 26 Fashion-conscious: interested only in who’s got the finest clothing. 27 Fatalistic: willing to help the PCs because nothing really matters, anyway. 28 Flirtatious: wants to test his or her charm on a PC of the opposite sex with a high Charisma. 29 Forbidding: takes pleasure in refusing requests. 30 Forgetful: wants to help the party, but must overcome a faulty memory to do so. 31 Giddy: has just received wonderful news and wants the PCs to celebrate his good fortune with him. 32 Glutton: wants the PCs to envy the incredible meal she is about to eat. 33 Gossipy: loves salacious and embarrassing information and happily shares what he knows in exchange for equally juicy rumors. 34 Greedy: knows adventurers are rich and wonders how she can extract the maximum amount of coin from them. 35 Gregarious: wants the PCs to think of him as their new best friend. 36 Grieving: wants to be left alone to mourn a loved one who has just died. 37 Guarded: will do anything to avoid seeming weak or vulnerable. 38 Guilty: has committed a sin or crime unrelated to the plot and is sure the PCs are onto him. 39 Harried: late for an important appointment and wants to get rid of the PCs as quickly as possible. 40 Healthy: swears by a cousin’s foul-tasting cure-all elixir, urging the PCs to purchase some. 41 Helpful: eager to please, perhaps to a fault. 42 Hero-worshiping: wants to hear all about the biggest, toughest creature the party ever fought. 43 Homesick: comes from abroad and wants the PCs to agree that her homeland is much better than this place. 44 Idealistic: wishes to enlist the PCs in a pet cause. 45 Impatient: wants to take action right now. 46 Importunate: tries to win a favor from the PCs through blatant begging. 47 Impostor: wants to keep secret the fact that she is a disguised rogue, doppelganger, or other entity posing as the real NPC. 48 Insecure: believes that people think him stupid and wants to prove otherwise. 49 Intimidating: wants others to acknowledge how dreadful and imposing she is.
50 Jaded: has seen and done it all and wants the PCs to know that their problems mean nothing to him. 51 Jester: wants the group to laugh at her terrible jokes. 52 Jolly: gregarious, wants to befriend the PCs and take them home to meet his family. 53 Laconic: tries to use as few words as possible. 54 Lonely: wants the PCs to be her best friends. 55 Loud: very helpful, but speaks in a disconcertingly loud voice. 56 Lovelorn: powerfully infatuated and hopes to enlist the PCs in a quest for his true love’s heart. 57 Loyal: respects and admires the PCs’ current adversary or object of inquiry and would sooner die than commit an act of betrayal. 58 Machiavellian: tries to involve the PCs in a complicated scheme to gain power or harm an enemy. 59 Matchmaker: always on the lookout for a suitable spouse for a hapless relative. 60 Melancholy: saddened by the state of the world and wants the PCs to share her gloom. 61 Mocking: sees the PCs as absurd and wants them to know it. 62 Mopey: feels that he’s an unrecognized genius and wants the PCs to show that they understand him. 63 Nervous: believes that all adventurers are murderous scoundrels and wants to get away from the PCs as soon as she can without offending them. 64 Nihilistic: secretly worships a dark deity of decay and destruction who will be pleased if the NPC brings about the party’s ruin. 65 Nosy: wants to know everything there is to know about the PCs, because this is her way of showing friendly interest in others. 66 Oracular: has a premonition about the PCs and wishes to share it. 67 Outlandish: fears he’s boring and tries to seem fascinatingly crazy. 68 Pacifistic: aids the PCs only toward peaceful ends. 69 Patriotic: wants everyone to love her king and country as much as she does. 70 Patronizing: views the PCs as common street rabble and condescends to them. 71 Picayune: corrects any minor mistake or mispronunciation the PCs make. 72 Pious: wishes to communicate his great devotion to his deity. 73 Prejudiced: irrationally despises one of the PCs on sight due to race, class, or another superficial trait. 74 Public spirited: loves the area, wants to improve it, and urges the PCs to do the same. 75 Puckish: seeks amusement, preferably at the PCs’ expense. 76 Pugnacious: looking for an argument on any topic whatsoever.
CHAPTER 3
LAWS AND PUNISHMENT
might at fi rst see little benefit in such an arrangement. When the PCs cause trouble, the law might seem like a nuisance or even the enemy. Without it, however, the cities they depend on for everything from safe lodgings to the convenient exchange of magic items would quickly cease to exist. The just and reliable rule of law is essential to the prosperity of any nation. People work hard to generate excess wealth only when they believe they will get to keep a fair share of it. Where the law is applied heavily but unjustly, kings and lords become robber barons, stealing from the people they’re supposed to protect. Adventurers are subject to capricious search and detention. The king’s men can stop them at any time for a surprise taxation session, confiscating their treasure, their magic items, and even their basic equipment. If the PCs don’t fight back, they lose their hard-won property. If they resist, they become outlaws, facing attacks from bounty hunters or law-enforcement officials whenever they venture into populated areas. In more lawless regions, criminals and brigands run rampant, while farmers flee for the hills and merchants shutter their shops. When traveling, adventurers face constant ambush by bandits. The only difference between these foes and the agents of corrupt authority is that brigands attack first and search for loot later. Characters familiar with their world understand this instinctively, even if the players do not. If the PCs bristle at authority and shirk any connection or obligation to their comparatively safe, well-governed home base, a quick jaunt to a lawful evil or chaotic land will illustrate the benefits of a just society.
THE CAMPAIGN
77 Quiet: speaks in a barely audible voice and recoils if the PCs don’t do the same. 78 Rebellious: wants to enlist the PCs in some troublemaking. 79 Resentful: wants to complain about a stupid or annoying superior. 80 Scattered: wants to help but loses focus unless carefully supervised. 81 Self-obsessed: steers any conversation back to his favorite subject: himself. 82 Servile: considers himself the PCs’ inferior and is disquietingly dedicated to aiding them. 83 Shifty: has done something terrible, and the more innocent she tries to appear, the more guilty she seems. 84 Sick: suffers from a chronic malady and anxiously shares details of its symptoms. 85 Skeptical: disbelieves anything remotely questionable the PCs say. 86 Smitten: infatuated with a PC of the opposite sex with a high Charisma, and wants to please him or her. 87 Smug: believes he’s clearly the best at what he does. 88 Solemn: responds well to serious talk, but badly to jokes and trivialities. 89 Spiteful: nurses a grudge against the PCs’ current adversary or object of inquiry and will say anything that increases their chances of harming him. 90 Territorial: doesn’t want the PCs getting too close to her or her possessions. 91 Thick: wants to help but is too dumb to do it. 92 Treasure-seeking: has found a treasure map and wants the PCs to help him recover the loot. 93 Trivial: wishes to demonstrate her mastery of irrelevant minor facts. 94 Trusting: believes anything the PCs tell him. 95 Unreliable: makes outlandish promises that she has no intention of keeping. 96 Vengeful: was recently robbed or assaulted and wants the PCs to thrash the perpetrator. 97 Violent: looking for a scrap against safely inferior opponents. 98 Wagerer: bets on anything. 99 Worried: wants to talk about how badly the kingdom has gone downhill in the past few years. 100 Xenophobic: treats locals well and outsiders badly.
LAW RANK The degree to which any jurisdiction, whether a fief, city, or kingdom, upholds the rule of law is measured by its law rank. This measures the fairness of its authorities and their effectiveness in suppressing criminality. It’s no consolation to have a just, good-hearted king if his sheriffs are too incompetent to enforce his peace. Answer the following questions to assign a law rank to a locality of your creation. In some cases, the questions require you to make new decisions about your setting, helping you to flesh it out. Start with a law rank of zero, adding and subtracting for each condition that applies. If you prefer to determine some of these factors randomly, tables are provided for that purpose.
The existence of vastly powerful adventurers is a threat to any ruler’s authority. Whenever possible, kings and lords find ways to bring them inside the system, using the same Power Center Alignment customs of mutual obligation they use to bind all other What is the alignment of the local power center (see page sectors of society. 138 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide)? Adventurers, who live outside society and are perIf the power center is good-aligned, add 2 to the law sonally powerful enough to settle their own disputes, rank.
101
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
If it is lawful-aligned, add 3. If it is evil, subtract 1. If it is chaotic, subtract 3.
If more than two-thirds are corrupt, subtract 5. If you determine this factor randomly, subtract 1 from the roll if the power center is lawful and subtract 1 from the roll if the power center is good.
Orderly Transitions d12 Level of Corruption Rank Adj. Over the past fi fty years, have all transfers of power from 2 or less No corruption +1 one ruler to the next been peaceful? 3–9 Hardly any +0 If so, add 2 to the law rank. Add another 2 points if the 10–11 One-third of officials corrupt –2 12 Two-thirds of officials corrupt –5 history of orderly transitions goes back for a hundred years or more. For every violent overthrow of a ruler in the last fi fty Role of Social Standing In many places, the gap between the social standing or years, subtract 1 from the law rank. wealth of the accused and that of the victim affects the d12 History of Transitions Rank Adj. outcome of cases. Individuals of high wealth and status 1–3 100+ years of orderly transitions +3 receive lenient treatment when they offend against their 4–9 50+ years of orderly transitions +1 inferiors. Lowly persons, on the other hand, suffer harsh 10 One violent overthrow –1 11 Two violent overthrows –2 punishments when they commit crimes against the high 12 1d6+2 violent overthrows –(1d6+2) and mighty. If these factors have no effect on outcomes, add 3 to the Legal Code law rank. Does this place have a written legal code? If they infrequently have an effect, add 1. If so, add 1 to the law rank. If that code is more than a If they usually have an effect, subtract 1. hundred years old, add another 2. If they always have an effect, subtract 2. If not, subtract 3 from the law rank. If you determine this factor randomly, subtract 2 from the roll if the power center is good. d10 1–4 5–7 8–10
Type of Legal Code Old legal code Recent legal code No legal code
Rank Adj. +3 +1 –3
Strength of Enforcement How strongly does the ruler enforce the laws? If enforcement is very strong, nearly always catching or killing criminals, add 2 to the law rank. If enforcement is moderately strong, catching or killing criminals more often than not, add 1. If enforcement is weak, leaving crimes unpunished more often than not, subtract 2. If enforcement is virtually nonexistent, almost never catching or killing criminals, subtract 4. d12 1–3 4–9 10–11 12
102
Strength of Enforcement Very strong Moderately strong Weak Virtually nonexistent
Rank Adj. +2 +1 –2 –4
Corruption How many of the ruler’s law enforcement officials are ready to ignore crimes or harass innocents in exchange for bribes? If the region has no corrupt officials, add 1 to the law rank. If it has few corrupt officials, leave the law rank unchanged. If more than a third of officials are corrupt, subtract 2.
d20 1 or less 2–5 6–10 11–20
Role of Social Standing Never matters Infrequently matters Usually matters Always matters
Rank Adj. +3 +1 –1 –2
A positive law rank indicates a jurisdiction with a deserved reputation for justice. Legal cases are mostly decided in favor of the deserving party. A negative law rank indicates a region where the guilty go free and the innocent hang—or an area with no law at all. When trials occur, they favor the interests of the cruel and corrupt authorities and their cronies and patrons. If a location’s law rank hovers around zero, its legal system is neither overtly corrupt nor particularly reliable. Before any legal proceeding, roll d20, modified by the location’s law rank. (If the party who deserves to win is of high social standing, and if the role of social standing usually affects outcomes, add 2 to the roll. If social standing always matters, add 4 to the roll.) If the result of the roll is greater than 10, the case will be judged in favor of the deserving party. If not, the case goes against the deserving party. In either event, the result tells you ahead of time what will happen—unless the PCs take successful action to prevent it. To bring about a just verdict in an unjust place, they might bribe judges, convince lying witnesses to tell the truth, or simply free the defendants from the king’s dungeons.
Over time, PC actions could bring about changes in an area’s law rank. They might rally a put-upon merchant class, transforming it into a group too powerful for the nobles to ignore. The role of social standing on verdicts might decrease as a result. They could train ineffective guards and deputies, improving law enforcement. The best way to ensure fair legal proceedings is to install a character with a lawful good alignment as the local power center.
CHAPTER 3
Local forces might lack the means to defeat high-level adventurers. In most jurisdictions, authorities fight fire with fire, giving other adventurers an incentive to do their dangerous work for them. When accused criminals
Illus. by S. Ellis
WRITS OF OUTLAWRY
THE CAMPAIGN
refuse to be peacefully bound over for trial, the local authority issues a writ of outlawry against them. Notices are posted in taverns, inns, and shops frequented by freelance heroes, identifying the outlaws and providing any known information about their abilities. Anyone capturing or killing outlaws can keep all possessions found on their immediate persons, including magic items. In cities with large adventurer populations, many people pay close attention to notifications of new outlawries. ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE Adventurers are both dangerIn medieval-style settings, the ultimate power to make ous foes and lucrative targets. and adjudicate laws rests with the king, but is The PCs might fi nd it more profitable to hunt outlawed coldelegated down through a chain of vassals or charter holders. Criminal leagues than to crawl around in cases are decided by local officials, a nasty dungeon scrabbling for lords, overlords, or the king loose coins. This works both ways—outlawed PCs might himself, depending on the seriousness of the offense find themselves hunted by and the social standing of multiple gangs of their dungeoncrunching peers. the accused. The law forbids bounty The PCs must find a hunters to harm outlaws after place in society before they surrender, but otherthey can expect any lewise, hunters can use lethal gal rights whatsoever. force. Hunters might be They might swear an held liable for any harm oath of fealty to a lord done to innocent parties or king, secure memduring an attack on outbership in a guild, or laws, if it can be proven become citizens of a that the harm was the city or town. Few jurisdictions predictable result of their maintain organized reckless actions. Typipolice forces. Armed cally, the punishment tax officials extract is a partial or complete revenue from those forfeiture of any assets who owe it, but no seized. Bounty hunters occasionally face criminal officers dedicate themselves to investigating charges if prominent people In a medieval setting, a court of law wields great power crimes or arresting crimare killed or badly hurt. inals. Routine neighborhood patrols are unknown. When adventurers encounter evildoers committing seriWhen crimes occur, the mayor musters a force of armed ous crimes and kill or capture them, they are often granted men to locate and then kill or capture the wrongdoers. a retroactive writ of outlawry, gaining all the criminals’ Revenue collectors make up the core of these forces, possessions as a reward. In locations with law ranks of 10 along with a militia of other officials and capable, wellor more, adventurers with a reputation for heroism can equipped locals. In a rural fief, the lord or his bailiff safely assume they will be so rewarded whenever they put down genuine threats to the public order. musters the knights and other armed vassals who owe him debts of service.
TRIAL AND SENTENCE Party members might find themselves on trial for various crimes, or they can seek redress for offenses committed against them by others. Crimes of violence and against property are both punished harshly. An individual who harms or steals from anyone in the chain of vassalage, from
103
Illus. by E. Fiegenschuh
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
104
the lowliest villein to a high-ranking noble, is seen as ultimately injuring the crown. Breaking an oath of fealty is as serious an offense as murder. In places with a lawful power center, adjudicating officials follow detailed procedures for the presentation of evidence and the testimony of witnesses. If the kingdom has a detailed legal code, they follow it carefully, matching crimes to offenses and meting out appropriate sentences. Advocates can appear on behalf of the complainant and the defendant, arguing the meaning of the kingdom’s laws to benefit their clients. Some codes call for trial by jury; in others, the official in charge is the sole arbiter of guilt or innocence. Areas dominated by chaos often favor the ordeal as a method of adjudication. • In an ordeal by fire, defendants are thrown onto a burning pyre, forced to walk over coals, or forced to press heated metal objects against their unprotected flesh. Those who survive unharmed are declared innocent, having clearly been blessed by the gods. • In an ordeal by water, defendants are placed at risk of drowning, thrown into a deep lake or a fastrunning river. • Trial by combat pits the defendant, or a chosen champion, ag a i n s t a wa r r ior chosen by the compl a i na nt or t he state. If the defendant fights and loses, she is slain, her guilt proven by the deities’ failure to intervene on her behalf. If the defendant’s champion loses, the defendant is judged guilty and sentenced accordingly. Victory by the defendant or her champion conclusively demonstrates her innocence. In the real world, ordeals spelled doom for anyone charged with a crime, but in a fantasy universe with
active, interventionist deities, ordeals can and do deliver just verdicts. In areas where the worship of chaotic gods predominates, some innocent defendants might gain immunity to heat, fire, or drowning when subjected to trial by ordeal. Deities might gift innocent defendants in trials by combat with hefty attack bonuses and perhaps even temporary use of combat feats. Chaotic evil gods might grant bonuses to the more thoroughly vile combatant. Few prisons exist in medieval societies. Political prisoners of extremely high rank, such as members of the royal family or regal hostages from other lands, are sometimes locked up in dungeons or towers. But the vast bulk of offenders face other fates. Individuals of high standing are typically punished with exile. Exiled offenders must leave the kingdom within a few days and cannot return for an indefi nite period. Usually, they return only when a
A female elf weathers the flames during her ordeal by fire
Although most players expect DUNGEONS & DRAGONS settings to consist of vaguely medieval kingdoms, you should feel free to create settings based on other periods of history, or with variant or imaginary forms of government. Nations with other forms of government can exist side by side with feudal kingdoms. In an imperial setting, a single culture has conquered a large number of other nations, making them into provinces of a gigantic empire. In the original homeland of the imperial culture, an emperor rules over a vast bureaucracy of officials. If the empire is still young and in a phase of initial expansion, ranking officials hail from the ruling class of the triumphant culture. Later, as the imperial culture assimilates conquered peoples, ambitious types from all over rise to positions of authority, especially in
CHAPTER 3
OTHER FORMS OF GOVERNMENT
their original homelands. Each province is ruled by a governor, who supervises a bureaucracy of his own, often made up of relatives and cronies. The imperial government maintains a standing army bent on further conquest. Tax revenues flow from the provinces to the imperial treasury and are then redistributed as the prosperity of the empire demands. The imperial throne might be passed down more or less peacefully within a bloodline, or it might change hands frequently—emperors are bloodily overthrown whenever they lose favor with the military. Empires are always lawful; if they become chaotic, they fall apart. In a republic, the people are ruled by a governor, president, or prime minister, chosen by election. The election might be democratic, with all adult citizens allowed to vote, but premodern cultures generally enfranchise only wealthy landowners. The leader might rule for life or for a fixed term of office, which might or might not be renewable through reelection. An official bureaucracy administers the government; republics require written constitutions and a strict rule of law. Republics with rulers chosen not by hereditary landlords but by an organization of elite merchants and burghers are referred to as oligarchies. Leaders shape policies for the promotion of trade and the protection of wealth, but to those outside the circles of power, oligarchies aren’t much different from other republics. In a theocracy, rulers ascend from the ranks of the priesthood, perhaps chosen by the deities themselves. The ruler might be considered to be an earthly incarnation of the national deity. In a fantasy world, this could be literally true. A priestly caste performs administrative duties, and a theocracy’s laws come straight from its culture’s holy book, its policies intended to further religious faith. National wealth might be devoted to the construction of temples, cathedrals, monuments, or tombs. Theocracies are often conservative, suppressing social changes that conflict with their governing faiths. On the other hand, new prophets sometimes arise to alter the underlying faith, and with it, the nation’s laws and goals. In a tyranny, the leader has taken over by force and rules without traditional authority. Any form of government can
THE CAMPAIGN
change of power occurs. Especially heinous crimes might result in hanging or beheading, but only when the judge is confident in her power and the defendant is unpopular with his peers. In actual medieval societies, those of lower status were often executed for comparatively minor offenses, including petty theft. Convicted offenders were lucky to escape with mere mutilation. Since an authentically grim portrayal of medieval justice violates most players’ sense of fun, good-aligned D&D societies are not so harsh. Serious crimes of violence might result in execution, but other crimes result in fi nes. Convicted criminals might be stripped of rank, along with their dependents, or even forced to labor as villeins. Offenses where no injury is suffered and no property taken or destroyed incur fines as punishment. For those sentenced to die, decapitation by a headsman is a privilege of rank; ordinary folk face the hangman. The hanged are placed on a structure called a gibbet and prominently displayed, often near the city gates or on a road leading to town. Their decaying corpses serve as a lesson to others. Seasoned travelers can tell when an area is ruled by a lawful evil power center—their roadways abound with gibbets.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs LAW ACROSS BORDERS Adventurers who have declared fealty in one kingdom can expect fair treatment in any similar land that respects the rule of law. Legal principles and obligations extend beyond borders even when overall authority does not. For example, brigands who commit crimes in one city and then return to their homes in another kingdom can expect to be arrested and prosecuted by authorities there. Trade depends on this sense of legal reciprocity; without it, merchants would be afraid to travel to places where they hold no citizenship rights. This principle also protects adventurers who can claim a rightful place in society. If they
stand trial in another land, local authorities tend to treat them fairly. Otherwise, their own vassals or citizens could face legal reprisals when visiting the adventurers’ homeland. If the defendants are mere vagabonds, with no lord or authority to back them up, they must rely entirely on the goodwill of their judges. Reciprocity does not mean that all jurisdictions are equally fair, just that outsiders get more or less the same treatment as locals. A corrupt ruler who abuses his own people gives special consideration to foreigners only if he happens to fear their lord.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
105
Illus. by E. Cox
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
In a land ruled by a tyrant, slaves do all the hard work
become a tyranny. Tyrants tend to govern by personal fiat, tossing aside the rule of law. Sometimes they are wiser and more just than their legitimate predecessors. More often, they govern by force, enriching a band of loyal thugs
who back up their decrees at sword-point. Tyrannies are sometimes called kleptocracies, as they are essentially run by criminal gangs who have taken over the reins of government. These gangs might be the remnants or
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs THE LAW IN SALTMARSH As an example of how to set up a system of laws for a D&D town or city, here’s how the rules would work for the town of Saltmarsh, which is described in detail in Chapter 4 of this book. 1: Saltmarsh’s power center alignment is neutral good, so it starts with a law rank of 2. 2: Despite external trouble with lizardfolk, sahuagin, pirates, smugglers, and slavers, transfers of power in Saltmarsh have been blessed with peace. This increases the town’s law rank by 2. 3: Saltmarsh has a written legal code that has existed since the town’s founding 130 years ago. Although the laws have been modified numerous times as the town grew, the central concepts have remained solid. This increases the town’s law rank by 1 for having a written legal code, and by another 2 for its age. 4: Saltmarsh is located near several wild and dangerous regions, and has always had a strong militia. Today, the town even has a large garrison and prison within its walls. The town councilors, unfortunately, have traditionally been prone to corruption to varying degrees, and this corruption has spread to the militia in some cases. As a result, law enforcement in Saltmarsh is only
106
moderately strong, despite the relatively good strength of the town’s militia. This increases the town’s law rank by 1. 5: As mentioned above, Saltmarsh has always struggled with corruption. Traditionally, a third to half of the town’s officials are corrupt to one degree or another. This reduces the town’s law rank by –2. 6: To a certain extent, Saltmarsh’s geography is to blame for the disparity between its rich and its poor. The nobles of Saltmarsh live in fancy houses located high up on hills, while the poor are forced to dwell in slums down on the waterfront that often take the brunt of the region’s winter storms. Since town councilors are usually also members of the nobility, they tend to favor the upper reaches of its citizens, and as a result, the nobles often receive lenient treatment when they offend against their inferiors. This modifies the town’s law rank by –1. Adding up the results, we find that Saltmarsh has a law rank of 5. There might be some corruption in town, and criminals with connections often go unpunished, but for the most part it’s a fairly just and fair place to live.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
descendants of tyrannical ruling parties long since driven from power.
BUILDING A CITY
When you’re building a city, the easiest way to start is by drawing a map. The map doesn’t have to be particularly artistic; it can even be little more than a bunch of labeled circles and squares on a sheet of paper. As long as you can understand its layout, you’ll be able to present the city in the same way game after game, and over time, it’ll grow and evolve on its own. Of course, it’s tough to map out a city. You need to consider many more variables and factors than when generating a wilderness or dungeon map. Defense: Cities are often built atop hills, thus forcing any enemies into the undesirable position of being downhill from the target. Larger cities also build walls to help protect its citizens, but that can be a costly process. If possible, a city might include natural landscape features such as cliffs, coastlines, bogs, and other difficult terrain as a natural boundary.
CHAPTER 3
GEOGRAPHY IS DESTINY
THE CAMPAIGN
The rules in Chapter 5 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide are excellent for creating settlements in D&D, particularly for locations that the PCs might just be passing through on the way to the dungeon. Usually, you won’t need to know much more than a settlement’s GP limit and perhaps how it is governed in order to run the game. But what happens when your players are clamoring for an urban adventure? Or worse, what happens if the PCs decide to settle down and make a specific town or city a home base from which they plan on staging all future adventures? The simplest answer is to use a city from a pregenerated campaign setting. Saltmarsh has been provided in this book for precisely this purpose. You can change the city’s name and the names of its prominent NPCs with little problem, and in so doing can easily customize the city and make it your own. But sometimes this isn’t good enough. It can be fun and rewarding to create your own city for the PCs to live in and explore, but at the same time it can be a daunting task. When you decide to create your own D&D city, the most important thing to keep in mind is “less is more.” You don’t need to generate the contents of each and every house in the city, nor should you be forced to write up stat blocks for all its citizens. Doing so can often limit your options, as during play, you or your players might come up with new ideas. And although this section uses the word “city” a lot, the advice works just as well if you need to build a thorp, a metropolis, or anything in between.
Water: People need water to survive, and when large numbers of people congregate in a small area, the need for water increases as well. Your city should have easy access to water, be it a river or lake, numerous wells that drop into large aquifers, or even a great number of rain barrels and water towers. Food: The city should have a nearby source of food, such as an ocean or lake for fish, farming fields for cattle and crops, mills for grinding grain, and so on. Resources: Food, water, and defense allow the citizens of a city to survive, but in order to prosper, those citizens need resources. People need a reason to settle in a region other than survival; as a result, your city should be near some form of valuable commodity. This could be as simple as a large number of mines in the nearby hills, a thriving fishing industry in a lake or ocean, or plentiful farms surrounding the city proper. Cities are built near rivers or on coastlines; it’s easier to move goods by boats and ships than overland. Since a river or coastline can also provide defense against an attack from land and can supply food and water, it’s helpful to place your city on the shore of a large body of water. Roads are also a concern. A city should have at least one approach that is relatively easy terrain and clear of obstruction. Magic can eliminate the need for some or all of these basic requirements. In general, though, you should resist the temptation to do away with them. If you make the city too fantastic, it ceases to be a background for adventure and becomes the adventure itself. Of course, in some cases, this might be exactly what you’re looking for! Finally, try to make some features of the landscape unique. A pinnacle of rock, a tangle of rivers, a lake, a crevasse, swamplands, ruined structures, or unusual buildings and artificial landmarks can give your city a distinctive look that helps to solidify its existence in the minds of your players.
HOW BIG IS THE CITY? Once you’ve decided on the surrounding terrain and drawn in important features such as coastlines, rivers, cliffs, forests, and the like, you’ll need to determine how much of this region is dominated by the city itself. The primary factor that determines a city’s physical size is its population. As a general rule, you can assume that a single Small or Medium citizen takes up about 1,500 square feet. Thus, a town the size of Saltmarsh should cover an area of about 5,700,000 square feet. Crowded cities are more densely populated, and might only have 1,000 square feet per citizen. Sparsely populated cities, on the other hand, can be sprawling in size, and can have up to 5,000 square feet or more per citizen. These numbers assume a fair amount of open areas in a city. Roads, rivers, lakes, cemeteries, fairgrounds, parks,
107
marketplaces, and town squares can take up a significant area of the land. Of course, cities populated by creatures that are larger or smaller than Small or Medium size are proportionally sized, in a similar way to how these smaller or larger creatures have differing Spaces.
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
THE CITY’S BUILDINGS
108
Not all buildings in a city are residences. Each city also has a number of shops, temples, public offices, and the like. Buildings of similar purpose tend to be clustered together, forming specific districts in the city. Residences (30% of buildings): Homes of citizens. Each residence shelters an average of twenty, ten, or five individuals, depending on the city’s population. Most homes sit in districts far from the main thoroughfares and markets, but they can also be found in all other districts. Administrative (5%): Town halls, militia barracks, city centers, military installations, and so on. Administrative buildings are usually found near the center of town. Entertainment (5%): Taverns, gambling houses, brothels, playhouses, theaters, and the like. These buildings are usually found near heavily traveled roads or wealthy districts. Industrial (10%): Shipwrights, carpenters, masons, slaughterhouses, lumberyards, fishmongers, and so on. These buildings are usually found far from residences or mercantile areas, but should have relatively easy access to busy streets or shipping. Nobility (5%): Mansions, townhouses, villas, and so on. These buildings are typically the farthest from the slums and industrial buildings, often close to administrative buildings. Shops (10%): Smiths, bakers, jewelers, grocers, alchemists, curio shops, and the like. These buildings are found along heavily traveled areas. Many cities have a large open marketplace near the town’s center as well. Slums (15%): Flophouses, shanties, shacks, and so on. These buildings are usually located in the least desirable section of the city. Public Works (5%): Temples, parks, graveyards, schools, libraries, public forums, and so on. These buildings are generally located between residences and administrative buildings. Travel (10%): Inns, shipyards, messengers, stables, and so on. These buildings are generally found along heavily traveled roads. Farms (5%): Farms are almost always found in the outlying areas of a city, usually outside any city walls. A city that relies on farms for trade could have double or even triple the normal number of farms, often at the expense of industrial buildings.
HOW MANY BUILDINGS? After you determine a city’s size and its boundaries, you can start filling in buildings. The vast majority of the buildings in your city will be residences. As a result, the number of buildings depends on the city’s population. At this point, you should decide on your city’s population density. Crowded: A crowded city is bloated with citizens. The reason for the overpopulation can vary—the discovery of a particularly generous vein of gold, a rush of citizens fleeing from another location, or the simple fact that it’s the only place safe enough to harbor a city for hundreds of miles around. In a crowded city, the ratio of people to buildings is 20 to 1; there should be a number of buildings equal to 5% of the total population. Standard: Most cities have a standard population density. This represents a healthy city with constant trade and productivity. In a standard city, the ratio of people to buildings is 10 to 1; therefore, the number of buildings in the city is close to 10% of the city’s population. Sparse: A sparse city is a dying city. For whatever reason, its buildings stand empty and abandoned. Perhaps a plague has taken its toll, an oppressive government has taxed its citizens so brutally that many have moved away, or a recent war or natural disaster has left few survivors. Sparsely populated cities have far too many buildings. The ratio of people to buildings is 5 to 1, so the number of buildings in the city is close to 20% of the city’s population.
FILL IN THE DETAILS Finally, you should be ready to start populating your city. If you know what sections of the city your players are going to be focusing on, you should focus on those areas as well. Taverns and inns are usually among the first places visiting PCs look for in a city, closely followed by temples dedicated to their deities, shops (particularly magic shops), and any guilds they might be affiliated with. Round things out by adding at least two locations in your city that should intrigue or amuse each player in your group; this gives you places to have NPCs talk about that the PCs are more likely to be interested in. If you have the time, jot down a few dozen NPC names on a piece of paper to use as the PCs explore the city. When you use a name, jot down a brief description of who that name was assigned to, where they live, and what they do in the city. And after each session, make sure to write down any interesting developments or additions you (or your players) have made to the city. Over time, your creation will boom into a living, sprawling location unique to your campaign world and familiar to your players, and the next time you run a campaign, you’ll have a custom-built city all ready to go! For an example of a settlement built from the ground up using these guidelines, check out the town of Saltmarsh in Chapter 4.
MAGIC EVENTS
For a magic event to occur, a series of elements must somehow connect and ignite the event. These elements vary widely from one magic event to the next. The Killing Frost of Ghulurak, for example, starts when a block of glacier ice is carved into Ghulurak’s form in a ritual combining both fell magic and masterwork sculpture—work that takes only a few hours. The Red Tides of Sorashan, on the other hand, require decades of careful interbreeding before a suitable child can be born and then sacrificed to the sea-demons that live below the Wailing Cliffs. The circumstances, participants, and other building blocks that comprise a magic event always differ from event to event. However, those building blocks do fall into certain general categories: lore, sources, catalysts, triggers, and controls. When you’ve combined a building block or two from each category, you have the pieces of your magic event in place. Once you’ve assembled all the elements, you need only define the event’s specific effects, and you have a plot device that can transform an encounter or serve as the focal point of an adventure.
CHAPTER 3
ELEMENTS OF A MAGIC EVENT
THE CAMPAIGN
A demon lord wants to ride a comet’s tail on a collision course with the world. A mysterious purple mist leaves only deserted villages in its wake. A lens of rare Zoklovian crystal must be fashioned to perform the ritual that keeps the undead at bay for another year. All of the above are clearly magical effects, but they don’t duplicate specific D&D spells, and they generally cover a wide swath of the landscape. Thus, they’re examples of a distinct category: magic events. A magic event is more plot device than character ability. The PCs in your group won’t use a magic event to clear each room in a dungeon, but a magic event can make for a memorable encounter, especially if the PCs are near the event’s “ground zero.” An imminent magic event can also be the framework on which you build an adventure—whether the PCs are trying to ignite the event or thwart it. Furthermore, magic events allow for an air of mystery and the unknown that the spell descriptions in the Player’s Handbook can’t match. Any PC wizard worth her salt knows exactly what the spells in her spellbook can do. She’s assessed her spells’ strengths and weaknesses, she knows their precise statistics, and when she casts a spell, she knows exactly what the result will be. On the other hand, wonder and mystery are hallmarks of a magic event. The players rarely know exactly how a magic event functions or what, precisely, it will do. Because a magic event is a plot device, not an effect that’s easy for the PCs to reproduce, the event can emphasize the fantastic and awe-inspiring nature of magic.
The Lore Element If the other elements of a magic event are the ingredients, the lore element is the recipe. In its most basic form, the lore element is the instructions that the characters in the game world (whether PC or NPC) will use to create the magic event. The stereotypical lore element is the magical ritual described in a dusty tome forgotten on the upper shelves of a library somewhere. Only when someone stumbles across the lore element does the magic event associated with it become a possibility. Finding the lore element gets the ball rolling, sending the researcher on a series of quests to assemble the other elements. It’s easy to put your own twist on the lore element by using a different sort of lore. Consider the following options. Encoded Lore: The instructions for creating the magic event must be decoded before they can be used. They might be written in a hard-to-translate language, a jumbled cipher, or a series of riddles. Hidden Lore: Even a perfectly legible ancient grimoire becomes problematic if it’s secreted away behind a concealed panel or locked up in a lich’s crypt. Instruction: Not all lore is written down. To launch the magic event, the PCs must find an instructor who will tell them how to put the various elements together. The instructor could be almost anyone—a wizened sage, a mysterious stranger, or a demon lord—and might demand payment of some kind in exchange for lore. The instructor might not give out the instructions all at once, distributing only one direction at a time. Divided Lore: The lore doesn’t have to be in one place. The incantation for summoning the Great Gorath might be written on a temple wall, while the incantation for controlling the entity appears on a set of scrolls in a library thousands of miles away. False Lore: A staple of evil schemers, false lore has a correct set of instructions, but the end result is often not what the steps describe. Many incautious adventurers have tried to cleanse the land of evil, only to open a portal to the Nine Hells because the ritual they used was false lore planted by their enemies. Folklore: Sometimes lore is commonplace. For example, everyone in a particular village might know that four maidens must dance at the crossroads on the full moon to keep the winter wolves at bay. Instinctive Lore: Some magic events don’t have a separate lore element. When the PCs satisfy the other elements, they suddenly understand how to create the magic event. Everyone who bathes in the waters of Silverdusk Lake, for example, might realize that the nearby wisps of fog feed on magical energy. Related Lore: The lore element doesn’t necessarily have to come first. The PCs initially could learn about one of the other elements, and then conduct research to uncover
109
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
the lore connected with it. For example, the PCs could discover a mysterious wellspring of positive energy (an energy source element), and then start searching through libraries to find some way to put the wellspring to use.
110
same categories as energy sources; they can be biological, mineral, alignment-based, and so on. The catalyst differs from the energy source in one or more of the following respects. Size: A catalyst is often smaller or weaker in some respect than an energy source. An active volcano might be an energy source, but magic flames or a single jet of lava might suffice for a catalyst. Portability: When creating a magic event, the PCs usually bring the catalyst to the energy source, not the other way around. A magic event might be spawned by mixing a pint of lamia’s blood (catalyst) into the moon-pools of the Arthagian Forest (energy source). Refinement: Energy sources are usually raw and unworked, but catalysts often require alchemical refinement, craftwork of some kind, or similar development before they’re suitable for the magic event. Berries tended by high-mountain druids might be the catalyst for a magic event that causes animals across the land to morph into their dire versions.
The Energy Source Element Simply put, the energy source element is the fuel that makes the magic event happen. The element isn’t necessarily energy in the D&D sense of the word or a definition based in modern physics. Because magic is involved, the energy source can be nearly anything. Abstract Magical: Sometimes magic itself is the energy source for the event. A magic conflagration might spontaneously erupt from a “cosmic wellspring,” or magical energy could be drawn from spellcasters trying to bring the magic event into being. A group of Pelor’s clerics, for example, could expend a certain number of spell slots to send a consecrating wave of positive energy across the land. Alignment-Based: Creatures, places, or objects of great evil, good, law, or chaos can provide their own energy. Examples of alignment-based energy sources include a The Trigger Element The trigger element is a precondition for the magic event. bound demon or a good cathedral from which magical Sometimes it’s a physical object or creature, but often energy can be siphoned. it’s a limitation in the time or location that will spawn a Biological: Frequently, evil magic events are powered magic event. with blood, human sacrifice, or other unsavory energy Object: Some magic events happen only when a physical sources. This effect need not be fatal; it’s possible to object is brought into the proximity of the energy source create a magic event that draws just enough energy from and catalyst. The object is often rare, valuable, or magical. participants to weaken them or age them prematurely. Energy/Elemental: Many magic events draw strength Sometimes it must interact with the energy source and from one of D&D’s energy types (fire, cold, electricity, catalyst in a specific way, such as a silver ladle that must sonic, and acid) or Inner Planes (Air, Earth, Fire, Water, stir a cauldron thirty times, clockwise. Negative Energy, and Positive Energy). Such magic events Creature: A magic event might require the presence typically require either proximity to the energy source of a specific person—or at least a specific kind of person. Fantasy literature offers many examples of magic (such as an event that emerges from a volcanic crater) or events that work only around characters of royal blood, a magical conduit to the energy source. Mineral: Inanimate objects—especially rare or valuable for example. ones—can fuel a magic event. It might take ninety-nine Time: Some magic events work only “when the stars are right.” Others might work only during specific seasons or emeralds to fuel the animation of a giant stone colossus. under certain weather conditions. The silky web-strands of spiders trapped in Limbo could Location: A particularly sacred or profane place might be the energy source for a network of webs that spreads be the trigger element for a magic event. Locations with across the Material Plane. Psionic: While not technically “magic,” psionic energy historical or mystical significance also make good trigsources can provide the catalyst and ongoing impetus ger elements. required to substantiate an event. These sources include the pooled minds of sinister illithids, a psionic engine that The Control Element siphons mental energy from an unsuspecting populace, Some magic events (such as the Consuming Vortex of or a rare crystal asteroid above the world that wakes to Traal, described below) run amok once they begin. Other psychic sentience. magic events can be controlled, usually by those who brought the elements together and created the event in The Catalyst Element the first place. A catalyst is a substance or energy that mixes with or Instinctive: The simplest control system is an instincconnects to the energy source, transforming it into the tive one; the creator of the magic event has an innate manifestation of the magic event. Catalysts fall into the ability to control its effects. The creator of a pillar of flame,
Once someone brings the various elements together in the manner specified by the lore, the magic event becomes active. This is where you pull out all the stops, describing fire in the sky, rainbow energy-rays, luminous ghosts tearing through the countryside, and other special effects that would do Hollywood proud. But what does the event actually do? That’s up to you—anything goes. Don’t feel constrained by how magic usually works. You’re striving for a powerful, wondrous effect, not rigid adherence to the way a particular spell or monster behaves. If you want to create a milewide purple cloud that fires black lightning every other round and turns those it engulfs into ducks, more power to you. However, you can use existing spells and effects as tools to help describe the game effects of your event. In the (intentionally silly) example above, you could say that the duck effect is similar to a baleful polymorph effect. Once you’ve set the effective caster level and the Difficulty Class of the Fortitude save, you have an easy way to adjudicate the situation if the PCs wind up inside the purple fog. Because you’ve connected the magic event to a known effect, you have a sense of which creatures might be immune to the purple cloud and how ducklike PCs might regain their normal forms. You can also put your own twist on the effect. You could rule, for example, that characters resist the purple cloud with a Will save, or that the black lightning hits with a ranged touch attack rather than forcing a Reflex save. Changing Events: A magic event doesn’t necessarily spring into being fully formed. You can describe a delay
STOPPING THE EVENT Most D&D adventures involving magic events cast the PCs in the role of spoilers, determined to stop or neutralize the event before it harms innocents or wreaks havoc. More rarely, the PCs try to create the magic event (or guard those who try), in which case they must be alert for enemies intent on sabotage. Preempting the Event: The easiest way to stop a magic event is to capture, sabotage, or destroy one of the elements before it is combined with the others. If the PCs can break the diamond lens, for example, they ensure that the Burning Eye of Al-Ghautra never opens. If the villains can kidnap the princess, they can stop the clerics of Heironeous from performing the Rite of Royal Valor. Stopping an Active Event: If the magic event is already active, would-be saboteurs have a harder task. Depending on the event, it still might be possible to eliminate or neutralize the event by seizing control of one of the elements. Other magic events don’t require a connection to their constituent elements once the event starts. Such events might have to be stopped directly, attacking the manifestation of the event with magic or force of arms. Perhaps only a complementary event (with its own set of required elements) can eliminate the first magic event and restore the status quo. If you’re using a magic event as an important part of an adventure, develop multiple ways that the PCs or villains can stop the event.
CHAPTER 3
THE ACTIVE EVENT
of several rounds, minutes, or hours before the magic event emerges. The event might be weak and localized at first, growing in strength and size at a specified rate. Its nature might even change at some point; for example, the Consuming Vortex of Traal becomes mobile and gains intelligence once it has devoured enough souls.
THE CAMPAIGN
for example, might be able to direct its movement with a thought or by a verbal command. Physical Control: Other magic events require the manipulation of a tangible object for control. Sometimes the control element is the trigger. For example, the Burning Eye of Al-Ghautra (described below) requires a diamond lens to focus the sun’s rays and create the Burning Eye. Once the eye exists, pointing the lens determines where it stares. Focus Item: This control element is like a physical control, except that it’s portable and doesn’t rely on direct manipulation to function. Instead, possession of the focus item grants the ability to control the magic event. Often, the focus item is a finely wrought object or magic item. Spell Control: Some magic events respond to spells cast by their creator (or, potentially, someone else). Such control might be rudimentary (a magical hurricane that changes direction when faced with a control weather spell) or fine (a rampaging stone colossus that receives commands through a Rary’s telepathic bond spell).
EXAMPLE MAGIC EVENTS The following magic events use the elements outlined above. They’re designed to be easy to drop into an ongoing campaign.
BURNING EYE OF AL-GHAUTRA The Burning Eye of Al-Ghautra is a giant flaming eye that appears atop a mountain. It can cause anything it sees to burst into magic flames. Lore: Directions for creating the Burning Eye of AlGhautra are carved into the walls of ancient subterranean temples devoted to Al-Ghautra, about whom little is known. Apparently some sort of powerful priest or demigod, Al-Ghautra sought to bring light and fire everywhere, even the darkest underground reaches.
111
Illus. by E. Cox
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
112
Energy Source: The sun itself is the energy source for the Burning Eye. Catalyst: Creating the Burning Eye requires unnaturally clear atmospheric conditions. A control weather spell cast on a day that’s clear and sunny to begin with is necessary for the birth of the Burning Eye. Trigger: This magic event has two triggers. The first is a 3-foot-wide lens made of purest diamond (hardness 20, hit points 40) and ensorcelled to magnify the sun’s rays. The diamond lens was broken into three parts after the last creation of the Burning Eye centuries ago. Pelor’s church guards two shards of the lens and keeps them separated from each other, but no one knows the location of the third shard. The other trigger element is a location. The Burning Eye of Al-Ghautra will emerge only above a mountain that’s at least 15,000 feet tall. Control: The diamond lens is also the control element. Anyone grasping the edges of the lens and peering through it can redirect the gaze of the Burning Eye. Effects: Once the reassembled diamond lens is brought to the mountaintop and the strong rays of the sun shine through it, the Burning Eye begins to form. The lens floats in midair a few feet above the peak, and over the course of the next 10 minutes, a massive eyeball composed of bright flame appears 100 feet above the mountain peak. Once the Burning Eye forms, the magic event is active and no longer requires good weather above the mountain peak. Anyone looking through the diamond lens can clearly see a circular area with a 40-foot radius, even if it’s hundreds of miles away. As long as line of sight exists from the Burning Eye to the target area, it can be viewed through the lens. The area viewed through the lens is brightly lit (as a daylight spell) no matter what the weather conditions or time of day. It also provides a true seeing effect for the viewer. If the lens views the same area for 2 rounds in a row, the Burning Eye does more than just illuminate. It creates a fire storm effect (as the spell, caster level 15th, Reflex DC 20) that deals 15d6 points of fire damage if the sun is shining on the mountain peak, 10d6 points of fire damage if it’s daytime but cloudy, or 5d6 points of fire damage if it’s night. Unlike the fire storm spell, any creatures caught within the Burning Eye’s area risks catching on fire (see page 303 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide) if they take fire damage. Buildings and forests likewise catch fire
The Burning Eye of Al-Ghautra explodes into existence
An ebon sphere that functions like a magical version of a black hole, the Consuming Vortex of Traal ingests only the living. The more living creatures it devours, the stronger and smarter it grows. Lore: Several manuscripts purport to describe the process of creating the Consuming Vortex of Traal, but all are fragmentary and incomplete. Filling in the missing parts requires ten separate divination or contact other plane spells—only the deities and similar great powers know the missing details of vortex creation. Creatures that try to create a vortex with incomplete or inaccurate instructions are sucked against their will to the Negative Energy Plane when they create the gate (as described below). Energy Source: The vortex itself is made of absolute nothingness, but it requires an influx of negative energy at the moment of creation. Anyone seeking to create the Consuming Vortex of Traal must create a gate (as the spell) to the Negative Energy Plane, and then call forth pure negative energy. This drains the caster as would calling forth a creature, costing him or her 1,000 XP. Catalyst: The negative energy that emerges from the gate must fill a gold-inlaid, cylindrical cage some 10 feet across (which costs 10,000 gp to make). An inky blackness fills the cage and pulses gently until the trigger moment. Trigger: When the new moon reaches its apogee, the negative energy consumes the cage. The 10-foot-wide black sphere extrudes nine flickering tentacles another 10 feet from its surface. The vortex then begins to consume any nearby creatures.
CHAPTER 3
CONSUMING VORTEX OF TRAAL
Control: At first, no force can move the Consuming Vortex of Traal. But once it grows as described below, it gains the ability to move. Positive energy repulses the vortex, so some clerics can crudely “steer” the vortex by channeling turn undead attempts into it. Turning damage sufficient to turn a 10 HD undead forces the vortex to move 10 feet directly away from the cleric. Effects: The Consuming Vortex of Traal is in some respects like a creature, and in other respects like a magic effect. Its nine tentacles make +15 melee touch attacks against all creatures within reach (split up as evenly as possible), and once a tentacle hits, it stays attached to its target. A creature struck by a tentacle must succeed on a series of increasingly difficult Will saves: DC 15 in the fi rst round, DC 20 in the second round, DC 25 in the third round, and so on. Creatures that fail a Will save are instantly slain as they’re sucked into the vortex; their agonized features appear briefly in relief on the surface of the vortex, and then they’re gone. Each tentacle is intangible and immune to physical and magical attacks, but a creature can escape from one by using a spell from the teleportation subschool or by channeling turning damage into the vortex sufficient to turn a 10 HD undead. Merely running away does no good; the tentacles stretch and reach through solid matter, if necessary, to maintain a connection with their target. Because the vortex is sessile at first, an evil cleric who brings it into being often has a number of sacrificial victims handy to feed into the vortex until it grows and gains mobility. Once the vortex has consumed 100 Hit Dice of creatures, it grows to a diameter of 15 feet, and its tentacles likewise extend their reach to 15 feet. It also starts to move at a speed of 20 feet per round. The vortex possesses only a rudimentary intellect at this time and seeks large congregations of living creatures that it can consume more quickly. The vortex completely ignores matter, floating down narrow corridors, through floors and ceilings, and so on. When the vortex has consumed a further 200 Hit Dice of creatures, it reaches its maximum size of 20 feet across with 20-foot-long tentacles. Its speed likewise increases to 60 feet per round. At this stage, the vortex knows enough to seek concentrations of life such as cities and to retreat when faced with positive energy attacks (as described below). To Stop: Disrupting the gate spell or damaging the cage before the apogee of the new moon ruins the ritual that creates the Consuming Vortex of Traal—and it might suck the would-be creator of the vortex into the Negative Energy Plane. Once the vortex consumes the cage and extrudes its tentacles, however, it’s much harder to stop. The PCs might try to prevent the vortex from consuming 100
THE CAMPAIGN
and burn to the ground if caught in the Burning Eye’s gaze. Fires spread as described in Forest Fires, page 87 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide. As a practical matter, the creators of the Burning Eye usually keep the lens moving, scanning for intruders who would try to end the magic event. Such intruders get 1 round of warning before the fire storm hits, because they notice that their surroundings are unusually brightly lit. To Stop: When fire cultists last lit the Burning Eye of Al-Ghautra several centuries ago, heroes affiliated with the church of Pelor eliminated the eye by reaching the mountain summit and breaking the diamond lens. That remains an effective way to stop the magic event. Merely obscuring the sun with weather won’t do the trick, but a solar eclipse (perhaps a magic event of its own) would cause the eye to wink out and the lens to shatter into diamond dust. Dealing 50 points of cold damage to the Burning Eye will cause it to “blink” for 1 round, gazing nowhere. If the cold damage can be sustained somehow, the Burning Eye won’t reopen.
113
Illus. by K. Andrasofsky
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
114
Hit Dice of creatures, and then securely wall it off so it can’t reach more victims. Some ancient laboratories and dungeons probably have quiescent Consuming Vortices, gently waving their tentacles across empty rooms until unwitting explorers disturb them. Characters in close proximity to a vortex can get a measure of protection by relying on teleportation magic (to get away if a tentacle touches them) or through spells such as death ward that protect against negative energy. Death ward doesn’t provide complete protection, however; it merely gives the tentacles a 50% miss chance when attacking a creature protected by the spell. The only known way to destroy a Consuming Vortex of Traal is to channel a massive amount of positive energy into it—a successful turning check, made from within 10 feet of the vortex, high enough to affect a 20 HD undead and that deals enough turning damage to affect 100 Hit Dice of undead.
races. While a powerful orc chieftain might be able to gather several large orc tribes to his banner and bully a few tribes of goblins into service, an Avatar of the Horde instinctively exerts control over many races at once, including powerful giants and monstrous humanoids. Lore: Many great heroes have undertaken long and dangerous quests to seek out and destroy the knowledge of the ritual needed to create an Avatar of the Horde. Because of these efforts, learning how to create this magic event is extremely difficult. A creature wishing to learn the ritual must find one of the few remaining texts that describe the ritual, and study the text successfully. Gleaning this information from the obscure and ancient text requires that the potential avatar succeed on a DC 15 Knowledge (arcana) check. In a few very rare cases, the orc deity Gruumsh has imparted knowledge of the ritual directly to one of his favored followers, circumventing the efforts of heroes seeking to prevent the ritual from taking place. The ritual itself is actually an arduous test of the potential avatar’s might AVATAR OF and dedication, and it is THE HORDE described in full in the Evil humanoids, effects section below. such as orcs and Energy Source: The Avatar of the Horde, goblins, occasionally gather into great however powerful it may hordes to raid the lands be, cannot compel a fracof men and their allies. At tious group of armies for their center, always, is a leadlong without continuous mager strong enough to gather more ical energy. The ancient and foul than his own tribe to his banner. rituals that give rise to the Avatar of the These leaders, fearsome as they might be, Horde also set in motion a continuous and An evil cleric tries to master the are but a pale shadow of the champions subtle magical force that keeps the horde Consuming Vortex of Traal of destruction known as Avatars of the bound together. This gentle compulsion is Horde. Gifted with more than simple physical might, an enough to bind the horde to the will of the Avatar, but Avatar of the Horde holds a supernatural sway over great it requires continuous energy to maintain. This magical numbers of dangerous humanoids and giants, building force is fueled by the deaths of those slain at the horde’s an army of tremendous size composed of many different hands. The horde cares nothing of the race, alignment,
races cannot abide to remain as one army, and they return to their normal homelands, fighting each other along the way. In addition, if the horde fails to slay at least 1,000 individuals each month, the magical force that binds it together fails, and it dissipates.
KILLING FROST OF GHULURAK CHAPTER 3
Locked beyond the boundaries of both space and time, Ghulurak, a being of ancient and frozen madness, conjures ageless nightmares of frozen worlds. Within the dark dreams of Ghulurak, whole worlds lie stilled to frozen unlife. Ghulurak would freeze all life, binding living worlds into a frozen rigor of agony and insanity. Driven by the dark images of Ghulurak, some maddened individuals carve this image from the purest ice of polar glaciers, allowing Ghulurak’s frozen power a way to access the material world. Once this pathway lies open, a desolate region of cold spreads ever outward, driving frost and hunger before it. Those who aren’t slain outright by the frigid temperatures eventually fall victim to the maddening image of Ghulurak, and begin working to protect and serve the frozen monstrosity. Lore: A few forgotten fragments of lore hold descriptions of the Killing Frost of Ghulurak and its effects. Learning the details of the Killing Frost requires a DC 40 Knowledge (history) check. Some lore is so precise, though, that it causes the image of Ghulurak to fester in the reader’s mind, and drives her to madness. Any creature that rolls a 50 or higher on an attempt to learn of the Killing Frost is exposed to a description so precise that she must succeed on a DC 25 Will save or fall under the effect of a geas spell that directs the reader to create the statue and complete the ritual that brings the Killing Frost into existence. Energy Source: The Killing Frost of Ghulurak draws power from a being of vast and ancient evil. Any true replica of its frozen and twisted form allows the creature Ghulurak to send a slender icicle of its power into the worlds of men. Once such a replica exists, Ghulurak powers the killing frost that bears its name. Trigger: The Killing Frost of Ghulurak starts when pure glacier ice is carved into Ghulurak’s form in a ritual combining both fell magic and masterwork sculpture—work that takes many hours. The statue requires a cube of ice at least 20 feet by 20 feet by 20 feet. Creating the statue requires 80 hours of labor, and it must be carved by hand. Interrupting the work on the statue does not disrupt the creation process, but all 80 hours of work must be fi nished before the rest of the ritual can be completed. Once the time has been spent working on the statue, the sculptor must succeed on a DC 25 Craft (sculpting) check or the effort is wasted and she must begin again. As soon as a statue of sufficient quality is complete, three separate symbols of insanity must
THE CAMPAIGN
or nature of the creatures killed. As long as the armies of the horde bring death to at least one thousand creatures each month, the magical force that binds them into one army remains active. Catalyst: The ritual that culminates the trial of the horde requires a small amount of blood from each of the races to be bound into the horde. Eligible creature types include humanoid (orc), humanoid (goblinoid), humanoid (gnoll), monstrous humanoid, and giant. Trigger: The trigger for the Avatar of the Horde coming into power is the completion of the trial of the horde, a long and complicated quest that requires significant might and dedication. The avatar must singlehandedly slay one member of each race to be included in the horde. Once all these combats are complete, the potential avatar must journey to an ancient holy site in the far north, where many believe that Gruumsh and Corellon Larethian fought one of their many battles. The avatar must cause the death of thirteen elves at this site (and so must also manage to get the elves to the site). Once the trial of the horde is complete, the avatar can bind a number of distinct races into the horde equal to 3 × his Cha modifier. If the avatar’s Charisma modifier changes after the completion of the trial of the horde, there is no change in the number of races that the avatar can include in the horde. Control: The Avatar of the Horde maintains a subtle, instinctive control over the horde at all times. Creatures of the horde regard the avatar as a creature of power and a true leader. Their disposition is never less than friendly toward it, and often includes an almost worshipful devotion. Although the fractious races of the horde generally follow the directives of the Avatar of the Horde, they are less firmly tied to one another. Open fighting is uncommon, but sometimes seen within the ranks of the horde. This infighting usually occurs between large and powerful tribes of lesser humanoids such as orcs and goblins. Few orc tribes will tangle with giants or trolls, but they hope to profit by weakening lesser members of the horde. Any enterprising chieftain, while bound to the horde, remains alert for opportunities to weaken tribes that lair near his own. Effects: The singular effect of an Avatar of the Horde is to bind fractious tribes from many different and warlike races into a cohesive army. Destruction fuels the horde and keeps it together, so the Avatar of the Horde must constantly push its army onward. The exact numbers of each type of creature available to the Avatar of the Horde are determined by the DM, but a reasonable estimate is somewhere around one hundred individual creatures per Hit Die of the Avatar. To Stop: The most direct way to shatter the might of the horde is to destroy its leader. Without the magical strength behind the Avatar of the Horde, the fractious
115
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
116
be graven into the base of the statue within an hour of its completion. To even begin the process, the sculptor must have been exposed to a precise description of Ghulurak’s form (see Lore above) or have been dominated by the madness within an existing Heart of Ghulurak (see below). Control: Ghulurak’s frozen madness lurks beyond both time and knowledge, and no force can control the killing frost made manifest by his power. Effects: The Killing Frost of Ghulurak spreads slowly from the immobile ice statue that brings it into being. As the frost spreads, three distinct areas of dangerous cold emerge, growing in severity and danger the nearer they are to the statue itself. Frost Fringe: The Frost Fringe, the first and least dangerous of the zones of cold that surround the statue of Ghulurak, is a 10-mile-deep ring. The entire area of the frost fringe has a temperature that ranges from 10° to 20° Fahrenheit, exposing creatures in it to the dangers inherent to cold weather (see page 302 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide). The Killing Frost: The second zone of cold, and in most cases the largest, is known as the Killing Frost of Ghulurak. The killing frost expands out from the statue, increasing in size at a rate of 1 mile in radius per week. The killing frost begins where the innermost zone ends and extends out depending on how long the statue of Ghulurak has been in existence. The temperature within the area of the killing frost never rises above –20° F. This extreme cold has several effects: unprotected characters take 1d6 points of cold damage per 10 minutes (no save). In addition, an unprotected character must make a Fortitude save (DC 15, + 1 per previous check) or take 1d4 points of nonlethal damage. Those wearing metal armor or coming into contact with very cold metal are affected as if by a chill metal spell. A partially protected character takes damage and makes saving throws once per hour instead of once per 10 minutes. The Heart of Ghulurak: The area closest to the frozen statue of Ghulurak holds within it a brutal madness that warps those who dare to enter it. Within a 1-mile radius of the statue, an area called the Heart of Ghulurak, the temperature remains unearthly cold at all times, hovering around –60° F. Unprotected characters take 1d6 points of cold damage and 1d4 points of nonlethal damage per minute (no save). Partially protected characters take damage once every 10 minutes instead of once every minute. Although dangerous, the cold radiating from Ghulurak’s frozen visage is but a precursor to the mental assault that those close to the statue must endure. Creatures that take damage from the cold temperatures must succeed on a DC 25 Will save each hour spent within 1 mile of the statue or fall under the sway of Ghulurak’s mad dreams. This
is a supernatural effect identical to a dominate monster spell (caster level 20th), except that it has no maximum duration and is not subject to spell resistance. Creatures dominated in this manner strive to protect the Heart of Ghulurak and to lure (or force) others to succumb to the will of Ghulurak. In addition to following the will of Ghulurak, those dominated hold in their minds the true form of Ghulurak and, should the original statue be destroyed, they are compelled to create one anew. This effect can be broken only by a break enchantment spell cast within a hallowed area. Many evil creatures fall easily under Ghulurak’s sway, and work to bind others to the frozen dreams of their master. These fell creatures rampage throughout the regions known as the frost fringe and the killing frost. The most insidious manifestation of Ghulurak’s icerimmed madness, the Heart of Ghulurak can eventually expand to cover a world. Should the killing frost ever remain manifested for a century, the heart begins to expand, pushing outward from its icy center, its radius increasing by 1 mile every month. Ancient lore tells of worlds lost to the frozen insanity of Ghulurak, for should the heart ever spread to cover an entire world, Ghulurak itself is made manifest on the world and forever holds dominion over it. The Form of Ghulurak: Imbued with magic and madness from Ghulurak, the completed statue exudes a magical effect that few can resist. Those wishing to destroy the statue must endure its terrifying mental barrage and defeat those who have already been overwhelmed by the madness of Ghulurak. The magic of its creation makes the statue much more resistant to damage than normal ice. The Form of Ghulurak has hardness 5 and 10 hit points per inch of thickness. A typical statue, carved from a 20-foot block, is about 15 feet thick, giving it 1,800 hit points. To Stop: The Killing Frost of Ghulurak can be stopped only by destroying the Form of Ghulurak. Crucial to the conjuration of the killing frost, this statue feeds the energy of the killing frost. Once the statue is destroyed, the lands affected by the frost fringe or the killing frost return to their normal seasonal weather over the course of several days. The effects of the Heart of Ghulurak fade much more slowly. The radius of the Heart of Ghulurak shrinks at a rate of 5 feet per month, and its full effects remain in any area that it still covers. Even after the wider frost has long since faded from memory, the Heart of Ghulurak can twist those who walk within it to madness, driving them to carve Ghulurak’s form anew from some other shard of ancient ice.
LIGHT OF PURITY The Light of Purity moves through the world as a mobile and physical manifestation of the might of Pelor. Clerics
CHAPTER 3
he can take a standard action to move the Light 30 feet. Once a cleric has control of the Light, that control cannot be wrested away until the minute has passed. If two clerics attempt to gain control of the Light at the same time, the cleric who would have turned an undead creature with the most Hit Dice succeeds in gaining control of the Light. Effects: The Light of Purity is a moving magical effect with a 40-foot radius. It is impervious to magical effects, and is completely incorporeal and capable of moving through solid matter. By itself, the Light is stationary, but a cleric of Pelor can use a turn undead attempt to move it (see above). The Light of Purity has several effects on creatures and objects that come within its radius: Undead creatures and creatures with the evil subtype take 10d6 points of damage at the beginning of each round that they are within the Light of Purity. The Light of Purity illuminates everything within its radius flawlessly. It suppresses all invisibility effects within its radius as the invisibility purge spell, and it automatically dispels any magical darkness effects that its light comes in contact with. To Stop: The Light of Purity is extinguished only if a cleric of Pelor fails to cast a daylight spell into the heart of the magical effect once at noon each day and once each night at midnight. The only way to darken the magical effect is to prevent such a casting. Only one daylight spell need be cast on the Light of Purity at each time, and the clerics of Pelor place great importance on the ceremony, assembling many of their church’s most powerful members at the time of each casting.
THE CAMPAIGN
of the Lord of Light call forth this glowing nimbus of pure light on their most sacred holiday, and one of their number must renew the Light once each day and once each night. The Light is both a tangible symbol of the might of Pelor and one of the church’s most powerful weapons against evil and undead creatures. The power of the Light of Purity quickly destroys any undead creature that comes within its brilliant radius, and it likewise blasts the flesh of innately evil creatures such as demons and devils. Although Pelor’s clerics are usually loath to take the Light of Purity out of the confines of the holy site where it is created, when the church of Pelor marches to war, the Light is brought to the fore to bring down the church’s greatest foes. Lore: The church of Pelor’s greatest temples house annals of lore that describe how to summon and control the Light of Purity. A cleric of Pelor can recall the exact details of the ceremony by succeeding on a DC 20 Knowledge (religion) check. Energy Source: The Light of Purity is maintained by the combined will of the clerics of Pelor and the might of the Lord of Light himself. As a token of the order’s vigilance and dedication to the Light of Purity, one cleric of Pelor must cast daylight into the Light each day at noon and each night at midnight. The cleric need not be the same for each casting, and in fact the privilege of casting the spell is rotated through the ranks of the most powerful and influential clerics within the order. If a cleric fails to do this, Pelor withdraws his might and the Light of Purity is extinguished. Catalyst: Every one hundred years, in the height of summer on a clear day, Pelor stretches forth his might and creates the Day of Sun. This day, sacred to the church of Pelor for many reasons, is the only day during which the clerics of Pelor can summon forth the Light of Purity. Trigger: One hundred clerics of Pelor must gather within a temple of Pelor specially prepared for the occasion and they must all cast daylight. In addition to casting the spell at the ceremony, all the participating clerics must devote a solid week to preparing themselves for the event. Along with the presence and spellcasting of the clerics themselves, the ceremony requires at least 10,000 gp in special materials. The ceremony can be performed only in a temple dedicated to Pelor and warded by a hallow spell. Control: The Light of Purity is usually stationary, but a cleric of Pelor can channel the power of his god into the Light and cause it to move slowly. A cleric of Pelor can expend one of his daily turn undead attempts to move the Light. To do this, the cleric rolls a turning check as normal. If the cleric is successful in turning a 10 Hit Dice or greater undead, he gains control of the Light for 1 minute. While a cleric controls the Light,
SPIRIT OF NATURE’S RAGE Within the unknowable spirit of the ancient forests lies a vast and slumbering power. This power rarely manifests in the world of mortal creatures, lacking a will to guide it. It is sometimes sensed—a thunderstorm of unusual strength carries with it a feeling of unquestioned dread, powerful dire animals venture from their usual haunts with violent intent, and similar unexplained events occur when this ancient power comes more firmly in touch with the world of humankind. Ancient rites, their origin bound to the very creation of the world, provide a means to awaken and control this power, and some powerful and dedicated druids can call it forth. Lore: The knowledge required to call upon the Spirit of Nature’s Rage can be found hidden in remote sites of great natural beauty and power. The fragments of lore are always recorded in an ancient form of the Sylvan language. The details of the locations and the lore contained change from site to site, but some examples where this lore might be found include: emblazoned on mountaintops, engraved into rocks buried beneath the roots of an
117
THE CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER 3
ancient tree, or etched into a great obsidian slab in the heart of a volcano. In the rare instance that they can even be found, these fragments of lore are also usually attended by fell guardians with purposes of their own for this information. Anuraxyus, an ancient gold wyrm, for example, slumbers in the heart of a volcano near one of the fragments, intent on ensuring that no evil force can bend the power of Nature’s Rage to its own ends. In sharp contrast to the noble intent of the dragon is Maelbranch, an evil treant gifted with extraordinary druid spellcasting ability, which harbors another fragment within the ancient forest that it rules, seeking to gather more fragments so that it can awaken the spirit. Energy Source: Nature’s nearly limitless power fuels the Spirit of Nature’s Rage, and once the magical event has come into being, it needs no further resources to maintain its powerful effects. Catalyst: The ancient rites that awaken the Spirit of Nature’s Rage require a menhir circle to stand for a great deal of time in a natural location. The menhirs must stand long enough to become bound to the slow power of nature itself, the length of time depending on the nature of the location. The possible locations of menhir circles that can be used for this purpose and the time that they must stand in place are given below. Location Forest Mountaintop Plains Underground
118
Circle Must Stand For 2,000 years 10,000 years 1,000 years 10,000 years
The length of time required is so great that few mortal creatures can find a way to construct a menhir circle themselves, guard its existence for the required time, and then complete the ritual. Those few times that the Spirit of Nature’s Rage has been invoked have been the result of generations of druids devoting their lives to the protection and preservation of a suitable menhir circle. Such a circle must be made of stone from near the location itself, and the magical rituals and crafting required to prepare the site cost an additional 10,000 gp above and beyond the difficulty of obtaining the stone and transporting it to the area. No menhir circle can ever be used more than once to invoke the Spirit of Nature’s Rage. Trigger: When a menhir circle of sufficient age is available, the Spirit of Nature’s Rage can be brought forth by a circle of druids who simultaneously cast storm of vengeance, elemental swarm, summon nature’s ally VII, transport via plants, awaken, and animal growth into prepared menhirs. One druid must cast each spell, all commencing casting at the same time while standing within the menhir circle itself. None of these spells have
a normal effect when cast in this manner, and serve only to awaken the event. No undead creature, regardless of druid spellcasting ability, can ever be part of a circle that controls the Spirit of Nature’s Rage. If a creature that is part of the circle somehow becomes undead, it is removed from the circle and loses the special power to influence those creatures that remain bound by the Spirit of Nature’s Rage. Control: The magical force of the Spirit of Nature’s Rage cannot itself be controlled; its effects bind a large number of dire animals, plants, fey, and elemental creatures to the magic of one circle of druid spellcasters. Effects: Once awakened, the Spirit of Nature’s Rage binds hundreds of natural creatures to the circle that created the event. The exact number and nature of the creatures bound in this manner is left to the discretion of the DM as fits the needs of the campaign, but in general it includes hundreds of animals, dire animals, elementals, fey creatures, and plant creatures. These creatures vary greatly in power, but a significant number of them are dire animals, elementals, and fey of great power. These creatures share an empathic link with any druid from the circle who stands within the menhir circle. This link allows the druid to direct the movements of these creatures, causing them to gather in one place like an army, guard a specific area, or hunt alone in small groups. The most powerful ability of the Spirit of Nature’s Rage, however, is its ability to transmit the magic of the circle members across great distances and to a great number of creatures at one time. Any spell that a circle druid casts within the menhirs can be cast directly on one of the menhirs. This transmits the effect to all the creatures bound to the circle that could be affected by the spell. For example, if a druid casts animal growth into a menhir, all the animals linked to the druid by the Spirit of Nature’s Rage gain the benefit of the spell, regardless of their distance from the circle. Spells with a range of personal cannot be cast into a menhir in this fashion, nor can spells that affect only an area rather than a specific target. For example, bull’s strength can be cast into a menhir in this fashion, but flame strike cannot. Spells that require expensive components or an expenditure of XP to cast require only one expenditure of the required component to affect all the creatures bound by the Spirit of Nature’s Rage. To Stop: The fathomless and ancient power of nature can never be completely quelled, but the direct effects of the Spirit of Nature’s Rage can be stopped by killing all the druids in the circle that triggered the event or by destroying the menhirs that make up the circle. Neither task is simple, since the druids control legions of natural creatures that they can use to protect themselves and the circle, including advanced treants, magically augmented dire animals, and elementals of great age and power.
Illus. by A. Swekel
ot every moment of a DUNGEONS & DRAGONS campaign takes place in a dripping dungeon, dusty crypt, or haunted cavern. Eventually, the PCs will retreat to civilization to rest, recuperate, and relax. They’ll search for a town or city where they can identify magic items, study mysterious discoveries, and seek new adventures. But what if the adventure you’re running doesn’t provide details on any nearby cities? Worse, what happens if the PCs end up staying in town for days, weeks, or even months to create magic items, seek cohorts, or otherwise interact with the world? It helps to have a detailed city or town ready, and this chapter aims to provide just that with the town of Saltmarsh.
ABOUT SALTMARSH Longtime D&D fans no doubt recognize the town of Saltmarsh, which was originally introduced in 1981 in dungeon module U1: The Sinister Secret of Saltmarsh. This module was followed by two more adventures, U2: Danger at Dunwater and U3: The Final Enemy. This chapter omits details of those adventures to avoid spoiling their plots for newer players. As presented in the modules, Saltmarsh was a blank slate. No map of the town existed, and precious few NPCs
were detailed (most of them being villains who weren’t expected to survive the adventure). Yet the town played an important role in the three adventures as a home base for the PCs. Each adventure featured a short description of the town and gave some brief notes on its government and population, but the bulk of the details were left to the Dungeon Master. The town of Saltmarsh presented here exists several years after the events in those adventures. In that time, slavers attacked the nearby town of Seaton, razing much of the city. The combination of refugees flooding into Saltmarsh and the influx of money from numerous suddenly rich adventurers fresh from ordeals in the nearby Hool Marshes, has nearly doubled the town’s population of two thousand. Now, Saltmarsh is one of the most rapidly growing towns in the region. Of course, you can add to or omit any of these facts to make Saltmarsh fit your campaign. This chapter’s details on NPC histories, locations, and deities come from the core D&D world of GREYHAWK, but it’s easy to change them. If your game uses the FORGOTTEN R EALMS setting, Saltmarsh could be located along the Sword Coast, a few days south of Baldur’s Gate, or it could be nestled on the shores of the Inner Sea, along the coast of Cormyr or Sembia.
119
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
In the EBERRON setting, Saltmarsh could be a thriving fishing town somewhere along the coast of Khorvaire, and it could serve as a port of call for adventurers seeking passage to the ruin-haunted reaches of Xen’drik far to the south. Of course, if you set Saltmarsh in GREYHAWK, some of the work has already been done for you; Saltmarsh is located in hex U4–123, on the southern coast of Keoland. Saltmarsh (Large Town): Conventional; AL NG; 3,000 gp limit; Assets 577,500 gp; Population 3,850; Mixed (human 81%, halfling 5%, half-elf 4%, gnome 3%, elf 3%, dwarf 2%, half-orc 1%, other 1%).
NOTABLE NPCS This section provides basic information about key NPCs in Saltmarsh, including their names, alignments, genders, races, classes, levels, and positions or roles in the town. Other details are left for you to create so you can customize the NPCs as needed for your particular campaign.
TOWN COUNCILORS Egan Lassiter (NE male human aristocrat 4/cleric 10), noble and secret high priest of Vecna Erolin Timertikos (NG male human aristocrat 6/fighter 3), Lord Mayor of Saltmarsh Hoskin Lashti (NG male halfling bard 1/aristocrat 7), owner of the Silver Raven Lira Tolivar (LN female halfling druid 8), keeper of the Saltmarsh Beacon Lyra Ivessa (NG female human cleric 10), high priestess of Pelor Toren Aerakin (LG male human aristocrat 6/wizard 1), noble
CITY WATCH AND MILITIA
120
Geolin (LN male dwarf fighter 4), commander of the town hall guards Grust Redbeard (LN male half-orc warrior 11), warden of Saltmarsh Jail Iborian Kelstinar (LN male half-elf ranger 6), commander of Hoolwatch Tower Lars Tannerson (LG male human warrior 4), commander of Eastgate Vera Orrenti (LG female human warrior 5), commander of Westgate Walthas Kang (LN male human fighter 11), commander of the city watch Others in City Watch: Ranger 6, barbarian 5 (2), fighter 5 (2), warrior 5 (5), ranger 3 (8), barbarian 2 (4), warrior 2 (4), barbarian 1 (6), warrior 1 (27) Others in Militia: Expert 11, commoner 10, commoner 5 (2), expert 5 (2), commoner 2 (4), expert 2 (4), expert 1 (54), adept 1 (8), warrior 1 (116)
GUILD LEADERS Abelard Larthe (LG male human expert 2), master of scriveners Andrati Paterwalus (CG male human wizard 8), master of tinkers Aydi Zarastian (CG female half-elf weretiger bard 11/ duelist 2), mistress of entertainment Diomar Lian (NG male human expert 1/wizard 4), master of alchemists Dircroft Cronan (LE male human expert 3/rogue 3), master of tailors Ebstilar Runail (LG male human expert 4/rogue 2), master of merchants Jasker (NG male human expert 5), master of smiths Jilar Kanklesten (NG male gnome expert 7), master of carpenters Merrin Paskenfell (CG male human sorcerer 5), master of artisans and curator of Saltmarsh Museum Mires Tithane (CE male gnome sorcerer 8), master of bakers Molak Mako (LG male half-orc fighter 1/expert 3), master of shipwrights Mylor Orvid (NG male human wizard 9), master of wizards’ guild Ned Shakeshaft (CE male human rogue 5/assassin 5), master of assassins’ guild Rodelik Karneth (LN male human expert 4/rogue 2), master of jewelers Ryan Kirtap (CG male human expert 3), master of brewers Sasha Amistar (CN female half-elf rogue 3/bard 7/arcane trickster 3), mistress of thieves’ guild Tarn Ticklip (CN male human commoner 3), master of dungsweepers Yonshi Quansath (LE male human expert 4), master of stonemasons
RELIGIOUS LEADERS Audry Lilybrook (CE female human adept 6), owner of Lilybrook Orphanage and cultist of Graz’zt Emirat Rastenar (N male half-elf cleric 8), high priest of Boccob Ferrin Kastilar (CN male halfling druid 4), high priest of Obad-Hai Gerald Isslor (N male human cleric 8), high priest of Fharlanghn Nestor Purilltan (CG male human fighter 2/cleric 7), high priest of Kord Warale Essryn (NG male half-elf cleric 4), priest of Pelor
OTHER NOTABLE CITIZENS Ankus Akalvin (CN male elf ranger 8), owner of the Drunken Urchin Anmeh Ronakin (CG male human ranger 3), owner of Anmeh’s Hall of Oddities
SALTMARSH
Torkan Anderhoff (NE male human rogue 2), Sawfish Boy and slaughterhouse worker Tyson Kashtilan (N male human cleric 1), missing priest of Boccob Vander Anderhoff (LE male human rogue 2), Sawfish Boy and slaughterhouse worker Vlistur (LE male doppelganger sorcerer 6), master of the Black Market Other Citizens: Barbarian 10, barbarian 3 (5), barbarian 1 (3); bard 9, bard 4 (2), bard 2 (4), bard 1 (8); cleric 8, cleric 4 (2), cleric 3 (2), cleric 2 (4), cleric 1 (12); druid 4, druid 2 (2), druid 1 (4); fighter 3 (6), fighter 2 (4), fighter 1 (8); monk 6, monk 3 (2), monk 1 (4); paladin 5, paladin 2 (2), paladin 1 (4); ranger 1 (4); rogue 9, rogue 3 (4), rogue 2 (5), rogue 1 (8); sorcerer 4, sorcerer 2 (2), sorcerer 1 (4); wizard 7, wizard 3 (2), wizard 1 (4); adept 7, adept 3 (2), adept 2 (5), adept 1 (11); aristocrat 7, aristocrat 3 (2), aristocrat 1 (19); expert 1 (57); warrior 1 (55); commoner 1 (3,275)
CHAPTER 4
Baswulf Tisk (CN male gnome ranger 11), hired thug Blahg (CE male dwarf rogue 5/sorcerer 1), owner of the Hoof ’n’ Mouth Daryn Larsken (LG male human fighter 6/duelist 5), owner of the School of Blades Desthen Clorisal (NE male human wizard 4), con artist posing as sculptor Ember (NG female gnome fighter 6/duelist 2), teacher at the School of Blades Flanigan Lorsk (LN male human expert 4), owner of Whitecap Shipping Jarthis Andrigal (LE male half-elf aristocrat 4), prisoner of Soshyn Kailee Restinan (NG female elf ranger 8), owner of the Lizard’s Boat Katlen Lithoti (CN female aranea wizard 2), apprentice to Mylor Orvid Kavern Lesk (N male human wizard 2), apprentice to Mylor Orvid Kinto Anderhoff (NE male human rogue 2), Sawfish Boy and slaughterhouse worker Klori (NG male human expert 1), missing member of carpenter’s guild Lankus Kurrid (CG male human fighter 4/expert 1), owner of the Wicker Goat Loris Aeltyn (CG male human aristocrat 3), noble Misha Larakti (NG female human expert 1/bard 4), owner of the Curio Shop Moradni Mortai (LN male human wizard 2), apprentice to Mylor Orvid Mylor Brank (NG male human wizard 5), owner of Saltmarsh Sendings Nettie (CE female human adept 5), possessed lunatic Noshi (LG male human monk 6), caretaker of Saltmarsh Cemetery Oona Fastralli (LN female human expert 3/aristocrat 1), ruling noble Oslor Pendicraw (N male human expert 4), “owner” of the Dancing Dryad Parne Anderhoff (CE male human rogue 2), Sawfish Boy and slaughterhouse worker Porthas (LG male human rogue 3/fighter 4/duelist 1), teacher at the School of Blades Radric (NG male dwarf rogue 5), owner of Radric’s General Store Sara Rasivath (NG female halfling ranger 3/aristocrat 4), noble Silark (NG male lizardfolk druid 5/bard 1), ambassador Skie Rayncliff (N female human aristocrat 5/rogue 4), vengeful mistress Soshyn Anamar (NE female human vampire cleric 12), haunter of the Andrigal Mansion Tobias Ambermead (LN male human aristocrat 5), noble
LIFE IN SALTMARSH Saltmarsh was founded 130 years ago by four adventurers who had cleared the area of a particularly brutal tribe of lizardfolk. Before they came, the area had consisted of just a few buildings, but the adventurers decided it was a fine place to retire and used their wealth to found the town of Saltmarsh. Over time, Saltmarsh grew slowly, eventually stabilizing at two thousand inhabitants strong for many years. Recently, pirates and slavers from the north sacked the nearby city of Seaton, and nearly a thousand refugees flooded the streets of Saltmarsh. At about the same time, several bands of adventurers finished dealing with a large sahuagin threat to the southwest, and the sudden influx of the vast treasures they had accumulated played a large part in the expansion of the town. Today, Saltmarsh is on the verge of becoming a legitimate city. Many travelers have decided to settle here because the town is located in a prime position—not too far from civilization, but far enough that external politics and tax collectors rarely bother to make the journey. It is a town filled with possibility and ripe for exploration—a perfect place for adventurers to call home while they explore the trackless reaches of the lizardfolk-haunted Hool Marshes to the southwest, the mysterious reach of the Dreadwood to the northeast, or any of the wild frontiers that lie between. Like most towns its size, Saltmarsh doesn’t have an underground network of sewage tunnels. Rather, the streets are lined with gutters that, in theory, should funnel the city’s waste down to the ocean or the Kingfisher River. Each day, laborers employed by the dungsweepers’ guild gather and replace large barrels of garbage and other waste that have been placed on convenient street corners. Saltmarsh is run by a town council of six elected individuals. The council meets in the town hall at the start of every
121
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
season, at which time they vote on issues and new laws and hear public grievances. In order for a motion or issue to be ratified, at least five votes must be cast in favor. Chief among the council is Lord Mayor Timertikos (area 59). The position of lord mayor is assigned by popular vote of the other members of the town council; the position is for life, or until the rest of the council votes unanimously to impeach. Only the lord mayor can call emergency meetings of the council. His vote also counts as two when issues are on the floor during a council session and is often used to settle ties. The other five members of the council also hold their positions for life, but they are nominated and elected by popular vote of the citizens of the town. Currently, the council members are Lady Lyra Ivessa (area 8), Lord Hoskin Lashti (area 42), Lord Toren Aerakin (area 54), Lord Egan Lassiter (area 57), and Lady Lira Tolivar (area 63).
for a large town to offer enough intrigue for sixty or more opportunities for adventure, introducing too many can drown your players in options.
1. CITY WALL
Saltmarsh is surrounded by an extensive stone wall made of large blocks of limestone quarried from the cliffs south of town. The populace built the wall—which is unusually large for a town of Saltmarsh’s size—only recently, when fears of attacks from nearby humanoid tribes took hold. The layered wall actually consists of two 4-foot-thick, 20-foot-high walls about 15 feet apart. The space between them is filled with packed earth and then capped with a wooden roof. Guards patrol the top of the wall, walking along a 7-foot-wide trough in the center protected by a 3-foot-high rim that provides those in the trough with cover. Twelve square watchtowers (area 2) control access to the top of the wall. It’s difficult to forcibly gain entry to Saltmarsh by battering a hole in the wall. An attacker must first penetrate The remainder of this chapter explores Saltmarsh in great the outer wall, followed by the packed-earth interior, and detail. You can use it as described, or you can pick and finally the inner wall. Each 10-foot-wide section of city choose buildings, NPCs, and adventure hooks for use in wall has the following statistics. other cities. Stone Wall (Outer or Inner): 4 ft. thick; hardness 8; hp Most of the locations include an adventure hook, but 360; break DC 60; Climb DC 20. don’t feel as if you need to use them all. They should serve Once the walls are breached, climbing over the 15 feet as inspiration for your campaign. Choose the hooks you of packed earth lodged between the walls requires a DC like, and ignore the rest. Although it’s entirely plausible 15 Climb check. pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
EXPLORING SALTMARSH
QUICK LOCATION REFERENCE We don’t want you to spend too much time flipping back and forth through this chapter, looking for the carpenters’ guildhall, Frog Park, Crazy Nettie’s place, or any other location that you Page 147 Aeltyn Mansion (area 55) 147 Aerakin Mansion (area 54) 134 Alchemists’ Guildhall (area 30) 148 Ambermead House (area 58) 149 Andrigal Mansion (area 60) 135 Anmeh’s Hall of Oddities (area 32) 128 Anvil, the (area 13) 129 Bakers’ Guildhall (area 16) 140 Barracks/Jail (area 43) 145 Black Market (area 49) 130 Blue Frog Brewery (area 19) 137 Bridges, major (area 36) 137 Bridges, minor (area 37) 128 Carpenters’ Guildhall (area 11) 126 Cathedral of Kord (area 7) 127 Cathedral of Pelor (area 8) 124 City Gates (area 3) 122 City Wall (area 1) 146 Crazy Nettie’s Place (area 50) 136 Curio Shop, the (area 33) 143 Dancing Dryad, the (area 47) 134 Drunken Urchin, the (area 28)
122
know you read about but just can’t find at the moment. Here’s an alphabetical list of all sixty-five locations described in this chapter and where to find them.
Page 146 Dungsweepers’ Guildhall (area 51) 147 Fastralli Mansion (area 53) 133 Fishmongers’ Warehouses (area 25) 145 Flounder Pounder, the (area 48) 131 Frog Park (area 21) 133 Hoof ’n’ Mouth, the (area 26) 125 Hoolwatch Tower (area 4) 128 Jewelers’ Guildhall (area 14) 148 Lassiter House (area 57) 136 Leatherworkers’ Guildhall (area 34) 143 Lilybrook Orphanage (area 46) 131 Lizard Embassy (area 22) 130 Lizard’s Boat, the (area 18) 135 Market (area 31) 136 Marshgate Bridge (area 35) 129 Merchants’ Guildhall (area 17) 152 Oak Island (area 63) 152 Oak Island Keep (area 62) 128 Radric’s General Store (area 12) 148 Rasivath Tower (area 56) 152 Saltmarsh Beacon (area 65) 127 Saltmarsh Cemetery (area 10)
Page 137 Saltmarsh Museum (area 38) 132 Saltmarsh Playhouse (area 24) 152 Saltmarsh Point Forum (area 61) 126 Saltmarsh Sendings (area 6) 139 School of Blades, the (area 41) 129 Scriveners’ Guildhall (area 15) 133 Shipyard (area 27) 130 Shrine of Obad-Hai (area 20) 140 Silver Raven, the (area 42) 142 Slaughterhouse (area 44) 152 Standing Stones (area 64) 143 Stonemasons’ Guildhall (area 45) 131 Tailors’ Guildhall (area 23) 138 Temple of Boccob (area 39) 127 Temple of Fharlanghn (area 9) 149 Timertikos House (area 59) 147 Tinkers’ Guildhall (area 52) 139 Town Hall (area 40) 124 Watchtowers (area 2) 134 Whitecap Shipping (area 29) 125 Wicker Goat, the (area 5)
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
123
Illus. by B. Hagan
CHAPTER 4
SALTMARSH
The town of Saltmarsh as seen from an approaching ship
Creatures: Patrols of guards (human warrior 1) walk along the walls at all times, although in times of peace, these patrols consist of only a single guard stationed between each watchtower. When the city raises the alarm, this number increases to three guards per wall section.
2. WATCHTOWERS
124
Twelve watchtowers provide additional defense to Saltmarsh’s wall. The majority of these towers stand along the eastern portion of the wall, where the open country and swamps are notorious for hiding tribes of dangerous humanoids and bandits. Each watchtower is made of stone and stands 30 feet in height. A single door provides access to the ground floor inside, which is split into three rooms: a holding cell, a small armory and storeroom, and a guard room. The upper floor holds a barracks for the guards posted at the tower and exits onto the city wall. The roof is armed with a single light catapult. A spiral staircase in the tower’s center provides access to all three levels. Creatures: Each watchtower has a contingent of three guards (human warrior 1), who live on the second floor and work in 8-hour shifts to patrol the roof and the nearby wall sections. These guards are recruited from the militia and are not part of the actual city watch. When necessary, they report
directly to Lars Tannerson or Vera Orrenti at either city gate (area 3), or to Walthas Kang at the city barracks (area 43).
3. CITY GATES Two gates, one at either end of the city, control land access to Saltmarsh. The townsfolk refer to them (simply enough) as Eastgate and Westgate. Each gate consists of a 60-footby-20-foot structure shaped roughly like a large “H”—a walkway over the road flanked by two towers. Each tower stands 40 feet in height, with the walkway bridging the two about halfway up. A large iron gate between the towers can be closed to control access to the city; the gates are left open during the day and locked at night. Each tower consists of three internal floors and a roof armed with a heavy catapult. The ground floor of each tower has a guardroom, an office, and a holding cell. The second floor is mostly taken up by the machinery that opens and closes the massive iron gate. The third floor contains doors that allow access to the walkway above the gate, along with barracks for the guards stationed in the towers. Saltmarsh lets most visitors into the city. As long as visitors can pay the entry tax or provide citizenry papers, the guards will let them in. A character can become a citizen of Saltmarsh at the town hall (area 40); noncitizens must pay a gate tax of 5 cp per individual. Merchant caravans
This looming watchtower stands an impressive 60 feet in height. Perched on the edge of a 50-foot cliff that plunges into the sea below, its location affords it a magnificent view of the sea and even the distant Hool Marshes about 8 miles to the southwest. The tower is made of stone, and its roof is armed with a single heavy catapult. Inside, the tower consists of four interior floors, each with roomy vaulted ceilings. The ground floor serves as the primary storage and armory for the city wall, watchtowers, and gates. The second floor contains several offices and meeting rooms and includes an exit onto the top of the city wall. The third floor houses barracks for the guards stationed at Hoolwatch Tower, with far more bunks than guards to allow for overflow in times of crisis when additional militia members are mobilized. The top floor consists mostly of the personal quarters of the commander of Hoolwatch. Creatures: An aloof ranger named Iborian Kelstinar commands Hoolwatch Tower. He caught the eye of the Saltmarsh city watch several years ago when he singlehandedly defended a large merchant caravan from an
SALTMARSH
4. HOOLWATCH TOWER
attack by lizardfolk. His sound tactics and bravery earned him immediate acceptance into the guard, and he quickly gained his post at the then-just-completed tower. Over the past several years, the post has gone to Iborian’s head, and he has become possessive of the position and impossible to satisfy. His staff of rangers and warriors finds it increasingly difficult to meet his demands, and the turnover of guards stationed here has begun to worry the town council. Still, no one denies that Iborian is good at his job, so for now, they overlook his attitude. In addition to Iborian, three 3rd-level rangers and twelve 1st-level warriors are stationed here. At any one time, only a third of these forces remain in the tower. Iborian sends the others out on scouting missions in the nearby countryside, and in their off hours the guards tend to spend their time as far from Hoolwatch as they can get. Adventure Hook: Iborian’s attitude has made several enemies, some of whom are angry enough to approach the assassins’ guild for solutions. The PCs could be hired by Iborian after an unsuccessful assassination attempt to find out who wants him killed.
CHAPTER 4
can gain entry to the town for a single caravan tax of 2 gp; this covers all members of the caravan as long as the merchants promise to do business in the town. No tax is charged for leaving the city. In the case of unusual cohorts, mounts, familiars, or animal companions, the guards call upon their commander for assistance and make sure that the suspect creature is well behaved and under the responsibility of its group. A DC 15 Diplomacy check convinces the guards of this, at which point they charge a 1-gp exotic animal tax for each unusual creature granted entrance to the city. If the Diplomacy check succeeds by 15 or more (in other words, if the travelers make a DC 30 check), the guards agree to charge the standard entry tax of 5 cp per individual instead. Obviously evil or dangerous creatures, such as undead and creatures of size Huge or larger, are flatly refused entry. If things begin to turn confrontational, four guards gather reinforcements from the watchtowers and alert the garrison. Creatures: Each of the gates is staffed by a group of eight warriors (human warrior 1) recruited from the city militia. A warrior from the city watch commands each gate; Lars Tannerson oversees Eastgate, while Vera Orrenti runs Westgate. Both take their posts very seriously and don’t suffer fools or horseplay among the guards or from anyone trying to gain access to the city when the gates are closed. During the day, two sentries watch over each tower, and a third sentry stands guard on the ground to the right of the gates. The ground sentry collects taxes from those entering the city and provides direction and aid to visitors. The commanders remain in their offices on the ground floor unless summoned by the sentries.
5. THE WICKER GOAT A drooping wicker goat hangs above the main entrance of this wooden building, its belly long since fallen into disrepair and allowing a family of pigeons to nest inside. The Wicker Goat is one of the oldest buildings in Saltmarsh and is certainly its oldest tavern. Constructed nearly 120 years ago, the building has changed ownership no fewer than two dozen times. When first planning the city walls around Saltmarsh, the town council chose this building as the boundary for the eastern end. The location has resulted in booming business for the tavern, for it’s literally the first building travelers from the east see upon entering the city. Prices at the Wicker Goat are a bit high (125% of normal costs listed in the Player’s Handbook). Generally, road-weary travelers don’t mind, but the locals tend to prefer the taverns closer to the heart of the city. The Wicker Goat serves a wide variety of ale, mead, and even some wine, but notably doesn’t sell any of Ryan Kirtap’s ales (area 19), since the current owner still holds a grudge against Ryan for something neither man seems willing to talk about in public. Creatures: The current owner of the Wicker Goat is a bear of a man named Lankus Kurrid. Nearly 6-1/2 feet tall, this muscular human spent much of his youth traveling from town to town and drinking at local establishments until he got in just enough trouble that moving on to the next town seemed the only option. Eventually, his habits earned him enough trouble that he fled his home nation of Furyondy and settled in Saltmarsh. For many years, Lankus was one of the only locals to patronize the Wicker Goat regularly. He knew visitors stopped here often, and he lurked at the tavern to keep an eye on newcomers so he’d know if enemies from Furyondy
125
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
had come looking for him. None ever did, and his loyal patronage earned him the fast friendship of the prior owner, who, much to Lankus’s surprise, left the deed to the tavern to him upon expiring a few years ago. Since then, Lankus has found that he quite enjoys running a tavern. He keeps meaning to change the name of the place and get rid of the creepy wicker goat out front but simply hasn’t gotten around to it yet. Adventure Hook: An unusual number of coins minted in Furyondy have recently cropped up in Saltmarsh, causing Lankus to worry that Furyondian agents have arrived in town and are searching for him. This worry might just be paranoia, but he’s willing to pay trustworthy locals or patrons 200 gp (or more) for information about the source of these coins.
6. SALTMARSH SENDINGS To send messages to distant locations, one visits Saltmarsh Sendings. The services offered in this brick building vary greatly, from simple letter delivery to sending spells. Saltmarsh Sendings does not ship cargo or other physical objects, but it does maintain good relations with Whitecap Shipping (area 29) and often refers its customers there for such needs. Written messages are the most popular services, but those who cannot write or would rather not have written evidence hire employees of Saltmarsh Sendings to memorize messages and deliver them orally. Creatures: Saltmarsh Sendings was founded recently by a human wizard named Mylor Brank, who had grown frustrated with the logistics of keeping in touch with his family in distant Nyrond. Messages went missing as often as they were delivered. Finally, Mylor decided to do something about it, buying the deed to this lot and constructing a solid brick building. With Saltmarsh’s growth, the message services he provides have proven quite popular, and he now subsidizes a large number of similar services in no fewer than five other cities. While Mylor isn’t of high enough level to cast sending himself, he maintains a good relationship with the nearby temple of Fharlanghn (area 9), whose clerics are pleased with his devotion (and donations) and keep him supplied with wands of sending. Adventure Hook: Mylor sometimes receives requests to send messages into dangerous territory. In these cases, he hires adventurers to serve as guards for his messenger, paying them 50 gp per character level upon the group’s safe return.
7. CATHEDRAL OF KORD
126
An 8-foot-high stone wall surrounds this stone building. The roofs are tiled in blood-red slate shingles, and the sides of the towering structure consist of massive pillars carved to resemble various styles of fighting men and women, each armed with a different weapon or performing a dif-
ferent feat of strength. As if these carvings weren’t enough to indicate the building’s purpose, a massive stone disc displaying the symbol of Kord is affi xed over the twin oaken doors at the front of the cathedral. Although the citizens of Saltmarsh observe a large number of religions, only a few have actual temples built within the city walls. The Cathedral of Kord is the second largest such temple, behind only the Cathedral of Pelor (area 8) in size and popularity. Kord’s worshipers include fishers and laborers, as well as the majority of the town’s guards. The Cathedral of Kord is open to the public, holding services once per day at sunset. These services are little more than glorified fighting matches between locals, but sometimes traveling combatants from other cities come to pit their skills against resident heroes. The temple bells ring only in times of danger; they double as a citywide alarm, and their distinctive, thunderous peal has been sounded only a few times in Saltmarsh’s history. Creatures: The Cathedral of Kord is staffed by two 2ndlevel clerics, two 1st-level clerics, and high priest Nestor Purilltan. Nestor has held that post for only a few short years, after the prior high priest was killed by an otyugh. The fighting sermons were Nestor’s idea, and they have been singularly responsible for the sudden upswing of Kord’s popularity in the town—the locals can’t seem to get enough of the fights. Adventure Hook: The temple always seeks new combatants for its “sermons.” Combatants are expected to worship Kord, but otherwise the invitation is open to anyone who wants to try his luck. The mock battles, staged as entertainment, take place in a large underground fighting ring; the participants deal nonlethal damage and use no magic. Winners can expect not only monetary awards (usually 10 gp per character level for a match won) but also increased fame in Saltmarsh. A character who wins ten matches gains a +2 bonus on all Intimidate checks made against citizens of Saltmarsh.
8. CATHEDRAL OF PELOR This impressive cathedral towers over the neighboring buildings, and indeed it might be the tallest structure in the town of Saltmarsh. It certainly presents one of the more impressive landmarks. The white stone walls of the cathedral rise nearly 100 feet into the air, and the large dome of red and orange metal atop the square structure adds another 50 feet to its height. The radiant golden symbol of Pelor adorns the walls of the structure, proclaiming its allegiance proudly and unmistakably. Yet despite its grandiose appearance, the building seems run down and even a bit dirty. The faith of Pelor has traditionally been the most popular in Saltmarsh—a nonintrusive yet supportive religion that allows the locals to ply their trades and live their lives while providing spiritual guidance, advice, and healing as necessary. But recently, the church of Pelor has seen a
This unassuming, one-story wooden structure seems somewhat out of place next to the two nearby walled compounds
SALTMARSH
9. TEMPLE OF FHARLANGHN
that surround extravagant cathedrals. But the wooden temple maintains a powerful and quiet dignity that might exceed the conspicuous display of wealth the other two exude. The symbol of Fharlanghn is carved into the front door of this structure and graces each of the stepping stones on the short walkway up to its front doors. The temple doubles as an inn that welcomes people of all religious affiliations, as long as they respect the building and its divine patron. Religious icons appear throughout the temple but are kept subtle and unobtrusive in the majority of rooms. Rates are generally quite good (75% of the normal cost), but with the understanding that repeat visitors are expected to leave donations to make up the remainder (or more) of the cost. Creatures: The Temple of Fharlanghn is tended by a human cleric named Gerald Isslor. He generally keeps a small staff of no more than three assistants, often travelers who wish to have somewhere to stay for a week before moving on to their next destination. Gerald maintains a strong friendship with Mylor Brank, the owner of Saltmarsh Sendings (area 6) and supplies the wizard with wands of sending in return for donations—and for news of developments in other cities. Adventure Hook: Gerald belongs to a secret society known as the Seekers, a group of individuals dedicated to exploring the unknown. He uses his regular news reports from Mylor to keep abreast of adventuring opportunities in lands near and far, and when something catches his eye, he is quick to hire a group to investigate.
CHAPTER 4
slow decrease in its faithful, and the cathedral struggles to maintain its high upkeep and staffing needs. The reasons for the church’s financial problems stem somewhat from the rise in popularity of Kord’s faith, but the number of new Kord worshipers alone cannot account for the decline of Pelor’s faithful. The cathedral itself is primarily one huge open space inside, consisting of a central pulpit surrounded by numerous pews. High windows keep the interior brightly lit during the day, and at night a massive holy symbol of Pelor suspended in the dome above radiates a number of continual flames. At dark, the glow of this symbol shines like a beacon through the metal dome, making it as much of a landmark at night as it is during the day. The ground floor contains personal quarters, storage, and other chambers, while the second floor holds the main worship area. The cathedral sits within a walled compound that also serves as an infirmary of sorts for the city. Several sick houses line the eastern wall of the Pelor compound; ill and injured citizens convalesce here under the care of the church’s priests. Until recently, this care was provided at very reasonable prices, but the hard times that have hit the church have forced the priests to charge more for their services. Creatures: The Cathedral of Pelor is currently staffed by nine clerics, led by a charismatic but increasingly depressed woman named Lyra Ivessa. She can’t explain the loss of the faithful; all of her attempts to recruit new worshipers have only managed to keep the congregation’s numbers from dwindling even faster. She has had to release a dozen other clerics from service over the past several years in order to cut costs, and as a result, the cathedral feels empty and cold. All that remains here is Priest Warale Essryn, two 2nd-level human clerics, and six 1st-level human clerics. Lyra Ivessa is also one of the six Saltmarsh councilors; see the description of the town hall (area 40) for more details. Adventure Hook: Although the cathedral’s diminishing resources mean that Lyra can’t provide rewards, she currently seeks adventurers who she can trust with the truth. Lyra believes that Pelor’s followers are being converted to a rival faith operating in the shadow of some other establishment. She has no clues where to start looking for this hidden cult, apart from having the PCs interview and investigate the lives of those who have left the flock, something she dreads doing since it could just as easily prevent potential returns. Unfortunately, Lyra’s fears are correct. An underground cult of demon worshipers (area 46), fi nanced in part by another hidden cult (this one of Vecna), is growing in Saltmarsh and slowly converting worshipers of Pelor to its own faith for a terrible hidden agenda.
10. SALTMARSH CEMETERY A wrought iron fence, its top adorned with a stylized pattern of leaves, surrounds a large section of the city. Within, rows of tombstones line winding paths between three low hills, atop which ornate stone crypts stand. Saltmarsh Cemetery is well maintained but receives visitors only rarely, except on days of funerals. The majority of those buried here are of the middle class; lower-class citizens of the city generally can’t afford funerals and either pay for the cremation of their dearly departed or let the dungsweepers take care of them. The simple stone vaults belong to the lesser noble families of Saltmarsh, while the major families maintain personal crypts below their estates. Creatures: An aged man named Noshi patrols and keeps Saltmarsh Cemetery. His incurable skin condition has cursed him with a shocking amount of body hair—a gift from half-orc ancestors. Noshi is quiet and rather self-conscious of his condition, and while he is a steadfast friend to a few, Saltmarsh denizens keep him at arm’s length. Stories that Noshi is part fiend or part ape are popular among the crueler children, while adults believe persistent rumors that he’s some sort of lycanthrope. Quite capable in a fight, Noshi won’t hesitate to use force to keep the cemetery safe and undesecrated.
127
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
Adventure Hook: Despite regular rumors that undead plague the graveyard, the cemetery and Noshi are both just what they seem. Nevertheless, grave robbers do pose a problem. A group of thieves based in the slums has created a method of robbing the dead that is both ingenious and difficult to prevent: On nights after a burial, the three thieves steal out to the fresh grave and hammer a long, hollow metal tube into the grave and through the coffin’s lid, using a silence spell from a wand to hide the sound. One of the thieves (a halfling) then uses a wand of gaseous form to float down through the tube and into the coffin, whereupon he resumes solid form to pluck anything valuable from the body before using the wand to resume gaseous form and escape. The tiny hole left in the earth is easily hidden. No one as yet suspects them, but any unscheduled exhumation brings the thefts to light and convinces both Noshi and the church of Pelor (area 8) to hire someone to track the thieves down.
11. CARPENTERS’ GUILDHALL This large wooden structure is both solidly and aesthetically built; every piece of timber seems to have been placed not only for structural reasons, but also to augment and enhance the grain and shape of those placed next to it. A sign above the entrance depicts a saw crossed with a hammer. This cunningly constructed building is the carpenters’ guildhall. Built entirely of wood, no nails or other fasteners hold the structure together, yet it is perhaps the most structurally sound building in town. It contains a large meeting hall, supply rooms, and numerous archives for blueprints, building techniques, and the like. Creatures: The current guildmaster is a gnome by the name of Jilar Kanklesten, a gifted (if somewhat elitist) carpenter who’s held the post for four decades. Adventure Hook: A human named Klori, one of the guild’s most promising new members, has gone missing after starting work on a new tavern near the river. Only his bloody and broken hammer remained behind. The guild has offered a 100-gp reward for information on Klori’s location, and a 500-gp reward if he is found alive.
12. RADRIC’S GENERAL STORE
128
One of the oldest buildings in Saltmarsh, this large structure has been repaired countless times by countless owners, yet it remains at its core a general store. Simple weapons, adventuring gear, tools and skill kits, clothing, food, drink, and even gear for mounts and transport can be purchased here. Additionally, the proprietor runs a popular eatery and bar, and loyal customers always fill the large front porch (expanded three times in the last six years). Creatures: Radric, a gregarious dwarf and retired rogue, spent much of his youth wandering the coastlines between the nearby city of Seaton and the Hool Marshes. Today, he’s content running his general store and giving the locals
somewhere comfortable to relax. Radric’s long red hair is always kept neatly combed, as is his prodigious beard. He wears plain clothing but favors outrageous hats. Adventure Hook: Not long before a disastrous fight with a black dragon in the Hool Marshes, Radric and his adventuring companions were searching the dangerous area for a remote monastery said to be built on a low hill long ago by the devotees of an obscure deity of bigotry and amphibians. He still owns the map that supposedly indicates the monastery’s location as well as the fact that it is abandoned—except for a snakelike creature with a woman’s head and her large stash of treasure. Although Radric never made it to the monastery, he’s still curious to know if it exists and eagerly shows the map to anyone who seems capable of an extended foray into the swamp.
13. THE ANVIL Half of this stone building is open to the air, exposing no fewer than a dozen well-equipped forges to observation by passersby on the nearby roads. A sign bearing the image of an anvil and the words “Guildhall of Smiths” hangs from a post at the street corner. The Anvil is one of the more powerful guilds in Saltmarsh. Much of its work lies in providing harpoons, hooks, gaffs, and various components for the construction of ships and boats, but the smiths of Saltmarsh can build almost anything from metal, given enough time. The dozen open forges serve a dual purpose: They give guild members who have not yet established a forge of their own a place to ply their trade, and they serve as additional sources of income. Creatures: The current guildmaster is a human smith named Jasker. He takes his position and job very seriously, while on all other topics he’s a notorious joker and comedian. Adventure Hook: Jasker has always wanted to work with mithral, but for various reasons he’s never been able to procure enough to make anything of import. Recently, an offer for 20 pounds of mithral ore fell into his lap. He paid for the ore to be delivered to Saltmarsh, but the shipment is several days late. He can’t afford to take time off to investigate, so he’s looking for someone to backtrack along the delivery route to learn what happened.
14. JEWELERS’ GUILDHALL This squat stone building is fairly unassuming, and with cause. The jewelers’ guild wanted its guildhall to be bland and dull, while at the same time difficult for a thief to penetrate. The resulting building is something of an eyesore, but its 2-foot-thick walls and arcane locked inner doors protect its valuable contents well. Creatures: The guildmaster is a no-nonsense human named Rodelik Karneth. As a child, Rodelik spent much of his time on the streets, running with gangs of young cutpurses and thugs until being nabbed by a particularly
This wooden structure is gray with age, and it is evident from the street that its tightly shuttered windows are blocked on the inside by bookshelves. The scriveners’ guildhall interior is a mazelike warren of bookshelves, with small desks wedged in wherever space is available. No natural light penetrates the winding halls, and each desk comes with a single everburning torch to provide illumination for the scribes. Unlike the other guilds in Saltmarsh, the majority of this guild’s members live at the hall. A number of small, cramped cells in the building’s basement serve as sleeping quarters and the like. The scribes who live here are, for the most part, failed wizards and bards who didn’t have what it took to make it elsewhere in town but didn’t want to abandon their love of the written word. Saltmarsh’s scholars hold the scriveners in disdain, yet if pressed they begrudgingly admit that the guild provides a valuable service in its preservation of books and preparation of public notices. Creatures: The current guildmaster of scriveners is a stooped old man named Abelard Larthe. His eyesight is failing, so he no longer performs scribing duties; he’s maintained his position more due to tradition than skill. Abelard’s life goal was to establish a weekly paper for Saltmarsh, but his plans never came to fruition. A run-down man, he spends his days sitting in his favorite chair on the second floor, staring out the one unblocked window in the building. Adventure Hook: A junior scrivener recently took on a job for a nobleman to copy a favorite book of poems. Halfway through the task, he noticed the back flyleaf coming loose, behind which the scrivener discovered a small hidden parchment. The paper bears a cryptic message written in a strange language that he has been unable to identify, but the message seems to be a numbered list of some sort, with the first three entries crossed out.
16. BAKERS’ GUILDHALL Each morning, crowds gather around this red brick structure, either drawn by the luscious smell of baked goods or to purchase the day’s supply of bread. The guildhall itself is
SALTMARSH
15. SCRIVENERS’ GUILDHALL
little more than a vast set of six kitchens, though typically only one is in use by the guildmaster, who tries new recipes daily. The bakers’ guild often calls its members from their various bakeries throughout town to aid in making bread and pastries for festivals or large parties; at these times, all six kitchens see heavy use. Creatures: The guildmaster of bakers is an energetic gnome named Mires Tithane. A fairly recent citizen of Saltmarsh, Mires moved here from the Kron Hills, and his skill at baking earned him a place in the guild by the end of the week. He rose through the ranks shockingly fast, and by the time he’d been a member for three months, he had become the guildmaster. Adventure Hook: Mires has a secret—he’s an accomplished sorcerer, and while his baking skills are indeed tremendous, his talent for intrigue is even greater. He used his Craft Wondrous Item feat to make baked goods infused with subtle magic, and with them, he magically influenced other members of the guild into aiding his rapid climb. Now that he’s established himself as the head of the guild, he intends to sit back and relax. Unfortunately, his rise to power wasn’t entirely without bloodshed; two other members of the guild (both gnomes themselves) proved resistant to his enchanted baked goods and had to be taken care of in a more permanent manner. Their bodies still lie hidden in the guildhall, kept from spoiling with gentle repose spells while Mires slowly disposes of their corpses. Not coincidentally, he’s making more and more money selling his wildly popular meat-patty scones.
CHAPTER 4
patient paladin he failed to rob. Rather than press charges, the paladin—a member of the Fastralli family (area 53)—agreed to let Rodelik go, provided that he apprenticed to one of Saltmarsh’s guilds. Rodelik chose the jewelers’ guild, and despite their initial doubts he quickly became one of the guild’s most talented jewelers. Adventure Hook: Although he has long since left behind his life of crime, that life has not left him. Rodelik’s one-time fellow gang members were caught on their next job (due in no small part to his absence; they were underequipped for the task) and spent many years in prison. Two of them died, but the remaining six have recently been released, having had nearly a decade to nurse their grudges against their old friend.
17. MERCHANTS’ GUILDHALL This large three-story building is the cornerstone of Salt marsh’s mercantile pursuits, representing grocers, innkeepers, bartenders, farmers, and other miscellaneous shopkeepers who don’t have their own guilds. As a result, the merchants’ guild is one of the most powerful and richest in town. The guildhall itself doubles as a moneylender and moneychanger. The guild makes initial loans at good rates (usually 10% interest, compounded monthly), with higher rates available for short-term loans. The guildhall rarely approves loans for more than 5,000 gp; arranging to borrow more requires a successful Diplomacy check (DC 10 + 1/100 × the desired loan’s amount over 5,000 gp). These larger loans generally have 25% interest and are compounded seasonally (once every four months). On the other hand, the guild performs moneychanging services (such as converting coins from one value to another, or even to writs of credit good for any shop in Saltmarsh) free of charge in order to encourage more trade in town. Creatures: Ebstilar Runail, a florid human who enjoys wearing loud and colorful clothing almost as much as he enjoys the pastries from the bakers’ guildhall (area 16) across the street, is the current guildmaster of merchants.
129
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
He hopes to make enough money to buy his way into Saltmarsh’s nobility someday, but until that comes to pass, he’s content to be one of the town’s richest men. Treasure: The merchants’ guildhall keeps a fair amount of money on hand in its underground vault, which is guarded by several traps and a stone golem. However, because the guildhall has a reputation for being robbed, Ebstilar has invested a fair portion of its funds elsewhere. The vault contains 15,000 cp, 15,000 sp, 15,000 gp, and 1,500 pp. Given 1d6 days, Ebstilar can cash in investments to generate an additional 35,000 gp. Adventure Hook: The merchants’ guild makes regular payments to the town’s thieves’ guild (area 47), so they needn’t worry about local scoundrels. Still, the hall has been robbed more times than Ebstilar cares to admit, each time by visiting thieves. The latest criminal to set her eyes on the hall is the notorious Scarlet Thorn, whose antics have made her infamous in half a dozen cities along the coast. No one’s sure who Scarlet Thorn is or what she looks like, but she’s announced her intention to rob the merchants’ guild before the season is out by sending her calling card, a bouquet of roses, to the hall. As a result, Ebstilar is frantically looking for an honest group of adventurers to help guard the building.
18. THE LIZARD’S BOAT
130
An intricate sign built to resemble a sailing ship that has caught on fire hangs above the main entrance to this tavern and inn. A half-dozen small lizards perch atop the sign. The lizards have learned that the tiny continual flames that appear to burn the ship’s rigging attract the best moths. The locals consider the lizards good luck and often toss them insects or bits of meat to eat as they enter the tavern. The Lizard’s Boat is a fairly clean and comfortable establishment, popular with visitors and the middle class of Saltmarsh. Lizard motifs continue inside the tavern, with carved lizards on the bar and walls, and lizards painted on the dishes and tables. The tavern serves a wide range of alcohol (including Blue Frog Ale from the local brewery, area 19) and all manner of seafood and bread. Creatures: The proprietor of the Lizard’s Boat is Kailee Restinan, a one-time elven ranger who lost her left hand to an angry wyvern in the nearby Dreadwood several years ago. She’s never been able to afford to have it regenerated, but she’s made the best of the situation, taking over as proprietor for the tavern (and changing its name in the process) after she rescued the prior owner’s children from slavers. Her animal companion, a monitor lizard named Sticktongue, serves as a mascot and bouncer for the tavern. Adventure Hook: Kailee Restinan’s affinity for lizards is in small part due to the fact that a lizardfolk druid named Krisharr rescued her from the wyvern that bit off her hand. She’s formed a strong friendship with Krisharr and visits him at his hut in the Hool Marshes at least
once a month. On a recent visit, she found his hut empty but saw no tracks nearby or any other clues. Her friend had simply vanished. Since then, she’s spent all her spare time trying to track Krisharr down, and would certainly welcome any aid.
19. BLUE FROG BREWERY This long stone building radiates the distinctive smell of fermenting alcohol. A highly detailed sign depicting a happily drunk blue frog dancing around an empty mug hangs over the front door, his equally blue tongue flopping around like a rope and about to tangle his feet. This is the Blue Frog Brewery, known throughout the region for its most famous concoction, Blue Frog Ale. Flavored with sweet swamp blueberries, the ale turns the tongue blue and encourages throaty belches that sound like the croaking of a large frog. The brewery also makes several other types of ale, beer, and mead, but none have gained the notoriety of Blue Frog Ale. Recently, the Blue Frog Brewery became the guildhouse for one of Saltmarsh’s youngest guilds—the brewers’ guild. Only a few members strong, the brewers have already established tiny breweries of their own in Saltmarsh. Creatures: The owner of Blue Frog Brewery and the brewers’ guildmaster is a jovial human named Ryan Kirtap. Middle-aged and balding, his laugh is nearly as infectious as his ale, and the only thing he enjoys more than having visitors is watching them get drunk on Blue Frog Ale and belching the night away. Adventure Hook: Although Ryan obtains the majority of his berry supplies by paying locals to gather them in the small swamps to the north, he’s heard stories of a variant of the swamp blueberry that grows to the southwest in the Hool Marshes. The problem, of course, is that the Hool Marshes are rather dangerous. He’s keeping an eye out for adventurers and pays 50 gp a basket for Hool Marshes blueberries. Anyone who takes him up on his job offer might be dismayed to learn that Hool Marshes blueberries grow in the same places that are haunted by a group of will-o’-wisps and shambling mounds.
20. SHRINE OF OBAD-HAI This serene wooden building located in Frog Park (area 21) is generally quiet and calm, receiving mild-mannered and introverted visitors in addition to worshipers of Obad-Hai. Of the recognized religious buildings of Saltmarsh, this shrine is the most unassuming and low-key of them all. The majority of this structure is open to the air, a large pagoda with low benches surrounding a central platform. A two-story tower serves as the temple caretaker’s home, and an enclosed set of rooms on the opposite side serve as storage. Creatures: A halfling druid named Ferrin Kastilar, a morose individual in the later years of his life, tends to the
Fir and pine trees dominate this sizable park, with a few willow trees growing near the park’s marshy interior. The ground here has always been a bit sloshy, making it difficult to build structures. As a result, a cleric of Obad-Hai purchased the land for a great price, and druids of the deity have tended to the area ever since. Frog Park derives its name from the large number of frogs that dwell here; on some nights, their susurrus can be heard all the way to the town market (area 31). Most people attribute the frog population to the park’s proximity to the northern wetlands. Statues of frogs decorate the park, but most visitors find the place just too swampy. Adventure Hook: A more sinister force draws frogs to this park. One of the frog statues is, in fact, an ancient likeness of Wastri, the Hopping Prophet and minor deity of bigotry and amphibians. Ferrin Kastilar, the current caretaker of the shrine of Obad-Hai (area 20), bought the statue from a shifty merchant several months ago, not recognizing its true nature. The statue serves as a focus for Wastri, who would like to extend his influence into the nearby Hool Marshes, and the evil deity has been using the statue to influence Ferrin. As long as the statue remains in its overgrown corner of the park, the menace it represents will only grow.
22. LIZARD EMBASSY This large building of red brick appears to be quite new. Twin stone statues of noble-looking lizardfolk flank the main entrance.
SALTMARSH
21. FROG PARK
Several years ago, the town of Saltmarsh nearly went to war with a large tribe of lizardfolk to the south. The war was averted by a band of heroes who discovered that the lizardfolk were building up arms to fight against a tribe of sahuagin. In order to prevent possible misunderstandings between the lizardfolk tribes of the Hool Marshes and Saltmarsh, the town council built this structure to serve as an embassy for the lizardfolk. Much of the building is open to the skies, with large, swampy courtyards fi lled with vegetation and bathing pools used by the lizardfolk. Meeting rooms and barracks ring the courtyards, along with a kennel for the several monitor lizards kept here as guards. Creatures: As the years roll by and memories of the menace posed by the sahuagin fade, the lizardfolk slowly lose interest in maintaining a presence in Saltmarsh. The majority of the citizens are only too happy to see this come to pass; while the lizardfolk have never caused any problems in town, they are nevertheless viewed with suspicion and fear. Currently, only half a dozen lizardfolk and three monitor lizards reside in the embassy. One of the lizardfolk, an ancient diplomat named Silark, vividly remembers the terrible times of the sahuagin. He’s doing his best to make sure that relations between Saltmarsh and the lizardfolk don’t deteriorate further, but he’s fighting a losing battle. Adventure Hook: Any number of intolerant locals might spread rumors to the PCs that Silark and the lizardfolk are up to no good, prompting an investigation. Silark and his fellow lizardfolk harbor no ill intent, and their desire to maintain an open forum between Saltmarsh and the Hool Marshes tribes is nothing more than it seems. Nevertheless, the Lizard Embassy has more than its share of enemies, including the powerful Ambermead family. Lord Tobias Ambermead has been lobbying recently to have the embassy closed down, to little success. See the description of area 58 for details of his new plans for the lizardfolk.
CHAPTER 4
shrine. His animal companion is a particularly large bullfrog named Lorys. Ferrin has a special love of frogs, and the amphibious denizens of the park seem to appreciate him as well. More often than not, though, his calm attitude breaks at inopportune moments, and he flies into a frothing frenzy. His temper is legendary in Saltmarsh. More than once, he’s lashed out at visitors with his spells, entangling people or even throwing fire at them for no apparent reason. So far, no one’s been killed, and he always seems able to talk his way out of trouble with the city watch. The druids of Ehlonna on Oak Island (area 63) worry that Ferrin’s anger is a manifestation of something more dire, but they hate to meddle in another church’s affairs and bide their time for now. Adventure Hook: The druids of Oak Island are right; something dire does brew in Ferrin’s mind. He’s been receiving visions of a particularly cruel and hateful minor deity of bigotry and amphibians named Wastri, and the visions have played to this anger. It won’t be long before Ferrin abandons the teachings of Obad-Hai and seeks an unhealthy and sinister alliance with the frog people of the Hool Marshes, an alliance that would spell trouble for Saltmarsh.
23. TAILORS’ GUILDHALL This relatively small building looks even smaller sandwiched between the towering Saltmarsh Playhouse and the sprawling Lizard Embassy. Its whitewashed walls are clean and spotless, and a sign bearing an image of a bolt of cloth, a spool of thread, and a needle hangs above the front door. The majority of the tailors’ guildhall serves as a staging ground for imported cloth and a storehouse of supplies and finished goods for export. The demanding guild requires members to return at least a quarter of their output to the guildhall for export to other cities. In addition, guild dues have climbed slowly but steadily over the past several years. The members of the guild grumble and complain, but most of them have few other skills and lack enough money to move to another city. For now, they take the abuse and do what they can to make ends meet.
131
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
132
Creatures: An old native of Saltmarsh by the name of Dircroft Cronan, a thin, angular-faced man in his early sixties, runs the tailors’ guild. Dircroft is a particularly difficult taskmaster, demanding nothing short of excellence and a quick turnover from his guildmembers. In return, he provides them with fine cloth and gear imported from distant regions. No one knows how Dircroft can get such large quantities of exotic cloth, but they appreciate the ready access to it. Adventure Hook: Dircroft has a secret—he’s at least partially responsible for the terrible attack on the nearby town of Seaton that took place years ago. Dircroft’s involvement with a band of smugglers incidentally funded the attack; the smugglers might have had ties to an infamous organization of slavers from the north. When he found out about the attack, Dircroft severed all ties with the smugglers and had several of them assassinated by his ally Ned Shakeshaft (area 48). Today, Ned is the only resident of Saltmarsh who knows of Dircroft’s involvement. He’s blackmailing
the tailor, which is the primary reason for the increased guild dues and the demands on its members; Dircroft has been selling their work and secretly claiming it as his own. But Ned might soon increase how much he’s asking for his silence, at which point Dircroft might contact outside aid to help him deal with his one-time ally.
24. SALTMARSH PLAYHOUSE This grandiose theater stands nearly three stories tall. Its façade features intricate carvings of famous characters from nearly a dozen well-known plays and operas (most of which the average working-class citizen of Saltmarsh would be hard pressed to place) and several characters from more lowbrow street-theater productions (about which the average upper-class citizen of Saltmarsh would be quick to feign ignorance). A large, three-story auditorium fills the playhouse. The ground floor has low stone benches for seats and is open to anyone who can pay the entrance fee of 1 sp. Unfortunately, not all of the upraised stage is visible from this level. The middle floor has nicer seats and affords a good view of the stage; seats here cost 5 sp. The best seats in the house are the private booths that line the upper floor. Each holds up to six people and costs 10 gp per person.
A negotiation outside the Lizard Embassy threatens to erupt into violence
SALTMARSH
The largest business in Saltmarsh is fishing, and the locals eat mostly seafood. This thriving industry is centered in the southeast section of the city, operating out of seven large warehouses where fishers sell their catch to workers who clean and prepare the fish and ship them to markets and restaurants in town. Each of the warehouses is run by one of seven established families of fishers, with the less affluent among them living in the press of the surrounding buildings. Fishing boats clog the piers, and traffic here is always congested at sunrise and sunset when the catch comes in. This section of town also holds the profitable fishmongers’ guild; each of the seven warehouses doubles as a guildhouse. Adventure Hook: The fishers of Saltmarsh often find strange things in their nets, and those discoveries invariably end up in one of the warehouses, sold as oddities or items of potential value. Recently, Saltmarsh’s fishers have found strange pieces of black coral in their nets. The coral matches
26. THE HOOF ’N’ MOUTH This new building somehow manages to look run-down and decrepit. A sign above the door shows a grossly exaggerated satyr with one of his hoofed feet jammed into his mouth and an expression of shock and worry on his face. This is Saltmarsh’s newest tavern, and in the span of only five months it has become a popular place for local fishers and sailors to relax. The Hoof ’n’ Mouth serves only the cheapest ale and grog, often watered down and usually in grimy mugs. The prices can’t be beat, though, and, even with the diluted ale, this is the least costly place to get drunk in all of Saltmarsh—with the possible exception of some of the speakeasies in the slums. The tavern’s specialty is a thick black ale that tastes like dirt but isn’t quite as expensive as ingesting actual soil. Creatures: The proprietor of the Hoof ’n’ Mouth, an eccentric dwarf named Blahg, floated into the Saltmarsh harbor amid much fanfare on a ruined boat burned down to the waterline. Blahg had a bag of holding filled with gold and pearls, and he used the money to build the tavern and open it within a month of his arrival. Adventure Hook: Blahg’s primary problem is that he’s a pyromaniac. He lit the fire that burned down his ship, and he was the only survivor. He’s not completely insane and realizes that he needs to keep a low profile now, but he’s already recruited a dozen locals into a fire cult dedicated to a deity he refers to as Infyrnus. The religion is fictitious, but Blahg’s plans to burn down the Drunken Urchin (area 28) are not. He’s just waiting for the right moment to put his competitor out of business for good.
CHAPTER 4
25. FISHMONGERS’ WAREHOUSES
no known nearby reef and melts within an hour of being brought to the surface unless stored in water. One fisher has discovered that a fish stored in a bucket with a chunk of the strange coral grows large, spiny, and particularly mean tempered. He has used this method for over a month to grow large fish and sell them at increased profit. He’s careful to sell only the fillets, for the fish themselves are far too disturbing to risk revealing. What strange effects these fish might have on those who eat them remains to be seen.
Illus. by M. Phillippi
The Saltmarsh Playhouse keeps a fairly talented group of actors and entertainers on call, but the majority of the operas, concerts, and plays performed here are traveling acts. Shows take place three to four times a week. The theater doubles as the guildhouse for Saltmarsh’s entertainers’ guild, a group of skilled performers and musicians who depend on one another for advertising and advice. An extensive underground level provides housing for guild members, and rumor holds that those who know the right passwords and have enough money can buy private “performances” with the guild’s more talented members. Creatures: The construction of this impressive building was financed almost entirely by guildmistress Aydi Zarastian, who made her fortune in the city of Greyhawk before retiring to Saltmarsh after her unique condition was unveiled during the premiere of a popular play. Aydi is an afflicted lycanthrope—a weretiger—but she’s more or less in control of her animalistic nature. The citizens of Greyhawk nonetheless reacted poorly to the news and tried to imprison her for trial. She managed to escape but in the process left three of the watch dead, a deed that nags at her conscience to this day. Adventure Hook: Aydi has so far managed to keep her true nature a secret in Saltmarsh, mostly by avoiding social events. But because her clients would love to have her entertain at their parties, this aloofness has spawned a fair number of rumors about her. In particular, Daryn Larsken, the founder of the School of Blades (area 41), has been intrigued by the mysterious beauty ever since he saw her display her fighting prowess as part of a performance. He might hire the PCs to spy on Aydi to learn more about her and find out if her modesty stems from a dedication to some other mysterious suitor.
27. SHIPYARD One of the largest structures in town, this sprawling wooden building towers over the nearby houses. The shipyard serves as the guildhouse for the shipwrights’ guild; here, members build almost all the needed fishing boats, merchant ships, and other vessels. The central wing contains administrative rooms, meeting rooms, supply rooms, and barracks for the local workers. The east wing is dedicated to the construction of fishing boats, while the west is dedicated to other types of ships. Two or three vessels are in progress in each wing at any one time. Once a ship is seaworthy, it is launched on one of several ramps that extend directly from the building itself.
133
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
Creatures: The shipyard and shipwrights’ guild is overseen by a gruff half-orc named Molak Mako, a hulking, tattooed figure who is nonetheless fair and honest in his trade. Molak came to Saltmarsh an orphan and was adopted by the kindly old man who ran the shipyard previously. When the man died, many tried to wrest control of the business from Molak, who had just become an adult, but no one could get the keys from the half-orc. Today, the locals deny such stories, having come to trust Molak and value his leadership. Adventure Hook: Unknown to Molak, his adoptive father hid a small fortune in platinum coins under a floorboard in his bedroom. A group of thugs that refer to themselves as the Sawfish Boys (see area 44) suspect the existence of this stash and plan to rob it. If they succeed, Molak might hire the PCs to track down what was stolen from the mysterious hole he finds in the floor of his bedroom.
28. THE DRUNKEN URCHIN
134
This seedy-looking, run-down building houses a popular tavern that caters mostly to fishers and traveling merchants from the nearby marketplace. Despite its tired appearance, the tavern is actually one of the busiest in town. The Drunken Urchin is infamous throughout Saltmarsh for its house special, urchin wine. A huge sign above the bar shows a sea urchin floating in a large glass of red wine as a particularly pleased man drinks from it. This concoction is rather foul, but the locals get a big kick out of tricking visitors into trying it. Urchin wine is little more than a large glass of cheap wine in which floats a small sea urchin that has been plucked from the aquarium behind the bar, crushed, and dropped into the glass. If a character manages to drink the entire glass of wine (and keep it down), the rest of the night’s drinks for that person are on the house. The nauseating texture and flavor of urchin wine requires that the drinker make a DC 22 Fortitude save to resist becoming ill for 2d4 rounds (and subsequently losing the opportunity for free drinks). Creatures: A crusty old salt named Ankus Akalvin runs the Drunken Urchin. He’s owned the tavern for his entire life and runs the dive with pride. Nothing entertains him more than seeing new blood try to choke down a glass of urchin wine, with the possible exception of seeing his new competitor Blahg lose business. Adventure Hook: The tavern’s bustling business has dropped off a bit, and Ankus knows why—the new establishment a few blocks to the north known as the Hoof ’n’ Mouth (area 26). Ankus and Blahg share a not-too-friendly sense of competition, and the two tavernkeepers wage a slowly escalating war of propaganda and sabotage that might soon end in bloodshed. Currently, Ankus plans to hire adventurers to visit the Hoof ’n’ Mouth to cause trouble, break things, and spread unflattering rumors about Blahg and his method of preparing drinks.
29. WHITECAP SHIPPING This long building controls the majority of import trade that comes through Saltmarsh. All visiting merchant ships must sign in their cargo here before they can offload their goods or sell their wares in the market. Whitecap Shipping also controls much of the land-based trade in town. Creatures: Owner and operator Flanigan Lorsk, a childhood friend of Erolin Timertikos (the current lord mayor of Saltmarsh), is one of the most powerful people in town. Although Flanigan doesn’t hold a seat on the town council, most council members seek his advice on important matters; his wisdom and long-standing residency afford him such an enviable position. His only real vice is the Dancing Dryad (area 47), where he usually spends two or three nights each week with one of his many favorite companions. Flanigan owns three fast coasters and hires them out to anyone who needs to ship goods north or south along the coast. Shipment of cargo generally costs 1 gp per pound, or 1 sp per pound for quantities of over 1,000 pounds. Adventure Hook: Flanigan is a notorious womanizer, and his list of ex-girlfriends reads like a directory. As a result, most women in Saltmarsh avoid him in private, but they don’t speak ill of him publicly due to his close friendship with the lord mayor. If one of the PCs is female, Flanigan might attempt to start a relationship with her, showering her with attention and weekly gifts (typically, items of jewelry worth 50 gp or so) until she either gives in to his “affections” or makes it clear that she doesn’t want his companionship.
30. ALCHEMISTS’ GUILDHALL This three-story tower looks even taller as a result of the wooden pilings on which it’s built. The top of the tower is a rounded dome, and strange lights and colored smoke often flash and drift from its high windows. A sign above the main entrance depicts three bubbling potions. This is the alchemists’ guild, a rich but fairly small guild associated not only with the creation and sale of alchemical items, but also with the sale of magic potions brewed at the temple of Boccob (area 39). The locals are a little nervous about the lights and smoke that seep from the tower’s heights, but they swallow this fear readily enough when they need alchemical supplies or potions. Creatures: A rail-thin, bald human named Diomar Lian oversees the guild. He and his two apprentices are its only members, since he’s loath to let anyone else into his confidence. The strange lights and smoke are part of his security plan—they’re nothing more than permanent silent images and dancing lights that give the place a sinister reputation and help to keep thieves away. Adventure Hook: Diomar periodically needs new supplies that aren’t readily accessible in town. His knowledge of nature is quite prodigious, though, and with a few hours of research, he can usually find a local plant or animal
product that can serve. He commonly hires adventurers to travel to the Hool Marshes or the Dreadwood to gather these supplies. He pays handsomely, often up to 100 gp per successful delivery.
31. MARKET SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
This long strip of open land is Saltmarsh’s primary marketplace. Most merchants in town can’t afford a storefront, so they rent spaces and tents here from the merchants’ guild to ply their trades. Player characters simply looking for food, supplies, and other miscellaneous purchases can find what they need here. The only permanent structures in this area are a large fountain built to resemble a massive mermaid lifting a ship into the air, and an open pagoda used by local ranchers to sell horses and other livestock. Adventure Hook: Every noon, during high market, the crowds here swell as merchants hawk their wares. Members of the city watch patrol the place fairly often, but it’s still a favorite haunt for pickpockets, who try to target obvious visitors to town rather than locals. If a character notices a pickpocket attempt, chances are the thief is an urchin in the employ of the dungsweepers (see area 51) and, if caught, might lead the PCs on a frantic chase all the way back to the guildhall.
Illus. by R. Spencer
32. ANMEH’S HALL OF ODDITIES The façade of this building is covered with dozens of posters, many in tatters or out of date, depicting strange freaks of nature, monsters, and bizarre relics with catchphrases such as “See the Wondrous Eel-Man!” and “Behold Nature’s Cruelest Trick: The Toad-Faced Dog!” and “Test Your Endurance in the Pit of Vile Ooze!” A huge sign over the main entrance proudly proclaims the place to be Anmeh’s Hall of Oddities; the sign flickers with a permanent faerie fire. This place is just what it seems—a freak show and museum that caters to the exotic and unusual. Entrance costs only 1 sp, or 1 gp for the “honored guest tour,” a guided tour of the museum by Anmeh himself that includes access to the “secret exhibits.” These are usually a handful of upcoming displays that the rich can pay to see early.
Anmeh pulls back the curtain, and onlookers are shocked at the contents of the cage
135
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
Creatures: The Hall of Oddities is the brainchild of Anmeh Ronakin, a retired ranger from a distant land who has long understood that people love to gawk at freaks. His wide travels exposed him to dozens, if not hundreds, of unique cultures and locations, and he draws upon this knowledge to keep his exhibits fresh and entertaining. The exhibits are fairly static—stuffed monsters, unusual objects such as shrunken heads and troglodyte religious icons, and dioramas of some of the world’s more notorious and strange locations. Anmeh also tries to keep at least two or three live exhibits at a time, which often consist of fairly small creatures such as stirges, chokers, deformed kobolds, or more exotic specimens. Rarely, he keeps something larger, such as a carrion crawler or an owlbear. Adventure Hook: Because many of his live exhibits are dangerous creatures, Anmeh takes great care to keep them secured. Unfortunately, one of his more recent “acquisitions” turned out to be an ettercap egg that Anmeh incorrectly identified as a spider egg. The egg hatched early, and the ettercap got out and escaped into the city. Anmeh hopes that it died, but recent rumors of a deformed man who has been menacing people in the slums have given him reason to worry.
33. THE CURIO SHOP
136
This shop always seems to be surrounded by curious smells, and an inordinate number of crows lurk on its eaves and gutters. A sign above the door depicts a quasit breaking a wand over a horned skull, and an evil spirit of some sort rises up from the shattered end of the wand. The Curio Shop is one of three places in Saltmarsh that regularly traffics in magic items (the other two being the Temple of Boccob [area 39] and the Black Market [area 49]). The cluttered shop is filled with strange items; spell components and alchemical items on consignment from the alchemists’ guild (area 30) can be found for sale here as well. Misha Larakti, the owner, always has magic items in stock if they are worth less than 3,000 gp, although her stock of items that cost 1,000 gp or more is generally limited to 1d3. She typically receives new stock once per month. Occasionally, she stocks items worth as much as 6,000 gp, but they tend to sell quickly. Currently, her only overpriced item in stock is a pair of gloves of Dexterity +2. Each month, there’s a flat 5% chance that she gets a new overpriced item in stock. (Determine the item randomly, but it must be a minor wondrous item worth no more than 6,000 gp.) These overpriced items invariably sell to itinerant adventurers rather than town residents. Creatures: Misha is a no-nonsense, middle-aged human. She’s always on the lookout for new magic to buy, and because she’s a member of the merchants’ guild, Saltmarsh’s shop owners are only too happy to send business her way. Misha’s shop is one of the more tempting targets for thievery in town, with its fairly large supply of portable wealth.
Fortunately, in her last adventure before she retired, Misha rescued a silver dragon wyrmling from a tribe of ogres. The dragon, Taaliax, promised to repay Misha by serving as her guardian until the day she dies. Now a very young silver dragon, Taaliax spends her time in the form of a large guard dog that sleeps near the fireplace, but she is quick to respond to any perceived threat to the store or to Misha. Adventure Hook: Prices are high enough at the temple of Boccob (area 39) that Misha doesn’t worry about the competition, but the Black Market (area 49) has been a thorn in her side for years. Since they don’t pay taxes or fees and don’t mind restocking their supplies with stolen property, it’s difficult for Misha to remain competitive. If she could get proof of the Black Market’s location, she could go to the town council and ask that it be shut down. She’s willing to reward any PCs who bring her this information with 2,000 gp and a lifetime 20% discount on items purchased in her store.
34. LEATHERWORKERS’ GUILDHALL This old building sags in the middle, its walls slowly rotting and its pilings sinking into the inexorable flow of the river below. A half-ruined sign still hangs askew over the boardedup door, but the picture has long since worn away. This was once the guildhall of leatherworkers, but several years ago its guildmaster, Kiorn Kester, was revealed to be in league with a band of slavers based on a farm to the west of town. After a very public trial, Kiorn was judged guilty and executed. When no heir came forth, the city dispensed of his belongings but couldn’t find the deed to the guildhall. As a result, it reverted to the city, but the council has neither the time nor the resources to rebuild the guild. The remaining leatherworkers in town joined the merchants’ guild instead, and this building now rots away into the river. Adventure Hook: The truth of the matter remains hidden in the ruined structure, in a secret closet where Kiorn kept the deed to the building along with his journals and life savings. Finding the secret closet is difficult (Search DC 26), but the journals within prove that Kiorn was framed. Further, the journals seem to indicate that at least three other merchants in Saltmarsh had ties to the slavers. While the books don’t provide any names, one of the entries indicates that one of these corrupt merchants was a tailor. Two of the unknown merchants have since left Saltmarsh, but the third—Dircroft Cronan, master of the tailors’ guild (area 23)—still lives in town. If he were to learn of the journals, he’d spare no expense to obtain and destroy them.
35. MARSHGATE BRIDGE Marshgate Bridge is a covered bridge made of stone with a slate-shingle roof. Its walls are carved with reptilian gargoyles, and a short watchtower at the east end affords an excellent view of the swamps to the north. The interior of the bridge is lined with numerous alcoves, each with a narrow
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
controls access to the building proper; it hangs open during the day but is closed at night. “Saltmarsh Museum” is carved into the stone above the entrance. This large structure is more than a museum of art and sculpture. It also serves as the guildhouse for the artisans’ guild, an organization that is closely allied to both the temple of Boccob (area 39) and the Saltmarsh Playhouse (area 24). Unlike most museums, everything on display here is for sale—for the right price. Most of the objects sell for around 100 gp, but some approach Saltmarsh’s limit of 3,000 gp. Anyone who merely wants to wander the display wings of the museum can do so for the bargain price of 1 gp. Creatures: The Saltmarsh Museum’s curator (and the artisans’ guildmaster) is a pleasant old human named Merrin Paskenfell. He’s always on the lookout for new talent, and a character who proves his skills to the old man finds him a supportive and helpful patron. The Saltmarsh Museum might sound like a tempting target for thieves, but Merrin has spared 36. MAJOR no expense in making it a gauntlet. Regular BRIDGES Two large wooden bridges patrols of hired guards span the Kingfisher River (human fighter 3) watch the building day and in Saltmarsh, each wide enough for two carnight, and the gates and riages to pass abreast. doors are protected by The northern most arcane locks placed by bridge is called Anwyn Merrin himself (though Bridge, after one of the he keeps the doors and founders of Saltmarsh. gates open during public The southernmost hours). Numerous other one is named Sharkfin magic traps, including alarms, sepia snake sigils, Bridge due to its distincand glyphs of warding tive triangular supports. placed by clerics of Boccob, 37. MINOR BRIDGES guard the displays, and the Two smaller bridges cross the Kingmost valuable works are kept fisher River as well. Each is wide enough Soshyn the vampire claims another victim in in a massive vault in the center for a single horse but generally sees the ruins of Andrigal Mansion (see area 60) of the main building. Finally, Merrin only foot traffic. The eastern bridge is known as Market recently secured the use of a shield guardian to augment Bridge, and the western one is called Barnacle Bridge due the museum’s defenses. Nevertheless, Merrin secretly pays to its thickly encrusted pilings. the Saltmarsh thieves’ guild a monthly fee of protection money to ensure that no local criminals try their hand at 38. SALTMARSH MUSEUM robbing the place. This huge building is made of white marble. Numerous Adventure Hook: One of Merrin’s prized artisans, the human sculptor Desthen Clorisal, is a con artist. Using carved pillars support open courtyards, and the façade is scrolls of flesh to stone purchased from the Black Market wreathed with intricate carvings. A wrought-iron gate
Illus. by V. Rams
window that offers a view of the marshes or the city. Young lovers often rendezvous in the alcoves late at night, and the town guards turn a blind eye to their activities. Adventure Hook: The guards’ tendency to overlook nocturnal goings-on has proven to be a boon for one of Saltmarsh’s most dangerous predators, the denizen of the old Andrigal Mansion (area 60)—the vampire Soshyn Anamar. Late at night, she lures victims to the bridge, almost always lone visitors to the city that no one would miss. Because she comes and goes in gaseous form (bringing the body of her latest victim with her to dispose of later in her lair), the guards have no idea that such dire predation is occurring on an almost weekly basis right under their noses. Soshyn might target one of the PCs as a victim if she thinks the character is alone, or she might target someone the PCs are hoping to meet in town.
137
Illus. by B. Hagan
CHAPTER 4
SALTMARSH
The Temple of Boccob dominates the Saltmarsh skyline
(area 49), Desthen has been capturing animals and minor monsters from the nearby wilderness and transforming them into statues that he passes off as his own work. With a DC 26 Spellcraft check, someone can recognize that the statues were created by flesh to stone, but because Merrin has no ranks in this skill and the statues sell quickly, no one’s noticed the deception—that is, almost no one. Tyson Kashtilan, a lay priest of Boccob, realized what was going on when he saw one of Desthen’s statues on display. Tyson confronted Desthen, but the wizard used one of his scrolls on the cleric. Tyson’s been missing for several months now, and Desthen has been wary about creating new statues. He hopes to arrange for the statue of Tyson to be sold to a visiting collector through the Black Market, but until he can seal the deal in a few more weeks, the petrified cleric remains hidden in the basement of Desthen’s modest home.
39. TEMPLE OF BOCCOB
138
Until very recently, this site was the location of Saltmarsh’s underfunded library. A few years ago, a local adventuring cleric of Boccob bought the library and had it torn down and rebuilt as a temple devoted to his deity. Today, the Temple of Boccob is perhaps the most unique and recognizable structure in all of Saltmarsh.
Built like a pyramid, the temple is capped with a large dome surrounded by glass towers. A large, five-story tower of pale blue marble dominates the eastern face of the pyramid. At night, the entire structure shimmers with countless continual flames, and a massive glowing symbol of Boccob slowly rotates above the central dome’s peak. The entire display is both awesome and ostentatious. Clerics of the other temples in town (particularly Lyra Ivessa of the Cathedral of Pelor, area 8) find the display tasteless and embarrassing, but the structure has found its way into the hearts of the town’s less religious denizens. The Temple of Boccob serves several functions in Saltmarsh. First and foremost, it is a place of worship. The books from the old town library are kept here as well, although only the faithful can peruse the stacks without paying a 1 gp fee. The temple also serves as the guildhouse for the local mages’ guild, which is located in the blue marble tower and connects to the main temple by a short stone passage. The wizards of the guild point out that membership is open to anyone of any faith, but those who don’t worship Boccob find the guild to be somewhat uncomfortable and awkward. Finally, the temple is one of the few places in town that regularly sells magic items. Unlike the Black Market (area 49) and the Curio Shop (area 33), the majority of the goods sold here are crafted on-site by the wizards or clerics. The
This long brick building is kept in fantastic repair. A central dome is flanked by twin wings of offices, records rooms, and storerooms. The central room serves as an audience chamber where the town council holds its government meetings, which are open to the public. However, the guards don’t admit just anyone—it takes a DC 20 Diplomacy check to gain entrance when the council is in session. When the council isn’t meeting, various clerks and scribes work here, copying legal texts, researching problems, and crunching numbers for the council. If the PCs wish to become citizens of Saltmarsh, they must apply here and then wait for two weeks while the council goes over their resumes and submitted histories. The PCs can
• He can run a business and own property in the city. • He no longer has to pay tolls when entering the city. • He receives a vote at times when the council puts legislation up for a public vote.
SALTMARSH
40. TOWN HALL
earn citizenship as long as they demonstrate marketable skills (and have at least 4 ranks in a Craft, Perform, or Profession skill) or seem to be capable of aiding in the town’s defense (and have at least two character levels in a PC class). The council won’t allow obvious criminals or ruffians to become citizens; a character who qualifies for this description can fool the council with a successful Bluff check opposed by the council’s collective Sense Motive +10. All applications for citizenship require a filing fee of 10 gp, which can be waived for any applicant who makes a DC 25 Diplomacy check. A citizen of Saltmarsh enjoys several benefits.
CHAPTER 4
magic shop generally has anything in stock that one could ask for, up to the town’s limit of 3,000 gp. However, items that cost over 2,000 gp are in limited supply; typically, only 1d3 are available each month. Creatures: The Temple of Boccob is staffed by seven clerics: four 1st-level acolytes, two 3rd-level priests, and Emirat Rastenar, the town’s current high priest of Boccob. Emirat is a serious half-elf; none of his underlings can say they’ve ever seen him laugh, much less smile. He tends to let the other clerics do as they will, but if any of them violate his unspoken rules, he gives them little room for explanation. The clerics of Boccob understand that if they’re not wise enough to know right from wrong, they shouldn’t be here and thus don’t begrudge Emirat for his uncaring mentorship. Another important denizen of this complex is Mylor Orvid, the highest-level wizard in Saltmarsh and master of the wizards’ guild. Mylor and his three apprentices (see the Adventure Hook below) rarely leave the tower that serves as their guildhouse, relying on one of six halfling servants (all 1st-level commoners) to resupply food stores and take care of other mundane matters. Mylor often spends weeks on end building magic items. Once or twice a year, he heads out alone into the Dreadwood to compare discoveries and creations with the elven wizards who live there; they often go hunting for exotic spell components together. Adventure Hook: Unknown to Mylor and his two human apprentices, the third—a homely young woman named Katlen Lithoti who seems to be an ace at wizardry—is actually a 2nd-level wizard aranea in human form. Katlen grew dissatisfied with life with the other aranea in the deep Dreadwood, and she tricked Mylor into thinking she was an orphaned wizard who had become lost in the woods. Taking pity on her, Mylor brought her back to the guildhouse and has been nothing but pleased with her progress as a wizard. The other two apprentices, Kavern Lesk and Moradni Mortai, have grown jealous of the attention Katlen receives and might try to frame her for stealing supplies or scrolls. If they do, the plan backfires, and Katlen might be forced to kill one or both of them and hide the bodies.
Citizenship might have other benefits in your campaign as you see fit; perhaps the guilds of Saltmarsh only allow citizens to join, for example. Creatures: In addition to the two dozen scribes and servants who work and live here (all either 1st-level experts or commoners), a patrol of six guards (all 1st-level warriors) are stationed here. These guards are commanded by a retired dwarf adventurer named Geolin, who dresses impeccably and does not suffer tomfoolery in the hall. You can find details on the town council and how it operates on page 121. Adventure Hook: If the PCs make a name for themselves in Saltmarsh as heroes or adventurers, it’s only a matter of time before the town council asks to meet with them. By the time the PCs reach 3rd level, they’ll have attracted enough attention that they receive a summons to the next council meeting. The councilors merely wish to appraise their personalities and plans to make sure that they have Saltmarsh’s best interests at heart. If the meeting goes well, the councilors might call upon the heroes at a later date to perform services for the city.
41. THE SCHOOL OF BLADES This walled compound houses a large, one-story structure of wood that surrounds an open courtyard. The gates to this compound are generally closed and guarded, though that’s more for show than anything else. This is the infamous School of Blades, a fighting school founded nearly a decade ago. Its instructors teach an acrobatic style that focuses on the use of light weapons and mobility—in short, they train duelists. Membership at the School of Blades is by invitation only. Generally, about a dozen students are enrolled at any one time, each having been recruited by the school’s founder or one of his two aides. The trio keeps a close eye on anyone in town whose fighting style might be augmented by their
139
Illus. by G. Kubic
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
140
lessons; likewise, the town’s nobles and guildmasters can of three—a sitting room, a bedroom, and a private bathroom. These suites cost 10 gp per night and include breakfast, a recommend possible students. massage, a hot bath, and laundry services. Each room can Creatures: Daryn Larsken, a human duelist from the be secured with a good lock (Open Lock DC 30). distant town of Verbobonc, founded the School of Blades Creatures: This fabulous establishment is owned and nearly ten years ago. Since then, he has tutored hundreds operated by Hoskin Lashti, a pleasant halfling who also of students, but only three dozen have graduated and happens to be one of the councilors of Saltmarsh. Of the become duelists; his courses are notoriously difficult. six councilors, he is perhaps the least invested in the role. Two of his graduates, a female gnome named Ember and He prefers to spend his time at his establishment, a human named Porthas, currently serve as his aides. entertaining the guests and rubbing elbows with Daryn has recently become enamored with Aydi the elite. Hoskin owns a figurine of wondrous powZarastian, the owner of Saltmarsh Playhouse (area er (silver raven) that he has been known to loan to 24), to an extent that his teaching has started to favored guests on occasion. suffer, and he relies more and more on his two Adventure Hook: One of Hoskin’s recent aides to lead classes. guests was Kombi Opaltooth, a traveling Adventure Hook: A character might be wizard who paid for his room for a month invited to join the school if he has a base attack bonus of +1, the Weapon Finesse feat, in advance, explaining that he needed proficiency with a light martial or exotic privacy to copy several new spells into his spellbook. But unbeknownst to melee weapon, and at least 4 ranks in the Tumble skill. An invitation, once offered, Hoskin, Kombi was murdered in his is never repeated; a prospective student room and his spellbook stolen. The typically has a day to accept or decline. body won’t be found until it begins to Once a student is accepted, he must smell several days after the murder, but move into the on-site barracks, pay the the crime appears to be a mystery betuition of 500 gp per six-month term, and cause the room’s door remains locked. attend at least 8 hours of classes a day, five In truth, Kombi stole the rare spells days a week. At the end of each 8-hour day, from a reclusive conjurer who lives in the student is fatigued and gains experithe nearby Dreadwood. The conjurer tracked him down and used dimension ence points as if he had defeated a CR 6 monster. A student who commits to his door and phantasmal killer spells to retrieve studies can earn enough experience his property. Finding the murderer is a points to become a duelist as early as task for PCs with skills in unraveling five years after he first enrolls. mysteries that leave behind no conDaryn understands that some of ventional clues; spells such as speak his students are also adventurers. As with dead and divination are required to long as they fight only with light martial crack this case. or exotic melee weapons while adven43. BARRACKS/JAIL turing, and as long as they make a DC 25 This grim, foreboding structure looms atop a Diplomacy check, Daryn allows them to Hoskin Lashti, owner of practice only four days a week, leaving them low hill, surrounded by a 15-foot-high stone the Silver Raven three days a week in which to adventure. fence topped with a menacing tangle of iron spikes and blades. This is the Saltmarsh Barracks, which 42. THE SILVER RAVEN also serves as a jail. The aboveground portion of the fortified Much of the façade and tiled roof of this marble building keep contains the armory and barracks for the city watch, is coated with silver paint. Silver embellishments, often in as well as training facilities, dining halls, and other necesthe shape of ravens, adorn the structure, and an exquisite sities. The three underground levels comprise the city jail; the deeper one travels, the more dangerous and terrible the silver statuette of a raven perches on a silver bar above the prisoners become. The third level contains a well-stocked main entrance. This gaudy establishment is the Silver Ratorture room, the existence of which is kept secret from the ven, Saltmarsh’s most prestigious tavern and inn. citizens. It’s used only rarely, and only on the most hardened Its food and ale are of excellent quality but expensive, costing ten times the amount listed in the Player’s Handbook. criminals who resist all other forms of interrogation. The proprietor even keeps a small set of five scrolls of heroes’ Creatures: Although the watchtowers on the city walls feast handy for special occasions; partaking of such a feast have barracks, the majority of the city watch is stationed here. Walthas Kang, the current commander of the watch, costs a mere 80 gp per person. All rooms are actually suites
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
141
Illus. by B. Hagan
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
The Saltmarsh Barracks does double duty as a jail
142
is assisted by a burly half-orc named Grust Redbeard who serves as the garrison’s jailer. Three types of guard units serve Walthas. City Watch Patrols: The garrison keeps five of these groups, each composed of three 1st-level warriors led by a 5th-level warrior; two groups are always on patrol. City Stalkers: The garrison has five stalkers, all 3rd-level rangers who operate as undercover guards in the city, although only one or two can be found here at a time. City Brutes: These consist of gangs of three 1st-level barbarians led by a 5th-level barbarian; only two of these units are kept, and they live below, serving as guards for the jail and as elite fighting forces when needed. Adventure Hook: A character who gets arrested almost certainly ends up here. Saltmarsh’s crimes are punished by incarceration, and the size of the jail is more than up to the task. The upper level of the dungeon is reserved for short sentences and minor criminals, the middle level for longer-term prisoners (up to five years), and the lower level for life terms. Escape from the Saltmarsh Jail, while difficult, might provide high adventure for the right type of PCs. Alternatively, the PCs might need to sneak into the jail to interrogate or even rescue a prisoner (who might or might not have been imprisoned unjustly).
44. SLAUGHTERHOUSE An almost palpable stink of death surrounds this large slaughterhouse. Livestock purchased from merchants to supplement the small number of farms is brought here for slaughter and preparation. The killing takes place in several underground chambers, with the waste dumped into pits of cultivated green slime that is burned off once a week, giving forth large plumes of nasty green smoke. Neighbors have long lobbied for the relocation of the slaughterhouse, but the town council is reluctant to move one of the city’s largest backup food processing operations outside the city walls, so for now it’s staying put. Creatures: Four slovenly and unpleasant brothers— Kinto, Parne, Torkan, and Vander Anderhoff—currently own and operate the slaughterhouse. The brothers refer to themselves as the Sawfish Boys because of the large sawfish that Torkan caught several years ago, which he preserved and mounted over the main entrance to the abattoir. Townsfolk tolerate the Sawfish Boys, who are anything but friendly, mostly because no one else wants to do the job that they so obviously enjoy. Adventure Hook: As time has passed, the Sawfish Boys have grown braver with their antics and mayhem. They’ve come to realize that their willingness to do their job affords
them a lot of leeway in the kinds of “entertainment” they can get away with. Recently, the smartest of the brothers (Vander) learned that a small fortune in platinum coins might be hidden in the shipyard (area 27), and they’re preparing a clandestine raid of the building once they can get a map of the place from the Black Market (area 49).
45. STONEMASONS’ GUILDHALL
This large, gothic-styled house seems a bit out of place next to the humble and serviceable Saltmarsh architecture nearby. One of the first buildings constructed in town, the orphanage was once the holding of the Lassiter family (area 57). When Saltmarsh’s nobility began moving up on Saltmarsh Point to the west, the Lassiter family moved as well. For several years, the mansion sat empty, until an enterprising aristocrat named Audry Lilybrook purchased and renovated the mansion, transforming it into an orphanage. Since its founding, the Lilybrook Orphanage has helped reform and educate hundreds of wayward children and urchins. Today, the orphanage cares for over three dozen orphans, and Audry Lilybrook has had to bring on a staff of five to help maintain order. The house looks foreboding, but the citizens of Saltmarsh agree that it does a lot of good. Of course, rumors swirl of something sinister going on in Lilybrook, but most people ascribe these rumors to cruel and vindictive children
SALTMARSH
46. LILYBROOK ORPHANAGE
CHAPTER 4
This large stone building looms over the nearby city wall. The yard to the south is often strewn with blocks of imported stone and gravel; more lie inside the main warehouse of the building. The guildhall of stonemasons also serves as a distribution point for all manner of stone building materials needed in town and in nearby regions. Few good places exist nearby to quarry stone, so it has to be imported. Creatures: The current guildmaster of stonemasons is a sour-faced human named Yonshi Quansath. He’s a talented stonemason, but he’s an even more talented complainer; nothing ever seems to be good enough for him. His three most common topics of ire and profanity are the Sawfish Boys and the slaughterhouse (area 44); Kailee Restinan, owner of the Lizard’s Boat (area 18), who once humiliated him in public; and Flanigan Lorsk, owner of Whitecap Shipping (area 29), who seems to take a perverse delight in taxing and fining Yonshi’s stone imports. Adventure Hook: Yonshi’s getting ready to do something about Flanigan Lorsk. His current plan is to find out which prostitute Flanigan visits the most at the Dancing Dryad (area 47), murder her, and then frame Flanigan for the deed, thereby eliminating one of his biggest problems in town. Yonshi isn’t quite sure how to go about the task, though. If he finds out that Flanigan has grown attached to a PC, he decides to arrange for that PC’s murder instead, hiring an assassin from out of town to do the job.
trying to besmirch the name of a humanitarian effort to better the lives of the unfortunate. Creatures: Audry Lilybrook is nearly seventy-five years old now, but she remains spry and smart as a whip. Her voice is shrill and impossible to ignore, and she runs the orphanage with a firm but understanding hand. Her five assistants deal with a regular influx of new orphans, but something (such as sickness, accidents, or runaways) always seems to keep the orphanage from running at full capacity. In any case, visitors to the orphanage note that the children are remarkably well behaved and polite, with only a few troublemakers whispering about demons in the basement and witches in the attic. Adventure Hook: Unfortunately, the troublemakers are right—Audry Lilybrook is a cultist of the foul demon lord Graz’zt. She purchased the house from the Lassiter family as a cover for her coven of cultists; her five “assistants” are 2nd-level adepts who scour the city for inductees into the cult, under the ruse of looking for foster parents. Audry is quite skilled at guessing who might be receptive to her offers of power and wealth, and has so far recruited nearly one hundred fifty of Saltmarsh’s citizens into her cult, many of them lapsed worshipers of Pelor. These new inductees are told of an emerging deity of luck called Jodai, and told that if they worship Jodai in secrecy, their luck will vastly improve. Each of these cultists receives a tiny brand between the shoulder blades, and in the weeks that follow, they find that their luck seems to increase the more they offer prayers to “Jodai” in the privacy of their homes. Audry’s plans for her cult and the actual source of the strange luck have yet to be revealed, but these secrets certainly don’t have Saltmarsh’s best interests at heart. The children of the orphanage are safe as long as they don’t get too nosy about what goes on in the attic and basement. They’re an excellent cover for Audry, and it’s only the troublemakers—who try to reveal her cult—that end up being fed to the fiendish animals she keeps locked in kennels deep below the orphanage. Anyone who gains the brand of Jodai (actually a brand of Graz’zt) and offers prayers at night in secret finds that one of his skills in which he has at least 1 rank (selected at random) gains a +1 profane bonus. Additionally, small bits of luck, such as finding a silver piece in the road or getting a good seat at a crowded tavern, seem to become more common. Over time, the character’s alignment shifts to evil, at which point Audry takes the convert into her full confidence.
47. THE DANCING DRYAD Part game hall, part tavern, part inn, and part brothel, the Dancing Dryad is one of the most notorious buildings in Saltmarsh. It presents a flashy façade, one that seems a bit out of place this close to the slums. Marble columns carved to resemble trees line the walls of the building, and a permanent silent image of a scandalously writhing woman
143
Illus. by E. Cox
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
with pale skin and green hair undulates on a miniature stage built to resemble a forest glen above the main entrance. Inside, the main room is filled with tables for playing cards, dice, and several other games of chance, all run by the house. Beautiful women dressed as dryads and nymphs take drink orders along with handsome men dressed as satyrs and pixies. A large stage at the far end of the hall is a full-sized replica of the miniature forest glen from the sign out front; the nights that the “dryad” dances on the stage tend to be the busiest. Customers can rent rooms on the upper floors for sleeping, but most of the Dancing Dryad’s clientele rent them for more carnal purposes. The serving men and women offer more than drink here. Creatures: The Dancing Dryad is a front for Saltmarsh’s thieves’ guild. Several underground chambers below the building serve as the actual guildhouse. According to town records, the owner of the Dancing Dryad is Oslor Pendicraw, but he’s little more than a smokescreen—an ally of the guild, though not an official member. The actual owner is Sasha Amistar, a canny and beguiling half-elf. She performs as the dancing dryad three nights a week, using her bard spells to make herself appear as a dryad; her disguise has fooled many druids and rangers into outrage at the perceived abuse of an innocent fey. Each time, though, Sasha talks the offended person into becoming an ally, while still disguised as the dryad. Her true appearance and role in the business are known only to guild members and a select few others in town, including her lover, Toren Aerakin, one of the town councilors. This connection is one of the primary reasons her operation has remained so well hidden for the past several years. Adventure Hook: Any PC rogue who tries to contact Saltmarsh’s underground is likely led here. Of course, no one gets far without the password, which changes daily. Learning the current password requires a DC 20 Gather Information check followed by a DC 20 Diplomacy or Intimidate check. Presenting the password to any of the workers here gets the character an audience with one of Sasha’s underlings. The newcomer must run a grueling obstacle course in a large chamber below the Dancing Dryad; the test involves at least ten skill checks (all at DC 20, selected semirandomly from the rogue class skill list), of which the applicant must make at least six. Success results in an invitation to join the thieves’ guild; failure means that the guild is forever closed to that character. There’s no love lost between the thieves’ guild and the assassins’ guild. The two groups often butt heads over territories, jobs, and philosophies, but for now, they’re not at war. It wouldn’t take much to ignite one, though.
The Dancing Dryad tempts slum dwellers into sampling its wares
144
48. THE FLOUNDER POUNDER
Ned Shakeshaft of the Flounder Pounder serves up some discipline to a local thug
SALTMARSH
The shacks and shanties that line this street use the cliff wall here as integral support. This building is no exception; it’s little more than a lean-to piled against the
CHAPTER 4
49. BLACK MARKET
Illus. by R. Spencer
Half of this seedy-looking tavern is built on stilts out over the waters of the harbor, while the other half rests firmly on the ground. A sign above the shaky front door depicts a mustached man hammering a large flounder into mash with a mallet. Inside, the place reeks of stale grog, raw fish, and body odor, although the regular patrons don’t seem to mind that much. A rickety bar winds along the southern wall, and open holes in the eastern floor drop into the water below. The patrons fish from these holes or relieve themselves in them as needed. The tavern’s name comes from the house specialty, flounder pounded to a thick mash (bones, eyes, and all) and then fried in lard and grog into flatcakes. This establishment seems to be a standard example of a tavern gone sour, but a DC 25 Sense Motive check allows a character to notice that the patrons are merely playing at being drunk and that most of them remain alert and observant. As is the case with the nearby Dancing Dryad (area 47), the Flounder Pounder is a front for a shadier business—in this case, an assassins’ guild. A secret tunnel below the western end of the bar leads down to a partially flooded passage that winds its way to the west, up out of the water and into a small network of caves under the Rasivath Mansion (area 56). The Rasivaths have no clue that the assassins’ guildhouse is hidden just below their basement. Creatures: The tavern and the guild are both run by the same man, a shifty-eyed, middle-aged human by the
name of Ned Shakeshaft. Ned’s lived in Saltmarsh for most of his life, making a living doing jobs that other people shudder at. For many years, he worked for Dircroft Cronan at the tailors’ guildhall (area 23), until a mission went bad and Ned was nearly killed by a group of adventurers to whom Dircroft had taken a dislike. Ned has since worked his way up the rungs of the assassins’ guild, only recently becoming its guildmaster. A greedy, self-centered menace, Ned’s attention is rarely a good thing. Only ten or so assassins belong to the guild today, but their footprint in Saltmarsh’s social scene is large; the average person on the street thinks that a nest of dozens of assassins hides somewhere in the city. The members are rogues who grew dissatisfied with the thieves’ guild and managed to escape (usually by faking their own deaths). Adventure Hook: Anyone who takes a dislike to the PCs and has both the excess of coin and the lack of morals and bravery required might take out a contract on one of them. More likely, though, something the PCs do (a favor here, a good deed there) triggers a chain of related events that culminates with inciting the assassins to finally strike at the thieves’ guild. A war between the two guilds has been simmering for some time now, and it won’t take much to set it off.
145
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
146
rock. The doors and windows are boarded up; peeking through the slats reveals what appears to be an abandoned house. Characters who insist on entering the building can do so by walking through the northern wall, which has completely fallen away. Those with the Track feat who make a DC 15 Survival check notice something of interest—a number of partially hidden tracks mar the ground inside the shack. That’s because this building is the entrance to the Saltmarsh Black Market, one of the best-kept secrets in town. A secret door set in the cliff wall in the house (Search DC 25) provides access to a number of underground chambers below Saltmarsh Heights. Normally, the door is locked and guarded from the tunnel side. A PC can open it with a DC 30 Open Lock check and gain entrance by giving the guard (human fighter 2/rogue 1) the proper password. Learning the word requires a DC 20 Gather Information check followed by a DC 20 Diplomacy or Intimidate check. The Black Market itself consists of several rooms connected to a half-mile tunnel that opens in a hidden sea cave to the west of town, where the market’s goods are delivered by smugglers, pirates, and worse. Several merchants ply their trades here, working together to regulate and protect one another. Numerous organizations, including the thieves’ guild (area 47), the assassins’ guild (area 48), Lassiter House (area 57), and the tinkers’ guild (area 52), finance and support the Black Market. Characters who wish to purchase goods from the Black Market must first find an agent in town with a DC 25 Gather Information check. Failure by 5 or more indicates that the town guard learns of the PCs’ interest and approaches them for questioning, in which case the characters can’t try to find the Black Market again for a week. Success indicates that an agent agrees to take the PCs’ order; he makes the purchase for them and delivers the goods to wherever they wish. To help safeguard the market’s secrets, outsiders are almost never allowed into the subterranean rooms. As a general rule, anything up to the town’s limit of 3,000 gp can be purchased on the Black Market without much fuss. Customers can buy more expensive items, too, but not as easily. Goods costing from 3,001 to 4,500 gp take 2d6 days to arrive and have a 125% markup in price. Goods costing from 4,501 to 6,000 gp take 1d4 weeks to arrive and have a 150% markup in price. Goods costing from 6,001 to 15,000 gp take several months to arrive and cost at least twice the market value. Creatures: All merchants of the Black Market are 3rdlevel rogues; in addition, five 3rd-level barbarian ogres live in the market and provide protection as needed. The organizing force behind the market, and the creature that keeps it as vibrant as it is secret, is a business-minded doppelganger sorcerer named Vlistur. He lives in a small set of hidden rooms below the market and views its secrecy as
his greatest responsibility, primarily because he receives kickbacks from all its merchants. Adventure Hook: Although illegal, the Black Market also has its uses. Characters who are known to operate outside the law might be approached on the sly by one of the town’s guildmasters or councilors to help defend the market’s secrecy; perhaps a local paladin visiting the Cathedral of Pelor has obtained a list of names of Black Market agents. The town council values the market for many reasons, and it might hire the PCs to stealthily destroy or remove this list from circulation.
50. CRAZY NETTIE’S PLACE Unique among the slums, this house is made of stone rather than wood and has a thatched roof. When winter storms come, it weathers them with ease, while the wooden buildings elsewhere on this promontory are badly damaged by the winds and the odd wave that reaches high enough to wash over the rock. Creatures: Ages ago, long before Saltmarsh incorporated as a town, an eccentric druid named Quander built the house. He lived here for several decades before one day simply walking into the sea and drowning. For years thereafter, the locals avoided the place, but eventually they began to build closer and closer. Finally, a particularly brave resident named Nettie decided enough was enough and moved in. The fact that she developed a noisy set of insanities soon after was not lost on the locals, and while Nettie sometimes helps the poor of the region with her magic, she remains a figure of fright and suspicion. Adventure Hook: Only a day after she moved into Quander’s stone home, Nettie discovered a strange gold amulet and was driven mad. The amulet is possessed by an evil spirit, a disembodied and insane fiend named Loliakra. On bad days, Loliakra is in charge and spends its time using Nettie to rant, rave, and carve its plans for regaining its missing body on pieces of driftwood. On good days, Nettie burns these plans to keep Loliakra from finding the solution and does what she can to help the locals. The source of the haunted amulet and the location of Loliakra’s body are left to you to devise.
51. DUNGSWEEPERS’ GUILDHALL This large structure perched on a rapidly narrowing ledge is set off on its own for a reason—this is the dungsweepers’ guildhall. One of the only thriving businesses in the slums, this building is the base of operations for a large number of unskilled laborers who endlessly patrol the streets of Saltmarsh with one of their dung wagons. They clear the streets and alleys of fi lth and refuse, haul it back here, and burn it in the pit behind the building or dump it unceremoniously over the edge into the sea. Creatures: The only person who lives here is the guildmaster, a foul human named Tarn Ticklip. He collects
This strange building seems to be made of equal parts wood, stone, and iron. Numerous smoking chimneys puff along its uneven rooftop, and the sounds of hammers, whistles, and metallic clangs periodically issue forth from within. A sign over the door depicts a set of interlocking gears. This building, the tinkers’ guildhouse, is a relatively new addition to Saltmarsh. All manner of inventors, clockworkers, gearmakers, lens grinders, and fine metalworkers are welcome here. The tinkers’ guild is dedicated to the construction of mechanical and optic devices such as clocks, spyglasses, and other nonmagical but nonetheless wondrous inventions. Creatures: The current master tinker is a wiry human named Andrati Paterwalus, a gifted toymaker whose windup nightingales, lobsters, and frogs are all the rage among children of the nobles. Less fortunate youngsters can’t afford the expensive toys and only watch the frequent demonstrations of the mechanical wonders in the fields just outside town to the west. The noble children have taken to pitting the toys against each other, and they build intricate battle arenas there. Of course, Andrati puts on a big show about the damage done to his toys, but since the repairs bring near-constant business, he doesn’t complain too loudly. Adventure Hook: Andrati’s secret is that his inventions are far from completely mechanical; they’re actually minor constructs. He builds them and then masks any magical auras with a variant of the nondetection spell he researched. Ironically, his genius would net him a nice position in the wizards’ guild (area 39) if he were to reveal the truth, but he finds that group to be far too hung up on itself; they have no joy or love of life, he’s fond of saying under his breath. Andrati could make an excellent contact for PCs who feel the same way.
53. FASTRALLI MANSION This mansion appears to be rather new. No vines grow on the surrounding stone wall, and the blue paint on the building’s exterior is fresh and bright. A coat of arms above the gate depicts a hawk with a ring in its mouth on a field of blue.
54. AERAKIN MANSION This sprawling mansion is well kept but obviously old. The four-story tower that looms over the main entrance dwarfs the mansion’s two floors. Over the gate hangs a coat of arms bearing a mermaid on a field of green, her arms upraised, clutching a scroll in her left hand and a wand in her right. Creatures: The Aerakin family is old blood in Saltmarsh, descended from one of the four adventurers who first claimed the region so long ago. Today, Toren Aerakin is the youngest ruling noble in Saltmarsh, having risen to the head of his household when both his parents and his grandfather died of a sudden violent illness. Gossip about town says that Toren poisoned them, but the young aristocrat angrily refutes these rumors and has had several people fined for slander as a result. Another subject of much gossip is the fact that Toren has yet to take a wife; he shares the mansion with his two younger brothers and four younger sisters. Toren inherited the role of town councilor from his grandfather as well and has turned out to be one of the more level-headed and reasonable councilors in recent history. Adventure Hook: Toren’s social situation is complicated. For many years, he’s secretly been the lover of the mistress of the thieves’ guild, Sasha Amistar (area 47). He always figured that there was plenty of time to sort things out before he inherited, but the sudden death of his parents and grandfather left him in a lurch. His new responsibilities have started to wear on him. Although Sasha enjoys being the lover of one of the town councilors (and the obvious benefits it brings for her guild), Toren grows more and more desperate to have her retire and become his wife publicly. When he becomes desperate enough, he might recruit the PCs to help convince Sasha to step down from her position and marry Toren, a task easier said than done.
SALTMARSH
52. TINKERS’ GUILDHALL
Creatures: The Fastralli family is the newest addition to Saltmarsh’s nobility. They come from a long line of gemcutters and jewelers and have much invested in the jewelers’ guildhall (area 14) and its master, Rodelik Karneth. In fact, the family’s intervention is what set Rodelik on the path of law. Oona Fastralli, a matronly woman who enjoys her new wealth and social status, leads the family. Adventure Hook: The Fastrallis are still sorting out who their allies are, and they might hire sneaky PCs to investigate their standing with the other nobles.
CHAPTER 4
payments from Saltmarsh for the services his guild provides, but the money barely covers the dozens of laborers he employs to haul dung wagons around town. Adventure Hook: People throw out the most unexpected things. Tarn’s only real source of entertainment is sorting through other people’s garbage. Over the years, he’s accumulated a stash of surprisingly valuable pieces of jewelry, damning letters, and other bits of useful or interesting trash. If the PCs dispose of something they’d rather not see again, Tarn might end up with it and sell it to the highest bidder.
55. AELTYN MANSION The walls and shingled roof of this otherwise fine-looking mansion have been painted a shocking hue of orange. A coat of arms fi xed above the gate depicts a leaping orange fish on a field of deep blue-green. Creatures: The Aeltyn family represents the honorable path of the fisher. Their ancestors built not only the shipyard (area 27) but also the piers and bridges in Saltmarsh. Loris Aeltyn is the current ruling noble here. One of his first acts
147
Illus. by G. Kubic
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
upon inheriting the title was to paint the house orange to match the color of the family fish, the orange perch. His wife, children, and siblings were shocked and horrified at this development, but they’ve learned to accept the fact that the other nobles mock the color of their home. Adventure Hook: The Aeltyns remain quite active in the fishing industry, and if the PCs cause problems for any honest fishers, the family soon hears about it and demands recompense from them.
148
57. LASSITER HOUSE
This fine mansion is as stately as it is classic. Gargoyles perch on its eaves, and lightning rods jut from its rooftops. A coat of arms over the gate depicts a crossed dagger and key on a field of gold. Creatures: The Lassiters are one of the original families of Saltmarsh, descended from Moria Lassiter, one of the adventurers who founded the town. They remain active in town, particularly in the merchants’ guild (area 17), the Saltmarsh Playhouse (area 24), and the Saltmarsh Museum (area 38). They 56. RASIVATH TOWER also have ties to the Lilybrook Unlike the other large mansions Orphanage (area 46). Egan Lassiter in Saltmarsh, this noble villa is is the current ruling noble. His opinions often cause great arguments in the dominated by a tall stone tower town council (of which he is a member), and several ancient-looking oak trees. The coat of arms fixed to the and he has nearly as many enemies as top of the gate depicts an oak tree friends in town. surrounded by rays of white light Adventure Hook: The Lassiter famon a field of brown. ily is in fact one of the deadliest dangers Creatures: The Rasivaths in Saltmarsh. They all secretly worship trace their lineage to one of the Vecna, and Egan Lassiter is their high four founding adventurers of Saltpriest. Many others belong to the cult, marsh; their ancestor was the and they meet in catacombs carved out druid Zestran Rasivath, and they of the bedrock beneath the mansion. A continue to honor his memory by fairly large underground temple of Vecliving in close proximity to nana exists below as well, and the cultists ture. Thus, their mansion takes have gathered a shocking number of undead and outsider minions to protect up a much smaller footprint on their secrets. One of their greatest setheir family grounds than do the crets is the founding of the cult of other noble houses. The Rasivaths are also the only nonhuman nobles in SaltGraz’zt in Lilybrook Orphanage. marsh. Although they’re halflings, their The Lassiters plan to reveal this cult home is scaled for human-sized creatures, a through their agents if they believe their own nod to their fellow nobles. Sara Rasivath, an truths might be exposed, and hope that the elderly halfling who often visits with the uproar over the demon cultists will draw atruling noble of tention away from themselves. Revealing the druids of Oak Island (area 63), currently Egan Lassiter, Lassiter House Lassiter cultists and ridding Saltmarsh of this rules the family. festering evil is a task for only the bravest PCs. Adventure Hook: The Rasivaths don’t suspect the treachery that lurks below their home— the town’s assassins’ guild that lies just under their basement. The family 58. AMBERMEAD HOUSE This solidly constructed mansion seems to have been built members sometimes hear rustlings or voices from below, but they’ve come to the conclusion that these are the spirits more for practical service than an ostentatious display of their ancestors guarding their home. The Rasivaths even of wealth. But it also seems run-down, its grounds a bit brag that their home is haunted, and the other nobles ignore overgrown and unkempt. The coat of arms depicts a silver them. No entrance leads from the basement to the guild hound leaping over the moon on a field of black. Creatures: The Ambermeads have fallen on hard times below; the assassins access their guild by a long tunnel from the Flounder Pounder (area 48). If their guild is ever recently, and Tobias Ambermead, the current ruling noble, discovered, one of the assassins pulls a lever to collapse the is nearing his wit’s end. His family made its fortune in tunnel and open a hole between the guild and the Rasivath wine and owns a large number of vineyards to the west. basement above. The assassins hope that the ensuing scandal Recently, however, the vineyards have been raided by flocks will give them plenty of cover to regroup and relocate. of persistent ravens and crows and (more disturbingly) by
Adventure Hook: If one of the PCs proves especially gallant, upstanding, and charismatic in dealing with Saltmarsh and its people, Erolin might take note and select that character as a possible nominee for the next lord mayor. Being lord mayor-elect brings a wealth of rewards, and eventually, rulership of the town might fall to the PC as well.
60. ANDRIGAL MANSION SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
This might once have been a proud, impressive mansion, but its days of glory are far gone. The building is run-down, with sagging roofs, boarded-up windows, peeling paint, and wretchedly overgrown grounds. Rust and moss are the rule here. A pitted, badly eroded coat of arms hangs askew over gates that are chained shut with rusty links; whatever heraldic device might have graced it has long since faded away. Creatures: The Andrigal Mansion is the source of rumors and wild speculation among the citizens of Saltmarsh. It existed before the town did, at that time the expansive grounds of the Andrigals, a religious family that served St. Cuthbert. When Saltmarsh was founded, the Andrigals helped fledgling businesses get off their feet, but their greatest project was the construction of a 59. TIMERTIKOS large cathedral to St. Cuthbert. The family patriarch, Jarthis Andrigal, wanted HOUSE One of the most impressive buildings it to be his clan’s greatest gift to the buron the entire hillside, this sprawling geoning town. With the cathedral nearly mansion has a carved façade and feacomplete, Jarthis called upon the tures numerous topiaries of fantastic daughter of an old friend to serve animals on its grounds. The coat of as the cathedral’s priest. Her name was Soshyn Anamar, and she was in arms over the gate depicts a winged helmet above a pair of crossed gauntfact Jarthis’s secret lover. lets on a field of red. The night she arrived in town, Creatures: Descended from Orrin Jarthis invited her up to his mansion for dinner and tried to take from her what Timertikos, a famous paladin and one of the four adventurers who founded he viewed as his reward for securing the the town, the Timertikos family honorable position of high priest. She rehas had representation on the town fused, and things turned violent. In the council since the start. Currently, scuffle, she accidentally broke Jarthis’s its ruling patron Erolin Timertikos arm. Infuriated, he struck her with a serves Saltmarsh not only as a statuette of St. Cuthbert and knocked councilor but also as its lord mayor. her out. Believing he had killed her, he He’s held the post for nearly three and his siblings dragged her body into decades now, and his popularity the basement and tried to dispose of her remains high. He’s getting in a tub of lye. As the lye hit her and began on in years, though, and of to destroy her body, she awoke in agony. She just had time to see Jarthis and his brothers and late his primary concern is Erolin Timertikos, realize what had happened before the Andrinominating a new lord mayor for the rest Lord Mayor of Saltmarsh gals finished the job with a shovel. of the council to ratify upon his death. He’d love to have one of his sons take the job, but they don’t That was the beginning of the end for the Andrigals. seem all that interested in it. Though no one ever learned of Soshyn’s death (Jarthis
Illus. by G. Kubic
monitor lizards from the nearby swamps. Tobias believes that the lizardfolk are behind the attacks on his lands, and he’s grown tired of demanding explanations from the Lizard Embassy (area 22). Now, he simply wants all the lizards in town exiled and seeks to have a bounty enacted on all lizardfolk and monitor lizards in the wild. Adventure Hook: In truth, Tobias’s woes aren’t the fault of the lizardfolk (although they aren’t doing much to help the case by ignoring his complaints). The animal attacks on his lands are being orchestrated by a bitter ex-lover named Skie Rayncliff, whom Tobias impregnated during a torrid affair. Rather than have his illegitimate child nearby, he broke off the affair and paid to have Skie and her unborn child forcibly relocated to a city far to the north. Skie miscarried along the trip when giants attacked her traveling party, but she somehow survived. Filled with rage at Tobias, she worked her way back south, built up a small fortune as a burglar, and then used the money to hire a shady ranger named Baswulf Tisk to aid in ruining her former lover’s livelihood. She plans to reveal his indiscretions to the rest of his family, but only after letting him suffer over the attacks on his vineyards.
149
150 SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
SALTMARSH
Andrigal Mansion, a once-proud structure now in disarray . . . and, some say, haunted
CHAPTER 4
and his fingers and toes completely gone. Baxter never said a word for the next four months, and then one day he walked off the cliff into the sea. No one’s stayed a night in the Andrigal Mansion since. The stories about the mansion are true, although it isn’t the Andrigal family that haunts it. The family was murdered long ago by none other than the betrayed cleric Soshyn, risen from her unhallowed grave as a vampire. She left the bodies as they lay after she finished with them, except for a half-elf named Jarthis, whom she has kept alive in the basement for these many years, hidden in a soundproof room and tormented nightly. Jarthis has lived the last century or so of his life in constant agony. Soshyn has preyed on Saltmarsh for nearly as long, but she is careful to take only lonely visitors and has kept her existence secret. She often lures her victims to Marshgate Bridge (area 35), using a hat of disguise to appear the way she looked when she lived—a seductive woman of twentythree years of age. In her true form, which she reveals only as she takes the life of a victim, she is horribly bleached, scarred, and eaten away, the disfiguring damage inflicted on her by the lye preserved forever in undeath. Soshyn is one of the most dangerous creatures in Saltmarsh, and you shouldn’t spring her on the PCs until
Illus. by B. Hagan
had never announced his plan to make her the high priest, or even that she was coming to Saltmarsh), townsfolk noted that the Andrigals suddenly grew insular and reclusive. Work stopped on the cathedral, and over the next several months, people saw less and less of the nobles. One day, the town councilors paid a visit and were aghast to find the house an abattoir. Someone had gone from room to room several days before and horribly murdered the Andrigals. Jarthis’s body was missing, and people assumed he had done the deed and fled. The mansion was boarded up, the cathedral was eventually fi nished and rededicated to Pelor, and life went on in Saltmarsh. The Andrigals soon passed from daily conversation, except for the odd whispered rumor. Adventure Hook: It’s generally accepted in town that the Andrigal Mansion is haunted. Children often dare one another to run up to the front door and knock three times, and they tell stories of little Baxter Larenby, who accepted a dare to sleep in the house alone. They say that he never came out; the city watch went in looking for him and emerged empty-handed, claiming to have found nothing but pale and silent about what they did find. Two months later, Baxter staggered back out of the house, his eyes filmed over with cataracts, his body skin and bones,
151
61. SALTMARSH POINT FORUM
Illus. by G. Kubic
SALTMARSH
CHAPTER 4
they’re of high level. When you judge that they’re ready to take her on, have one of her victims get away and tell stories of the horrible melted woman who attacked him on the bridge. After much investigation, the PCs should be led to the Andrigal Mansion and the catacombs below, which are haunted by Soshyn’s undead minions and several powerful fiends she has summoned with her divine magic, twisted by her new patron, Nerull.
152
This stone structure is open to the air, a manycolumned forum guarded by two large statues of knights on horseback. At the center of the forum stand four more statues—a paladin, a rogue, a wizard, and a druid, likenesses of the four adventurers who founded Saltmarsh so many years ago. Nobles often gather here to discuss topics of the day or merely sightsee. From this vantage point, the view of Saltmarsh, Oak Island, and the sea is unparalleled. The stone bridge that connects the forum to Oak Island is an architectural wonder, held aloft by only four thin pilings that reach down to the ground and the seabed below.
the woods here, but they keep a constant eye to the south for the approach of any enemies; they take their roles as guardians of the isle and of Saltmarsh very seriously.
64. STANDING STONES Two massive obelisks capped by a stone menhir overlook the ocean here. The druids of Oak Island find this place to be the most holy on the isle and perform their rituals and religious ceremonies here. At sunrise and sunset, the view from this bluff is nothing short of magnificent. Adventure Hook: Unknown to the druids, the standing stones were erected centuries ago by a foul-tempered pirate named Pigeye Pete to mark the location of one of his hidden caches of treasure. A map that leads the PCs to the stones might cause some problems with the druids, though. Even if they’re convinced that the pirate’s treasure can be found, they’re loath to uproot the stones without significant favors from the PCs.
65. SALTMARSH BEACON
The second artificial structure on Oak Island is a towering lighthouse of blue marble. Close inspection (and a DC 26 Spellcraft check) reveals that the entire structure was built with walls of 62. OAK ISLAND KEEP stone and stone shape spells. The lightThis small, squat stone keep is abandoned. house itself is about 100 feet tall, its At one point in Saltmarsh’s past, the town beacon a number of continual flames council kept a small garrison of guards set in a massive lens. A small buildhere, with plans to turn the island into ing adjoins the base of the tower, a naval base. The plans were scrapped in which the druids bunk on nights when the weather is too rough to sleep when a small group of druids volununder the stars. teered to watch the island, occupy the A massive horn runs the length of beacon at the far end, and warn the city the tower. A person at the top of the lightin case of attack by sea. The keep itself remains, empty and overgrown with house can use it to create a booming, vines, and has become a favorite mournful tone that can be heard haunt of young nobles in love throughout the town of Saltseeking a private place away from marsh. This is the alarm in case of their parents. enemy approach from the sea. Each year on the spring equinox, the druids 63. OAK ISLAND sound the horn to ring in a new year and Lira Tolivar, leader of the This sizable island juts from the surto keep the citizens of Saltmarsh used to Oak Island druids rounding waters. Nearly 250 feet high, it the sound in case they need it. reaches roughly the same elevation as the Saltmarsh HighAdventure Hook: The druids have cared for the beacon lands at their highest point. Oak and a few fir trees crowd for many decades, and its familiar, constant shine at night the island; hawks and eagles nest in the branches, and small is a fi xture of the skyline. If something were to happen rodents and rabbits lurk in the underbrush below. to the druids and the beacon were extinguished, the townsfolk might begin to panic. But none is brave enough Creatures: Oak Island is tended by a group of five to make the journey up there to investigate—except, druids who serve Ehlonna and are led by a druid named perhaps, the PCs. Lira Tolivar. They spend much of their time relaxing in
Illus. by A. Swekel
s DM, you have a cast of thousands at your disposal. It’s your job to portray every person the PCs meet, from regal dwarf kings to unnamed spear-carriers, as well as every monster they encounter, from fearsome beholders to snarling hyenas. Moreover, you must remember how the bartender in the town of Saltmarsh behaved when the PCs last passed through—which was two months ago in the game world and more than six months ago in real time. An NPC’s importance can be measured by one simple yardstick—the degree to which the PCs interact with him. If the PCs spend time talking to the bartender every session, then he’s more important than the king of the realm (whom the PCs might never meet), the doppelganger posing as a priest (whom the PCs might never uncover), or the blackguard rampaging through the nearby countryside (whom the PCs might fight and defeat in a single session). Eventually, the truly important NPCs take on lives of their own, and the characters develop lasting relationships with them, treating some with the affection of close friends, and others with the scorn of bitter enemies. Whatever the nature of these relationships, playing these NPCs consistently is a vital part of being a great DM. After all, whenever the PCs interact with one of your important
NPCs, the players are immersing themselves in the world and story you’re creating.
CONTACTS While adventuring in your campaign world, player characters meet countless NPCs. Some are villains or impartial observers, and some might even serve as comic relief, but a few become valuable allies to whom the PCs regularly turn for aid, information, or simple companionship. A PC who is particularly taken with one of these allies might want to recruit her as a cohort or even an apprentice, but for the most part, such individuals simply remain dependable friends. Unearthed Arcana (pages 179–180) presents one set of guidelines for handling contacts. If you’re looking for a simpler system that requires less paper work and that rewards the PCs for roleplaying and interacting with NPCs, you can use the system presented here instead.
GAINING A CONTACT A PC wishing to gain a contact must first select an NPC. If that person’s attitude toward the character is worse than helpful, the first step must be to
153
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
Table 5–1: Sample Contacts Contact Agosti of the Shadow Shore Deogol Knifethrower Farhaan Nicabar Vasilii the Fat Jal Omari Wildcat Rodorsson Nisha of the Many Eyes Ialdabode Cynric the Pure Orkatz of the Green City
Class Wizard 5 Rogue 4 Cleric 6 Expert 5 Soulknife 3 Barbarian 5 Rogue 7 Psion (telepath) 5 Cleric 5 Expert 5
Favors Provided at No Charge Translate any nonmagical script Forge a document Smooth over trouble with local authorities Appraise an art item, a piece of jewelry, or a gem Accompany individual on one adventure up to 1 day in length Help train an animal for a purpose (see Handle Animal) Gather intelligence about any one local person Use read thoughts on one captive Provide healing (cure light wounds) Help research a specific topic (+2 bonus on PC’s Knowledge check)
adjust the NPC’s attitude to helpful with a successful Diplomacy check. (A character can make someone do a favor for him with Intimidate, but he can’t gain a longterm contact with this skill.) Once the NPC’s attitude is helpful, the player simply declares his intent to make that NPC a contact. A PC can have a number of contacts equal to her Charisma bonus (minimum one). In addition, a character who joins a guild (see Guilds, page 223) gains one extra guild contact. In this system, the character does not automatically gain new contacts upon attaining new levels. When a new slot opens for a contact, a PC must find and recruit one in the usual way.
USES FOR CONTACTS A contact’s behavior toward a PC falls somewhere between that of a cohort and a hireling. The contact won’t risk his life for the PC or accompany her on adventures, but he can provide information on request, influence other groups and organizations on the PC’s behalf, or make a skill check—as long as doing so doesn’t cost any money. (If money is involved with the check, the PC must pay the expenses.) In addition, a contact might occasionally waive his normal fee for a service he has performed for the character. This kind of favor is available from a given contact only at specific intervals, as given in Table 5–1: Sample Contacts.
HIRELINGS
154
The Dungeon Master’s Guide provides prices for hiring many different 1st-level commoners, but adventurers often require the services of a specialist—an NPC who is particularly good at a specific task. The higher the specialist is in level, the better he is at his task, and the more money his services cost. A specialist has an advantageous selection of feats, skills, and class abilities that, when combined, allow him to excel at a specific task. Since most specialist NPCs don’t focus their skills on combat or defense, they generally won’t agree to accompany PCs on an adventure. Convincing a specialist to do so usually doubles or even triples his asking price, and
Frequency 1/week 1/month Once 1/week Once Once Once 1/month 1/month 1/week
he might also demand a share of the treasure, even if he doesn’t help in combat. Descriptions of the various kinds of specialists are given in the following sections. Character classes, skills, and feats that each type is likely to possess are provided, but full combat statistics are not. Specialists are usually experts, although some might multiclass into other classes to gain additional benefits relating to their chosen professions. Technically, spellcasters are also specialists, but they don’t appear in the following sections, since the costs to have an NPC cast a spell or to commission the creation of a magic item are handled elsewhere. Adventurers do not count as specialists, but they are described below because NPC adventurers often accompany PC parties for extended periods. Adventurers and specialists always use the elite array (15, 14, 13, 12, 10, 8) to determine their ability scores.
ADVENTURERS Unlike a specialist, an adventurer has no fear of accompanying others on dangerous missions. When PCs decide that their group needs an additional member for a particular mission—be it a cleric for extra healing, a rogue to deal with traps, or a fighter to provide additional combat support—they should hire an adventurer. Adventurers are almost always single-classed NPCs. (Multiclass adventurers should be treated as unique NPCs who can’t be hired simply with money.) You can use the tables on pages 113–126 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide to generate statistics for adventurers quickly. Typically, an adventurer’s daily fee in gold pieces equals her character level squared, plus a split of any treasure gained—usually a half share of the total loot. However, she charges ten times her normal asking price and demands a full share of treasure if her character level is equal to or greater than the average party character level. Adventurers don’t gain experience points, so if the PCs need a higher-level adventurer for a subsequent mission, they must find a different one. A PC who takes a liking to a particular adventurer might take the Leadership feat and recruit her as a cohort, provided that his Leadership score is high enough to do so.
SPECIALISTS
CHAPTER 5
Specialists’ Skill Modifiers Since the majority of specialists are human, the following discussion details how a human specialist builds up his modifier in his chosen skill. See the Nonhuman Specialists sidebar, below, for tips on adjusting skill bonuses for other races. Table 5–2: Skill Modifiers for Human Specialists breaks down a human specialist’s base skill modifier for his selected skill at any given level. It also gives the earliest point at which he can gain access to additional bonuses, such as magic items that boost ability scores or grant competence bonuses, feats that provide untyped skill bonuses, and masterwork tools. Key Ability: At 4th level, a human specialist boosts the key ability for his chosen skill by 1 point, raising it to 16 and gaining another +1 bonus on checks with his chosen skill. He continues to boost this ability score each time he can do so thereafter (every four character levels). The acquisition of items that boost his ability scores are also taken into account in this column. Feats: A specialist takes any feats that could boost the modifier for his chosen skill as soon as possible. Since he is entitled to two feats at 1st level as a human, he takes Skill Focus, which adds +3 to his skill modifier, and another skillboosting feat (such as Alertness or Persuasive) that grants a +2 bonus on his chosen skill and one other. Concentration, Craft, Knowledge, Perform, and Profession are the only skills for which no such feats exist, so a specialist who has
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
Specialists’ skills can vary greatly, but each chooses one skill in particular on which to focus his efforts, and places his best ability score (15) in the key ability for that skill. The skill selected depends on the specialist’s calling. For example, a diplomat would obviously require Diplomacy, and an investigator would likely need Gather Information. Likewise, an animal trainer needs Handle Animal, a sage needs one particular Knowledge skill, and a locksmith needs Open Lock. A specialist’s daily rate of pay depends on his skill modifier for his chosen skill, not on his character level. Thus, the first step in determining the cost of hiring him for a service is to calculate his skill modifier.
Table 5–2: Skill Modifiers for Human Specialists Key Skill Source of Level Ability Modifier Bonuses Cost 1st 15 +13 Feats, masterwork gear 2 gp 2nd 15 +14 — 2 gp 3rd 15 +17 Competence +2 3 gp 4th 16 +22 Competence +5 4 gp 5th 16 +23 — 4 gp 6th 16 +24 — 504 gp 7th 18 +26 Ability item +2 505 gp 8th 19 +27 — 505 gp 9th 19 +28 — 505 gp 10th 19 +29 — 506 gp 11th 19 +30 — 1,007 gp 12th 20 +31 — 1,007 gp 13th 22 +33 Ability item +4 1,007 gp 14th 22 +35 — 1,008 gp 15th 24 +37 Ability item +6 1,008 gp 16th 26 +39 Inherent bonus +1 2,008 gp 17th 26 +40 — 2,009 gp 18th 26 +41 — 2,009 gp 19th 27 +42 Inherent bonus +1 2,009 gp 20th 28 +44 — 2,009 gp
chosen one of these skills has a modifier 2 points lower than Table 5–2 indicates for his level. Masterwork Gear: A specialist owns a masterwork instrument or masterwork tools as appropriate for his chosen specialty. This item grants him a +2 circumstance bonus on his skill check. Competence: At 3rd level, a specialist takes the Favored in Guild feat (see page 227), gaining a +2 competence bonus on his chosen skill. At 4th level, he can afford a magic item that grants him a +5 competence bonus on his skill check. Ability Item: At 7th level, a specialist can afford to buy an item that boosts his key ability score by +2. At 13th level, he upgrades this item to one that grants a +4 bonus, and at 15th level, he upgrades to one that grants a +6 bonus. Inherent Bonus: At 16th level, a specialist can afford an item or spell that grants a +1 inherent bonus to his key ability score. At 19th level, he can afford a second such increase. Other Adjustments: As described under Skill Synergy, page 66 of the Player’s Handbook, a +2 bonus applies to checks made with each of the following skills when the specialist accumulates at least 5 ranks in the appropriate related skill (given in parentheses): Appraise (Craft), Balance (Tumble), Diplomacy (Bluff), Gather Information (Knowledge [local]),
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs NONHUMAN SPECIALISTS All the specialists detailed in the previous sections are human. A specialist of a different race can sometimes gain additional benefits in the form of racial bonuses on checks with her chosen skill and racial bonuses to key abilities. As a general rule, nonhuman specialists should be more difficult to find than their human counterparts. If, however, a PC wishes to hire a half-celestial artisan or a gray elf sage, begin by adjusting the key ability score and skill modifiers given in Table 5–2 to take her
racial bonuses into account. Since a nonhuman specialist starts with only one feat, she takes Skill Focus in her chosen skill at 1st level and Favored in Guild at 3rd level. Because she must wait until 6th level to gain a skill-boosting feat such as Alertness or Persuasive, a nonhuman specialist of 1st–5th level has a skill modifier 2 lower than a human specialist of comparable ability would. Once you have calculated her total skill modifier, simply determine her daily rate normally (see Cost of Hiring a Specialist, page 156).
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
155
Illus. by E. Fiegenschhuh
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
156
Intimidate (Bluff), Jump (Tumble), Knowledge (nature) by 5 (minimum of 1 gp/day), rounded down to the nearest whole number. (Survival), Ride (Handle Animal), Sleight of Hand (Bluff), Spellcraft (Knowledge [arcana]), and Tumble (Jump). ThereAdditional Fees: Specialists sometimes charge fees in addifore, at 2nd level, a specialist who has chosen one of these tion to the base cost of the project, as given in Table 5–3. skills increases his ranks to 5 in the appropriate related skill. The resulting bonus from skill synergy is not accounted Table 5–3: Specialists’ Additional Fees Reason One-Time Fee for in the skill modifiers given in Table 5–2. Bonuses from Hazardous task 500 gp skill synergy also apply on Climb, Disguise, Escape Artist, Accomplished specialist (6th–10th level) 500 gp Search, Survival, Use Magic Device, and Use Rope checks High-level specialist (11th–15th level) 1,000 gp Exceptionally high-level specialist 2,000 gp under certain conditions, but since they don’t apply at all (16th–20th level) times, they don’t modify the specialist’s rate of pay. Cost of Hiring a Specialist The base cost of hiring a specialist depends on his total skill modifier, not on his character level. Hiring a more skilled specialist might cost more per day, but it also decreases the time required to make specific items. In most cases, hiring a 1st-level standard crafter is the least expensive option, although the Craft modifier for such a specialist is only +4. Total Cost: The total cost of hiring a specialist is his base cost (see below) plus any additional fees. Base Cost: If a specialist is hired to build a specific item, his price equals the cost of the base goods, plus his daily rate times the number of days required to make the item. His daily rate in gold pieces equals his total skill modifier (as determined in the previous section) divided
Although Table 5–2 gives skill modifiers for specialists up to 20th level, few (if any) exceptionally high-level specialists exist in most campaign worlds. As a general rule, characters should have to do a fair amount of research to locate a specialist of 11th–15th level. A specialist of 16th–20th level is of near legendary status, and while such a person might be
Regdar and Jozan consult with a cloud giant sage in her quarters
easy to locate, she might live in some out-of-the-way region. Simply reaching such a high-level specialist should be an adventure in itself.
SAMPLE SPECIALIST PRICES
UNIQUE ABILITIES Not all NPCs are created equal. Just as PCs can gain unusual benefits and abilities in the course of a campaign, strange occurrences and once-in-a-lifetime events can gift an NPC with powers normally beyond his reach. Consider, for example, the old hermit who lives on the hill and periodically has visions of the future, or the sinister murderer who stalks a city at night, shrugging off damage with apparent ease. Assigning unique abilities to NPCs not only adds flavor and color to your game but also helps keep players on their toes even if they know the rules backward
Table 5–5: Unique NPC Abilities CR Level d20 Adjustment Adjustment 1 +1 +2 2 +2 +5 3 +2 +4 4 +1 +2 5 +2 +4 6 +1 +2 7 +1 +3 8 +0 +1 9 +2 +5 10 +0 +1 11 +0 +1 12 +2 +5 13 +2 +5 14 +0 +1 15 +0 +2 16 +1 +5 17 +2 +4 18 +3 +7 19 +4 +12 20 +2 +5
Unique Ability Aberrant limbs Abysmally wretched Arcane adept Divinity Doomwatcher Dragon touched Fey spirit Graced from outside Gravetouched Guardian spirit Lifemate Naturebond Past life Poisonlaced Prodigy Prophet Spore carrier Stormtouched Unearthly beauty Vestigial twin
CHAPTER 5
Table 5–4: Specialist Prices Service Time Cost Appraisal (standard object) 1 minute 1 gp Appraisal (exotic object) 1 minute 2 gp Verbal delivery: simple message Variable 1 gp Verbal delivery: complex message Variable 2 gp Decipher simple written message 1 minute/pg 2 gp Decipher standard written message 1 minute/pg 3 gp Decipher complex written message 1 minute/pg 4 gp Diplomat1 (friendly to helpful) 1 minute 2 gp Diplomat1 (indifferent to helpful) 1 minute 4 gp Diplomat1 (unfriendly to helpful) 1 minute 1,006 gp Diplomat1 (hostile to helpful) 1 minute 1,508 gp Information (major news items) 1d4+1 hours 1 gp Information (uncommon) 1d4+1 hours 2 gp Information (dangerous/obscure) 1d4+1 hours 503 gp Sage (basic question) Immediate2 1 gp Sage (tough question) Immediate2 2 gp Sage (extremely tough question) Immediate2 4 gp Lockpick (simple lock) 1 round 2 gp Lockpick (average lock) 1 round 3 gp Lockpick (good lock) 1 round 4 gp Lockpick (amazing lock) 1 round 506 gp Potion Identification 1 minute 3 gp 1 This price also applies to thugs and goons hired to intimidate a target. 2 The price given is for quick answers of no more than a few words. Generally, a sage needs time to research and collate information when asked for more detail. In such cases, the time required increases to 1d12 days, during which the sage requires daily payment for services.
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
The most cost-effective specialist is always one who can take 10 on her skill check to achieve the desired result. This section provides prices for specialists at that level of expertise who offer the services most often sought by adventurers. Although these prices are fairly low, the indicated services are usually available only in large cities or places where particularly high-level specialists can be found. Some of the services described in Table 5–4 are especially pricey because they require high-level specialists, involve hazard pay, or both.
and forward. An experienced player whose character encounters a traveling ranger with a bow and a wolf might be able to guess that she is at least a 4th-level ranger, but he won’t expect her to react to an attack by revealing an extra pair of arms, each wielding another weapon. Table 5–5: Unique NPC Abilities presents a wide range of attack options and special qualities that you can assign to any NPC. You can either roll for an ability randomly or select one that seems appropriate. While some of these abilities mimic spells, and others increase in potency if the NPC is higher level or has exceptionally high ability scores, all can be used for NPCs of any level. However, Table 5–5 also provides a CR adjustment for each ability so that you can be sure that the resulting NPC does not present too difficult a challenge for your PCs. As a rule of thumb, no NPC should have a unique ability that raises her CR more than 3 beyond the average level of the PCs who will encounter her. A character who can produce a circle of death effect, for example, could be a rude surprise for a party of lower-level characters. These unique abilities were created for use by NPCs, not PCs. Because player characters might also be subject to unusual or even bizarre circumstances that could confer similar abilities, Table 5–5 also provides a level adjustment for each unique ability. Because these abilities are not balanced for PC use, these level adjustments are quite liberal. Don’t overuse unique abilities; they should always remain exceptions to the rule. They exist primarily as tools for creating a memorable NPC who can become the focus of an entire adventure. After all, if every second or third NPC has extra arms or innate spell-like abilities, the novelty of such powers will soon be lost. As a rule of thumb, consult the table no more than once for every two levels that the PC party advances.
157
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
UNIQUE ABILITY DESCRIPTIONS
158
The following entries describe the unique NPC abilities given in Table 5–5 and provide a bit of background to explain how the NPC might have gained each ability. Aberrant Limbs (Ex): The NPC was born with an extra pair of arms or an extra pair of legs. He might or might not be able to withdraw the aberrant limbs into his body to hide his unusual nature; if he can, he gains a +10 bonus on Disguise checks made to hide the aberrant limbs. An NPC with an extra pair of arms gains Multiweapon Fighting as a bonus feat. The land speed of an NPC with an extra pair of legs increases by 20 feet. Abysmally Wretched (Su): The NPC is horrendously ugly and disgusting to look upon. Any creature within 30 feet that looks at the uncovered countenance of the NPC must make a Fortitude saving throw (DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier) or become nauseated for 1d4 rounds. Thereafter, the affected creature can look at the NPC without ill effects. Each day, the NPC can affect a total number of creatures equal to her character level with this ability. The closest creatures are affected first, and those with the lowest Hit Dice before those with higher Hit Dice. Arcane Adept (Su): The NPC comes from a long line of spellcasting heroes or villains, and she has inherited some of her parents’ magical talents. She has a limited number of spell-like abilities that mimic sorcerer/wizard spells. The NPC can use one 1st-level effect up to three times per day, one 2nd-level effect twice per day, or one 3rd-level effect once per day. She must choose one of these three options at character creation, as well as the spell or spells duplicated. Once made, these choices cannot be changed. For any of these effects, the caster level equals the NPC’s character level, and the save DC is 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier. If the NPC takes levels in an arcane spellcasting class, the save DC for each of her spells increases by 1. Divinity (Su): Whether he realizes it or not, the NPC is the offspring of a deity, though only the tiniest fraction of divinity persists in his mortal body. Select a domain granted by the deity in question. The NPC can use that domain’s granted power as if he were a cleric of a level equal to his character level. In addition, he gains a +2 sacred (or profane) bonus on his choice of the following: attack rolls and initiative checks, all skill checks, or all saving throws. He must choose one of these three options at character creation, and once made, the selection cannot be changed. If the NPC takes levels in a divine spellcasting class, the save DC for each of his spells increases by 1. Doomwatcher (Su): The NPC observed a horrifying or awesome supernatural event as a child—perhaps the casting of a miracle or wish spell, the appearance of a deity, an open portal to the Abyss, or some occurrence of similar importance. As a result, her eyes now glow with an unnatural color. She can see equally well with
her eyes open or closed (even when she is blindfolded), and she can feign blindness to avoid attracting attention. Once per day when her eyes are open and uncovered, the NPC can employ a gaze attack that fi lls those who see it with powerful emotions. Her gaze is effective out to 30 feet, and anyone subjected to it can resist the effect with a successful Will saving throw (DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier). On a failed save, a victim is affected as though by the NPC’s choice of the following spell effects (the NPC chooses with each use of the gaze): confusion, crushing despair, fear, heroism, Tasha’s hideous laughter, or rage. The effect has a caster level equal to the NPC’s character level. The NPC can switch the effect of her gaze once per round as a free action. She can use this ability for a total number of rounds equal to her character level with each activation. Dragon Touched (Su): One of the NPC’s ancient ancestors was a dragon of some sort, and its latent magical ability has surfaced within him. Select an energy type from the following: acid, cold, electricity, fire, or sonic. The NPC has immunity to damage of this type. In addition, he can belch out a 30-foot line of this energy as a breath weapon once per day, dealing 1d6 points per character level of the appropriate energy damage. A successful Reflex save (DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Con modifier) halves the damage dealt. Fey Spirit (Su): The NPC’s soul is infused with fey magic. Perhaps he has fey ancestors, was born to travelers who sought shelter in a fey mound (see page 70) during a storm, or lived for a hundred years as the playmate of a dryad in a realm where time doesn’t exist. Whatever the cause, his brush with the fey has left him with the ability to make his voice either soothing and melodic or terrifying and intimidating whenever he wishes, gaining a +10 insight bonus on Diplomacy or Intimidate checks, respectively. More important, he can use fear and charm monster each once per day as spell-like abilities (save DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier). Graced from Outside (Su): Whether she realizes it or not, the NPC is descended from outsiders, and the nature of those ancestors influences her appearance. If her ancestors were celestials, her skin is smooth, her eyes golden, and her hair white or platinum. If, on the other hand, her forebears were fiendish, she might have vestigial horns or a cloven foot, or her breath might smell of brimstone. Though she is not quite a tiefling or an aasimar, the character nevertheless gains resistance to fire 5 and resistance to cold 5. More impressively, she can use a single cleric domain spell of up to 2nd level once per week as a spelllike ability (caster level equals NPC’s character level; save DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier). This spell must be chosen at the time of character creation from one of the following domains: Chaos, Evil, Good, or Law. Once made, this choice cannot be changed. While the
CHAPTER 5
Unique abilities give these NPCs special flavor ( from left): an abysmally wretched dwarf, a human prodigy with amazing strength, a halfling spore carrier, a half-elf with unearthly beauty, a gnome with a vestigial twin
Illus. by S. Ellis
until he is once again on the same plane as his lifemate. Typically, the bond shared between the two individuals is felt equally, but occasionally an NPC’s lifemate does not have this ability and can go for many years without even knowing that such a bond exists. Naturebond (Su): The NPC has always had an unexplainable bond with nature, and she can call upon the natural world to do her bidding. She is most at home in natural surroundings and quickly becomes irritable and foul-mouthed in urban areas. Because of her connection to nature, the NPC can use speak with animals and speak with plants at will as spell-like abilities (caster level equals the NPC’s character level). She can also use the following spells as spell-like abilities (caster level equals the NPC’s character level; save DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier), each once per week: command plants, summon nature’s ally V, transport via plants. Past Life (Su): The NPC has recalled a past life in which she might have been a monarch, a tyrant, a great hero, a villain, or even a person from an entirely different world. Because of this link to her past self, she gains a +2 insight bonus on attack rolls, saving throws, and skill checks. She also gains one of the following abilities (chosen at character creation), depending on the nature of her past life: greater rage once per day as an 11th-level barbarian, bardic knowledge as an 11th-level bard, turn (or rebuke) undead once per day as an 11th-level cleric, wild shape once per day as an 11th-level druid, a fighter bonus feat, the diamond body ability of an 11th-level monk, smite evil once per day as an 11th-level paladin, a single favored enemy (+6 bonus) as an 11th-level ranger, sneak attack as an 11th-level rogue (+6d6 damage), one bonus metamagic or item creation feat, or the ability to
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
spell-like ability is active, the NPC’s otherworldly features become markedly more pronounced. Gravetouched (Su): The NPC was born alive from an undead mother and somehow survived to adulthood. He has immunity to death effects and energy drain, and he can use detect undead as a spell-like ability (this ability is always active). The NPC’s caster level equals his character level. In addition, he can command undead as an evil cleric of a level equal to his character level, and he can use animate dead and create undead as spell-like abilities, each once per week (caster level equals NPC’s character level). Guardian Spirit (Su): The NPC is protected by a helpful, watchful spirit—perhaps one of her ancestors, a benevolent outsider or fey spirit, or some other supernatural being. This spirit helps protect the NPC from harm by granting her a +2 deflection bonus to Armor Class. Lifemate (Su): This NPC’s soul is bonded to that of another NPC (or possibly even a PC) in a metaphysical analogy to the fleshly bond shared by conjoined twins. The NPC constantly knows his lifemate’s state of health as if a status spell were continuously in operation, and he can contact his lifemate once per week by using sending as a spelllike ability. Once per month, the NPC can use shield other (caster level equals NPC’s character level) on his lifemate, regardless of the distance between them, so long as both are on the same plane. He does not need line of sight or line of effect to his lifemate to use this ability. If he and his lifemate are on different planes, the NPC takes a –2 penalty to Wisdom and Charisma
159
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
160
use one 5th-level sorcerer spell as a spell-like ability once per day. Poisonlaced (Ex): A strange, brightly colored insect or spider poisoned the NPC when he was a child. Ever since, he has been able to sense the presence of poison and has had nothing to fear from it. The NPC can use detect poison as a spell-like ability. This ability is always active, and the NPC’s caster level equals his character level. The NPC also has immunity to poison. Prodigy (Ex): The NPC might be shockingly strong, amazingly dexterous, disturbingly intelligent, stupendously hearty, unusually wise, or preternaturally attractive. She gains a +2 bonus to one of her ability scores and an additional +4 bonus on any of her check modifiers that are based on that ability (including ability checks and skill checks), improving those modifiers by a total of +5. Prophet (Su): The NPC was born on a day of great astronomical significance. His eyes are solid white with no pupils, yet he can still see as a normal creature of his race. In times of distress, he often has strange visions that duplicate the effect of an augury spell (caster level 20th). If the NPC wishes to have a vision relating to a specific topic, he can use divination as a spell-like ability once per week (caster level 20th), but if he does so, he gains two negative levels, which last for 24 hours. The NPC constantly functions as if affected by a foresight spell (caster level 20th). Spore Carrier (Su): The ship on which the NPC and her parents traveled from their homeland sank near a barren island, killing everyone except her. The NPC was forced to subsist on strange, pallid fungi—the only form of nutrition available on the island. She was eventually rescued, but she has had a compelling desire to return to the island ever since. The fungus that the NPC consumed infected her with supernatural spores, which grant her complete protection from hit point damage and ability damage dealt by fungi and oozes, including green slime and dangerous molds. Three times per day, as a standard action, she can cough up a dense cloud of pale spores into a single adjacent 5-foot square. The spore cloud remains in this square for a number of rounds equal to her character level, or until dispersed by a strong wind. Any creature passing through this cloud must make a Fortitude save (DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Con modifier) or take 1d4 points of Constitution damage. A new saving throw is required for each round of exposure. A creature reduced to 0 Constitution by these spores dies, and its body immediately bursts open, revealing a colony of strange, pallid fungus. If the spore carrier NPC is within 30 feet and fails a DC 15 Will save, she is compelled to take a standard action to eat the fungus. Stormtouched (Su): The NPC was born at the height of a supernaturally powerful thunderstorm. While his mother was giving birth, his home was struck repeatedly by lightning. The house took no damage, but his mother
perished. Because of this event, the NPC bears a jagged birthmark somewhere on his body. The NPC has immunity to electricity, and any attack that deals such damage heals 1 point of damage for each 3 points of damage that it would otherwise deal. This healing does not allow the character to exceed his full normal hit points. The NPC can also use call lightning storm and control weather as spell-like abilities (caster level equals the NPC’s character level; save DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier), each once per week. Unearthly Beauty (Su): The NPC’s beauty is shocking, granting her a +4 bonus on all Charisma-based checks. In addition, she can use dominate monster once per week (caster level equals NPC’s character level; save DC 10 + 1/2 NPC’s character level + NPC’s Cha modifier). The NPC can maintain only one dominate effect at a time; if she dominates a new creature while she still has one under her control, the previously dominated creature is freed. Vestigial Twin (Ex): The NPC was born with a vestigial head and possibly one or two atrophied arms or legs—the remains of a twin that only partially formed. The vestigial head grows from some point on the NPC’s body and has its own personality and voice. Once per round, this second head can take an additional standard action independent of the actions taken by the rest of the body. This action must be chosen from the following list: casting a spell known to the NPC (verbal component only), activating a spell-like ability possessed by the NPC, activating a magic item, or attempting a skill check or ability check based on a mental ability score (Intelligence, Wisdom, or Charisma).
SAMPLE COMPLEX NPCS The sample NPCs given on pages 110–126 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide are invaluable to busy DMs who don’t have time to generate statistics for every NPC in their campaigns. Yet these tables don’t help in every situation. In particular, they don’t offer multiclass NPCs or characters with prestige classes. Each of these characters represents a classic multiclass or prestige class archetype, and they can be used in a pinch with little or no adjustment. All these NPCs are human, but you can change a character’s race with relative ease by removing the feat and skill ranks indicated in each character’s description and using the information on pages 126–127 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide. Most of these NPCs are fairly high in level, primarily because as complex NPCs who often have unexpected combinations of classes, they tend to be more memorable than standard single-class NPCs. Thus, they make excellent recurring villains, powerful allies, or leaders of organizations. The statistics blocks on the next twelve pages are presented in a new format. Details of the format are described on page 173.
ANTIPALADIN (EL 14) The antipaladin’s talents don’t lend themselves well to the role of minion, so he is best used as a villainous leader. In a high-level game, however, he could adopt a lesser role, serving as a specialist in the service of an evil church, as the general of a corrupt king’s army, or as a member of an elite force of antipaladin shock troops in the employ of a demon lord or archdevil.
CHAPTER 5
CR 14
Illus. by M. Cotie
Human paladin 7/blackguard 7 LE, NE, or CE Medium humanoid Init –1; Senses Listen +2, Spot +2 Aura despair (10 ft., –2 on saves) Languages Common, empathic link AC 25, touch 10, flat-footed 25 hp 91 (14 HD) Fort +14, Ref +6, Will +9 Speed 20 ft. (4 squares) Melee +1 unholy longsword +19/+14/+9 (1d8+4/19–20 plus poison) or +1 unholy longsword +17/+12/+7 (1d8+4/19–20 plus poison) and shield bash +16 (1d6+1) or Ranged shield spines +14 (1d10/19–20) Base Atk +14; Grp +17 Atk Options Cleave, Power Attack, poison (Large scorpion venom, DC 18, 1d6 Str/1d6 Str), smite good 4/day (+3 attack, +7 damage), sneak attack +3d6 Special Actions command undead 6/day (+5, 2d6+8, 5th), lay on hands 21 points/day Blackguard Spells Prepared (CL 7th): 3rd—contagion (DC 15) 2nd—cure moderate wounds, death knell (DC 14) 1st—cure light wounds, doom (DC 13), inflict light wounds (+17 melee touch, DC 13) Spell-Like Abilities (CL 7th): At will—detect good 1/day—summon monster I (evil only; CL 14th) Abilities Str 17, Dex 8, Con 12, Int 10, Wis 14, Cha 16 SQ aura of evil, dark blessing, fiendish servant, poison use, share spells Feats Cleave, Improved Shield Bash, Improved Sunder, Power Attack, Two-Weapon Fighting, Weapon Focus (longsword) Skills Diplomacy +20, Hide +5, Jump –15, Knowledge (religion) +5, Ride +11 Possessions +3 full plate armor, spined shield, +1 unholy longsword, gauntlets of ogre power, amulet of natural armor +1, ring of protection +1, 5 doses of Large scorpion venom, 5 doses of giant wasp poison (DC 18, 1d6 Dex/1d6 Dex), silver unholy symbol, 30 pp, 60 gp Nonhuman Antipaladin: Remove all ranks in Diplomacy (changing the modifier to Diplomacy +3). Remove Weapon Focus (longsword).
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
Antipaladin
Fiendish Heavy Warhorse Servant CR — LE, NE, or CE Large magical beast (augmented animal) Init +1; Senses darkvision 60 ft., low-light vision, scent; Listen +7, Spot +6 Languages empathic link, speak with blackguard AC 17, touch 10, flat-footed 16 hp 60 (8 HD); DR 5/magic Resist cold 10, fire 10; improved evasion; SR 13 Fort +16, Ref +8, Will +8 Speed 50 ft. (10 squares) Melee 2 hooves +10 (1d8+5) and bite +5 (1d4+2) Space 10 ft.; Reach 5 ft. Base Atk +6; Grp +15 Atk Options smite good 1/day (+8 damage to good foe) Abilities Str 20, Dex 13, Con 17, Int 7, Wis 13, Cha 6 Feats Endurance, Improved Natural Attack (hoof), Run Skills Jump +25, Listen +7, Spot +6
Antipaladin
161
ARCANE MERCENARY (EL 11) The arcane mercenary can represent any fighter who seeks to augment his martial skills with arcane magic. He could be a specialized bodyguard, a guard at a wizard’s guild, or an adventurer seeking his fortune.
Illus. by W. O’Connor
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
Arcane Mercenary
162
CR 11
Human fighter 5/sorcerer 6 LN Medium humanoid Init +2; Senses Listen +1, Spot +1 Languages Common, empathic link AC 15, touch 12, flat-footed 13 hp 61 (11 HD) Fort +7, Ref +5, Will +7 Speed 30 ft. (6 squares) Melee +1 longsword +12/+7 (1d8+5/19–20) or Ranged mwk composite longbow +11/+6 (1d8+2/×3) Base Atk +8; Grp +10 Atk Options Point Blank Shot, Precise Shot Combat Gear wand of magic missiles (5th), potion of barkskin (+3), 4 potions of cure light wounds Sorcerer Spells Known (CL 6th, 5% arcane spell failure chance): 3rd (4/day)—heroism 2nd (6/day)—blindness/deafness (DC 16), bull’s strength
Arcane mercenary
1st (7/day)—enlarge person, mage armor, mount, ray of enfeeblement (+10 ranged touch) 0 (6/day)—acid splash (+10 ranged touch), detect magic, light, mending, ray of frost (+10 ranged touch), read magic, resistance Abilities Str 14, Dex 14, Con 12, Int 10, Wis 8, Cha 18 SQ familiar, share spells Feats AlertnessB (if familiar within 5 ft.), Combat Casting, Craft Magic Arms and Armor, Iron Will, Point Blank ShotB, Precise ShotB, Still Spell, Weapon Focus (longsword)B, Weapon Specialization (longsword) Skills Concentration +5, Intimidate +12, Knowledge (arcana) +9, Listen +1, Ride +10, Spellcraft +11, Spot +1 Possessions combat gear plus +2 buckler, +1 longsword, masterwork composite longbow (+2 Str bonus) with 20 arrows, cloak of Charisma +2, 44 gp Nonhuman Arcane Mercenary: Remove all ranks in Knowledge (arcana). (This skill then becomes unusable, since the arcane mercenary is untrained in it.) The loss of these ranks removes the bonus from skill synergy on Spellcraft checks, reducing that modifier to +9. Remove Iron Will. Toad Familiar CR — N Diminutive magical beast (augmented animal) Init +1; Senses low-light vision; Listen +4, Spot +4 Languages empathic link, speak with master, speak with amphibians AC 18, touch 15, flat-footed 17 hp 30 (6 HD) Resist improved evasion Fort +6, Ref +4, Will +8 Speed 5 ft. (1 square) Melee — Space 1 ft.; Reach 0 ft. Base Atk +8; Grp –9 Atk Options deliver touch spells Abilities Str 1, Dex 12, Con 11, Int 8, Wis 14, Cha 4 SQ amphibious Feats Alertness Skills Concentration +4, Hide +21, Intimidate +5, Listen +4, Ride +9, Spot +4
BOUNTY HUNTER (EL 12)
CR 12
Bounty hunter
Skills Climb +19, Disguise +10, Gather Information +10, Handle Animal +8, Hide +22, Jump +14, Listen +14, Move Silently +17, Ride +5, Search +22, Spot +14, Survival +8 (+15 following tracks) Possessions combat gear plus +2 shadow chain shirt, +1 human bane longbow with 20 arrows, masterwork rapier, ring of climbing, lens of detection, lesser bracers of archery, 5 doses of black adder venom, 2 doses of dark reaver powder (ingested, DC 18, 2d6 Con/1d6 Con + 1d6 Str), 30 pp, 5 gp Death Attack Sneak attack can kill target or paralyze it for 1d6+5 rounds (Fort DC 17 negates). Nonhuman Bounty Hunters: Remove all ranks in Jump (changing the modifier to Jump –1). Remove Iron Will.
Illus. by D. Scott
Human ranger 3/rogue 4/assassin 5 LE, NE, or CE Medium humanoid Init +3; Senses Listen +14, Spot +14 Languages Common, Elven, Sylvan AC 19, touch 13, flat-footed 19; improved uncanny dodge, uncanny dodge hp 60 (12 HD) Resist evasion Fort +6 (+8 against poison), Ref +14, Will +4 Speed 30 ft. (6 squares) Melee mwk rapier +13/+8 (1d6 plus poison) or Ranged +1 human bane longbow +14/+9 (1d8+1/19–20 plus poison) or +1 human bane longbow +12/+12/+7 (1d8+1/19–20 plus poison) with Rapid Shot Base Atk +9; Grp +9 Atk Options Point Blank Shot, Precise Shot, death attack (DC 17), favored enemy humans +2, poison (black adder venom, DC 11, 1d6 Con/1d6 Con), sneak attack +5d6 Combat Gear potion of cure moderate wounds Assassin Spells Known (CL 5th): 2nd (3/day)—cat’s grace, invisibility, pass without trace 1st (4/day)—disguise self, feather fall, jump, true strike Abilities Str 10, Dex 16, Con 12, Int 15, Wis 8, Cha 14 SQ poison use, trap sense +1, trapfinding, wild empathy +5 (+1 magical beasts) Feats EnduranceB, Improved Critical (longbow), Iron Will, Point Blank Shot, Precise Shot, Rapid ShotB, Skill Focus (Survival), TrackB, Weapon Finesse
CHAPTER 5
Bounty Hunter
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
The bounty hunter works best as a specialized stalker who has been hired by the PCs’ enemies to hunt them down and either kill or capture them. He can also serve as the master of a thieves’ guild, or a sinister figure who has information the PCs need. This particular assassin specializes in slaying humans, but it’s a simple matter to change his favored enemy (and the bane quality of his longbow) if desired.
163
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
CULTIST (EL 6) For low-level play, a cultist can be the organizing force of a hidden cult dedicated to some forgotten god. For higherlevel play, the cultist makes a good minion for a powerful dragon, undead, outsider, or elemental seeking to establish a cult of its own. She could even be a local priest who just happens to belong to a thieves’ guild. Not all cultists are evil; a cult of lawful neutral inevitableworshiping maniacs can be just as creepy and menacing as a cult of demon worshipers. Alternatively, in an area where the bad guys hold all the power, cultists such as this one could be worshipers of a good deity who have been forced to live secret lives in the hidden corners of a debased and hateful society. The NPC presented here happens to be a cultist of Nerull. If you wish to make a cultist for a different deity, just change the character’s domains and alignment as appropriate. However, if you drop the Trickery domain in favor of another, the cultist’s Bluff modifier decreases by 3, since Bluff is no longer a class skill for her.
Illus. by R. Gallegos
Cultist
164
CR 6
Human cleric 3/rogue 3 NE Medium humanoid Init +0; Senses Listen +6, Spot +6 Languages Common AC 13, touch 10, flat-footed 13 hp 36 (6 HD) Resist evasion Fort +7, Ref +5, Will +8 Speed 30 ft. (6 squares) Melee +1 scythe +7 (2d4+2/×4) Base Atk +4; Grp +5 Atk Options sneak attack +2d6 Special Actions command undead 4/day (+1, 2d6+4, 3rd), death touch 1/day (3d6) Combat Gear potion of pass without trace, potion of sanctuary Cleric Spells Prepared (CL 3rd): 2nd—enthrall (DC 15), invisibilityD, undetectable alignment 1st—cause fear D (DC 14), command (DC 14), cure light wounds, obscuring mist 0—create water, cure minor wounds, guidance, mending D: Domain spell. Deity: Nerull. Domains: Death, Trickery
A cultist of Nerull
Abilities Str 13, Dex 10, Con 14, Int 8, Wis 16, Cha 12 SQ trap sense +1, trapfinding Feats Combat Casting, Martial Weapon Proficiency (scythe), Skill Focus (Bluff), Weapon Focus (scythe) Skills Bluff +13, Concentration +8, Diplomacy +3, Disguise +7 (+9 to act in character), Intimidate +3, Knowledge (local) +2, Knowledge (religion) +2, Listen +6, Spot +6, Use Rope +3 Possessions combat gear plus +1 leather armor, +1 scythe, cloak of resistance +1, phylactery of faithfulness, 40 gp Nonhuman Cultist: Remove all ranks in Concentration (changing the modifier to Concentration +2) and Knowledge (local). (The latter skill then becomes unusable because the cultist is untrained in it.) Remove Skill Focus (Bluff).
GIANT SLAYER (EL 10) The giant slayer can be either a lone hero who has dedicated his life to fighting giants, or a member of a highly trained force of giant-slaying specialists who protect the frontier. This NPC can become a slayer of some other creature type with relative ease; just change his favored enemies, the bane quality of his battleaxe, and the focus of his slaying arrow.
Giant slayer
Illus. by S. Ellis
Heavy Warhorse Animal Companion CR — N Large animal Init +1; Senses low-light vision, scent; Listen +5, Spot +4 AC 14, touch 10, flat-footed 13 hp 30 (4 HD) Fort +7, Ref +5, Will +2 Speed 50 ft. (10 squares) Melee 2 hooves +6 (1d6+4) and bite +1 (1d6+2) and Space 10 ft.; Reach 5 ft. Base Atk +3; Grp +11 Abilities Str 18, Dex 13, Con 17, Int 2, Wis 13, Cha 6 SQ 1 bonus trick Feats Endurance, Run Skills Listen +5, Spot +4
CHAPTER 5
CR 10
Human barbarian 5/ranger 5 CG Medium humanoid Init +2; Senses Listen +13, Spot +13 Languages Common, Giant AC 16, touch 10, flat-footed 16; improved uncanny dodge, Two-Weapon Defense, uncanny dodge hp 93 (10 HD); Diehard Fort +11, Ref +7, Will +4 Speed 40 ft. (8 squares) Melee +1 giant bane battleaxe +17/+12 (1d8+8/×3) or +1 giant bane battleaxe +15/+10 (1d8+6/×3) and mwk handaxe +14 (1d6+2/×3) or Ranged mwk composite longbow +13/+8 (1d8+3/ 19–20) Base Atk +10; Grp +15 Atk Options Power Attack, favored enemy giants +4, favored enemy magical beasts +2, rage 2/day (6 rounds) Combat Gear arrow of giant slaying, 2 potions of cure light wounds Abilities Str 20, Dex 15, Con 17, Int 12, Wis 10, Cha 8 SQ animal companion, fast movement, link with companion, share spells, trap sense +1, wild empathy +6 (+2 magical beasts) Feats Diehard, EnduranceB, Power Attack, Toughness, TrackB, Two-Weapon Defense, Two-Weapon FightingB, Weapon Focus (battleaxe) Skills Climb +17, Handle Animal +12, Jump +8, Knowledge (nature) +9, Listen +13, Ride +17, Spot +13, Survival +13 (+15 in aboveground natural environments) Possessions combat gear plus +2 chain shirt, +1 giant bane battleaxe, masterwork handaxe, masterwork composite longbow (+3 Str bonus) with 20 arrows, 52 gp Nonhuman Giant Slayer: Remove all ranks in Climb (changing the modifier to Climb +4 when raging). Remove Toughness.
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
Giant Slayer (Raging)
When not raging, the giant slayer has the following changed statistics: AC 18, touch 12, flat-footed 18 hp 73 (10 HD) Fort +9, Will +2 Melee +1 giant bane battleaxe +15/+10 (1d8+5/×3) or +1 giant bane battleaxe +13/+8 (1d8+4/×3) and mwk handaxe +12 (1d6+1/×3) or Ranged mwk composite longbow +13/+8 (1d8+3/ 19–20) Grp +13 Abilities Str 16, Con 13 Skills Climb +15, Jump +6
165
Illus. by M. Phillippi
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
HIGH PRIEST (EL 20)
166
This NPC is the leader of some widespread, powerful religious organization. She could be the head of an order of benevolent guardians that protects a whole nation, or she might be the sinister overlord of a cruel theocracy. This particular high priest is a cleric of Hextor. If you wish to make a high priest for a different deity, just change the character’s domains and alignment as appropriate. However, an alignment change might alter her command undead and spontaneous spellcasting capabilities. Her prepared spells might also change, since a high priest who can spontaneously cast cure spells shouldn’t have any of those prepared. You can replace this high priest’s prepared cure spells most easily by just giving her two of some other spell at each level. Every day, the high priest casts greater magic weapon on her heavy flail (increasing its enhancement bonus to +4) and uses her magic vestment spell-like ability on her shield and armor (increasing the enhancement bonus on each of those to +5). These extra bonuses are incorporated into the statistics block. If the high priest is encountered during the 6 hours of each day when these spells aren’t active (typically while she sleeps), or if the spells are dispelled, adjust her Armor Class, attack bonus, and weapon damage bonuses appropriately.
High Priest Human cleric 17/hierophant 3 LE Medium humanoid Init –1; Senses Listen +9, Spot +9 Languages Common, Infernal AC 32, touch 13, flat-footed 32 hp 94 (20 HD) Fort +15, Ref +7, Will +24 Speed 20 ft. (4 squares) Melee +4 speed unholy heavy flail +22/+22/+17/+12 (1d10+10/17–20) Base Atk +13; Grp +17 Atk Options smite 1/day (+4 attack, +17 damage), divine reach Special Actions command undead 5/day (+4, 2d6+19, 17th), spontaneous casting (inflict spells) Combat Gear pearl of power (3rd-level spell), wand of cure moderate wounds (34 charges), wand of searing light (6th level, 19 charges), scroll of heal Spells Prepared (CL 20th): 9th—miracle, power word killD 8th—extended ethereal jaunt, fire storm (DC 27), power word stunD, unholy aura (DC 27)
CR 20
7th—blasphemy (DC 26), quickened cure serious wounds, destruction (DC 26), disintegrateD (DC 26), quickened searing light 6th—quickened death knell (DC 21), greater dispel magic, harmD (DC 25), heal, summon monster VI, word of recall 5th—quickened cure light wounds, quickened divine favor, f lame strike D (DC 24), plane shift (DC 24), slay living (DC 24), spell resistance, true seeing 4th—cure critical wounds (2), death ward, divine power D, extended protection from energy, greater magic weapon†, sending, tongues 3rd—blindness/deafness (DC 22), contagionD (DC 22), cure serious wounds (2), extended desecrate, dispel magic (2) 2nd—align weapon, cure moderate wounds (2), death knell (DC 21), hold person (DC 21), shatter D (DC 21), silence (DC 21), spiritual weapon 1st—bane (DC 20), command (DC 20), comprehend languages, cure light wounds (3), divine favor, inflict light woundsD (DC 20), sanctuary (DC 20) 0—cure minor wounds, detect magic, guidance (2), mending, read magic D: Domain spell. Deity: Hextor. Domains: Destruction, War † Already cast. Spell-Like Abilities (CL 20th): 4/day—quickened cure moderate wounds 2/day—magic vestment† † Already used. Abilities Str 19, Dex 8, Con 10, Int 12, Wis 28, Cha 14 SQ aura of evil Feats Combat Casting, Craft Magic Arms and Armor, Craft Wand, Craft Wondrous Item, Extend Spell, Forge Ring, Improved Critical (heavy flail), Quicken Spell, Weapon Focus (heavy flail)B Skills Concentration +23, Diplomacy +25, Knowledge (religion) +24, Spellcraft +24 Possessions combat gear plus +1 half plate, +1 animated heavy steel shield, +1 speed unholy heavy flail, periapt of Wisdom +6, belt of giant strength +6, ring of freedom of movement, ring of protection +4, cloak of resistance +2, tome of understanding +2 (already read), scroll of restoration, silver holy symbol, 47 pp, 55 gp Divine Reach (Su) Use touch spells to a range of 30 feet. Nonhuman High Priest: Remove all ranks in Diplomacy (changing the modifier to Diplomacy +2). Remove Combat Casting.
A high priest of Hextor
MARTIAL ARTIST (EL 10) The martial artist is most often a wanderer who travels from town to town, seeking enlightenment or someone who can challenge his martial prowess. He could also be a teacher or a philosopher of combat—a mystical figure who lives in a remote location. Alternatively, several martial artists might belong to a secret or specialized band of assassins or thieves that controls a city from behind the scenes.
CR 10
Human rogue 5/monk 5 LG, LN, or LE Medium humanoid Init +8; Senses Listen +10, Spot +15 Languages Common AC 18, touch 18, flat-footed 18; Dodge, Mobility, uncanny dodge hp 60 (10 HD) Immune normal disease Resist evasion Fort +7, Ref +12, Will +7 (+9 against enchantments) Speed 40 ft. (8 squares) Melee unarmed strike +11/+6 (1d10) or mwk kama +11/+6 (1d6 plus poison) or unarmed strike +10/+10/+5 (1d10) with flurry of blows or mwk kama +10/+10/+5 (1d6 plus poison) with flurry of blows Base Atk +6; Grp +6 Atk Options Combat Reflexes, Stunning Fist 7/day (DC 17), ki strike (magic), poison (DC 14, 1d4 Str/1d4 Str), sneak attack +3d6 Abilities Str 10, Dex 18, Con 14, Int 8, Wis 14, Cha 12 SQ fast movement, slow fall 20 ft., trap sense +1, trapfinding Feats Combat ReflexesB, Dodge, Improved Initiative, Mobility, Stunning FistB, Weapon Finesse, Weapon Focus (unarmed strike) Skills Balance +14, Escape Artist +12, Hide +17, Jump +10, Listen +10, Move Silently +17, Spot +15, Tumble +19, Use Rope +4 (+6 involving bindings) Possessions masterwork kama, gloves of Dexterity +2, monk’s belt, 6 doses of Medium spider venom Nonhuman Martial Artists: Remove all ranks in Jump (changing the modifier to Jump +2) and reduce Listen ranks by 5 (changing the modifier to Listen +5). Remove Mobility.
Illus. by D. Scott
Martial artist
Martial Artist (Rogue)
CHAPTER 5
CR 10
Human monk 5/fighter 5 LG, LN, or LE Medium humanoid Init +2; Senses Listen +2, Spot +2 Languages Common AC 18, touch 16, flat-footed 16; Dodge, Mobility hp 59 (10 HD) Immune normal disease Resist evasion Fort +9, Ref +7, Will +9 (+11 against enchantments) Speed 40 ft. (8 squares) Melee unarmed strike +12/+7 (1d10+5) or unarmed strike +11/+11/+6 (1d10+5) with flurry of blows Base Atk +8; Grp +11 Atk Options Blind-Fight, Combat Reflexes, Power Attack, Spring Attack, Stunning Fist 7/day (DC 17), ki strike (magic) Abilities Str 16, Dex 14, Con 12, Int 10, Wis 14, Cha 8 SQ fast movement, slow fall 20 ft. Feats Blind-Fight, Combat ReflexesB, DodgeB, Iron Will, MobilityB, Power Attack, Spring AttackB, Stunning FistB, Weapon Focus (unarmed strike), Weapon Specialization (unarmed strike) Skills Balance +12, Climb +16, Intimidate +4, Jump +22, Knowledge (religion) +8, Tumble +12 Possessions amulet of natural armor +1, bracers of armor +1, monk’s belt Nonhuman Martial Artists: Remove all ranks in Climb (changing the modifier to Climb +3). Remove Blind-Fight.
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
Martial Artist (Fighter)
Variant Martial Artist This version of the martial artist is of a sneakier persuasion. This monk might be a specialized scout for a monastery or a would-be assassin. More dexterous and nimble than the fighter martial artist, this individual seeks to sneak up on a foe and strike quickly from the shadows, relying on poison and sneak attack damage to incapacitate a foe. These martial artists are especially tough combatants in groups, where their tumbling ability, poison, and sneak attacks can be deadly.
167
MASTER WIZARD (EL 18)
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
The master wizard can be the founder of a wizard’s guild, the advisor to a king, a kindly and knowledgeable eccentric, or even a sinister and menacing villain for the characters to take on at the climax of the campaign. The master wizard described here is chaotic neutral. If you change his alignment too drastically, you should change his familiar to a new creature that more closely matches his new alignment.
168
Master Wizard
CR 18
Feats AlertnessB (if familiar is within 5 ft.), Combat Casting, Craft RodB, Craft Wondrous ItemB, Extend Spell, Improved Familiar, Maximize Spell, Quicken Spell, Scribe ScrollB, Skill Focus (Spellcraft), Spell Focus (enchantment), Spell Focus (evocation) Skills Concentration +23, Craft (alchemy) +28, Knowledge (arcana) +28, Knowledge (geography) +14, Knowledge (history) +22, Knowledge (the planes) +28, Listen +3, Spellcraft +33, Spot +3 Possessions combat gear plus masterwork dagger, bracers of armor +5, ring of protection +2, ring of wizardry II, headband of intellect +6, Heward’s handy haversack, contingency statuette worth 1,500 gp, 4 doses of granite/diamond dust (for stoneskin spell) worth 250 gp each, 19 pp, 8 gp Spellbook spells prepared plus 0—acid splash, arcane mark, dancing lights, detect magic, detect poison, disrupt undead, ghost sound, light, mending, message, open/close, prestidigitation, ray of frost, read magic, resistance; 1st—alarm, comprehend languages, hypnotism, identify, mage armor, shocking grasp, sleep, Tenser’s floating disc; 2nd—arcane lock, continual flame, daze monster, flaming sphere, fox’s cunning, gust of wind, rope trick; 3rd—arcane sight, daylight, dispel magic, displacement, heroism, Leomund’s tiny hut, rage, stinking cloud, tongues, wind wall; 4th—crushing despair, dimension door, fire shield, ice storm, lesser geas, Otiluke’s resilient sphere, shout, wall of ice; 5th—cone of cold, contact other plane, mind fog, permanency, lesser planar binding, sending, symbol of sleep, telekinesis; 6th—chain lightning, contingency, geas/quest, greater heroism, symbol of persuasion; 7th—delayed blast fireball, finger of death, mass hold person, power word blind, symbol of stunning; 8th—dimensional lock, horrid wilting, polar ray, symbol of insanity; 9th—meteor swarm, power word kill, wish Arcane Fire (Su) +10 ranged touch, 600 ft. range, deals 5d6 damage +1d6 per spell level used to create. Mastery of Shaping (Su) Alter burst, cone, cylinder, emanation, or spread spells so as to leave one or more “holes” in the area or effect. Those within such holes are not subject to the spell’s effect. Each hole must be at least a 5-foot cube. Any shapeable spell has a minimum dimension of 5 feet instead of 10 feet. Nonhuman Master Wizard: Remove all ranks in Craft (alchemy). (This skill then becomes unusable because the master wizard is untrained in it.) Remove Combat Casting.
Human wizard 13/archmage 5 CN Medium humanoid Init +2; Senses darkvision 60 ft., arcane sight, see invisibility; Listen +3, Spot +3 Languages Common, Draconic, Elven, permanent tongues, empathic link AC 19, touch 14, flat-footed 17 hp 83 (18 HD) Resist contingent fire shield activates when damaged by a weapon Fort +8, Ref +8, Will +14 Speed 30 ft. (6 squares) Melee mwk dagger +9/+4 (1d4/19–20) or Ranged mwk dagger +11 (1d4/19–20) Base Atk +8; Grp +8 Atk Options mastery of shaping Special Actions arcane fire Combat Gear lesser metamagic rod (maximize), lesser metamagic rod (quicken), 2 potions of bull’s strength Spells Prepared (CL 18th): 9th—dominate monster (DC 27) 8th—horrid wilting (DC 25), maximized cone of cold (DC 23), mind blank 7th—forcecage, insanity (DC 25), project image (DC 24) 6th—maximized fireball (DC 21), greater dispel magic, mass suggestion (DC 24), Tenser’s transformation 5th—dominate person (DC 23), feeblemind (DC 23), teleport (2), wall of force 4th—charm monster (DC 22), confusion (DC 22), stoneskin, wall of fire (DC 22) 3rd—fireball (DC 21), fly, hold person (DC 21), lightning bolt (DC 21), suggestion (DC 21) 2nd—cat’s grace, darkness, darkvision, false life, mirror image, scorching ray (+10 ranged touch), see invisibility, shatter (DC 20), Tasha’s hideous laughter (DC 20), touch of idiocy (+8 melee touch) 1st—burning hands (DC 19), charm person (DC 19), grease (DC 18), magic missile, ray of enfeeblement Quasit, Improved Familiar CR — (+10 ranged touch), shield CE Tiny outsider (chaotic, evil, extraplanar) 0—daze (DC 18), flare (DC 18), mage hand, touch of Init +7; Senses darkvision 60 ft.; Listen +7, Spot +7 fatigue (+8 melee touch; DC 17) Languages Common, Abyssal, empathic link Spell-Like Abilities (CL 18th): AC 25, touch 15, flat-footed 22 2/day—dimension door, displacement, finger of death hp 42 (18 HD); fast healing 2; DR 5/cold iron or good (DC 24) Immune poison Abilities Str 10, Dex 14, Con 14, Int 24, Wis 12, Cha 8 Resist fire 10; improved evasion; SR 18 SQ familiar, permanent resistance (included), scry on Fort +5, Ref +8, Will +13 familiar, share spells
Spellbook spells prepared plus 0—arcane mark, dancing lights, daze, detect poison, flare, light, Master Specialist mage hand, mending, message, open/ You can make encounters with close, prestidigitation, ray of frost, wizards distinctive from one another resistance; 1st—alarm, detect secret by varying many factors, one of doors, endure elements, enlarge which is spell selection. One way person, feather fall, identify, mage armor, summon monster I; to quickly gain a grasp of a par2nd—arcane lock, continual flame, ticular wizard’s choice of spells is daze monster, fox’s cunning, rope trick, to make her a specialist. An encounter shatter, summon swarm; 3rd—blink, with an enchanter as opposed to a clairaudience/clairvoyance, deep necromancer is a completely differslumber, dispel magic, gaseous form, haste, ent experience, much like fighting keen edge, phantom steed, protection from a dragon as opposed to a goblin. While both energy, summon monster III, water breathing; wizards hurl mighty spells at your PCs, 4th—crushing despair, detect scrying, dimensional anchor, ice storm, polymorph, solid fog, their effects, and the PCs’ preparation stone shape, summon monster IV; 5th— for them, result in a radically different Master wizard baleful polymorph, break enchantment, encounter. Consider this alternative spell dominate person, hold person, major list and spellbook for the master wizard, creation, mind fog, overland flight, Rary’s telepathic both for a conjurer NPC. bond; 6th—chain lightning, disintegrate, globe of invulnerability, legend lore, planar binding; Spells Prepared (CL 18th; prohibited schools illusion 7th—greater teleport, Mordenkainen’s magnificent and necromancy): mansion, phase door, plane shift, reverse gravity; AS 9th—dominate monster (DC 26), summon monster IX 8th—greater planar binding, maze, Otto’s irresistible 8th—incendiary cloud (DC 26), maximized cone of dance, sunburst; 9th—gate, meteor swarm, wish cold (DC 22), mind blank, summon monster VIIIAS
Illus. by M. Cotie
Feats Replace Spell Focus (enchantment) and Spell Focus (evocation) with Spell Focus (conjuration) and Augment Summoning
CHAPTER 5
7th—forcecage, insanity (DC 24), prismatic spray (DC 24), summon monster VIIAS 6th—acid fog, maximized fireball (DC 20), greater dispel magic, summon monster VIAS, wall of iron 5th—cloudkill (DC 23), feeblemind (DC 22), summon monster V AS, teleport (2), wall of force 4th—charm monster (DC 21), confusion (DC 21), dimension door, Evard’s black tentacles, stoneskin 3rd—fireball (DC 20), fly, hold person (DC 20), lightning bolt (DC 20), stinking cloud (DC 21), suggestion (DC 20) 2nd—cat’s grace, darkness, darkvision, fog cloud, glitterdust, scorching ray (2) (+10 ranged touch), see invisibility, Melf’s acid arrow, Tasha’s hideous laughter (DC 19), web (DC 20) 1st—charm person (DC 18), grease (2) (DC 19), magic missile (2), shield (2) 0—acid splash, daze (DC 17), detect magic (2), read magic AS: Spells affected by the Augment Summoning feat
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
Speed 20 ft. (4 squares), fly 40 ft. (perfect) Melee 2 claws +13 (1d3–1 plus poison) and bite +8 (1d4–1 plus poison) Space 2-1/2 ft.; Reach 0 ft. Base Atk +8; Grp –1 Atk Options deliver touch spells, poison (DC 19, 1d4 Dex/2d4 Dex) Spell-Like Abilities (CL 6th): At will—detect good, detect magic, invisibility (self only) 1/day—cause fear (as the spell, but 30-foot radius; DC 11) 1/week—commune (6 questions; CL 12th) Abilities Str 8, Dex 17, Con 10, Int 12, Wis 12, Cha 10 SQ alternate form (as polymorph, CL 12th, into bat or monstrous centipede form) Feats Improved Initiative, Weapon Finesse Skills Bluff +6, Concentration +21, Craft (alchemy) +22, Diplomacy +8, Disguise +0 (+2 acting), Hide +17, Intimidate +2, Knowledge (the planes) +22, Listen +7, Move Silently +9, Search +7, Spellcraft +22, Spot +7 Improved Evasion (Ex) No damage on successful Reflex save and half damage if the save fails.
169
Illus. by E. Fiegenschuh
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
MASTERMIND (EL 14)
170
The mastermind moves behind the scenes. She can be the ruler of a thieves’ guild, the benevolent ruler of a city-state, or a sinister figure who manipulates a nation from the shadows. A mastermind makes an excellent campaign villain because diligent PCs can discover that she is the motivating force behind several seemingly unconnected adventures. Alternatively, she could be a hidden ally for the PCs—an NPC who knows much and can help the characters with their tasks, but would prefer to remain anonymous.
Mastermind
CR 14
Human rogue 7/bard 7 N Medium humanoid Init +2; Senses Listen +1, Spot +1 Languages Common, Elven, Halfling AC 22, touch 12, flat-footed 22; uncanny dodge hp 42 (14 HD) Resist evasion Fort +3, Ref +12, Will +8 Speed 30 ft. (6 squares) Melee +1 spell storing rapier +13/+8 (1d6+1/15–20) Base Atk +10; Grp +10 Atk Options Combat Expertise, Combat Reflexes, Improved Feint, sneak attack +4d6 Special Actions bardic music 7/day (suggestion [DC 17], inspire competence, inspire courage +1, fascinate 3 creatures, countersong) Combat Gear figurine of wondrous power (silver raven), wand of cat’s grace (45 charges), scroll of teleport, scroll of fly Bard Spells Known (CL 7th, 5% arcane spell failure chance): 3rd (1/day)— glibness, lesser geas (DC 17) 2nd (3/day)— cure moderate wounds, detect thoughts (DC 16), suggestion (DC 16), tongues 1st (4/day)— charm person (DC 15), disguise self, silent image (DC 15), undetectable alignment 0 (3/day)—daze (DC 14), flare (DC 14), ghost sound (DC 14), mage hand, message, read magic
Abilities Str 10, Dex 15, Con 8, Int 14, Wis 12, Cha 18 SQ bardic knowledge +9, trap sense +2, trapfinding Feats Combat Expertise, Combat Reflexes, Improved Critical (rapier), Improved Feint, Persuasive, Weapon Finesse Skills Bluff +26, Diplomacy +28, Disguise +24 (+26 to act in character), Forgery +12, Gather Information +24, Intimidate +24, Knowledge (local) +19, Move Silently +5, Perform (oratory) +24, Sense Motive +18, Sleight of Hand +13, Use Magic Device +24 Possessions combat gear plus +2 glamered shadow elven chain, +1 light steel shield, +1 spell storing rapier (cure serious wounds), cloak of Charisma +2, amulet of natural armor +1, boots of elvenkind, Heward’s handy haversack, circlet of persuasion, scroll of speak with dead, 65 pp, 46 gp Nonhuman Mastermind: Remove all ranks in Knowledge (local). (This skill then becomes unusable, since the mastermind is untrained in it.) Remove Combat Reflexes.
Mastermind
TRIBAL SHAMAN (EL 13) A tribal shaman is most often the religious or spiritual leader for a tribe of barbarians. However, he could just as easily be a reclusive nomad or the leader of a band of barbaric mercenaries.
Tribal Shaman (Raging)
CR 13
CHAPTER 5
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS Illus. by B. Hagan
Human barbarian 6/druid 7 Any nonlawful Medium humanoid Init +1; Senses Listen +19, Spot +3 Languages Common AC 15, touch 10, flat-footed 15; improved uncanny dodge, uncanny dodge hp 109 (13 HD) Resist +4 against spell-like abilities of fey Fort +13, Ref +5, Will +12 Speed 30 ft. (6 squares); woodland stride Melee +1 greataxe +16/+11/+6 (1d12+7/×3) Base Atk +11; Grp +15 Atk Options Improved Bull Rush, Power Attack, rage 2/day (7 rounds) Special Actions wild shape 3/day (7 hours) Combat Gear potion of shield of faith (+4), potion of cure moderate wounds Druid Spells Prepared (CL 7th): 4th—flame strike (DC 17) 3rd—cure moderate wounds, greater magic fang, poison (DC 16) 2nd—bear’s endurance, bull’s strength, resist energy, Tribal shaman spider climb AC 17, touch 12, flat-footed 17 1st—cure light wounds (2), longstrider, produce flame hp 83 (13 HD) (+12 ranged touch, +13 melee touch), speak with Fort +11, Will +10 animals Melee +1 greataxe +14/+9/+4 (1d12+4/×3) 0—cure minor wounds, detect poison, guidance, Grp +13 mending, purify food and drink, virtue Abilities Str 15, Con 13 Abilities Str 19, Dex 12, Con 17, Int 8, Wis 17, Cha 10 SQ animal companion, fast movement, link with Deinonychus Animal Companion CR — companion, trackless step, trap sense +2, wild N Large animal empathy +9 (+5 magical beasts) Init +2; Senses low-light vision, scent; Listen +10, Spot Feats Combat Casting, Craft Magic Arms and Armor, +10 Improved Bull Rush, Lightning Reflexes, Natural Spell, Power Attack AC 16, touch 11, flat-footed 14 Skills Handle Animal +16, Intimidate +9, Knowledge hp 34 (4 HD) (nature) +8, Listen +19, Ride +3, Survival +19 (+21 Fort +8, Ref +6, Will +2 in aboveground natural environments) Speed 60 ft. (12 squares) Possessions combat gear plus +1 wild hide armor, +1 Melee talons +6 (2d6+4) and greataxe, amulet of natural armor +1, dusty rose prism 2 foreclaws +1 (1d3+2) and ioun stone, 15 gp bite +1 (2d4+2) Nonhuman Tribal Shaman: Remove all ranks in Listen Space 10 ft.; Reach 5 ft. (changing the modifier to Listen +3). Remove Base Atk +3; Grp +11 Combat Casting. Abilities Str 19, Dex 15, Con 19, Int 2, Wis 12, Cha 10 SQ 1 bonus trick When the tribal shaman is not raging, the following Feats Run, Track changes apply to the above statistics. Skills Hide +8, Jump +26, Listen +10, Spot +10, Survival +10
171
Illus. by V. Rams
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
UNDEAD MASTER (EL 17)
172
2nd—bear’s endurance, cure moderate wounds (2), death The undead mster is a classic villain—perhaps knellD (DC 19), desecrate, shatter the leader of an undead nation or the (DC 17), spiritual weapon scion of a sinister cult. She can 1st—command (DC 16), cure command undead both as a clerlight wounds (2), deathwatch, ic and as a sorcerer (by using detect undead, hide from the command undead spell), undead, magic stone, protection and she can cast animate from chaosD (CL 14th) 0—cure minor wounds (2), detect dead as both a cleric and magic, guidance, mending, read magic sorcerer. Thus, the total D: Domain spell. Deity: Wee Jas. number of undead minDomains: Death, Law ions she can command is Sorcerer Spells Known staggering. She often uses (CL 14th, 15% arcane spell her portable hole to transport failure chance): minions during the day or 7th (3/day)—control undead (DC 24) to smuggle them through 6th (5/day)—create enemy territory. undead, veil (DC 21) The undead master de5th (7/day)—magic scribed here is a worshiper of jar (DC 22), nightmare Wee Jas. If you wish to make (DC 20), teleport (DC 20) an undead master devoted to a 4th (7/day)—animate dead, different deity, change the chardimension door, enervation (+10 ranged touch), stoneskin acter’s domains and alignment as 3rd (7/day)—gaseous form, gentle repose, appropriate. stinking cloud (DC 18), vampiric touch (+8 melee touch; DC 20) Undead Master CR 17 2nd (7/day)—command undead (DC Human cleric 3/sorcerer 4/mystic 19), darkvision, false life, ghoul touch theurge 10 (+8 melee touch; DC 19), spectral hand LE Medium humanoid Undead master 1st (8/day)—charm person (DC 16), chill Init +1; Senses Listen +10, Spot +7 touch (+8 melee touch; DC 18), endure Languages Common, empathic link elements, ray of enfeeblement (+10 ranged AC 19, touch 12, flat-footed 18 touch), sleep (DC 16) hp 97 (17 HD) 0 (6/day)—arcane mark, dancing lights, disrupt Fort +8, Ref +6, Will +19 undead (+10 ranged touch), ghost sound (DC 15), Speed 30 ft. (6 squares) mage hand, message, open/close, prestidigitation, Melee mwk dagger +9/+4 (1d4–1/19–20) or touch of fatigue (+8 melee touch; DC 17) Ranged mwk dagger +11 (1d4–1/19–20) Abilities Str 8, Dex 13, Con 12, Int 10, Wis 20, Cha 21 Base Atk +9; Grp +8 SQ familiar, share spells Special Actions command undead 8/day (+7, 2d6+8, Feats AlertnessB (if familiar is within 5 ft.), Combat 3rd), death touch 1/day (3d6) Casting, Craft Staff, Craft Wand, Craft Wondrous Combat Gear boots of levitation, staff of necromancy (42 Item, Greater Spell Focus (necromancy), Spell charges), wand of enervation (31 charges), wand of Focus (necromancy), Still Spell cure moderate wounds (39 charges), wand of inflict Skills Concentration +21, Knowledge (arcana) +12, serious wounds (22 charges) Knowledge (religion) +14, Listen +10, Spellcraft +16, Cleric Spells Prepared (CL 13th): Spot +7 7th—destructionD (DC 24), ethereal jaunt Possessions combat gear plus +2 studded leather 6th—antilife shell, create undeadD, harm(DC 23) armor, ring of force shield (included), ring of 5th—stilled freedom of movement, insect plague, slay protection +1, masterwork dagger, cloak of Charisma livingD (DC 22), spell resistance, unhallow +4, periapt of Wisdom +4, portable hole, black onyx 4th—cure critical wounds, death ward, giant vermin, gems (2,000 gp value total, for animate dead and greater magic weapon, order’s wrathD (DC 19; CL create undead), 2 doses granite and diamond dust 14th), spell immunity (worth 250 gp each, for stoneskin), 98 gp 3rd—animate deadD, contagion (DC 20), cure serious Nonhuman Undead Master: Remove all ranks wounds, magic vestment, protection from energy, in Concentration (changing the modifier to speak with dead (DC 20) Concentration +1). Remove Combat Casting.
READING THE STATISTICS BLOCK The new statistics block format is divided into four main sections, which are separated by horizontal lines. Each section serves a specific purpose, so you will need to reference different sections at different times during an encounter. The sections are as follows, from top to bottom.
CHAPTER 5
Identification and Encounter The top section identifies the creature and gives the information you need at the start of an encounter. Name: This word or phrase identifies the creature. Sometimes a number is given with the name to indicate how many creatures appear in the encounter. CR: This value is the Challenge Rating of an individual creature of this kind. Race, Class, and Level: This information is provided only for characters with class levels. Alignment: The one- or two-letter abbreviation that appears here denotes the creature’s alignment. Size and Type: The creature’s size category and its type (and subtype or subtypes, if applicable) are given here. Init: This value is the creature’s modifier on initiative Offensive Information Refer to this section when it’s the creature’s turn to act checks. Senses: The Senses entry indicates whether the creature in combat. All its combat options—from melee attacks has darkvision, low-light vision, scent, tremorsense, blindto spells to potions it might drink—are detailed in this sense, blindsight, or some other sensory special quality. section, even if they are not strictly offensive in nature. This information is followed by the creature’s modifiers on Speed: This entry begins with the creature’s base land Listen and Spot checks (even if the creature has no ranks speed, in feet and in squares on the battle grid. Next come speeds for its other modes of movement, if applicable. in those skills). Melee/Ranged: Typically, these entries give all the Aura: Occasionally, a creature has a special ability that physical attacks the creature can make when taking a full takes effect anytime another creature comes within a certain distance of it. Such abilities, such as a blackguard’s attack action. The first attack described is the creature’s aura of despair or a devil’s fear aura, are detailed here. preferred form of attack, usually a melee attack of some Languages: This entry gives the languages the creature sort but possibly (as in the example below) a ranged attack. speaks or understands, as well as any special abilities relatIf the creature can make only a single attack (for instance, ing to communication (such as telepathy or tongues) that when it is taking an attack action), use the first indicated attack bonus. Occasionally, a creature has separate options it possesses. indicated for single attacks and for full attacks. For example, Defensive Information a halfling ranger with the Manyshot and Rapid Shot feats This section provides the information you need when might have the following entries: characters are attacking the creature. Ranged +1 longbow +8 (2d6+2/×3) with Manyshot or AC: This entry gives the creature’s Armor Class against +1 longbow +10/+10/+5 (1d6+1/×3) with Rapid Shot most regular attacks, followed by its AC against touch or attacks (which disregard armor) and its AC when flatMelee mwk longsword +8/+3 (1d6/19–20) footed (or at any other time when it is denied its Dexterity bonus to AC). If the creature has feats or other abilities that modify its Armor Class under specific circumstances Each set of attack routines is prefaced by a boldface word (such as the Mobility feat), they are noted here as well as indicating whether the attacks are melee or ranged. in the Feats entry. Next comes the weapon used for the attack, the modified hp: This entry consists of the creature’s full normal hit attack bonus, the amount of damage the attack deals, and point total (usually average rolls on each Hit Die), followed information about critical hits. If the weapon has the by the creature’s Hit Dice in parentheses. If the creature “default” critical hit characteristics (threat on a 20 and ×2 has fast healing, regeneration, damage reduction (DR), damage), this portion of the entry is omitted.
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
or some other ability that affects the amount of damage it takes or the rate at which it regains hit points, that information also appears here. Immune: Any immunities the creature has are indicated here. This includes immunity to specific types of energy as well as specific immunities (such as immunity to poison or to sleep effects). Resist and SR: If the creature has resistance to certain kinds of attacks, that information is given here. Resistance to energy is shown first, as the energy type and the number of points resisted per attack (acid 10, for example). This information is followed by any other resistances the creature has. Altered saving throw bonuses for specific circumstances appear on this line. The creature’s spell resistance, if any, appears after the other resistances on the same line. Fort, Ref, Will: This entry gives the creature’s saving throw modifiers. Weakness: This entry details any weaknesses or vulnerabilities the creature has, such as light sensitivity or vulnerability to a type of energy.
173
NONPLAYER CHARACTERS
CHAPTER 5
174
Space: This entry defines how large a square the creature makes certain skills class skills would not be detailed in takes up on the battle grid. This information is omitted the statistics block. for any creature that occupies a 5-foot square. Spell-Like Abilities: Any spell-like abilities the creaReach: The Reach entry defines how far the creature’s ture possesses appear here. The entry begins with the natural reach extends, and it also gives information about creature’s caster level for these abilities. As with spells, any reach weapons it might use. This information is omitthis entry includes attack bonuses and saving throw DCs ted for any creature that has a reach of 5 feet. where appropriate. Base Atk: The Base Atk entry gives the creature’s base Other Information attack bonus without any modifiers. Grp: This entry gives the creature’s grapple bonus (base Most of the information presented in this section is not attack + size modifier + Str bonus). relevant during a combat encounter with the creature. One important exception is explanatory text for special abilities Atk Options: Special abilities that the creature can that appear elsewhere in the statistics block. employ to modify its normal attacks appear here. Such Abilities: The creature’s ability scores appear here in abilities might include feats such as Power Attack or the customary order (Str, Dex, Con, Int, Wis, Cha). Combat Expertise, or special abilities such as smite evil SQ: Any special qualities not presented earlier in the or trip. statistics block appear here. These entries are often class Special Actions: This entry gives any special attacks features or other abilities that are not generally relevant that the creature can use on its turn in place of making in combat. attacks. Combat Gear: Possessions that the creature can choose Feats: This entry lists all the feats the creature posto employ on its turn as an action appear here. Such items sesses, including those that appear elsewhere in the might include scrolls, potions, wands, staffs, rods, or statistics block. wondrous items. Skills: This entry shows all the skill modifiers for Spells Known: This entry appears only for sorcerers skills in which the creature has ranks. Modifiers are also and members of other classes who do not prepare spells. provided for skills to which racial modifiers, bonuses from synergy, or other modifiers apply, whether or not the It begins with the creature’s caster level for spells. If its creature has ranks in those skills. rolls to overcome spell resistance are based on a number Possessions: This entry is simply a list of items that the other than its caster level (because the creature has the creature is wearing or carrying. The expression “combat Spell Penetration feat, for example), its total modifier is gear” appears first, when applicable, to remind you of other given after the expression “spell pen.” Spells known are listed from highest level to 0 level, and each spell includes possessions that are referenced above. an attack bonus and a saving throw DC, if appropriate. If Spellbook: This entry gives the spells in the creature’s spellbook, if it has one. The notation “spells prepared plus” the character casts some spells at a different caster level indicates that the spells the creature has prepared are part than others, that information is also specified with the of this list, but are not reiterated here. affected spells. The final portion of the statistics block consists of Spells Prepared: This entry appears only for wizards, paragraphs explaining special abilities noted in the various clerics, and members of other classes who prepare spells. entries above, in the order in which they appear. It begins with the character’s caster level for spells. If its rolls to overcome spell resistance are based on a number other than its caster level (because the creature has the Roleplaying Hook When appropriate, a Hook entry appears at the end of a Spell Penetration feat, for example), its total modifier is statistics block, set off in its own section. This is a tidbit of given after the expression “spell pen.” Spells prepared are listed from highest level to 0 level, and each spell includes information to help you run the creature in a flavorful or an attack bonus and a saving throw DC, if appropriate. If memorable way. Generally, this information is present only if the statistics block describes a unique named character. the character casts some spells at a different caster level It might be a quote or a battle cry, or an indication of the than others, that information is also specified with the kind of characters the creature is most likely to attack. If affected spells. the descriptive text that accompanies a creature’s or charA cleric’s statistics block also includes the name of his acter’s statistics block includes facts about the individual’s deity (if applicable) and the domains to which he has behavior or outlook that could serve as a roleplaying hook, access. Each domain spell he has prepared is marked the Hook entry is omitted. with a superscript D. The granted powers of his domains This information does not appear in any of the statistics might appear as combat options or resistances, or they blocks in this book, since the NPCs presented here are might not appear at all, if they only modify information archetypes rather than unique individuals. presented elsewhere. For example, a domain power that
Illus. by A. Swekel
espite its title, this book, like its predecessor, contains material designed to interest players and their characters. That’s intentional. The PCs are at the center of the story, and nothing truly happens in even the most elaborate game world unless the PCs experience it somehow—whether they see it firsthand or learn about it later. Accordingly, this chapter details ways you can enrich the experience of the PCs in your game world, and by extension, the players at your game table. You can start PCs as apprentices or encourage them to start businesses as a sideline to adventuring (and a source for future adventures). You can offer them new powers and rewards: magical locations as treasure, teamwork benefits, and guardian spirits. Finally, you can design new prestige classes that give the players exactly what they want for their characters while immersing them in the world you’ve created.
STUDENTS AND MASTERS A character can take the Leadership feat to gain a cohort, who then serves that PC as a general helper, a bodyguard, or a sidekick. The cohort is a unique NPC, but one who remains subservient to his or her master.
But what happens when a PC wishes to apprentice himself to a powerful wizard, or offers his services to a powerful rogue in order to learn from him? This relationship can be modeled on the Leadership feat, but the PC gains no tangible benefit for becoming a cohort. Not many players want to play a subservient minion of an NPC. Instead, the character can opt to take the Apprentice feat. A character who wishes to become a teacher himself once he has surpassed his own instructor can take the Mentor feat.
APPRENTICESHIP Once a character has taken the Apprentice feat, she is considered an apprentice. The first thing she must do is select a type of mentor; the mentor choices are listed below. The DM can create new mentor types using the listed mentors as guidelines. Upon becoming an apprentice, a character immediately gains two new class skills and two bonus skill points to spend on these class skills. These new class skills are added to the class skill list for any character class or prestige class she gains. The specific skills gained as class skills depend on the type of mentor she selects.
175
Illus. by V. Rams
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
In addition, the character gains one specific benefit (the exact type depends on the type of mentor selected) from her mentor, and in desperate times she can even call upon him for aid. Apprentices are expected to learn and grow, and mentors are loath to step in and provide physical support or financial aid, or to pull strings for an apprentice. Convincing the mentor to aid in this way requires a successful level check (d20 + character level), the DC of which is set by the DM and varies from 10 for simple favors to as high as 25 for highly dangerous, expensive, or illegal favors. A successful check means the mentor helps in some way (lends a magic item, accompanies the character on a short mission, pulls strings to get an appointment with the mayor, and so on) but demands double the normal tithe the next time the character gain a level. Once the character asks for aid, no further requests for aid will be honored until she gains at least one experience level.
travel with the PCs, so he or she won’t take treasure, XP, and spotlight time from the player characters. A character can try to gain a mentor of a particular race, class, and alignment, but the actual details are left to the DM. If a character selects a mentor who is too different from her skill set, interests, or goals, the advantages of this feat are correspondingly diminished. The mentor has gear as an NPC (see Table 4–23: NPC Gear Value, page 127 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide) and must have the Mentor feat.
Expectations of the Apprentice Maintaining the status of apprentice isn’t cheap. The apprentice is expected to tithe 100 gp of her earnings each time she gains a level. This tithe covers costs such as supplies, guild dues, gifts to the mentor, and miscellaneous costs. The tithe must be paid to the mentor as soon as possible (and certainly before the character gains another level), or she Where the mentor leads, Finding a Mentor risks losing her apprenticeship. the student follows When a character decides A 1st-level character doesn’t need to become an apprentice, to pay a tithe until she reaches 2nd level. she must first locate an appropriate mentor. Not just any Additionally, an apprentice is expected to practice her NPC will do. As with the Leadership feat, apprenticeship skills, study, and even undertake minor tasks for her depends heavily on the social setting of the campaign, mentor. Every week, she must spend at least 8 contiguous the actual location of the PC, and the group dynamics. hours working for her mentor and practicing her skills. You’re free to disallow this feat if it would disrupt the If she fails to meet this requirement, she must spend an campaign. Unlike Leadership, the allied NPC does not additional day the next week. If she shirks her duties in
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
176
NEW FEAT: APPRENTICE
NEW FEAT: MENTOR
A character with this feat has apprenticed himself to a master in order to speed his learning and bolster his skills. This feat must be taken at 1st level. Once you start gaining experience, your methods of learning are already too ingrained for you to be able to gain the benefits of a mentor–apprentice relationship. Prerequisite: 1st level only. Benefits: When you select this feat, you gain all the benefits described in this section for being an apprentice.
A character who takes this feat has offered his knowledge and skill to a lower-level NPC and takes that NPC on as an apprentice. Prerequisites: 8 ranks in at least two of the four skills associated with your mentor category; Apprentice; you must have graduated from an apprenticeship. Benefits: When you select this feat, you gain all the benefits described in this section for being a mentor.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
this manner for an entire month, the character’s mentor expels her from the apprenticeship.
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
Ember hones her skills under the guidance of a martial artist mentor
Illus. by R. Mimura
Mentor Types The eight mentor types described below are fairly generic, and can encompass any alignment, race, or class. A mentor can easily be a chaotic evil gnome wizard craftsman or a lawful good human rogue, for example. Each mentor type is associated with two skills; as detailed above, the apprentice gains these skills as class skills. In addition, each mentor grants the apprentice additional benefits unique to his profession and calling. Craftsman: A craftsman mentor is skilled at building things. A craftsman grants his apprentice a +2 competence bonus on all Craft checks and a 10% discount when he purchases raw materials for items he makes (including items made with the Craft skill or with an item creation feat, but not spell components or services). Associated Skills: Appraise, Knowledge (architecture and engineering). Criminal: A criminal mentor is a high-ranking member of a thieves’ guild, an assassin, a bandit lord, or any similar miscreant. A criminal grants his apprentice a +2 competence bonus on Intimidate checks and an extra 100 gp to spend on equipment as a starting character at 1st level. In addition, the apprentice is not required to pay the 100 gp tithe at each level, provided he remains an apprentice in good standing. He is expected to comply with requests from his mentor for minor services or
tasks, such as tailing a subject, staking out a prospective work site, and so on. Associated Skills: Bluff, Gather Information. Entertainer: An entertainer mentor is an actor, musician, storyteller, or other notable personality, often someone quite recognizable or famous. An entertainer grants her apprentice a +2 competence bonus on Diplomacy checks and the ability to call upon the aid of an admirer or fan by spending a tithe appropriate for the apprentice’s level. The admirer is of a character level equal to 1/2 the apprentice’s own (minimum 1st) and must be within at least one step of his alignment, but can be of any race or class. The ally serves the apprentice for a limited duration (usually a number of days equal to his Charisma modifier, minimum of 1 day) as if a cohort. Once the apprentice calls upon the aid of an admirer, he may not do so again until he gains at least one level. Associated Skills: Diplomacy, Perform. Martial Artist: A martial artist mentor has perfected a particular style of fighting, often exotic. A martial artist grants his apprentice a +2 competence bonus on Intimidate checks and a +2 bonus on Reflex saving throws. Associated Skills: Concentration, Tumble. Philosopher: A philosopher mentor is dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge. In a civilized area he might be a scholar or librarian, while in the wilderness he might be a shaman or nomad. A philosopher grants his apprentice a +2 competence bonus on Concentration checks and a +2 bonus on Will saving throws.
177
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
178
Associated Skills: Knowledge (any one), Sense Motive. Charisma bonus (if any) and by the following situations. Soldier: A soldier mentor is a commander of an army, a These situations only apply when the feat is first taken; if captain of a garrison, a mercenary leader, or otherwise in any of these situations change at a later date (for example, command of a combat troop. A soldier grants his apprentice the apprentice’s alignment changes), the mentor’s level a +2 competence bonus on Intimidate checks and a +2 does not change. bonus on Fortitude saving throws. Table 6–1: Mentor Level Modifiers Associated Skills: Intimidate, Knowledge (local). Condition Modifier Spellcaster: A spellcaster mentor could be a priest of Mentor and apprentice are same race and class +1 the character’s religion, a teacher at a wizard’s guild, or an Mentor and apprentice are same alignment +2 inventor seeking a protégé. Spellcaster mentors are not Mentor and apprentice share one alignment aspect +1 Mentor and apprentice are opposing alignments –1 as useful as the other seven mentors for characters who Apprentice starts at maximum rank in at least two +1 cannot cast spells themselves. A spellcaster grants her of the mentor’s associated skills apprentice a +2 competence bonus on Spellcraft checks. The tutelage of a spellcasting mentor grants additional benefits only if the apprentice shares the same class as Becoming an Ex-Apprentice In the case of the death or loss of a mentor, an ally or assohis mentor. The apprentice only gains these benefits when he gains a level in this class; he retains all the other ciate of the prior mentor (who is of an equal level to the benefits of this feat (the bonus skills and the bonus on original mentor) typically takes the place of the original. The benefits gained from the Apprentice feat are not altered. Spellcraft checks) regardless of what class he chooses to Two conditions can alter the apprentice benefits. gain a level in. If the apprentice and his mentor are arcane spellcasters, Surpassing the Mentor: Once the apprentice reaches he gains one additional spell known at 1st level. Wizards 5th level, he graduates from his apprenticeship. He continues to gain the benefits of the Apprentice feat, but no longer gain this spell in their spellbooks, and spontaneous castneeds to work with his mentor. The mentor’s associated ers such as sorcerers or bards gain an additional 1st-level skills remain class skills for purposes of determining the spell beyond their normal number of spells known. As maximum rank he can have in those skills, and he still the apprentice gains levels, he is able to learn additional spellcasting techniques from his mentor; wizards can copy retains the secondary benefits, but an associated skill can from their mentor’s spellbook at no charge. Spellcasters only be purchased as a class skill if he gains a level in a who do not prepare spells (such as a bard or sorcerer) class that has that skill as a class skill. He no longer needs gain increased flexibility with the spells they know. Each to tithe to his mentor upon gaining levels. If you allow, he time an apprentice gains another of these levels, he can can also immediately exchange his Apprentice feat for the Mentor feat (see below). choose to learn a new spell in place of one he already Expulsion: Grounds for expulsion include actions knows. The new spell’s level must be the same as that of the spell being exchanged. deemed destructive by the mentor, failing to pay tithes in a timely manner, or simply not spending the time required If the character and his mentor are divine spellcasters to study the chosen craft for an entire month. A character who prepare spells (such as clerics, druids, paladins, or can also choose to leave an apprenticeship; although the rangers), he can select one spell he knows as a preferred apprentice can part on good terms with his mentor, the spell. This can be a spell of any level he can cast. Once per day, the apprentice can spontaneously cast a preferred game effects are the same as if he were expelled. spell by swapping out any prepared spell of an equal spell An expelled apprentice immediately loses the secondlevel. He can only have one preferred spell at a time, but ary benefits of this feat, and his apprentice class skills immediately become cross-class skills unless he possesses each time he gains a level in the associated class, he can a level in a class that grants the skill as a class skill. A skill change his preferred spell to a different spell. that becomes a cross-class skill begins to atrophy; the next Associated Skills: Knowledge (any one), Use Magic Device. Woodsman: A woodsman mentor might be a hunter, a time the character gains a level, any skill ranks in excess caretaker of a forest, or a scout. A woodsman mentor grants of his normal maximum skill ranks for a cross-class skill his apprentice a +2 competence bonus on Survival checks are lost forever. and the ability to follow tracks as if the apprentice had the Track feat, but only when the DC is 20 or lower. Gaining a New Mentor If a character is expelled or voluntarily leaves an apprenAssociated Skills: Knowledge (nature), Survival. ticeship before he surpasses his mentor, he can seek out Mentor Statistics a new mentor. The new mentor can be of any type. FindThe DM should develop the mentor’s statistics. A mentor ing a new mentor is time-consuming. The ex-apprentice has a base level of 5th, modified by the apprentice’s must make a successful Gather Information check (DC
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
10 + character level), and each attempt takes a number of While the apprentice pays his mentor a tithe, the money from that sum goes to pay for the various expenses related days equal to his character level. Success indicates he has to maintaining the apprenticeship. The apprentice might found a new mentor; failure indicates that he has not, but also ask his mentor for help at times, usually in the form he can try again. of a loan of money or the casting of a spell. The mentor Once a character gains a new mentor, he must immeis free to react to these requests as she sees fit, but if she diately pay a tithe of 100 gp times his character level. He ignores them too often, she might lose her apprentice. must then spend at least a week of 8-hour days studying and working with his new mentor to become familiar with her teaching methods. After this time, the apprentice Finding an Apprentice gains the mentor’s associated class skills and secondary When a PC takes the Mentor feat, the DM should prepare benefits, but he does not gain bonus skill points for the a small group of three to six prospective apprentices for the character to choose from. At this stage, the prospective new class skills. apprentices don’t need full statistics; a name, race, class, A new mentor’s maximum level is one level lower than the level of the previous mentor (minimum 5th). A chargender, and one-sentence personality should be enough. acter who constantly changes mentors or keeps getting When the PC selects one of them, she generates the apprentice’s ability scores, using the elite array (15, 14, 13, expelled soon finds that no one wants to take him on as 12, 10, 8). The apprentice must have the Apprentice feat, an apprentice. but otherwise the details are up to the player character. MENTORSHIP A new apprentice starts at 1st level, with gear appropriate Although mentors typically belong to a guild or organizato his class. tion, they sometimes work alone. Likewise, although most mentors take on multiple apprentices and devote their lives Keeping an Apprentice to teaching them, some instead focus on one apprentice at The mentor is free to treat her apprentice however she a time. Player character mentors should choose this second wants, entrusting him with as little or as much responsioption, since by taking on only one apprentice they don’t bility as she feels appropriate. The mentor score measures have to devote all their time to him. The benefits for having her apprentice’s loyalty. When she first gains this feat, her multiple apprentices don’t stack, in any event. initial mentor score equals 1 + her Charisma modifier and is modified by the following conditions. An apprentice is similar to a cohort, except that the apprentice doesn’t accompany the mentor on adventures Situation Modifier as a standard rule. A new apprentice is always a 1st-level Apprentice’s character level +1 per level character. The apprentice’s race and gender can vary, but The mentor grants the apprentice a favor +1 his class must be identical to one the mentor possesses at The mentor refuses the apprentice a favor –2 The mentor provides room and board +1 least one level in. Likewise, the apprentice must have the Each week the mentor fails to train the apprentice –1 Apprentice feat. for the minimum required time The mentor must possess at least 8 ranks in two of the Each time the mentor asks the apprentice for a favor –1 four skills associated with the mentor type. The apprentice is killed as a direct result of the –5 mentor’s actions Craftsman: Appraise, Craft (any), Knowledge (architecture and engineering), Profession (any). Criminal: Bluff, Gather Information, Open Lock, Training an Apprentice Apprentices advance with training. Each week, a mentor Sleight of Hand. Entertainer: Diplomacy, Gather Information, Perform, is expected to dedicate at least 8 consecutive hours to Profession. training with her apprentice. Meeting this minimum Martial Artist: Balance, Concentration, Jump, Tumble. amount of training allows the apprentice to advance and Philosopher: Concentration, Knowledge (religion), keeps the mentor’s own skills honed. If she neglects her Knowledge (any one other), Sense Motive. apprentice, not only does she take a penalty to her mentor score, but she also loses her skill check bonuses until she Soldier: Climb, Handle Animal, Intimidate, Ride. Spellcaster: Concentration, Knowledge (arcana), Spellspends time with her apprentice. craft, Use Magic Device. With adequate training, the apprentice gains a level each time the mentor gains a level. He also acquires equipment Woodsman: Climb, Handle Animal, Knowledge appropriate to an NPC of his class (see Chapter 4 of the (nature), Survival. Dungeon Master’s Guide). Since the mentor spends so much of her time teaching the apprentice and practicing these four skills, she gains a When the apprentice reaches 5th level, he graduates +2 competence bonus on checks involving any of her four and follows the mentor as a cohort, as if she had the associated skills. Leadership feat.
179
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
Favors from an Apprentice Periodically, a mentor might need a favor from her apprentice. To determine if the favor is granted, make a mentor check by rolling 1d20 and adding the mentor score. A small favor, such as assisting in the creation of a magic item or guarding a location for a day, is a DC 15 check. A large favor, such as asking the apprentice to accompany the mentor on a short, relatively safe adventure or guarding a location for several weeks is a DC 25 check. A huge favor, such as asking for the apprentice to accompany the mentor on an extended adventure or asking him to make the mentor a magic item, is a DC 40 check. Each time the mentor asks a favor of her apprentice, her mentor score goes down by 1, regardless of whether or not the favor is granted. Losing an Apprentice If a mentor’s score ever drops to 0 or lower, the mentor’s apprentice grows dissatisfied and leaves. The mentor immediately loses the bonuses to her associated skills. The mentor can also choose to expel her apprentice at any time; the results are identical to when an apprentice voluntarily leaves. If her apprentice dies, she can choose to have the apprentice raised from the dead, at which point he might leave, depending on the circumstances of his death. The mentor can seek out a new apprentice once a month has passed. If she gains a new apprentice, her mentor score is reset to its base value, –1 per previous apprentice lost. If a mentor loses too many apprentices, she’ll quickly find that no one wants to become her student due to the reputation she’s gained. At the DM’s option, relocating to a new, distant location can remove the penalties for losing apprentices. Finally, once the apprentice reaches 5th level and graduates from his apprenticeship, he becomes a cohort, as if the mentor had the Leadership feat. The mentor can dismiss him, if she wishes, with no ill effect or hard Table 6–2: Businesses Business Primary Skill Criminal Intimidate organization Farm Profession (farmer) Fighting school Base attack Moneylender Profession (bookkeeper) Performance hall Perform Service Shop Tavern
180
Troupe University
Profession or Craft Profession (shopkeeper) Profession (innkeeper) Perform Knowledge
feelings. This does not count as a lost apprentice should she seek to gain a new one in the future. She must fi nd a new apprentice within 30 days to continue to benefit from the skill bonuses.
RUNNING A BUSINESS DUNGEONS & DRAGONS player characters typically have one source of income: they fight monsters and take their treasure. Rewards from grateful kings and barons and guildmasters might supplement this income, but for the most part, PCs finance themselves with treasure. Yet this isn’t the only way characters can make money. Certainly, it’s not the way the NPCs of the world survive. They rely on skills such as Craft, Perform, and Profession for their livelihood. Low-level PCs might rely upon these skills as well to augment their meager income at the start of an adventuring career. No matter what sort of business a character runs, the rules for determining its success or failure work the same.
BUSINESS BASICS The rules presented here for running businesses function primarily off a single skill check, based on the business’s primary skill. The owner makes a special skill check using this skill, called a profit check. The owner can opt to take 10 on a profit check but he can’t take 20. One profit check is made once every business term, typically one month. The profitability of the business is set by its risk and modified by its location, the business owner’s secondary skills, and several other factors. The degree by which the profit check succeeds determines how much income the business generates, or how much it loses, for that term. While the profit check is usually based upon a Profession or Craft skill, it represents more than what a single character does to earn money. A business is an investment by the owner, and running a business produces more
Secondary Skills Knowledge (local), primary skill of business front Handle Animal, Knowledge (nature) Intimidate, Craft Diplomacy, Appraise Diplomacy, Sense Motive Appraise, Diplomacy Appraise, Sense Motive Profession (brewer or cook), Sense Motive Special Diplomacy, Profession (teacher)
Associated Guild Criminal
Capital High
Resources Risk High High
Naturalist
Low
Low
Low
Mercenary Government
Low Medium
High Medium
Medium Medium
Service
Low
Medium
Low
Religious or service Arcane, religious, or mercantile Mercantile or service Service Arcane, religious, or scholastic
Medium
Low
Low
Medium
Low
High
Medium
Medium
High
Medium High
Low Medium
Low Low
Risk: This indicates how solid the business tends to be (see Table 6–6). A low-risk business is reliable and less prone to going under. A high-risk business is susceptible to changes in the marketplace, but while more high-risk businesses go bankrupt than low-risk ones, high-risk offers the possibility of big money. Table 6–2 categorizes these factors for easy reference.
CHAPTER 6
Illus. by W. O’Connor
Criminal Organization A criminal organization can range from something as simple as a protection racket among a small group of established shops to a complex clandestine smuggling operation BUSINESS CATEGORIES or even a full-blown thieves’ guild. The first step to establishing a business is, Bards and rogues are probably the naturally enough, determining what kind of best-suited characters for this type business the prospective business owner wishes of business. to run. Effectively, the success of a business By their natures, criminal depends on one primary skill and two secorganizations are illegal. As a ondary skills. There is no minimum result, all criminal organizarequired skill rank in a primary tions need a cover or front. or secondary skill to start a busiThis could be a slaughterhouse, a guildhall, a book ness, but a business founded by a shop, or any other business. character with poor skills won’t The additional costs and last that long at all. This section presents several resources needed to maintain archetypical businesses the front are negligible, but they impact the organization’s that PCs might want to try their hands at. You can cresecondary skill requirement. A ate new businesses using the criminal organization run in an following as models. evil region (a slave trader in a nation in which slavery is legal, for example) Primary Skill: This entry is instead treated as a service, a shop, gives the business’s primary skill—the skill that director other ordinary business. ly affects the business’s Primary Skill: Intimidate. success, and the one that Secondary Skills: Knowlevery proprietor of the edge (local), primary skill of business front. business must have. Secondary Skills: Capital: High. This entry gives the secResources: High. A criminal organization might employ drastic methods ond and third most important Risk: High. to extract information skills for the business; see Table 6– 5 for details of how these skills affect a business’s success. Farm Farms are specialized businesses similar to shops and Capital: The relative amount of cash the entrepreneur services, yet they require their own special set of skills needs to start the business; see Table 6–3. Resources: The relative amount of resources (primarand resources. When a PC decides to build a farm, he ily buildings and employees) the owner needs to maintain should determine the nature of the primary crops and the business (see Table 6–4). This also determines the livestock. Unless he chooses something exotic, this final cost of operation, reflected as a modifier to the decision is largely cosmetic in game terms. Farms are profit check. good choices for druids and rangers; even barbarians
CHARACTERS
profit than a character could earn on his own. In fact, a character who is a business owner could make a profit check during a month while he simultaneously works for the business, earning gold each week with a Profession or Craft check (such gold is considered part of the business’s overhead). To build a new business, a character first selects the desired business category. Second, the owner pays the initial investment depending on where he locates the business (see Table 6–3). Third, he pays for the initial resources for the business (this includes buildings and employees). Once he accomplishes these three steps, he’s ready to start raking in the cash (or to go bankrupt, if things turn out poorly).
181
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
182
can make excellent farmers if they can keep their rage Capital: Low. under control. Resources: Medium. Primary Skill: Profession (farmer). Risk: Low. Secondary Skills: Handle Animal, Knowledge (nature). Service Capital: Low. Services cover a wide range of businesses, especially Resources: Low. those that revolve around the Craft or Profession skills. Risk: Low. An armorsmith, a bookbinder, a shipwright, a guide, a Fighting School gardener, and an innkeeper all provide services. If a busiThe fighting school represents any establishment built to ness doesn’t obviously fit into one of the other categories, train aspirants in a specific method of combat, whether it’s probably a service. Services are generally easy to get off the ground, since most start small and work their way up. that method is unarmed combat, cavalry, archery, or Services are so varied that there isn’t one particular class melee weaponry. Gladiatorial arenas are a particularly that does better at them than another. popular form of fighting school. Fighting schools (and universities) are unique in that their primary customers Primary Skill: Profession (any) or Craft (any). reside on site, imparting the difficulties of running a Secondary Skills: Appraise, Diplomacy. service or tavern on top of everything else. Fighters, Capital: Medium. monks, paladins, and rangers make good owners of Resources: Low. fighting schools. Risk: Low. Primary Skill: Unlike other businesses, the fighting school’s “primary skill” is not a skill at all. Rather, the Shop Shops are similar to services, except that they focus on owner uses her base attack bonus as the primary skill selling the products of service businesses rather than when running a fighting school. If the school focuses creating the product. A shop can be as humble as a general on a specific weapon, the owner can include any bonuses from Weapon Focus or Greater Weapon Focus to the profit store or as impressive as a magic item shop. This business check, but no other bonuses apply. also covers the traveling merchant. Bards and rogues make the best shop owners. Secondary Skills: Intimidate, Craft (armorsmithing, Primary Skill: Profession (shopkeeper). bowmaking, or weaponsmithing). Secondary Skills: Appraise, Sense Motive. Capital: Low. Capital: Medium. Resources: High. Resources: Low. Risk: Medium. Risk: High. Moneylender Moneylenders make their living by investing and lending Tavern money. Moneylenders require more cash to start out but The tavern combines the features of a shop and a perforfairly low resources, since they don’t need much more than mance hall. Customers come to a tavern both to purchase a vault and a modest building around it. Bards and rogues food and to be entertained, even if the entertainment make the best moneylenders, although clerics might find consists of nothing but gossip. Any type of character can do well as a tavern keeper, since the more unique and talent for the trade as well. colorful the owner’s appearance and personality, the more Primary Skill: Profession (bookkeeper). likely he is to attract curious new customers. Secondary Skills: Diplomacy, Appraise. Primary Skill: Profession (innkeeper). Capital: Medium. Secondary Skills: Profession (brewer or cook), Sense Resources: Medium. Motive. Risk: Medium. Capital: Medium. Performance Hall Resources: Medium. A performance hall is an entertainment venue where Risk: High. people can enjoy the opera, listen to music, watch a play, and so on. Performance halls are located in structures such Troupe as theaters and concert halls, and have close relationships A troupe is similar to a performance hall in that the owner to troupe businesses. Bards and monks are the best suited of a troupe is an entertainer. But whereas the owner of a for performance halls. performance hall is tied to one location, a troupe travels Primary Skill: Perform (any). from place to place. As a result, troupes can make much more money if they’re lucky, but their nomadic existence Secondary Skills: Diplomacy, Sense Motive.
+0
4,000 gp
8,000 gp
16,000 gp
BUILDING THE BUSINESS
CHAPTER 6
Town
City +2 8,000 gp 16,000 gp 32,000 gp University Metropolis +4 16,000 gp 32,000 gp 64,000 gp A university is similar to a fighting school in that its primary customers live on site and are fairly stationary. Unlike fighting schools, universities need greater capital to get off the The business’s location has little to no effect on how many ground and not as many resources; the equipment and ratio buildings and employees are needed to keep it afloat, of teachers to students is much more favorable. This category but these two factors do represent additional resources of business covers everything from small private magic that must be purchased over and above the cost of the schools to sprawling campuses in big cities to cramped initial investment. The costs for buildings below come from Table 3–27 in boarding schools. Although a wide variety of topics can be taught at a university, the owner need not be knowledgeable the Dungeon Master’s Guide. on all topics taught there. Bards, clerics, sorcerers, and Table 6–4: Minimum Resource Needs for Businesses wizards make the best choices for this business. Resource Primary Skill: Knowledge (any). Need Building Type and Cost Employees Secondary Skill: Diplomacy, Profession (teacher). Low 1 simple house (1,000 gp) 0 Capital: High. or 2 horses and a carriage (500 gp total)1 Medium 1 grand house (5,000 gp) 5 Resources: Medium. High 1 mansion (100,000 gp)2 20 Risk: Low.
CHARACTERS
also prevents repeat business. As with performance halls, covers all the intangible costs of starting a business, bards and monks make the best business owners. including bribes to the appropriate officials, purchasing Primary Skill: Perform (any). of equipment and supplies needed to run the business, Secondary Skills: Perform (any other than the primary advertising, tithes, and taxes. The cost of buildings and perform skill), one of the following: Balance, Climb, employees is not covered by the initial investment; these Disguise, Escape Artist, Handle Animal, Jump, Ride, are based on the Resource requirement of the business Sleight of Hand, Tumble. Once this second secondary and quantified in Table 6–4 instead. skill is chosen, it cannot be altered without disbanding Table 6–3: Profit Modifiers and Initial Investments and rebuilding the troupe. Profit —————— Capital —————— Capital: Medium. Location Modifier Low Medium High Resources: Low. Wilderness –10 500 gp 2,000 gp 4,000 gp Risk: Low. Rural –4 2,000 gp 4,000 gp 8,000 gp
1 Businesses operating out of a horse-drawn carriage take a –2 penalty on profit checks. 2 Alternatively, a high-resource business can be based in any combination of grand houses or towers that equals 100,000 gp.
Once the owner has selected what kind of business to run, he needs to determine where to base the business. Without exception, businesses function better near larger cities; even farms work better near large cities. Unfortunately, BENEFITS OF BUSINESS OPERATION the larger the city, the more expensive the costs to build DUNGEONS & DRAGONS is about adventure and excitement; and maintain a business. Businesses in large settlements the day-to-day running of a business can be anything but. For faster gameplay, the operations of a business are spend the first several years paying off loans they had to therefore generalized and significantly simplified. Busitake to start out. Location: This indicates where the business is located. nesses generate income or loss once each month based Wilderness assumes that the business isn’t located within on a profit check. 20 miles of any settlement. Rural assumes the business is located near a thorp, hamlet, or village. Town assumes the The Profit Check business is located near or in a small or large town. City Each month, the owner makes a profit check. To make assumes the business is located in a small or large city. a profit check, the owner makes a skill check using his Metropolis assumes the business is located in a metropolis business’s primary skill. A profit check equals 1d20 + (or larger) urban area. primary skill + modifiers. Thus, a tavern owner would Profit Modifier: This bonus or penalty applies to profit make a Profession (innkeeper) check, while a moneychecks made with a business in the indicated location. lender would make a Profession (bookkeeper) check. He Capital: This indicates the amount of free cash required can take 10 on a profit check if he has at least 1 rank in to start a low, medium, or high initial investment business the primary skill. He can never take 20 on a profit check. in the indicated region. This money, once spent to start a This check is modified by the factors listed on Table 6–5 (see the next page). business, is gone and cannot be recovered. The money
183
Illus. by V. Rams
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
Table 6–5: Profit Check Modifiers Situation Modifier Owner has at least 5 ranks in both secondary skills +1 Owner has at least 10 ranks in both secondary skills +2 Owner has 15 or more ranks in both secondary skills +3 Owner is a member of an associated guild +1 Owner spends less than 8 hours per week assisting business growth –8 Owner spends more than 40 hours per week assisting business growth +2 Owner has the Business Savvy feat (see below) +2 Business is located in the wilderness –10 Business is located in a rural area –4 Business is located in a city +2 Business is located in a metropolis +4 Business is a low-resource business +1 Business is a high-resource business –4 Business is a low-risk business +1 Business is a high-risk business –4 Previous profit check failed –1 per consecutive check failed A business partner successfully aids during the term1 +2 A specialist is on staff Variable2 1 A business partner can be a hired specialist, a cohort, or even another PC. In order to provide a bonus on the profit check, the partner must make an aid another check, using the business’s primary skill. 2 A specialist adds a bonus of +2 if his specialized skill is the business’s primary skill. He adds a +1 bonus if his specialized skill is one of the business’s secondary skills.
Once the check is made, subtract 25 to derive the profit rating. A negative profit rating at this point indicates a loss for that term, whereas a positive profit rating indicates a profit. The actual profit or loss in gold
pieces depends on the risk level of the business. A low-risk business is more likely to make a profit, but the profit will be measurably smaller than what a high-risk business could attain. On the other hand, a high-risk business that doesn’t make a profit might instead have a significant loss. Table 6–6: Profit or Loss By Risk Risk Level Profit Low Profit rating × 5 gp Medium Profit rating × 20 gp High Profit rating × 50 gp
For example, Garrick is a 7th-level character running the local town tavern. He spends more than 40 hours working each week, has 10 ranks in both Profession (cook) and Sense Motive, is a member of the local business guild, and has a business partner (his wife) who helps him each week. The tavern is a medium-resource, high-risk endeavor, so his total modifier on his profit check is +3. With his 10 ranks in Profession (innkeeper) and his +2 Wisdom bonus, he gets a 25 on his profit check if he takes 10, which is a 0 profit rating, so his business neither gains nor loses money for the term. If he had achieved a 30 result on the profit check (a good month, indeed), his profit rating would be 5 (30 minus 25), and his profit would be 250 gp (5 × 50 gp). If the profit rating results in a loss, the owner must cover those losses, either from his own pocket, contacting a moneylender, or making arrangements with his debtors, the details of which are left to the DM. If the losses cannot be covered then the business fails (see Failed Businesses, below).
MAINTAINING A BUSINESS Once the business is located, any necessary buildings are purchased or bought, and at least the minimum number of employees is hired, the business is ready to go. The benefits of operating a business are detailed in the previous section; this section covers the rules for maintaining a business. Cost of Operation All businesses have a cost of operation. This cost includes employee salaries, repairs to buildings, regularly purchased supplies, taxes, fines, and anything else that might crop up during the day-to-day process.
pqs NEW FEAT: BUSINESS SAVVY You are particularly gifted when it comes to setting up and maintaining profitable businesses. Prerequisite: Negotiator. Benefits: You gain a +2 bonus on all profit checks. In addition, you get a +1 luck bonus on all attack rolls, saving throws, and checks when resolving any business-related events.
184
A business owner catches up on his bookkeeping
pqs
The owner of a business pays the cost of operation during each term, but that cost is incorporated into the profit check. The base cost of operating a business is determined by its resource needs, but occasionally there might be additional expenses for a business beyond the base cost, including the salaries of additional employees or specialists, costs arising from business-related events, and any upgrades purchased in the current term.
CHAPTER 6
Specialist Employees As a business grows and becomes more profitable, the owner can hire specialists to further enhance the business’s profit. Having a specialist on staff grants a bonus on profit checks. A specialist must have at least 8 ranks in the relevant Profession or Craft skill. If the specialist’s skill is one of the business’s secondary skills, it gains a flat +1 bonus on its profit check. If the specialist’s skill and the business’s primary skill are the same, the business gains a +2 bonus on profit checks. Specialists put an additional drain on other employees, unfortunately, since they demand more from them. A business can support one specialist at a rate of 10 gp per month. Each additional specialist requires more employees, so the cost of each additional specialist with the associated employees is 20 gp more than the previous specialist. Thus a business that employs three primary-skill special- Selling a Business ists would pay a total of 90 gp per month on specialist A business owner might decide to sell a profitable business to a prospective individual or group. An owner who sells wages (10 gp for one, 30 gp for the second, and 50 gp for the third) and gain a total bonus of +6 on the profit check his business gains half his initial investment, adjusted by from those specialists. the recent profit or loss. Hiring new employees and specialists is a common tactic for successful businesses. Salaries for these addi- Failed Businesses tional employees (standard and specialists alike) represent A business that goes bankrupt loses all its employees additional costs over and above the business’s normal cost immediately and can no longer be used to make profit of operation. checks. The owner might find himself in dire straits if he still owes moneylenders or other creditors money; Upgrading a Business depending on their patience and temperament they might An owner can take steps such as buying the latest equipor might not attempt to collect on what’s owed them by ment, refurbishing buildings, or ordering a new brand of seizing property or threatening the owner. In such a situale to improve his business, and these upgrades usually ation, the business is sold for one-quarter of the original have a positive effect on the profitability of the enterprise. initial investment, any loss is covered from those proceeds, Upgrades are essentially additional capital investments and the owner retains the remainder (if any). If no money is left after the losses are covered, the owner could find in the business. If the business owner invests 25% of the himself indebted to moneylenders. initial capital cost of the business, he rolls 1d4 and adds the result as a permanent bonus on future profit checks. A If the owner doesn’t owe anyone money, he can attempt business owner can only benefit from one upgrade every to launch a new business (or even relaunch his prior failed business). He must pay the initial investment as normal, three months. but if he already owns buildings, he obviously doesn’t have Business Partners to repurchase them. Additional business partners can also enhance an operation’s profitability. Business partners must be from BUSINESS EVENTS one of four categories: they can be hired specialists, Businesses don’t operate in a vacuum. They require they can be cohorts, they can be allied NPCs, or they customers, investors, and even competition to thrive.
CHARACTERS
can be other player characters. Only hired specialists put an additional drain on the maintenance costs, but all four types are within their rights to receive a share of the profits. The details for this profit sharing are up to the owner and partners to work out, but usually, the owner gets a full share and any partners get a half share. In cases where the partner had an equal hand in setting up the business, he can demand up to a full share as well. When it comes time to make a profit check, one of the business partners makes the check, using the appropriate skill check modifier. The rest of the business partners can use the aid another action to grant +2 bonuses on the profit check, as long as they spent at least 8 hours a week during the current term helping on site at the business. Business partners are not required to help in this manner. Hiring a specialist to be a business partner is an excellent idea for a PC who wants to start a business as an additional source of income but doesn’t want to be tied down to the business. By having the specialist make the profit checks, the PC is free to do as he pleases with his time. If he’s available to help out, he can try to aid another on the profit check; if not, the specialist can still handle the business on her own.
185
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
Since the business must be exposed enough for these factors to influence it, it is also vulnerable to other influences. Some of these business-related events can increase profitability for a term, but most present challenges that must be overcome if the business is to survive. Consult Table 6–7 to see what sort of business-related events occur. Roll once per term for low- and medium-risk businesses, and twice per term for high-risk businesses. The timing of the events is left to you, but you should strive to have them occur at times when the owner is able to react to the event. If an owner is away for extended periods of time, there’s little he can do and he simply has to accept what chance has to offer. As the business continues to grow and more events occur, try to weave them together so that they build logically from one another. For example, if you keep rolling up robberies, perhaps a mastermind who has a grievance against the business owner is orchestrating the thefts. To roll up a business-related encounter, roll d20, modified by circumstances as shown in Table 6–8 (apply one modifier from each section of the table, as applicable). A result of higher than 20 is possible. Descriptions and definitions of the entries on Table 6–7 follow. Table 6–7: Business-Related Encounters d20 Encounter 1 or less Monster 2 Banditry 3 Wounded adventurer 4 Bad weather 5 Natural disaster 6 Fire 7 Burglary 8 Accident 9 Irate customer 10 No encounter 11 Bad competition 12 Infestation 13 Employee unrest 14 Spell gone awry 15 Sabotage 16 Unexpected taxes 17 Protection racket 18 Mistaken identity 19 Important customer 20 Spectacle 21 Good competition 22 Booming business 23 Unusual patron 24 Franchise offer 25 or more Admirer
186
Accident: Nearby construction or a traffic accident impacts the business in some way; perhaps a partially completed building collapses onto the owner’s shop, or maybe an out-of-control carriage crashes onto the front porch. The damage to the business caused by the accident costs 2d6×100 gp to repair.
Admirer: A friendly character (usually an NPC with class levels) with a CR equal to 2 less than the owner’s level approaches the owner with a request. She might wish to hire the owner, tell him a rumor he heard, or could simply be looking for friendship or advice. Bad Competition: A second business front with nearly identical services opens nearby and begins to attract away customers and undercut prices. Unlike the good competition encounter, the owner of the competing business in this case nurtures a grudge against the owner and deliberately tries to bring grief to his establishment. If the two businesses are taverns, the competitor might hire a druid to cause a rat infestation in the owner’s bar. If the two businesses are fighting schools, the competitor might challenge the owner to a fight and then cheat in the duel. Until the bad competition leaves, the business owner takes a –1d6 penalty on profit checks. Bad competition remains until the owner makes a profit in three successive months. Bad Weather: A particularly bad few days (or weeks) of weather cause minor damage to the business, necessitating repairs for 3d6×10 gp. Banditry: A group of bandits targets the owner’s establishment. The bandits might attempt to set up a protection racket, but they are more likely to simply try to assault the business and rob it blind. The bandits consist of a number of thugs with a combined EL equal to the owner’s character level –2 (minimum EL 1). Booming Business: For whatever reason, business is booming this term. Apply a +4 bonus on the roll for the term’s profit check. Burglary: A thief tries to break into the business and rob it. The thief is working alone, and he should have two fewer class levels than the owner. The level of his success
Establishing a franchise grants a bonus on the business’s next profit check equal to +5 per 1,000 gp donated. Each profit check thereafter, the bonus decreases by 1 per term until it reaches +1, at which point it becomes a permanent +1 bonus on profit checks. Good Competition: A similar business opens nearby. Unlike the bad competition encounter, though, the owner of this competing business merely likes what the business owner is doing and is trying his own hand at it. Good competition lasts for 2d4 months, during which time the business owner subtracts 1d6 from his profit check. From then on, he adds 1d8 to his profit check. Important Customer: Someone important visits the business. This could be one of the owner’s guildmasters, a local politician, or a famous bard or hero. The visitor’s patronage itself doesn’t impact profits, but the owner might be able to make an ally or contact out of the visitor. More important, word of the visit spreads and a number of customers visit the business as a result, granting a +2 bonus on profit checks for the next 1d4 months. Infestation: The business has become infested with rats, vermin, or another undesirable pest. Each term the infestation is allowed to continue, apply a cumulative –1 penalty on all profit checks. The infestation can be removed with a successful DC 25 Survival check and 2d6×10 gp of supplies; at the DM’s option, certain spells
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
obviously depends on what sort of defenses and guardians the owner has established; if he has none, the thief steals any gold kept on site, along with 2d6×100 gp in goods and supplies. Employee Unrest: The business’s employees are unhappy. They shirk their duties, the quality of their work suffers, and the atmosphere at work is poor. The unrest can be mollified with a DC 30 Diplomacy check or a pay raise. Each pay raise adds additional overhead of 5 gp per employee per term. Failure to address the concerns of the unhappy employees results in a cumulative –1 penalty on profit checks each term; this penalty is removed completely once the employees are happy again. Fire: Fire is a danger that can threaten an entire city. This could be a fi re on par with a forest fi re (Dungeon Master’s Guide page 87) that the owner must help fight in order to save his business, or it could be a new fire that starts on site. Arson is a possibility in this case; if no one’s around to stop the fire, the business burns to the ground. The business can no longer make profit checks and must be rebuilt. Franchise Offer: The business owner is approached by another entrepreneur and given a franchise offer. For an investment of no less than 1,000 gp, the entrepreneur can establish a linked business elsewhere in the nation (or perhaps in the same city, if the city is large enough).
Illus. by F. Vohwinkel
A peddler’s cart crashing through the front window makes for a bad day at the bookstore
187
Illus. by F. Vohwinkel
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
188
(such as repel vermin cast multiple times) can cure the infestation as well. Penalties accrued by infestation diminish at the same rate, lowering by 1 point per term as customers slowly become convinced the infestation is over. Irate Customer: A customer who has a bone to pick with the owner visits the business. The customer’s grievance might or might not be legitimate, but it nonetheless requires immediate attention. The customer’s initial attitude is unfriendly; if the owner doesn’t adjust this to at least friendly with a successful Diplomacy or Intimidate check (or with appropriate magic), the customer leaves the business and spreads the word of his poor treatment throughout the region. The next 2d4 profit checks take a –4 penalty as a result. Mistaken Identity: The business owner or one of his employees is mistaken for someone else—famous or infamous. This has no effect on the business’s profit, but might cause further developments as the DM sees fit. Monster: A monster native to the region attacks the business. The attack could be against the employees, the building, or both. The monster’s CR should be equal to the business owner’s character level. If it is not defeated, the damage it causes results in a –6 penalty on profit checks until repairs costing 4d10×100 gp are made. Natural Disaster: A natural disaster strikes; this could be a tornado, an earthquake, a blizzard, or anything else appropriate to the region. The disaster is devastating not
only to the business, but to everyone else in the region. As a result, profit checks take a –8 penalty for this month. Each month that follows, this penalty decreases by 2 until four terms have passed and the penalty is removed altogether. No Encounter: Nothing unusual happens this term. Protection Racket: The business owner is approached by an intimidating group of thugs and made to understand that if the owner pays a fee of 3d6×10 gp per term, the business won’t have an accident. Paying this money only prevents trouble from this particular group; others can still rob or menace the business. Failure to pay these demands or deal with the group behind the racket ensures that something bad happens each term. Roll an additional business-related encounter each term the fee isn’t paid, rerolling anything with a beneficial result. Sabotage: This could be as simple as petty vandalism or as dangerous as a legitimate attempt to destroy the business. The business owner should make a special profit check to determine how bad the damage is, opposed by the saboteur’s Disable Device check (which should be equal to the business owner’s base profit check). Success indicates the attempt was thwarted in time, but failure indicates damage. The profit check for this term takes a –4 penalty. Spectacle: An unusual form of public entertainment performs near the business for several days—a talented bard, a street circus, a flashy magic display, or a parade, for
Gronka tells Krusk to mind his own business
WHAT IS A TEAMWORK BENEFIT? Experienced D&D players understand the value of specific tactics that take advantage of teamwork. However, teamwork also has a more general benefit. Once characters have trained with specific comrades, they’re attuned to the nuances of how they fight, move, and communicate. Characters who have spent time working as a team can derive a benefit simply from having their comrades nearby. This teamwork benefit grants an expanded use of a skill, a
CHAPTER 6
TEAMWORK BENEFITS In D&D, PCs rarely stand alone. The wizard relies on the doughty fighter to intercept charging enemies, and the fighter in turn depends on the cleric’s healing magic when the battle is over. But over time, characters who adventure shoulder to shoulder together can realize teamwork benefits based on their long history together. Likewise, PCs who adventure together can bind a guardian spirit to their group, further strengthening their ability to function as a team.
bonus on certain checks, or a battlefield action otherwise unavailable to the team members. To qualify for a teamwork benefit, PCs must meet two broad categories of requirements: training time and prerequisites. First, the characters seeking the benefit must jointly practice techniques relevant to the benefit for at least two weeks before acquiring the benefit. This two-week training period must be repeated whenever a new character joins the group, as the newcomer becomes accustomed to the operating procedures of veteran team members. Second, some teamwork benefits have prerequisites such as skill ranks, base attack bonus, or feats. A prerequisite can take one of two different forms. Task Leader Prerequisites: These requirements must be met by at least one character on the team. If only one character qualifies, and that character leaves the team, the group loses the teamwork benefit until the character returns or is replaced by another character who meets the same prerequisites. The designation of task leader can vary from one benefit to another; a character who serves as the task leader for the Infiltration teamwork benefit might be a different individual from the one who functions as the task leader for the Ranged Precision benefit. In addition to the indicated prerequisites, a task leader must have an Intelligence score of at least 8. (While a task leader need not be a genius, nor has he particular need of a strong personality, he must be at least reasonably capable of communicating his thoughts to others.) Team Member Prerequisites: Every character on the team must meet these requirements. Any character who joins the team must meet the prerequisites in order for the team to enjoy the teamwork benefit. For example, the Infi ltration teamwork benefit has a task leader prerequisite of 8 ranks in both Hide and Move Silently, and a team member prerequisite of 1 rank in Hide or Move Silently. This means that at least one character in the group must have 8 or more ranks in each of the two skills, while each other character in the team must have at least 1 rank in either of the two skills. When the team is sneaking around, the task leader directs her less adept comrades in stealth techniques, covering any extra noise with environmental sounds, and so on. A team (see The Team Roster, below) gets one teamwork benefit for every 4 Hit Dice the lowest-level member of the
CHARACTERS
example. The spectacle brings out the crowd; the business gains a +2 bonus on this term’s profit check. Spell Gone Awry: A spellcaster has foolishly experimented with a spell or had a mishap with a scroll. The business might have to contend with a rampaging summoned creature, the aftermath of a fireball, or a squad of the city guard under a confusion effect. Unexpected Taxes: The local government, either having fallen on hard times or having succumbed to greed, raises taxes for a short period of time. For the next 1d6 terms, the owner takes a –1d4 penalty on profit checks. Unusual Patron: The store has attracted the attention of a particularly unusual customer; a dragon, an outsider, or something equally exotic decides to visit the store once or twice per term. The novelty (or notoriety) of this development grants the business a permanent +1 bonus on profit checks, as long as the unusual patron continues to support the business. Wounded Adventurer: A wounded adventurer staggers into the business seeking aid and shelter. The adventurer might or might not be what he seems; he could herald the arrival of bandits or a monster, or he might himself be a bandit trying to con the owner out of some cash.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs CREATURES AND TEAMWORK Creatures with an Intelligence score of 1 or 2 can be included on a team only if they learn the teamwork trick. Creatures that don’t have an Intelligence score can never be part of a team.
Teaching an animal the teamwork trick requires a DC 20 Handle Animal check made as part of teamwork training. This trick allows the animal to be part of a team and thus benefit from any teamwork benefits enjoyed by the team. The animal must still meet any team member prerequisite required by the benefit.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
189
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
190
team has, so it earns a new teamwork benefit whenever that character must train with the other characters on the team character attains a new level evenly divisible by 4. If that for at least two weeks, learning the nuances and standard operating procedures of the team. This training can occur character’s level later drops below the required level (due to energy drain or being brought back from the dead), the during the training time required to gain the benefits of team retains all its current teamwork benefits but doesn’t a new level. gain a new one until the lowest-level character regains his A character can join an adventuring party without joinor her lost level(s) plus four more levels. ing the team that includes other members of the party. Anytime a team gains a new teamwork benefit, it also In this case, he doesn’t gain any teamwork benefits, but has the option to swap out a previously known teamwork neither does his lack of prerequisites count against the benefit for a new one for which the team qualifies. In effect, team’s qualification for the benefits. the team can elect to lose one teamwork benefit in order A character leaves a team at his option or by consensus to gain two others. This is most often done when the team of the other members of that team. roster has changed in such a way as to make a previously TEAMWORK BENEFIT known teamwork benefit no longer useful. Unless otherwise specified, each teamwork benefit DESCRIPTIONS Here is the format for teamwork benefit descriptions. can be taken only once. The teamwork benefit applies whenever the characters on the team can communicate with each other, whether verbally, with gestures, or by Benefit Name Description of what the benefit does or represents. magical means. Training: A brief discussion of the training procedure THE TEAM ROSTER required to acquire the benefit. Teamwork benefits are based on the notion that once Task Leader Prerequisite: A base attack bonus, a feat characters have spent time training with their comrades, or feats, a minimum number of ranks in one or more they respond instinctively to subtle changes in body lanskills, a class feature, or some other requirement that at guage and can anticipate their comrades’ likely moves. least one character on the team must have in order for A group of people (PCs or NPCs) must train together the team to acquire this benefit. This entry is absent if for at least two weeks before all members of the group a teamwork benefit has no task leader prerequisite. A are eligible to share the same teamwork benefits. The benefit can have more than one task leader prerequisite; the same character must meet all task leader prerequisites PCs will undoubtedly occupy most of the positions for a particular benefit. on the team, but cohorts, animal companions, paladin mounts, familiars, and recurring NPC allies can also be Team Member Prerequisite: These requirements members of a team. must be met by every member of the team in order for A team must have at least two members and no more than the team to acquire this benefit. This entry is absent if a eight. To join a team, a character must have an Intelligence teamwork benefit has no team member prerequisite. A score of 3 or higher. benefit can have more than one team member prerequisite. To maintain their teamwork benefits, the characters on a If another teamwork benefit is given as a team member team must train together for at least four one-week periods prerequisite, all members of the team must qualify for per year. These training periods need not be consecutive the prerequisite teamwork benefit before the new benefit can be acquired. and can happen at the same time as training to earn the Benefit: What the teamwork benefit enables the team new class features of a given level (as described above), so in most cases PCs won’t have to spend additional time to members to do. keep their teamwork skills sharp. Tips: Advice for players and DMs using this teamwork To add a new character to a team (often because a benefit. previous character died or otherwise left the group), that Door Procedures pqs Your team is accomplished at identifying and eliminating traps and other threats at doors. DESIGNING YOUR OWN TEAMWORK BENEFITS When designing your own teamwork benefits, ask yourself: Is Training: By studying common door traps, practicing this a specific tactic, or is it an accumulation of countless small listening techniques, and remaining alert for tiny clues benefits? If the benefit you imagine is analogous to a specific that precede a triggered trap, you gradually develop a sequence of actions, it’s not a teamwork benefit, just a smart routine that enables your team to examine a door with tactic. If the benefit emerges from familiarity among the characters and a shared understanding of general techniques, then minimum risk to the team. it’s a teamwork benefit. Task Leader Prerequisite: Listen 8 ranks, Search pqs 8 ranks.
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
Team Member Prerequisite: Listen 1 rank or Search Task Leader Prerequisite: Heal 8 ranks. 1 rank. Team Member Prerequisite: Heal 1 rank. Benefit: When listening at or searching a door or similar Benefit: If two team members each attempt to stabilize portal, the task leader gains a +1 circumstance bonus on his the same dying creature in the same round, the second Listen and Search checks for each team member within attempt automatically succeeds. Tips: The fastest members of the team can reach a fallen 10 feet of the door. If the task leader chooses to take 20 on a Listen or Search comrade most quickly. check made at a door, he can do so in half the normal time (as if he had made ten attempts, rather than twenty). Friendly Fire Evasion By attuning yourself to minute, almost subliminal changes Tips: The door procedures teamwork benefit is a good in your environment, you get just enough warning to avoid way to quickly adjudicate each door you approach in a damaging area spells cast by your allies. dungeon. You can quickly make the rolls and get on with Training: During the training procedure for this benefit, the encounter on the other side. Be ready to make these the spellcasters on your team cast lightning bolts, fireballs, rolls when you find a closed door in the dungeon. Then flame strikes, and other area spells in their arsenal, and other make the Listen check or the Search check, and either team members stand on the fringes of the spells’ area, their deal with the trap you find or get ready to open the door. senses perked for the whiff of brimstone, the crackle of Keep in mind that you might be able to take 10 or take 20 static electricity, or the barely audible hum that occurs an on these checks. instant before such spells go off. Then you practice ducking, Field Medic Training dodging, and covering so that you avoid the damage from Your comrades can quickly stabilize grievous wounds those spells. so that a fallen ally doesn’t succumb to blood loss and Task Leader Prerequisite: Spellcraft 4 ranks, evatrauma. sion ability. Training: To gain this benefit, your team receives Team Member Prerequisite: Base Reflex save +2, instruction from accomplished healers and practices on Spellcraft 1 rank. the wounded.
Illus. by F. Vohwinkel
A team trained in door procedures can pass most any portal without risking harm
191
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
Benefit: You gain the evasion ability (see page 41 of the Player’s Handbook), but only concerning spells cast by your team members. Tips: Use this teamwork benefit to keep tough characters in the front line despite allied damaging spells raining down around them. Of course, you still need a pretty good Reflex save bonus to take full advantage of this benefit.
192
Benefit: Your team can move at full speed without taking a –5 penalty on Hide and Move Silently checks. Other penalties (such as from difficult terrain) still apply, and you take the normal penalties on Hide or Move Silently checks while attacking, running, or charging. Team members are always visible to each other despite their Hide check results and the presence of anything less than total concealment (although cover might still block line of sight between team members). If you move to a position where none of your comrades can see or contact you, you lose the teamwork benefit at the start of your next turn and don’t count as part of the team until you reestablish contact with at least one member. Tips: If you’re part of an infiltration team, keep in mind that you can take 10 on your Hide and Move Silently checks whenever you aren’t being threatened or distracted. It’s often easiest to just tell the DM what the lowest Hide and Move Silently check results on the team are. Those check results set the DC for NPCs’ Spot and Listen checks.
Gaze Aversion When facing a monster with a gaze attack (such as a medusa), you are adept at avoiding its dangerous gaze. Training: Your team practices concise verbal descriptions, often in code, and maneuvering according to those descriptions. Eventually you’re able to avoid looking at your target except when it’s absolutely necessary, keeping track of the battle through the shouted instructions of your comrades. Task Leader Prerequisite: Spot 8 ranks. Team Member Prerequisite: Spot 1 rank. Benefit: As long as at least one team member is looking directly at the gaze-attack monster, any team Invisibility Sweep member averting his eyes need not make a save against If you’re aware of the presence of an unseen enemy, you the gaze attack. can quickly move through an area and pinpoint your Tips: To make this teamwork benefit as effective as foe’s location. Training: You practice finding invisible enemies possible, it’s best if the spotter is beyond the area the gaze attack affects, is naturally immune to the effect of by swinging your weapons through empty spaces and the gaze, or at least has the best saving throw among making sudden movements that an invisible foe wouldn’t anticipate. More important, you quickly develop a shortthe team members. hand way of describing the location of an unseen enemy Infiltration you have pinpointed—“At my 4 o’clock, 10 feet out,” for You are adept at moving silently and unseen. You point example. Eventually, members of your team can quickly and effectively target a specific (apparently empty) square out noisy ground to your comrades, identify good hiding based on your verbal description. places for one another, and otherwise move as unobtruTask Leader Prerequisite: Blind-Fight. sively as possible. You dart ahead while your teammates Benefit: Each team member can check for the preswatch for enemies, then you cover your comrades while ence of an invisible enemy by groping into four adjacent they advance. While this teamwork benefit doesn’t help 5-foot squares within reach, making touch attacks into much amid the tumult of a pitched battle, you’re able those squares as described on page 295 of the Dungeon to sneak behind enemy lines to attack enemy leaders, Master’s Guide. Doing so is a standard action. If one team sabotage siege engines, and otherwise give your army the member pinpoints the location of an invisible enemy upper hand before the trumpets sound. Training: Infiltration training involves hours of practice (whether through groping, Spot and Listen checks, or sneaking as a group. Elves and other woodland denizens other means), every other team member within earshot often play elaborate games of hide-and-seek (with the seekalso has that enemy pinpointed until that enemy moves into a different square. (Pinpointed invisible enemies still ing team getting useful practice as scouts). Subterranean gain the benefit of total concealment; see page 152 of the races stalk the caverns and tunnels of their realms, practicPlayer’s Handbook.) ing the art of hiding in a pitch-black environment. With practice, members of an infiltration team get good at sharing hiding spaces, darting from cover to cover, and timing their Joint Bull Rush movements to be as silent and stealthy as possible. Shoulder to shoulder with your allies, you can blast into Task Leader Prerequisite: Hide 8 ranks, Move Silently the ranks of your enemies, knocking them back with your 8 ranks. combined force. Team Member Prerequisite: Hide 1 rank or Move Training: You and your teammates practice charging Silently 1 rank. wooden tackling dummies all at the same time, moving
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
in lockstep and delivering a powerful push at the same Snap Out of It Because you know your fellow team members so well, you can moment. Eventually you get so good that you leave only help them shake off the effects of magical compulsions. splintered and sagging dummies in your wake. Training: Your team is trained in a variety of effects Task Leader Prerequisite: Improved Bull Rush. Benefit: To perform a joint bull rush, all the team that intentionally shake the psyche of your comrades— everything from a stinging slap to the face to an imploring members involved must ready the bull rush action until “Remember us, Regdar? We’re your friends. . . .” the turn of the member with the slowest initiative. Then Task Leader Prerequisite: Concentration 8 ranks or all the bull rushing team members move to their target at Iron Will. the same time and make a single bull rush attempt using Team Member Prerequisite: Concentration 1 rank. the Strength bonus of the strongest team member. Each Benefit: If a team member is known to be under the additional team member involved in the joint bull rush sway of a compulsion effect, an adjacent team member applies his or her Strength bonus (minimum +1). The can spend a full-round action to grant that team member team members must end their movement adjacent to one a new save against the compulsion effect (as the rogue’s another, and they all provoke attacks of opportunity from the defender (although the defender can only make a single slippery mind class feature, except that the second save attack unless he has the Combat Reflexes feat). need not happen in the second round of the effect). No character can grant another team member more Joint Grapple Escape than one extra save against any one compulsion effect. You use nonverbal cues to time your struggles against a However, multiple team members can all attempt to help grappling enemy, applying force and leverage at just the the same character. right moment to escape the clutches of your foe. Tips: This benefit only works if you know that your Training: In a series of wrestling matches, you practeam members have been subverted by a compulsion tice techniques of suddenly shifting your weight and effect. Spellcraft checks can identify that a spell such as applying maximum effort just as a comrade outside the dominate person has been cast, and a Sense Motive check can detect that the behavior of one of your team members grapple makes a similar effort—or at least distracts your is being influenced by an enchantment. opponent. Eventually, your timing improves to the point where you and your comrades are working in concert with split-second timing. Spell Barrage By coordinating the release of your spells, you’re able to Task Leader Prerequisite: Base attack bonus +4 or catch your foes when they’re unable to evade the effects. Improved Grapple. Training: By observing your fellow spellcasters as Benefit: If you successfully use the aid another action to assist an adjacent team member’s next grapple check or they’re working magic, you’re able to time your spells so Escape Artist check to escape from a grapple, you provide they finish when your enemies are off-balance from the your teammate with a bonus on that check equal to +4 or first spell. your Strength modifier, whichever is higher. Task Leader Prerequisite: Spellcraft 8 ranks. Team Member Prerequisite: Spellcraft 2 ranks. Ranged Precision Benefit: This benefit is triggered when a team member You know the timing of your comrades’ attacks so well first casts a spell requiring a Reflex save. Whether they succeed or fail on the save, all enemies within its area take a that you can shift to the side for a moment, letting ranged –2 penalty on Reflex saves for each subsequent Reflex save attacks fly past you and into your enemies. Training: You and the rest of the team watch each other attempted that round against an effect created by another shoot ranged weapons, memorizing how much time it member of the same team. Tips: Obviously, the more Reflex-save-requiring area takes to draw an arrow from a quiver, nock it, aim, and spells you can cast during the round, the better. Consider shoot. Then you internally count to measure the time giving team members that are secondary spellcasters or between arrows, shifting yourself when you know an have ranks in Use Magic Device a scroll or wand with an arrow is being fired so you don’t get in the way. area spell for such occasions. Task Leader Prerequisite: Base attack bonus +4, Precise Shot. Spellcaster Guardian Team Member Prerequisite: Base attack bonus +2. You have a keen sense of the timing of the spellcasters on Benefit: The penalty for firing a ranged weapon into your team, so you can often protect them from enemies a melee is cut in half (from –4 to –2) if every ally in the when their spells are about to go off. melee is on your team. The AC benefit your foe gets from Training: Over a period of weeks, you closely observe cover is likewise cut in half (from +4 to +2) if that cover your comrades as they cast spells, noting the exact gestures consists solely of team members.
193
Illus. by K. Andrasofsky
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
and phrases they use when they are at their most distracted. You learn the idiosyncrasies of your allies’ spellcasting techniques so well that you know exactly where they are in the spellcasting process just by watching and listening to them, even if you don’t know what the words and gestures mean. Task Leader Prerequisite: Combat Reflexes, Spellcraft 4 ranks. Team Member Prerequisite: Dexterity 13 or Spellcraft 1 rank. Benefit: If a spellcaster on your team provokes attacks of opportunity by casting a spell, a team member adjacent to the spellcaster can interpose herself between the spellcaster and one or more attackers at the last moment, taking upon herself attacks of opportunity meant for the spellcaster. The team member can intercept a number of attacks of opportunity equal to 1 + her Dexterity bonus. Resolve each attack as normal, using the interposing team member’s Armor Class. If the attack hits, it damages the interposing character but doesn’t distract the spellcaster.
194
Superior Flank Your team is good at harrying foes by surrounding them. If two of you get into flanking positions, you can both time your attacks to take maximum advantage of the enemy’s divided attention. Enemies get so distracted that every attacker benefits. Training: This teamwork benefit happens only after all the members of the team spend countless hours practicing two-on-one, three-on-one, and other unbalanced melee combats. Eventually the team members develop
split-second timing and a keen perception of where the enemy is concentrating his defensive efforts. Task Leader Prerequisite: Sneak attack +4d6. Team Member Prerequisite: Base attack bonus +3. Benefit: Whenever two members of your team flank the same enemy, all members of the team can make melee attacks against that enemy as if they also flanked her. Creatures that can’t be flanked are unaffected. Furthermore, if at least two members of your team are flanking a foe who has the improved uncanny dodge ability, add together the rogue levels of all team members engaged in melee with that foe to determine whether she can be flanked. If the sum of your teammates’ rogue levels is four more than the foe has Hit Dice, all members of your team can flank that foe. Tips: If your team has this benefit, you get the +2 bonus for flanking on your melee attacks more frequently. You’ll want to study how to flank unusually large creatures (see page 153 of the Player’s Handbook).
ACQUIRING A COMPANION SPIRIT The process of attracting a companion spirit begins with a group of at least two and no more than eight creatures gathering for a brief magic ritual. The creatures in the group must each have at least 4 Hit Dice and an Intelligence score of 3 or higher. Other than the Hit Dice requirement, the requirements for connecting
Team members use a spell barrage to cut off their opponents’ escape
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
with a companion spirit are the same as for establishing a the creature’s joining the team. The reagent cost for the team roster, and in the vast majority of cases, the PCs will ritual is based on the total team membership, however, use the same roster for both team-based benefits. No creature including the new member. can be connected to more than one companion spirit, since A creature can disconnect from a companion spirit the second spirit won’t establish a connection to a creature by spending an hour in meditation and burning a small already under another spirit’s companionship. amount (50 gp worth) of the same reagents that first attracted the companion spirit—in reverse order. Doing so The hour-long ritual to attract and bind a companion spirit requires one of the creatures on the team to succeed requires no skill in Spellcraft or specific ritual trappings. on a DC 15 Spellcraft check. The ritual is simple enough Once the reagents have been burned and the meditation that a PC can simply take 10 on it—there’s no consecompleted, the creature no longer has any of the benefits quence for failure other than a wasted hour. By burning of the team. a series of rare reagents (worth 300 gp per team member), the team convinces a companion spirit to approach. The Improving a Companion Spirit exact order of the reagents burned determines the kind A companion spirit can become more powerful, just as the creatures under its companionship improve. of companion spirit that approaches, chosen from those Periodically, the team can gather together and repeat described below. the ritual that connected them to the companion spirit Once attracted, the companion spirit connects to each in the first place. When they do so, they get a chance character in turn, taking a measure of their life force (300 to exchange more of their life energy (represented as XP each). Once the companion spirit has bound itself to experience points) for greater magical benefits from the team, the ritual is nearly complete. By consensus, the the companion spirit. team members choose the companion spirit’s characterThe team has an opportunity to perform the ritual and istics, selecting one from the list of general qualities and one from the list of specific qualities. Once the team makes gain a new magical benefit every time the lowest-level this choice, they gain the 1st-tier benefits associated with creature on the team gains 3 Hit Dice, starting at 7th each chosen quality, and the ritual is complete. level. If that character’s level drops below the required level (due to death or level drain), the team retains its Companion Spirits and the Team companion spirit benefits but won’t gain new ones until The magical benefits the companion spirit provides are the lowest-level character regains his or her lost levels plus three more levels. useful but not flashy or overtly powerful. These qualities The rituals require more expensive reagents and a greater encourage teamwork among team members by using XP cost as the creatures in the team gain levels. the companion spirit as a conduit for magical energy or providing a floating bonus that the team decides jointly Table 6–9: Companion Spirit Ritual Costs how to spend. Lowest-Level Reagent Cost XP Cost Unless stated otherwise, using a companion spirit’s Character (per team (per team benefit is a free action usable once per team member’s member) member) Benefit turn. The benefit doesn’t manifest itself in any visible or 4th 300 gp 300 XP 1st-tier 7th 700 gp 750 XP 2nd-tier audible way unless stated. 10th 1,500 gp 1,200 XP 3rd-tier Changing the Team: As long as the companion spirit 13th 3,000 gp 1,650 XP 4th-tier is connected to fewer than eight creatures, a character 16th 7,500 gp 2,100 XP 5th-tier can join a team under the companionship of a spirit by performing the ritual at the highest level the team has attained (according to Table 6–9 below). Only the creature Companion Spirit Benefits joining the team must pay the XP cost; the other team When a team first connects with a companion spirit, the team chooses a specific quality and a general quality, members need only be present for the ritual and assent to
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs COMPANION SPIRIT PERSONALITIES Companion spirits are intentionally without personalities of their own, and they don’t directly interact with the PCs. In a group full of characters, familiars, animal companions, cohorts, and other NPCs, the disembodied personality of the companion spirit is just one more voice in the tumult. But if the group wants to interact with its companion spirit, you can have it communicate in some fashion and give it whatever personality you wish.
Likewise, the companion spirits described below aren’t directly connected to alignments, deities, or organizations because such powers already have instruments to aid or thwart the PCs. If you give companion spirits personalities and have them interact with PCs, however, you might consider going all the way and providing them with goals and motives of their own.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
195
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
196
gaining the 1st-tier benefit from both characteristics. and another for 4 rounds. You instinctively sense when Each time thereafter that the team performs the ritual to a team member is scrying you, so you know it’s safe to improve the companion spirit (according to the schedule intentionally fail the Will save the spell requires. shown in Table 6–9: Companion Spirit Ritual Costs), the spirit receives the next higher tier benefit from the two Magical Storage Benefits Your companion spirit stores magical energy that can be benefit categories that it already possesses. used by all members of the team. Table 6–10: Companion Spirit Benefits 1st-Tier Benefit: Your companion spirit can hold a General Characteristics 1st-level spell, which each team member can release. Communication Provides magical communication Once per day, a spellcaster on the team casts the spell between team members into the companion spirit (ignoring usual targeting Magical storage Stores spells that team members can cast Salve Healing of hit point and ability damage requirements). At any point during the following 24 Transference Share abilities between team members hours, each team member can release the spell as if it were a spell trigger item with a caster level of 1st, but Specific Characteristics the team member need not have spellcasting ability. The Chain Enhances team’s social dominance Corrosion Gives team affinity to acid and poison spellcaster makes all choices the spell requires (other Flame Gives team affinity to fire than targeting) when originally casting the spell. Each Frost Gives team affinity to cold team member can use the stored spell only once, and must Lens Enhances team’s senses and sight abide by targeting restrictions and line of effect when Lightning Gives team affinity to electricity Rampart Enhances team’s defense by reducing casting the spell. You can’t use the companion spirit to number of hits store spells with a target entry of personal, and it won’t Shadow Enhances team’s stealthiness store 0-level spells. Shroud Wards team against death 2nd-Tier Benefit: As above, but your companion Thunder Gives team affinity to sound Tower Enhances team’s defense and resiliency spirit can hold a spell of up to 2nd level, and the caster level of the spell becomes 3rd level. This replaces the GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS 1st-tier benefit. The team chooses one of the following four general char3rd-Tier Benefit: As above, but your companion acteristics for its companion spirit. spirit can hold a spell of up to 3rd level, and the caster level of the spell becomes 5th level. This replaces the Communication Benefits 2nd-tier benefit. Your companion spirit allows communication through the 4th-Tier Benefit: As above, but your companion magical conduits that bind members of your team. spirit can hold a spell of up to 4th level, and the caster 1st-Tier Benefit: Team members can talk to each other level of the spell becomes 7th level. This replaces the as though connected by a message spell (see page 253 of the 3rd-tier benefit. Player’s Handbook) for 1 round per day per each person on 5th-Tier Benefit: As above, but your companion the team, split up as each team member likes. For example, spirit can hold a spell of up to 5th level, and the caster if there are eight people on your team, you can use the level of the spell becomes 9th level. This replaces the message benefit for 3 rounds before an encounter, then 4th-tier benefit. 4 rounds later in the day, and you’d still have 1 round of Salve Benefits communication left. This companion spirit provides the succor of healing, 2nd-Tier Benefit: The team shares a permanent status mending the wounds of those under its protection. effect, as described on page 284 of the Player’s Handbook. 1st-Tier Benefit: Each day, the companion spirit offers 3rd-Tier Benefit: The team can send messages great a pool of curative magic equal to 3 hit points times the distances through the air, as the whispering wind spell, number of team members. For example, a six-creature though the destination of each message is limited to the team would have 18 points of curative magic in its pool. A locations of other team members. The team can send one team member can claim all or part of curative magic as a such message each day for each team member. standard action, healing 1 point of damage for every point 4th-Tier Benefit: Team members can telepathically communicate through a Rary’s telepathic bond for 1 minute taken out of the pool. Once part of the pool is claimed, per day per team member. the size of the pool shrinks accordingly for the rest of 5th-Tier Benefit: Each team member can use scrying (as the day. the spell) on another team member for 1 round per day 2nd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 1st-tier per creature on the team. For example, with six people benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the on your team, you could scry on one of them for 2 rounds pool is equal to 6 hit points times the number of team
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS Illus. by G. Kubic
Vadania leads the ceremony to summon a companion spirit
members. You can also use the companion spirit to heal ability damage, at a cost of 4 hit points of healing for each point of ability damage restored. You can heal either hit point damage or ability damage as a standard action, but not both in the same action. 3rd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 2nd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the pool increases to 9 hit points times the number of team members, and members can claim all or part of the curative magic with a move action. 4th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 3rd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the pool equals 12 hit points times the number of team members. 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 4th-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the pool increases to 15 hit points times the number of team members, and members can claim all or part of the curative magic with a swift action (see page 237). Transference Benefits The tendrils that connect your team together are conduits for a variety of effects. 1st-Tier Benefit: Once per day, anyone on the team can claim all or part of a +4 morale bonus on his or her next
saving throw. Once claimed, the bonus is unavailable to the rest of the team. For example, if you claim a +2 morale bonus on your next save, the other members of your team have only a +2 bonus remaining to be claimed. (Most team members get a consensus before claiming the bonus.) 2nd-Tier Benefit: As a move action, you can voluntarily accept a –2 penalty on your next attack roll to give another team member a +2 circumstance bonus on his or her next attack roll against the same enemy. Your ally doesn’t get the bonus until you actually make the attack with the –2 penalty. 3rd-Tier Benefit: Once per day as a move action, each team member can voluntarily take 10 points of damage to give another team member 10 temporary hit points, which last for up to 10 minutes. 4th-Tier Benefit: Once per day as an immediate action, each team member can grant his save bonus (including any magic, ability score, class, and race-based bonuses) to another team member. You effectively attempt the saving throw on behalf of your comrade, lending them your ability through the companion spirit. (See page 237 for the definition of an immediate action.) 5th-Tier Benefit: Once per day, you can target one team member with a spell and have it take effect on
197
SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS
Illus. by W. O’Connor
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
The team chooses one of the following specific types of companion spirit and gains the accompanying benefits.
Regdar is surrounded by a chain companion spirit’s mist that evokes sadness in his foes
198
Chain Companion Spirit Benefits Chain companion spirits seem interested in interpersonal connections between the creatures in their care, with a strong affinity for social hierarchies and situations of social dominance. 1st-Tier Benefit: Each day, the companion spirit offers a bonus pool on Intimidate checks equal to twice the number of team members. For example, a five-creature team would have a +10 bonus pool. A team member can claim up to half (round up) of the Intimidate bonus by taking a free action to do so prior to making a Intimidate check. Once part of the bonus pool is claimed, the size of the bonus pool shrinks accordingly for the rest of the day. 2nd-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit makes your compulsion spells more convincing, granting +1 to the effective caster level for level-dependent spell variables such as damage dice or range, and for caster level checks on compulsion spells cast by team members. 3rd-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can surround the team members in a thin gray mist that doesn’t obscure sight but evokes great sadness in the team’s enemies (equivalent to a crushing despair spell, except that it’s not a cone). The Will save DC is Charisma-based, and the caster level for the crushing despair effect equals the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member. The mist surrounds each team member that activates it out to a 10-foot radius. Any team member can activate or deactivate the mist with a move action, but the total duration on a teamwide basis is limited to 2 rounds per team member. A team of six could have the mist surround one member for 6 rounds, or they could get 2 rounds each, for example. 4th-Tier Benefit: Once per day, each team member can call on the power of the companion spirit for a lesser geas spell-like ability with a caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member. The save DC is Charisma-based. 5th-Tier Benefit: Once per day, each team member can call on the power of the companion spirit for a dominate person spell-like ability with a caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member. The save DC is Charisma-based.
another team member. The magic is transferred through the companion spirit to the true target. For example, you could cast a touch spell such as cure critical wounds on a nearby ally, using this benefit to heal a gravely injured Corrosion Companion Spirit Benefits The forces of acid and decay are affinities for this comteam member who’s too far away to reach. The spell also panion spirit, which delights in gradual destruction affects the team member you actually touch. You can’t and collapse. use the companion spirit to transfer spells with a target 1st-Tier Benefit: Each team member can call on the entry of personal, however. companion spirit as a standard action to gain resistance to
Frost Companion Spirit Benefits Frost companion spirits crave cold (insofar as companion spirits have motivations). 1st-Tier Benefit: Each team member can call on the companion spirit as a standard action to gain resistance to cold 5 for 10 minutes, as the companion spirit consumes
Lens Companion Spirit Benefits Lens companion spirits are devoted to enhancing the senses of the creatures under their protection. 1st-Tier Benefit: Each day, the companion spirit offers a bonus pool on Spot checks equal to the number of team members. For example, a five-creature team would have a +5 bonus pool. A team member can claim all or part of the Spot bonus by taking a free action to do so prior to making a Spot check. Once part of the bonus pool is claimed, the size of the bonus pool shrinks accordingly for the rest of the day. 2nd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 1st-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit except that the bonus pool can also be spent on Listen and Search checks. 3rd-Tier Benefit: Team members can see each other as long as they have line of effect to one another, even if ambient light conditions wouldn’t allow them to do so. If it’s too dark to see a fellow team member, you can see him and everything within 10 feet of him with black-and-white vision (like darkvision). You can also see everything within 10 feet of yourself as if you had darkvision. 4th-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can render visible an unseen foe (as an invisibility purge spell with a caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member). It can do so for a total of 2 rounds per team member. Any team member can activate or deactivate the invisibility purge effect with a move action, but the total duration on a teamwide basis is limited to 2 rounds per team member. A team of six could have one member as the center of an invisibility purge for 12 rounds, or they could get 2 rounds each, for example. 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 3rd-tier benefit. It is identical to that effect except that you can see everything within 30 feet of another team member, regardless of ambient light conditions, and everything within 30 feet of yourself.
CHAPTER 6
Flame Companion Spirit Benefits The flame spirit has no connection to fire elementals or other denizens of the Elemental Plane of Fire, but it has a fundamental affinity for flame and the destruction it wreaks. 1st-Tier Benefit: Each team member can call on the companion spirit as a standard action to gain resistance to fire 5 for 10 minutes, as the companion spirit consumes some of the fire for itself. Team members activate their resistance on an individual basis and don’t need to have the benefit running at the same time. 2nd-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit stokes the flames of your magic, granting +1 spell power (+1 effective caster level for level-dependent spell variables such as damage dice or range, and for caster level checks) on fire spells cast by team members and an additional 1 point of fire damage dealt by team members wielding a weapon that deals fire damage (everything from a torch to a flame tongue longsword). 3rd-Tier Benefit: As the 1st-tier benefit, except that each team member gains permanent resistance to fire 5. 4th-Tier Benefit: As the 2nd-tier benefit, but spellcasters gain +2 spell power on fire spells, and weapons that deal fire damage deal an extra 1d6 points of fire damage. 5th-Tier Benefit: As the 3rd-tier benefit, except that each team member gains permanent resistance to fire 15.
some of the chill for itself. Team members activate their resistance on an individual basis and don’t need to have the benefit running at the same time. 2nd-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit augments the chill of your magic, granting +1 spell power (+1 effective caster level for level-dependent spell variables such as damage dice or range, and for caster level checks) on cold spells cast by team members and an additional 1 point of cold damage dealt by team members wielding a weapon that deals cold damage. 3rd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 1st-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that each team member gains permanent resistance to cold 5. 4th-Tier Benefit: As the 2nd-tier benefit, but spellcasters gain +2 spell power on cold spells, and weapons that deal cold damage deal an extra 1d6 points of cold damage. 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 3rd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that each team member gains permanent resistance to cold 15.
CHARACTERS
acid 5 for 10 minutes, as the companion spirit consumes some of the corrosive damage for itself. Team members activate their resistance on an individual basis and don’t need to have the benefit running at the same time. 2nd-Tier Benefit: When a team member makes an attack that includes poison (whether from natural venom or poison on a weapon), the DC of the Fortitude saves to avoid the poison damage are increased by 1. Furthermore, attempts to sunder an object (such as an opponent’s weapon) deal an extra 2 points of damage. 3rd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 1st-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that each team member gains permanent resistance to acid 5. 4th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 2nd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the DC of poison saves is increased by 2, and sunder attacks deal an extra 4 points of damage. 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 3rd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that each team member gains permanent resistance to acid 15.
199
Illus. by G. Kubic
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
200
Lightning Companion 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 3rd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that each team Spirit Benefits This companion spirit has an affinity for bright flashes of member gains permanent resistance to electricity 15. light, quick movement, and electricity in all its forms. 1st-Tier Benefit: Each team member can call on Rampart Companion Spirit Benefits Rampart spirits seem to draw sustenance from the companion spirit as a standard combat—specifically by twisting fate action to gain resistance to electricity 5 for 10 minso that successful blows turn into utes, as the companion misses. spirit consumes some 1st-Tier Benefit: Each day, of the electrical damage the companion spirit offers for itself. Team members a bonus pool to Armor Class activate their resistance equal to double the number on an individual basis of team members. For exand don’t need to have the ample, a five-creature team benefit running at the would have a +10 bonus same time. pool. A team member can 2nd-Tier Benefit: claim up to half (round Once per day, each up) of the available Armor team member can call Class bonus by taking an on the power of the immediate action to do so afcompanion spirit for ter the attack is announced, an expeditious retreat but before the attack result spell-like ability with a is known. (See page 237 for caster level equal to the the definition of an immeHit Dice of the lowestdiate action.) The bonus is level team member. considered an insight bo3rd-Tier Benefit: nus to AC and lasts only for This benefit replaces that attack. Once part of the 1st-tier benefit. the bonus pool is claimed, It is identical to that the size of the bonus pool shrinks accordingly for benefit, except that each team member the rest of the day. gains permanent resis2nd-Tier Benefit: tance to electricity 5. This benefit replaces 4th-Tier Benefit: the 1st-tier benefit. It is Once per day, each team identical to that benefit member can call on the except that the size of power of the companthe bonus pool to AC is equal to three times the ion spirit for a haste spell-like ability with number of team mema caster level equal bers. At most, a team to the Hit Dice of member can claim half the lowest-level team the bonus pool’s maximember. Unlike the mum size for a single standard haste spell, attack. For example, a this spell-like ability six-member team would affects only the indihave a +18 bonus pool to vidual team members, AC, and a team member but other team members could take up to a +9 bonus can activate the power for on any single attack. themselves if they wish. Thanks to their lens companion spirit, Alhandra and Ember take the fight to an ogre mage no longer protected by invisibility
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS Illus. by D. Scott
Their rampart companion spirit protects Tordek, Jozan, and Lidda against the attacks of their foes
3rd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 2nd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit except that the insight bonuses to AC last for 1 round. 4th-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can extrude its energy so it surrounds a team member in a coruscating nimbus of yellow-orange energy that provides concealment (and a corresponding 20% miss chance). It can do so for a total of 2 rounds per team member. Any team member can activate or deactivate the nimbus with a move action, but the total duration on a teamwide basis is limited to 2 rounds per team member. A team of four could have one member protected for 8 rounds, or they could get 2 rounds each, for example. 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 4th-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit except that the nimbus provides total concealment (and a corresponding 50% miss chance). Shadow Companion Spirit Benefits While this spirit companion has no overt connection to undead shadows or the Plane of Shadow, it has an affinity for all things stealthy and hard to discern.
1st-Tier Benefit: Each day, the companion spirit offers a bonus pool on Hide and Move Silently checks equal to double the number of team members. For example, a five-creature team would have a +10 bonus pool. A team member can claim up to half (round up) of the Hide and Move Silently bonus by taking a free action to do so prior to making a Hide or Move Silently check; the bonus applies to both skills, so you can use it twice if you make both checks in the same round. Once part of the bonus pool is claimed, the size of the bonus pool shrinks accordingly for the rest of the day. 2nd-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can dampen sound around a team member (as a silence spell with a caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member). It can do so for a total of 2 rounds per team member. Any team member can activate or deactivate the silence effect with a move action, but the total duration on a teamwide basis is limited to 2 rounds per team member. A team of six could have one member as the center of a silence spell for 12 rounds, or they could get 2 rounds each, for example.
201
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
202
3rd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 1st-tier ben- Thunder Companion Spirit Benefits efit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the bonus pool This companion spirit seems attracted to loud sounds of is equal to three times the number of team members. all kinds—it’s not for the stealthy or unobtrusive. 4th-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can render 1st-Tier Benefit: Each team member can call on the companion spirit as a standard action to gain resistance to a team member unseen (as an invisibility spell with a sonic 5 for 10 minutes, as the companion spirit consumes caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level some of the energy damage itself. Team members activate team member). It can do so for a total of 2 rounds their resistance on an individual basis and don’t need to per team member. Any team member can activate or deactivate the invisibility effect with a move action, but have the benefit running at the same time. the total duration on a teamwide basis is limited to 2 2nd-Tier Benefit: Once per day, each team member can call on the power of the companion spirit for a shatrounds per team member. Unlike the standard invisibility spell, this benefit doesn’t prevent team members ter spell-like ability with a caster level equal to the Hit from seeing each other, regardless of whether they have Dice of the lowest-level team member. The save DC is this benefit active. Charisma-based. 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 3rd-tier ben3rd-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 1st-tier efit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the bonus pool benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that each team is equal to four times the number of team members. member gains permanent resistance to sonic 5. 4th-Tier Benefit: Once per day, each team member can Shroud Companion Spirit Benefits call on the power of the companion spirit for a shout spellThese companion spirits tend to hover near the border like ability with a caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the between life and death, keeping the creatures in their care lowest-level team member. The save DC is Charisma-based. on the life side of that border. Unlike the standard shout spell, this spell-like ability 1st-Tier Benefit: Team members continually have doesn’t affect other team members, so they can stand in its area with impunity. a gentle repose spell-like ability active on them with a 5th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 3rd-tier caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that each team member, so their bodies do not decay for days or weeks member gains permanent resistance to sonic 15. after death. 2nd-Tier Benefit: Once per day, each team member can call on the power of the companion spirit for a false Tower Companion Spirit Benefits Defense wins battles, and no companion spirit offers more life spell-like ability with a caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member. The temporary hit defense than the tower companion. A kindred spirit to the points last until the duration expires or the temporary rampart companion, the tower companion offers a broader range of defensive benefits. hit points are lost in battle. 1st-Tier Benefit: If you take a full attack action this 3rd-Tier Benefit: Each team member gains a +2 insight bonus on saving throws against death effects round, you can voluntarily reduce your attack rolls by and effects employing negative energy (such as inflict up to –5 and add the same number to a bonus pool. Any spells), and a +2 insight bonus on Fortitude saves against other team member can use a free action at the beginning massive damage. of their turn to take 1 point from the bonus pool to gain a 4th-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can render +1 insight bonus to their AC for 1 round. Unused points a team member immune to magical death and negative evaporate at the beginning of your next turn. energy effects (as a death ward spell with a caster level 2nd-Tier Benefit: As an immediate action taken right before you attempt a saving throw, you can ask fellow team equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member). members to grant you an insight bonus on that saving It can do so for a total of 2 minutes per team member. throw. (See page 237 for the definition of an immediate Any team member can activate or deactivate the death ward effect with a move action, but the total duration on a action.) The tower companion spirit transfers fateful teamwide basis is limited to 2 minutes per team member. energy between you and your comrades, so that you gain A team of six could have one member protected by the a +1 insight bonus on that saving throw for every team member who agrees to the exchange. Team members who death ward for 12 minutes, or they could get 2 minutes agree to the exchange take a –2 penalty on all saving throws each, for example. for 1 round—including the saving throw from the current 5th-Tier Benefit: This ability replaces the 3rd-tier effect, if it affects multiple team members simultaneously benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that the (such as a fireball). saving throw bonus is +4. In addition, team members 3rd-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can make a team can activate their 4th-tier benefit as a swift action (see member’s skin preternaturally resistant to damage (as a page 237).
Abilities granted by prestige classes are appropriate for mid- to high-level characters. Prestige classes are acquired only by meeting the requirements specific to each example, which almost always require—in effect—that a character be at least mid-level (around 5th or 6th level). Additionally, there might be nonrules-related requirements that must be met in-game, such as group membership fees, special training exercises, quests, and so on. Prestige classes are purely optional and always under the purview of the DM. It’s good policy to tightly limit the prestige classes available in your campaign. The prestige classes in the Dungeon Master’s Guide and other sources are certainly not all-encompassing or definitive. They might not even be appropriate for your campaign. The best prestige classes for your campaign are the ones you tailor-make yourself.
THE DM’S ROLE Prestige classes allow a Dungeon Master to create exclusive, campaign-specific roles and positions. These special roles offer abilities and powers otherwise inaccessible to PCs and focus them in specific, interesting directions. A character with a prestige class will be more specialized yet perhaps slightly better than one without. These DM-created tools lend specifics and actual mechanics to the details of your world. In short, you come up with a particular group or role for your campaign, and create a prestige class based
THE PLAYERS’ ROLE DMs who don’t mind sharing the responsibility of campaign development with their players might allow them to design prestige classes. As long as the DM remains involved, such prestige classes are perfectly viable. The DM knows what organizations need prestige classes in the campaign, and has general ideas of what such a prestige class should do. Players wishing to develop prestige classes should work closely with their DM to do so.
WHY CREATE A PRESTIGE CLASS? There are four basic reasons why you should create prestige classes for your campaign. To Satisfy Players: A player with a ranger character wants to be an expert archer. He takes Point Blank Shot and the other appropriate feats, but he wants to be able to perform even greater deeds with his bow. He’s willing to sacrifice other aspects of his character to do so, but there don’t seem to be options for him. In response you create the Red Arrow Guild. From the guild, he learns of a number of different trick shots and special bow-related abilities he can learn if he joins the group and takes levels in the master of the red arrow prestige class. Players have plans or desires for their characters that extend beyond the bounds of the rules found in the Player’s Handbook. Prestige classes provide a way for you to develop rules within a balanced format to help meet your players’ needs. To Develop an Organization: You’ve already created the Red Arrow Guild, a group of fighters, rangers, and even rogues who help defend the capital city in times of great distress. They have a good reputation and a long history. To help further develop this organization, you create the master of the red arrow prestige class with abilities unique to the guild. Now, when people speak of their almostunnatural prowess, concrete facts describe exactly what they can and cannot actually do. Prestige classes help you to define monastic orders, secret cabals, religious zealots, thieves’ guilds, special military units, a group of people trained under a specific teacher, sorcerers from a particular area, or bards who studied at the same college. If you’re not already creating organizations like this in your campaign, you should be. Prestige classes distinguish them from one another. If the wizards of the Arcane Order know different spells and have different abilities than the wizards of the Open Hand Guild, it makes both groups, and the campaign as a whole, more interesting. Using prestige classes with campaign organizations also encourages player characters to join or at least investigate these groups. Prestige classes offer you a way to use the rules to draw players into your campaign world and
CHAPTER 6
DESIGNING PRESTIGE CLASSES
around that idea. The following material focuses on your needs as the DM.
CHARACTERS
stoneskin spell with a caster level equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member). It can do so for a total of 2 rounds per team member. Any team member can activate or deactivate stoneskin effect with a move action, but the total duration on a teamwide basis is limited to 2 rounds per team member. A team of four could have one member protected for 8 rounds, or they could get 2 rounds each, for example. 4th-Tier Benefit: This benefit replaces the 2nd-tier benefit. It is identical to that benefit, except that you gain a +2 insight bonus on that saving throw for every team member who agrees to the exchange (and accepts the –2 penalty on their own saving throws). 5th-Tier Benefit: The companion spirit can render hostile magic ineffective, granting spell resistance equal to the Hit Dice of the lowest-level team member + 12. It can do so for a total of 2 rounds per team member. Any team member can activate or deactivate the spell resistance with a move action, but the total duration on a teamwide basis is limited to 2 rounds per team member. Team members ignore this spell resistance when casting spells on each other; the tower companion spirit knows to let such spells pass through its defenses.
203
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
involve them in whatever sorts of politics, intrigues, and adventures you have in store. To Develop a Race or Culture: As with organizations, races and cultures benefit from specific rules that showcase their abilities. While it’s fine to declare that “elves operate well in the woods,” or “gnomes are tricky,” such statements carry greater weight with rules to back them up. Prestige classes (the elven woodstalker and the gnome trickster, for example) provide those rules. Cultures garner even greater benefit from prestige classes. Game rules don’t provide distinctions for how the people from the Southern Kingdom in your campaign differ from the folk of the Direwood Forest. You could create an extensive description of how the spear-using warriors of the south have a completely different fighting style than the hardy, no-nonsense approach of the warriors of the Direwood. The southern speardancer and the Direwood ranger prestige classes directly speak for those differences. Culture-based prestige classes can tie into PC backgrounds; perhaps only characters from the Sunlost Desert can take the knife-fighter prestige class. It makes every culture and every populated place that you create for your campaign truly special. To Make Otherwise Poor Options Acceptable: While this reason ties in with the first, it’s worth mentioning on its own. A prestige class can take a poor choice, such as specializing in the whip, and make it worthwhile. Potentially, you could create prestige classes that grant interesting abilities for characters who spend a lot of skill points on Intimidate or a particular knowledge or craft. Characters who choose strange multiclass combinations, put their best score in Charisma (and who aren’t bards or sorcerers), or come from less optimal races (goblin or kobold PCs, for example) could have access to prestige classes that make those choices worthwhile. The Hidden Fifth Reason: Any number of organizations could oppose the PCs, along with races such as gnolls, goblins, and orcs. Some campaigns establish evil cultures as major opponents. DMs should strongly consider designing prestige classes only available to the opposition. Such classes should have a broader utility than merely taking advantage of PC weaknesses or nullifying PC strengths. They make the campaign unique, provide memorable encounters, and transform the opposition into real threats with which the PCs must reckon.
PRESTIGE CLASS OR STANDARD CLASS? Ideally, the choice of gaining a level in the character’s primary class (or only class, if not multiclassing) or taking a prestige class should be a tough decision. A prestige class might allow access to new skills or spells, but can be more restrictive than the standard class. Perhaps it has a slower attack progression or less desirable saves. If a player has a tough time deciding whether her character should take another level of rogue from the Player’s Handbook or should start taking levels of your prestige class, you’ve probably balanced your prestige class correctly.
NAMING AND CORE CONCEPT You have an advantage that no game designer can ever have: You know the specific details of your campaign. When creating a prestige class, use your knowledge of these details to their fullest. The first rule is to forget the general and embrace the specific. You’re not creating a prestige class for everyone’s campaign—just for yours. The examples below show how general prestige class names, when modified toward particular organizations, become more specific and therefore better defined in your campaign. Holy warrior City guard Martial disciple Woodsman
Champion of Pelor Greyhawk watchman Order of the Fist disciple Darkwater Pass tracker
DESIGNING REQUIREMENTS All prestige class requirements are based around the idea that the character who qualifies for the class is already well on his way to becoming someone who can do the things that the prestige class excels in. Someone qualifying for the Misty Peaks mountaineer prestige class should already have 6 ranks in Climb and 4 in Use Rope—in other words, he’s already an expert climber when he qualifies for the elite title of mountaineer. Two types of requirements can be used to determine who can take a prestige class. The first type is game requirements. These are hard and fast rules—often numerical values—that a character must fulfill to qualify. The second type is character requirements. These can be aspects of a character—race, age, religion, and so on—as well as deeds that the character has accomplished. For example, a candidate for the hunter of the dead prestige
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs BEHIND THE CURTAIN: WHY REQUIREMENTS? First, there’s the idea of “prestige.” If any commoner can qualify for the class, the class lacks prestige. Second, prestige classes offer powerful abilities not normally available to characters. Requirements impose a cost, so that characters don’t get
204
something for nothing. Similarly, taking a level of a prestige class should never be a more obvious or desirable choice than taking a level of a standard class. Requirements force characters to consider which they wish to do.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
CHAPTER 6
Feats: List all feat requirements, including any prerequisite armor or weapon proficiencies. Base Attack Bonus: Do not use a modified attack roll. This requirement isn’t necessary if skill ranks already set the minimum class level for the prestige class. Use this instead of stringent skill rank requirements for combatoriented prestige classes. Base Save Bonus: Base saving throw bonuses group character classes differently than base attack bonuses. For instance, you can choose a base Fortitude save bonus, which puts fighters, monks, and clerics on the same level, or choose a base Will save bonus requirement and have clerics, wizards, and monks all meeting the prerequisites at the same time. Special Abilities: When used as prestige class requirements, special abilities such as evasion, rage, or turning undead might define the focus of the class. Spellcasting Ability: This either requires the ability to cast arcane or divine spells of a certain level or the ability to cast specific spells. Requiring spells of a certain type (arcane or divine) and level opens the class to more spellcasters. Requiring specific spells might focus the prestige class to druids, bards, or wizards, depending on the spell. Since sorcerers know fewer spells than wizards, requiring a specific spell might prevent sorcerers from taking the class. Be aware of those effects of the requirement. Domains: Some prestige classes, such as those specific to a religion or cause, might require a specific cleric domain. Special: This category covers other game-mechanic requirements. It also includes restrictions. Character requirements can include race, gender (use rarely), alignment, patron deity (most commonly used in the FORGOTTEN R EALMS setting), or accomplishments (see the sidebar).
CHARACTERS
class, which specializes in fighting undead, must have had a negative level bestowed by an energy draining undead. Sometimes these are simply roleplaying hooks that tie into the organization or culture that a prestige class represents, such as pledging allegiance to a monarch, paying initial membership dues, or performing a specific religious rite. Use nongame mechanics requirements to add life and flavor to prestige classes, but don’t use them for game balance purposes. No requirement should be based on a die roll. That means that ability scores (or ability score bonuses), hit points, or other aspects of a character determined by a die should never be used as a prestige class requirement. Requirements should be based on choices—feats, skills ranks, and the like. Further, remember that prestige classes do not map to existing classes. That is to say, no prestige class should limit itself to members of a regular class. Class and level are not good requirements. That said, once you assign a set number of ranks, feats, and so on as requirements, it’s not difficult to figure out which class can meet those requirements at what level. Rogues can attain the assassin prestige class in the Dungeon Master’s Guide, for example, quicker (at 5th level) than other classes, but even wizards could potentially meet the requirements (at 13th level). No prestige class should be attainable by a character lower than 5th level.
Good Requirements The following requirements help define the type of characters who might wish to qualify for a given prestige class. Skill Ranks: The requirement is a number of ranks in one or more specific skills, not total skill bonus. Skill requirements might each require different ranks. Skill ranks make it easier for members of certain standard Poor Requirements The following requirements overly limit or restrict the classes to enter the prestige class, if the skill in question type of characters who might wish to qualify for a given is on their class skill list. Skill ranks also set class level prestige class. to enter the prestige class (see Table 3–2: Experience and Level-Dependent Benefits, page 22 of the Player’s Handbook, Character or Class Level: This requirement discourfor maximum skill ranks). ages creativity among players. Base attack bonus effectively
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs EXAMPLE ACCOMPLISHMENTS Creating a prestige class requirement that describes a particular accomplishment is a good way to give the class a distinctive flavor. Depending on the concept behind the class, the accomplishment can involve combat, a journey, a mental exercise, or some other specific endeavor. Some examples are provided below. —Kill a specific monster —Visit a hard-to-reach shrine —Endure an ordeal of pain —Retrieve a rare herb —Complete an individualized quest
—Perform a seemingly impossible task (walk on water, capture the breath of a bird) —Win a race, duel, or other contest —Discover a secret password —Impress an important person with words and wit —Create a great work of art (a song, a dance, or a painting) —Solve a riddle —Get a specific tattoo —Always wear a specific color —Always tell the truth —Perform a daily ritual —Tithe 10% of all wealth gained
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
205
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
206
sets a minimum character level, but not every prestige class characters must have at least five levels in base character requires a minimum base attack bonus. Let players figure classes to qualify. Ten-level prestige classes have enough special abilities to attract player characters without requirout how to meet the class requirements as best they can. Concentrate on those requirements members of a prestige ing any special rules for handling characters with more class would naturally all meet. than twenty levels. Character Class: With the ease and prevalence of multiclassing, you should let players figure out what classes, and Hit Dice how many levels of each, their characters need to qualify When you set the requirements for your prestige class, for a class. you decide what standard classes easily qualify for the Ability Score: Magic items aside, this makes entering class. You know what Hit Dice those classes use. You a prestige class entirely a matter of luck. Not only does a can choose to give the prestige class a larger Hit Die, player have to roll high enough when he builds his charthe same HD, an average of the likely entry class’s Hit acter, but he must guess what ability will give him access Dice, or fewer HD. This choice is part of the balancing to a prestige class that might not exist yet. of the prestige class. No class should have less than a d4 for Hit Dice, and none Hit Points: Again, this makes entering a prestige class should have more than d12. Classes only use unmodified entirely a matter of luck. die rolls for hit points, though class abilities might provide Armor Class: Characters don’t live in their armor. Using this requirement creates all kinds of ugly questions bonus hit points at specific levels. about how long a character must wear armor (or an armorinfluencing magic item) every day to be able to earn a level Class Skills and Skill Points of the prestige class. Generally speaking, the number of skill points and the Redundant Requirements: There’s no point in number of class skills should be directly related. There’s no point in having a huge list of class skills if the character requiring both a base attack bonus and a base save, or a doesn’t have the skill points to take advantage of it. The base attack bonus and skill ranks, or a base save and skill opposite is also true: There’s no point in having a stack ranks. Any one of these sets a level requirement to enter of skill points and not having a long list of class skills on the class. Pick the one most appropriate for your vision of which to spend them. the prestige class. The exception is when only one is the Classes get two, four, six, or eight skill points, modified “true” level requirement. You might want characters with by the character’s Intelligence. A prestige class should not Run, Endurance, and Combat Reflexes (which a human fighter can have at 1st level), 8 ranks in Climb and 8 ranks “give away” the skill list, making every skill a class skill. in Swim (which several classes can accomplish by 5th Class skills should reflect the nature and pursuits of the level), and a base attack bonus of +6. The feats and skills prestige class. represent things you want all members of the prestige class to be able to do, while the base attack bonus sets the Base Attack Bonus Attack progression governs every form of combat, from level requirement. greatswords to rays. If a combat-focused prestige class BASIC FEATURES has several impressive abilities, slowing the attack OF PRESTIGE CLASSES progression helps balance the class. Classes with a lot The basics shared by all classes are levels, Hit Dice, class of noncombat abilities might need a relative fast attack skills and skill points, base attack bonus, and base save progression to keep the choice between prestige class bonus. Table 3–1: Base Save and Base Attack Bonuses on and standard class from shifting too far in favor of the page 22 of the Player’s Handbook should prove very helpful standard class. when designing these aspects of your prestige classes. There are four possible attack progressions. Three of them appear in Table 3–1: Base Save and Base Attack Levels Bonuses, page 22 of the Player’s Handbook. The fourth possiIn most cases, prestige classes have either five or ten bility is +0, where attack progression never improves. That designed levels. It’s possible to have fifteen or even twenty. should only be used in rare and extreme cases, however. You might even design one with as few as three. Prestige Few characters will put their attack progression on hold classes with five or fewer levels generally fi ll a very for as few as five levels, and they certainly won’t for ten. specific purpose. To make achieving the requirements worthwhile, they must pack a lot of special abilities into Base Save Bonus The progression for saving throws appears in Table 3–1: their few levels. Prestige classes with twenty levels, on Base Save and Base Attack Bonuses, page 22 of the Player’s the other hand, border on the Epic (see the Epic Level Handbook. For each new prestige class, you choose whether Handbook for information on that style of play) since
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS Illus. by W. England
Depending on the prestige class choices he makes, Tarn (center) could become a dagger-wielding assassin (left) or a fierce knight in shining armor
the class gets a single good save, two good saves, or all good saves. If the class doesn’t get all good saves, choose which save or saves gets the better bonus. In general, combat-oriented classes have good Fortitude saves, spellcasters have good Will saves, and other classes have good Reflex saves. If giving a class two good saves, use these guidelines for one of them. All good saves is a powerful lure for any class, so use it sparingly. Feats As a rule, bonus feats are not exciting abilities for prestige classes. Avoid lists of bonus feats.
DESIGNING ABILITIES Every level of a prestige class should include a significant benefit. Spellcasters specifically have a difficult time justifying missing out on the new spells they gain with each level, and so prestige classes aimed at spellcasters must be particularly attractive. The first ability or abilities gained should be matched to the minimum level at which a character could possibly qualify for the class. Thus, if a ranger can qualify for the class at 4th level, the first level of the prestige class should be approximately equivalent to the 5th level a ranger might gain.
Major abilities, particularly brand-new powers, should be carefully considered. They should never be more powerful or useful than the types of things that other classes can do. Look at existing class abilities, feats, and the prestige classes in the Dungeon Master’s Guide for ideas. Borrow directly from the abilities of other classes when designing a prestige class if you need to. Weapon and Armor Proficiency In many cases, all you need to say is “A [prestige class name] gains no additional proficiency in any weapon or armor.” Prestige classes never remove weapon or armor proficiencies. If you want to limit access to armor, you can word special abilities so they only function when class members wear light armor, or medium or light armor. If the class skill list contains skills affected by armor check penalties, then it also helps restrict armor. A third option can restrict weapons as well: Give the class a code of behavior that swears off using certain weapons, types of weapons, or armor. For further weapon restriction, focus the special abilities on a group of weapons or specific weapon. The lasher and the master of chains, for instance, gain little if any benefit from their classes unless using a whip or a chain, respectively.
207
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
Spells, Spell Lists, and Caster Levels Some argue that you can’t design a spellcasting prestige class without making “+1 level of existing class” the spell progression. Members of the class might gain a caster level every level, every other level, or every three levels. Gaining caster levels less often than that removes spellcasting from the primary focus of the class, so the class abilities have to compensate by being more desirable. Providing a short list of spells available to the prestige class gives spellcasting ability to characters that don’t have it normally, rather than creating a true spellcasting prestige class. If providing a list, you must also provide a table showing access to the spells by class level. Table 6–11, below, provides spell access for all the standard classes.
4th, more 2nd-level spells than 3rd, and more 1st-level spells than 2nd. A spell list should have the spells appropriate for the class and no more—for a wide variety of spells, a character can pick up a level of wizard or cleric. Occasionally, if a spell is a “signature” spell of a prestige class, you can lower the level that the class gets the spell by one. For example, for a flame mage prestige class, wall of fire might be considered a 3rd-level rather than a 4th-level spell. This technique should be used sparingly. Do this only once or twice for a given class, if at all. Normally, if a class has other attractive powers or benefits, it’s not necessary.
COSTS AND BALANCING Table 6–11: Access to Spells (By Class Level) Cleric, Druid, Paladin Spell or Wizard Sorcerer Bard or Ranger Adept Level Level Level Level* Level* Level* 0 1st 1st 1st — 1st 1st 1st 1st 2nd 4th 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 8th 4th 3rd 5th 6th 7th 11th 8th 4th 7th 8th 10th 14th 12th 5th 9th 10th 13th — 16th 6th 11th 12th 16th — — 7th 13th 14th — — — 8th 15th 16th — — — 9th 17th 18th — — — *Provided character has access to bonus spells.
When assigning how many spells a character can cast at a given level, look to the Player’s Handbook for examples of spell progression. If your prestige class prepares spells as a cleric, use the cleric and druid tables as guides. If your class prepares spells as a wizard, use the wizard table as a model. If your class doesn’t prepare spells, use the sorcerer tables. Spell lists should always have more low-level spells than high level. As a result, it’s best to start the list by choosing the highest-level spells the class can know. Then you can list a greater number of spells at the level below that, and more spells still at the next lower level, and so on. For example, suppose you create a class that, like paladins and rangers, can know spells up to 4th level. The class spell list should have more 3rd-level spells than
Levels in a prestige class should never be so good that a character would be foolish not to take them. Balancing the class prevents that possibility. Before working on prestige class abilities, consider what a character must give up to take the class. The things given up are the costs of entering the prestige class. Hit Dice: Some classes clearly qualify for a prestige class sooner than others. Those classes might have to accept a smaller Hit Die when taking levels of the prestige class. For them, this is a cost, but for other classes that Hit Die might be larger. For instance, a prestige class that uses a d8 for Hit Dice has a cost for barbarians, fighters, paladins, and rangers, but it represents a benefit for bards, rogues, sorcerers, and wizards. Skill Points: Clearly, certain classes never lose when they take a prestige class. Fighters and wizards can’t have any fewer skill points than they already do, for instance. Just like with Hit Dice, one class’s gain might be another class’s loss. A prestige class that grants 4 skill points per level +Int modifier represents a gain for fighters and wizards, but a loss for rogues. Class Skills: The impact of a class skill list can be tricky to judge. A class with a long skill list and commensurate skill points seems like a gain for many classes, but if the prestige class’s skill list is sufficiently different from the list of the classes most attracted to it, it might not be a benefit at all. Attack Progression: As mentioned above, base attack bonus can be a cost. A wizard or sorcerer can’t have a worse
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs PALADINS AND MONKS When designing prestige classes, paladins and monks call for special consideration. Because these two classes cannot multiclass freely, it’s harder to persuade members to take an interest in prestige classes. When designing a prestige class whose members should include paladins, monks, or both, consider adding the following note:
208
Multiclass Note: Monk (or paladin, as appropriate) characters can freely multiclass with this class. Monks (or paladins) who have already taken levels in another class can again take monk (or paladin) levels after gaining a level as a [prestige class name]. A prestige class that offers a great deal of power might not need this note. A well-balanced prestige class might need it to keep the choice from shifting too far in favor of simply taking levels in the standard class.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
Prestige Class Categories In general, prestige classes fall into the following categories. When you’re inventing your own prestige class, think about how you’d classify it—or use the categories below to inspire your creations.
CHAPTER 6
Special Considerations Prestige classes tied to organizations might have ongoing requirements. These can include assignments, dues, strict obedience to specific rules, or personal sacrifices of wealth. Becoming a member of a prestige class might involve apprenticing for a time to another member, or eventually serving as a mentor for a prospective member. Entry into a prestige class might come with strings attached. Powerful enemies seek members out, or those among the group’s ranks face the prejudices of the local folk. Membership in certain prestige classes might even be illegal, particularly if they dabble in forbidden knowledge. These “strings” can come along with prestige classes that represent a specific group in the campaign world, or they can be tied to prestige classes that simply deal with knowledge. The dragonslayers might not be a formal organization, for example, but their reputation precedes them nonetheless.
Party Role Classes: Four basic roles define the classic adventuring party: combatant, sneak, arcane caster, and divine caster. Combatant classes include barbarian, fighter, monk, paladin, and ranger. Bard, monk, rogue, and ranger are examples of sneak classes. Arcane casters obviously include sorcerers and wizards, and bards as well. Cleric and druid are examples of divine caster classes, as are paladin and ranger to a lesser extent. Choices in feats, skills, spells, and class abilities all help to customize these standard classes. Party role prestige classes carry this customization a step further. The duelist’s special abilities clearly set it apart from a fighter with a rapier and Weapon Finesse. The shadowdancer’s abilities are very different from those of monks or rogues. The archmage and the hierophant are the arcane and divine casters, respectively, at the top of their chosen fields. The archmage and the hierophant provide important examples of another option in prestige class design. Rather than having twenty levels (as standard classes do) or ten levels (as the arcane archer, duelist, dwarven defender, and shadowdancer do), they only have five. That’s because the classes they’re based on, cleric and wizard, do a good job of supporting the party roles already. Iconic Classes: Fantasy literature has helped to define certain iconic roles. Some, such as the barbarian, are standard classes in the Player’s Handbook. Others require prestige classes. The assassin and the blackguard are iconic images in the D&D framework, and the game could never be complete without them. These two classes, the assassin and the blackguard, are also examples of another use for prestige classes. According to the Player’s Handbook, “Standard characters are good or neutral but not evil. Evil alignments are for villains and monsters.” These prestige classes exist for NPCs, providing you with memorable opponents to pit against the heroic PCs. Race-Based Classes: Racial prestige classes develop a race further by providing specific rules to showcase its abilities. While each race detailed in the Player’s Handbook has different abilities, the arcane archer and the dwarven defender help demonstrate how—through the rules—each race fits the archetypes represented in campaign worlds and fantasy traditions. You could easily create prestige classes that further define these archetypes, such as the dwarven smith, the halfling hill-scout, or the half-orc demolisher. Situational Classes: Sometimes you want a character to really shine in a particular situation. While feats, skills, and class abilities allow that, prestige classes let you take it a step further. The loremaster is an example of the value of advancing as a spellcaster. The loremaster continues to gain spells known, spells per day, and caster levels as if she were gaining levels in her standard class. This is extraordinarily
CHARACTERS
attack progression than his standard class, but all the other classes can. Save Progression: If a class has two or all good saves, then a prestige class with fewer good saves needs enticing abilities to draw members. For instance, a monk-focused prestige class, such as one with the slow fall (30 ft.) ability as a requirement, with only one good save needs powerful abilities to attract any but ex-monks. Feats: Feats are a cost for a prestige class in two cases. First, requiring less optimal feats is a cost. If a prestige class requires the feats Endurance, Great Fortitude, and Run, fighters would have to give up Weapon Focus, Power Attack, and similar typical fighter feats to qualify. Requiring feats not on a class’s bonus feat list also represents a special cost. Special Abilities and Spellcasting: Both of these requirements create a cost because they might force characters to multiclass to enter a prestige class. Domains: This requirement might force a cleric to change patron deity in order to qualify for a prestige class. The loss of domain powers and change in domain spells can be a real cost for such characters. Special: The special requirements can impose a cost. Characters wishing to take levels of the prestige class must accept that cost. For instance, you might design a prestige class with restrictions on multiclassing similar to those placed on paladins or monks. Hunter of the dead offers another example, requiring candidates to have lost a level to the attack of an undead creature.
209
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
valuable to spellcasters, and so the class must have corresponding costs. Game Function Classes: Game function prestige classes revolve around esoteric rules or functions, such as planar travel or psionics. Where party role prestige classes focus on party needs and situational prestige classes focus on recurring situations in a campaign, the game function prestige class specializes in one aspect of the game rules. The horizon walker, for example, focuses on long-distance travel and adapting to wilderness environments. It goes beyond what a ranger could achieve through skill selection. You could create similar classes around ranged combat, necromancy, or turning undead. Combination Classes: Usually a character must slow development of a class feature while gaining levels in another class. A prestige class lets a character focus on those features she wants to develop while sacrificing those she doesn’t. The arcane trickster is an example of crossing rogues with arcane casters. The eldritch knight crosses arcane casters with fighters or other combat-focused prestige classes. You can explore these kinds of combinations when a player expresses a desire to pick and choose among class abilities—as long as the prestige class holds commensurate costs.
PC ORGANIZATIONS Some characters prefer an independent existence, choosing no affiliation greater than their association with the other PCs at the table. Others join larger groups of dozens, hundreds, or thousands of NPCs. Whether it’s a national army, a secret society, or a pirate ship’s crew, the organization a PC joins offers advantages and responsibilities that independent characters don’t have. Used properly, an organization that all the PCs at your table can join strengthens the bonds between characters, immerses them further into the game world, and adds drama to their adventures. In some ways, PC organizations are like prestige classes. Characters often have to earn their way in, they receive special benefits to match their special membership, and the group they choose suggests a particular way of life. The ideal PC organization is something that everyone at your gaming table, regardless of race or class, wants to join. Organizations tend to have long-term goals that the PCs can jointly achieve. If a class or prestige class is the answer to the “Who am I?” question, the PC organization is the answer to the “Who are we?” question.
CAMPAIGN BENEFITS
210
A good PC organization takes some work for the DM to create, but it provides three main benefits for your ongoing campaign. It Improves PC Cohesion: Because everyone works toward the organization’s overall goal—however broad or
abstract it might be—the characters don’t diffuse their efforts. An elf paladin and a dwarf rogue might ordinarily not give each other the time of day, but if they’re part of the same organization, they already have a connection they can build a friendship on. As your game grows with new players and new characters, you have an easy way to connect them to the existing PCs: They’re part of the larger organization, not complete strangers. It Immerses PCs in the Game World: Left to their own designs, some PCs drift across the surface of the world you create, never becoming truly involved in any of the societies, conflicts, and plots you have spun. For some styles of play, that’s fi ne, but many D&D players like to feel like the struggles of the game world matter to their characters. A PC organization is a good way to “ground” the players in the setting, giving them a set of enemies and allies they can accept or rebel against. It Makes a DM’s Life Easier: Most PC organizations provide some sort of tangible benefits to their members—otherwise, what PC would want to join? A good organization provides benefits to the DM as well. If the PCs are loyal to an organization, the DM can get an adventure rolling quickly by having its leaders direct the PCs to take action against some threat. The organization can also provide a safe home (either literally or figuratively) where the players can recover between struggles and spend their downtime.
CONSTRUCTING A PC ORGANIZATION Building an organization that the PCs will want to join is more art than science; there’s no right or wrong way to do it. The three example organizations provided below share a common format, which contains elements you might want to add to your own organizations. Entry Requirements: Unlike a prestige class, it’s okay for an organization to admit low-level members. You don’t need to refer to specific game mechanics at all if they aren’t appropriate for an organization. Benefits: The organization should provide some tangible benefit, unless you’re completely sure that the players at your table will join it for entirely altruistic reasons. D&D is already replete with reward systems for PCs, so you don’t need to give away big benefits. Focus instead on benefits that make your game run more smoothly. For example, if an organization gives PCs easy and inexpensive access to a 9th-level NPC cleric, that makes your job easier. A PC who dies can get a raise dead spell quickly, minimizing the player’s time away from the action at the game table. It’s a tangible benefit to the players, but doesn’t actively affect the PCs in everyday play. Consider the following benefit categories. Economics: You can make changes to the usual buying and selling rules by inventing an organization that pays
CHAPTER 6
Advancement: Decide how the organization recruits new members and what it feels like to undergo the process of joining. Then consider what ongoing membership is like, and what opportunities for advancement the PCs will have. Missions: What sort of missions does the organization undertake? Are they tailored toward specific goals or meant to pursue general principles? Are characters assigned every tasks, or can they take their own initiative when pursuing the organization’s goals? Missions can be as simple or as complex as you (and the needs of the organization) decree. Responsibilities: Consider carefully what the minimum level of participation is for the PCs to stay in the organization. D&D players are fond of rushing off to save the world at a moment’s notice, so you want to allow a certain degree of freedom in most organizations. Structure: Decide who’s in charge, and the agenda of the leadership. Then figure out what the subordinate leaders are like. Spend some time brainstorming about other notable members, such as the organization’s founder, a particularly noteworthy hero, or a traitor whose name everyone curses. If your players like a political element to their game, develop factions and rivalries within the organization, or conflicts between one organization and another. NPC Reactions: Figure out how the average “peasant in the street” reacts to the organization. Then consider how the various groups and factions important to your campaign might react differently. How important this element is depends greatly on whether the organization is public or secret. Lore: If someone wants to learn more about the organization, what skill applies? What are the DCs to learn different details about a group? It is harder to learn about obscure or secret organizations than it is to learn about public organizations with storied histories. Encounters: Figure out the features that lend themselves to a fun encounter with members of the organization, whether the PCs join the group or not. Create stats for the characters the PCs will interact with. This might be the leadership, or it might be the rank-and-fi le members, depending on the organization and the level of the PCs. It might be tempting to try to produce statistics for the entire organization, but you’ll be better served by focusing your efforts on the NPCs that the characters are most likely to meet during a game session. Adaptation: The three organizations presented below feature examples of how to modify them for use in your unique game world. Other Game Elements: An organization can often be the inspiration for a location, magic item, feat, spell, or prestige class, if the organization has developed any of these things for its members.
CHARACTERS
more than 50% value for certain items, or one that offers a discount on purchased items. You can also create an organization that pays its members outright, but consider carefully how radically a D&D player’s sense of wealth changes as the game reaches higher levels. A salary of 100 gp a month looks like a prince’s ransom at 1st level, but amounts to a pittance at 15th level. If you want to have the organization pay the PCs, consider alternatives to salary. The organization might offer to cover adventuring expenses (such as expensive material components) or offer bonus-based pay (such as bounties). That way you maintain overall control of the D&D economy at your game table. Gear: Some organizations provide equipment outright, such as magic items, horses, or a sailing ship. This category includes loaned gear, too. As with paying PCs outright, consider how the perceived value of the item changes as the characters attain more levels. Services: The NPC members of an organization can do things for the PCs, such as cast spells on their behalf and make magic items with raw materials the characters provide them. Access to low-level laborers and hirelings falls into this category as well. Information: Some organizations are useful for the things they can tell a character. Establish Knowledge check bonuses for the sages within an organization. Membership can also provide conveniences such as language translation, access to rare books and maps, and access to spellbooks for PC wizards. Clue-based magical divinations such as contact other plane are a powerful example of this resource, but giving PCs unlimited access to the power of prophecy can be a recipe for disaster if you aren’t prepared for them to use it. Access: Organizations can have interesting headquarters and other important locations, such as fortresses, planar gates, or forbidden islands. They might offer unusual means of transport, such as desert caravans and flying ships. Again, these benefits provide convenience for you as the DM—they get the PCs to the adventure sites faster. Status: Finally, some organizations have an element of social status attached to them, whether within society at large (such as a noble order of knights) or a subculture (such as a thieves’ guild). If you tie a prestige class to the organization, you should require membership in the organization for any prospective member of the prestige class. Combat: D&D adventures tend to involve combat, and the organizations that create those adventures are well aware of the dangers of the world they live in. Not all organizations feature combat as their main focus, of course, but all at least recognize the benefit of a strong defense. How an organization faces threats reinforces the nature of its mission and purpose.
211
ORDER OF ANCIENT MYSTERIES
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
“We are so proud of our grand cities, our far-flung empires, and our powerful magic. Yet in the dim past lie buried wonders that would stagger our feeble imaginations.” Urtenek Mauroch, researcher for the Order of Ancient Mysteries
212
A shadowy group devoted to uncovering the lost lore of the past, the Order of Ancient Mysteries sends its members far and wide to explore ruins, brave their dangers, and return with wagonloads of long-buried treasures. Joining the Order The order knows how dangerous its work is, so it insists on a minimum level of competence among its agents for their own safety. The order takes pains to separate itself from mere tomb robbers—by motive if not by methods—so all members have at least a passing familiarity with ancient history. Entry Requirements: Base Fortitude, Reflex, and Will saves +1; Knowledge (history) 1 rank. The Order of Ancient Mysteries knows that all the safe, easily explored ruins have long been thoroughly picked over by historians and adventures. What remain are the dangerous, remote, and well-guarded sites, so the order recruits bodyguards, healers, and “access experts” to accompany the learned researchers. Thus, every class has a place within the order, from the fighter who battles the jungle natives, to the rogue who disarms the crypt-door trap, to the cleric who destroys a tomb’s undead guardians. Because the Order of Ancient Mysteries grew out of the merger of other esoteric societies and cabals, monks and wizards are particularly common within its ranks. The wizards’ tendency to thirst for knowledge makes them good researchers, while the monks’ strong self-discipline enables them to pursue the order’s goals without distraction or fear. An expedition of the Order of Ancient Mysteries looks a lot like a typical group of adventurers—and that’s no accident. Whatever the PCs’ class, they will fi nd their versatility and special abilities put to the test by the many dangers of the ruins they explore. PCs usually receive an invitation to join the Order of Ancient Mysteries after they have uncovered items of historical significance as part of their adventurers. If they sell the emerald-encrusted ankh they found in a mummy’s tomb, for example, the PCs might meet an agent of the order as the buyer. That buyer will then start a conversation, which in turn might eventually lead to an invitation to join the Order of Ancient Mysteries. More rarely, the order approaches adventurers in a patronage role, offering them the opportunity to explore
a particular site in exchange for a cut of the profits. The order has plenty of its own agents, however, so it only uses freelance help if order members are otherwise occupied, or if the freelancers have unique abilities or access to the site in question. In any case, the order prides itself on its ability to match expedition members to the potential dangers of a site. When characters first join the order, they undergo a series of physical, mental, and magical tests so that the order has some idea of their capabilities. They are then sent off to a ruin, dungeon, or other site believed to have minor historical significance. The more historical lore and valuable treasure the characters bring back to the order, the more lucrative—and dangerous—their next assignment will be.
ORDER OF ANCIENT MYSTERIES BENEFITS The Order of Ancient Mysteries has been delving into tombs, temples, and ruins for centuries, so it can afford to be picky about what it takes from an expedition. Accordingly, as members, PCs can keep almost all the treasure they extract from a site. The order wants only specific items of historical significance, many of which have little or no intrinsic value. The order sustains itself as a peerless broker of historical information and a dealer in rare antiquities, so it can afford to leave the garden-variety loot in the hands of its explorers. Not surprisingly, the promise of riches motivates those explorers to risk life and limb on the next expedition. Economics: The Order of Ancient Mysteries finds itself in possession of many antiquities that, once studied, are of no further use to the researchers. While an ancient magic sword doesn’t do any good to the order historian in her office, it’s definitely useful to the order’s explorers. As an agent of the order, a character can purchase magic weapons, armor, rings, rods, and wondrous items for 80% of their listed market price. Doing so is time-consuming, however, and even the order’s vaults don’t contain every magic item under the sun. If a PC is interested in obtaining a specific magic item from the order, he must wait two weeks while his request works its way through the order’s various branches. The item might be available (30% chance), with a further 30% chance that a similar item is available. Taken collectively, the Order of Ancient Mysteries’ branches have a gold piece limit of 70,000 gp (as if the order was a community between a large city and a metropolis in size; see page 137 of the Dungeon Master’s Guide). Gear: The flip side of keeping the bulk of the loot from its explorations is that the order expects the PCs to be selfsufficient explorers. The order doesn’t equip adventurers, but it will provide logistical assistance and transport for particularly large or unusual expeditions.
CHAPTER 6
At the regional headquarters, characters can meet with research planners who provide them with new sites to explore, get help with logistical matters such as hiring porters, and deliver the antiquities when the expedition is over. Only order members make it past the headquarters’ entry hall—not everyone is worthy to gaze on the accumulated lore of the past. The order also maintains secure vaults where it keeps its accumulated antiquities—especially those it hopes will reward further study. The order’s vaults are almost always in remote locations and bristle with both magical and mundane defenses. Many vaults were once sites of historical significance that the order fully explored and then appropriated for its own storage purposes. The order’s explorers rarely receive access to the vaults, the locations of which are a secret known only to the higher echelons of researchers.
CHARACTERS
For example, if the order tasks the characters with recovering the three pieces of the Colossus of Korvenon (a 40-foot-tall statue), it will provide the train of wagons required to transport the pieces back to civilization. Protecting the wagon train is still the PCs’ responsibility, however. Services: The order’s research directors are accustomed to setting up expeditions, so they often acquire hirelings such as porters, teamsters, translators, and guides for a group of explorers. The order usually pays the hirelings, although PCs would be wise to offer them a small percentage of the expedition’s proceeds as well. Information: First and foremost, the Order of Ancient Mysteries can provide the location of sites for characters to explore. The order’s collection of ancient maps is without equal, and is constantly being updated and improved by explorers. A typical adventure for the order begins with a research planner telling the PCs something like, “Recent research has revealed the existence of a temple/ruin/crypt/fortress in (insert remote location here).” They immediately receive whatever information the order has on the site, such as maps, potential dangers, historical details, and nearby hazards. That’s not to say that the order’s information is completely accurate or complete—if it were, the PCs might not need to go there in the first place. It’s not as exciting as a map to a lost temple, but the historical information in the order’s archives can be a useful resource. Within the order’s facilities, members have free access to a researcher with a Knowledge (history) modifier of +15 or Knowledge (any other category) +10. Given two weeks’ time, a more learned sage (+20 in history and +15 in other categories) can respond to written requests. Access: As members of the Order of Ancient Mysteries, PCs have access to the order’s public facilities: unassuming buildings in most large cities and metropolises. The order’s regional headquarters are often near a city’s university, temple to Boccob, or some other center of learning. Few antiquities are kept long-term at the various headquarters, so the order relies on armed guards and the occasional magic ward for protection.
PLAYING A MEMBER OF THE ORDER Many things can drive characters to explore: knowledge for its own sake, the challenge of remote locations and exotic dangers, or the thrill of the “big score” when they uncover a treasure chamber full of gold. Whatever the reason, adventurers are driven to climb down into dark, dangerous places, delving into sites that haven’t been touched for centuries or millennia. Explorers and the Order of Ancient Mysteries thus have a symbiotic relationship. The order periodically gives PCs new places to explore, and they bring back lore and antiquities that further the order’s research efforts—which in turn lead to new places for the heroes to discover. While there’s little crossover between the order’s researchers and its explorers, both groups are keenly aware of how necessary the other group’s skills and abilities are to the order’s goals. Combat: The order’s explorers fight only when they have to—but when their business is invading ancient ruins, tombs, and temples, they find themselves fighting quite a bit. When possible, explorers employ stealth or magic to reach an exploration site, especially if the mundane
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs TEN ORDER-SPONSORED EXPEDITIONS • Retrieve the shards of Glazarel’s burial urn from the Tombs of the Wailing Priests. • Copy the inscriptions from the summoning circle at the Ebony Tower, but do not disturb the demon lord trapped within the circle. • Follow the strange comet until it lands and reveals the Temple Beyond Time. • Map the Shrine of the Dark Journey, which lies deep beneath the surface and is overrun with kuo-toas. • Acquire by any means the ruby chalices of Kavannu from the blue dragon Arphenastrom.
• Burn incense on the Altar of Doom until the Portal to Pandemonium appears, then map the caverns beyond. Don’t stay beyond the 12 hours that the portal remains open. • Retrieve a mummy lord from the ziggurat of Thanak-Re— without destroying it. • Figure out the origin point of the magical cataclysm that destroyed the city of Illuria. • Find out what happened to the 9th-degree explorer Nerachem, who sailed north to find a mysterious iceberg city. • Sack the library of the lich known only as Fell Guriak.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
213
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
214
alternative is a month-long trek through hostile jungle. If the site can’t be reached with magic, they must contend with the beasts, bandits, and other dangerous creatures that live near the area. Once in the site, characters have to contend with myriad traps left by the location’s last occupants, plus any guardians left behind. Often these guardians are ageless creatures, such as undead and constructs. Sometimes they have to fight their way through a site’s more recent denizens to get to items of historical significance. If PCs want to reach the thousand-year-old Temple of the Twin Suns, their real opposition might be a tribe of kuo-toas that moved into the temple a decade ago and now call it home. Advancement: The order’s explorers can advance in rank through a tiered system known in order parlance as “degrees.” Characters are known as initiate explorers until they successfully complete an expedition for the order. After that point, they are explorers of the first degree. Thereafter, characters are promoted a degree each time they bring back items of historical significance; each trip, the order’s researchers raise the threshold of what constitutes “significance.” For lower degrees, bringing back samples of ancient arts or clues about age-old civilizations might be sufficient. As PCs attain greater degrees, it takes more to impress the researchers—complete religious texts, functioning magic items, or maps to previously unknown sites. Degrees are awarded based on an expedition’s historical significance, not its danger. While the two factors are often related, it’s possible to face great dangers and come home empty-handed, or to luck into a great historical find at minimal risk. Thus the explorers of the order rarely refer to their degrees when talking to each other. Degrees are mostly a ranking system used by the researchers and expedition planners. Some expedition planners offer particular missions only to explorers who have reached a certain degree—often the fi fth degree or the tenth degree. Those expeditions often target fragile sites—those the order worries it might have only one chance to explore. A temple perched on the lip of a volcano, a ruined city that appears on the Material Plane for only one week each century, or an ancient tomb in the center of an active battlefield—all are examples of areas that only the order’s best operatives will be asked to explore. Missions: At heart, the order’s expeditions are simple: An expedition planner gives the characters a map and instructions. They then brave the dangers of the site and return with treasure for themselves and antiquities for the order’s researchers. Sometimes the order throws a wrinkle into a particular mission. For example, the PCs might be sent to scout a particularly large site, such as a ruined city, identifying its
major buildings and assessing its greatest dangers. They need bring back only information: a map, a catalog of the ruined city’s denizens, and a copy of the runes etched on the city’s walls, for example. Future expeditions—perhaps led by the PCs, perhaps not—will tackle the various buildings within the city separately. Sometimes the order’s explorers get lost or simply never return from an expedition. Characters might be sent to a site not to gather antiquities but to rescue the survivors of a previous expedition or at least ascertain their fate. Responsibilities: The Order of Ancient Mysteries realizes that expeditions might take months to complete, and it acknowledges that some explorers take on jobs and missions that don’t have anything to do with the order. As long as the PCs perform one expedition per year and don’t catastrophically fail a mission, they remain members in good standing.
THE ORDER IN THE WORLD “Begone, interlopers! The horrors buried here have no place in your unsuspecting world!” Al-Yuriak the lich, to the order expedition that opened his tomb The Order of Ancient Mysteries is an organization designed to support episodic D&D play. Each episode is a site-based adventure that begins with a briefing from the order, proceeds to actual exploration of the site, and concludes with a return to civilization. It’s up to you, as the DM, to determine how tightly you want the episodes to link together. If you opt for few or no connections between episodes, you have a great degree of freedom to design varied sites to explore: a lich’s tomb one month, a sahuagin temple the next, and a ruined githzerai monastery on the Plane of Limbo after that. If you connect the episodes, you can have each site reveal historical information that leads to the next site, and eventually the characters’ experience with one site might help them survive a later one. Structure: The Order of Ancient Mysteries is composed of three distinct groups. The research directors set the order’s overall agenda, control its financial resources, and prioritize its research efforts. They approve the exploration of each new site and assign explorers to each expedition. The explorers accomplish much of the order’s actual work. They explore the sites, deal with the dangers and hazards there, then return historical antiquities to the order. PCs will almost always be explorers. While explorers are central to the order’s mission, they’re usually off on expeditions, so they don’t have much say in the order’s internal politics or overall decision making. The researchers are the connection between the explorers and the research directors. Academic sages pore over
the antiquities and lore that the explorers recover. Once their research uncovers information about a new site, they pass along their data to the research directors, who decide whether it merits a new expedition.
DC 30: Baron Iriyach, an antiquities dealer of some repute, will pay handsomely for information on the order’s current or future expeditions.
THE ORDER IN YOUR GAME
Characters with ranks in Knowledge (history) can research the Order of Ancient Mysteries to learn more about the organization. DC 10: The Order of Ancient Mysteries sends expeditions to sites of historical interest and has them bring back antiquities. DC 15: Among historians, the order is known for the quality of its research and its tendency to take everything from an ancient ruin that isn’t nailed down. DC 20: Becoming one of the order’s explorers is a good way to get rich, but it’s dangerous. The explorers get to keep whatever treasure they fi nd that the researchers don’t want.
CHAPTER 6
ORDER OF ANCIENT MYSTERIES LORE
The Order of Ancient Mysteries makes an excellent patron for mid-level PCs, who are either hired by an order explorer or assigned a small expedition of their own. If the initial expedition goes well, the PCs are probably asked to join the organization at that point. You now have a ready-made adventure starter whenever you need one—a research planner from the order shows up with a map. Because the order largely keeps to itself, it’s easy to mix adventures involving the order with adventures that don’t involve searching a ruin for ancient treasures. In your game, you can thrust the order into a struggle between other powers and factions by having the PCs uncover some long-buried secret with larger implications for your game world. If the order winds up with part of a powerful artifact or the instructions for a doomsday ritual, the organization will draw decidedly nonacademic interest from other powerful creatures and organizations. If the PCs in your game have joined the order, they should expect to encounter tombs full of deadly traps, mouldering temples housing strange magic, and ancient ruins that aren’t as deserted as they seem. Give them all the tropes of the exploration genre: cowardly or traitorous guides, hostile natives, unscrupulous rivals, wondrous sights unbeheld by mortal eyes, and narrow escapes from certain doom. Encounters: Most members of the order are encountered as patrons. A research planner from the order will hire the PCs to undertake an expedition to a historical site and bring back some antiquities. Under the right circumstances, the order can make a useful ally—or rival. If the PCs are exploring a site on their own and get trapped or captured somehow, an explorer from the order might rescue them as she explores the site. The PCs might be adventuring in a dungeon and find that an order expedition keeps beating them to the most interesting and lucrative areas. Adaptation: As presented, the order is a self-sufficient, independent group. In your campaign, it might be affiliated with a church, government, or other organization. The order might be one college in a magical university, or it might be the pet project of a history-obsessed king. Another way to adapt the order for your campaign is to give it a more tangible goal than the abstract “uncover all the lost secrets of history.” Perhaps it’s the Order of the Ancient Mystery—a group devoted to solving an immense magical puzzle that’s confounded sages for centuries. The order might want to unearth every ruin of a particular era or empire because it seeks something specific, or because it’s obsessed with returning the world to the splendors of a bygone age.
CHARACTERS
NPC Reactions Most people simply aren’t interested in history, so they have an initial attitude of indifferent to members of the Order of Ancient Mysteries. The typical NPC thinks of researchers and research directors as specialized sages. The order’s explorers are treated like travelers and explorers the world over. Other historians, clerics of Boccob, and collegians at schools of wizardry regard members of the order more favorably, with a starting attitude of friendly. That’s not to say that the order is without rivals and enemies. Two adversaries deserve special note. The half-elf Baron Iriyach runs a far-flung tomb robbing and smuggling network, and he’s eager to beat the Order of Ancient Mysteries to any potential site. He attempts to do so in three ways: by infiltrating order branches and stealing maps and lore, by preempting or waylaying explorers en route to a lucrative site, and by discovering and breaking into the order’s antiquities vaults to steal the treasure within. Another enemy represents one of the extinct societies that the order now studies. The Hakralian Empire fragmented centuries ago, but many of their tombs and temples remain. The Hakralians were obsessed with death and the afterlife, and they used divination magic to discern that the Order of Ancient Mysteries would one day plunder their gravesites and other sacred places. Accordingly, they created a cabal of agents (some undead, others in suspended animation) known as the Guardians of the Coming Dawn to thwart the order and protect the contents of Hakralian vaults. A central Hakralian prophecy predicts the rebirth of the empire—an event the Guardians worry the order’s site-plundering might disrupt.
215
THE SHINING CRUSADE
SHINING CRUSADE BENEFITS
Because its mission is so broad—defeat the forces of evil anywhere they gather—the Shining Crusade often finds itself spread thin. The combat forces of the crusade typically fight major battles in a dozen places or more at any one time. Only when the need is dire will characters be able to call A militant arm of good-aligned churches and governments, on the full military might of the Shining Crusade. the Shining Crusade attacks the forces of evil—especially Economics: The Shining Crusade relies on its crusaders fiends and undead—wherever they can be found. to equip themselves, but it does have a number of clerics willing to add the undead bane and evil outsider bane special JOINING THE SHINING CRUSADE abilities to magic weapons for 75% of the usual cost. Membership in the Shining Crusade is generally granted Gear: Anywhere the Shining Crusade has a fortress (usuas a reward to soldiers and adventurers who show heroism ally 50% of small cities, and all large cities and metropolises), in battle against the forces of evil or thwart a fiendish or crusaders on a mission can get warhorses and nonmagical undead plot. If the PCs vanquish evil in a manner that gets equipment from the fortress’s arsenal. As long as characters the attention of good-aligned governments or churches, don’t obviously abuse this privilege, they needn’t return they might receive an invitation to join the Shining the gear when they’re done with it. Crusade. Where the crusade is popular, members enjoy a One item of gear deserves special note: the crusader’s degree of honored social status, not unlike that accorded tabard. Because crusaders come from dozens of religions to a decorated war veteran. and scores of races and nations, the Shining Crusade has While many members of the Shining Crusades are adopted a simple tabard as its insignia, rather than a holy paladins, the stereotypical “knights in shining armor,” symbol or heraldic design on a shield. On their tabard or robe, crusaders wear an emblem in the form of a radiating the organization knows the value of fighting evil from sun pattern. the shadows as well. Thus, the Shining Crusade counts Traditionally, the sun emblem is gold on a blue tabard, members of every class and race within its ranks. Entry Requirements: Nonevil alignment, base attack but individual crusaders often adopt different colors. Some bonus +2, must have publicly thwarted a major plot from choose national or religious colors to emphasize their undead, demons, or devils. heritage or dual affiliation. Others do so for practicality’s Overall, a third of the Shining Crusade consists of sake; stealthy rogues in service of the Shining Crusade paladins, and another third are neutral good and chaotic wear a black sun on a midnight-blue tabard. good clerics, fighters, and rangers. The remaining third Services: A typical Shining Crusade fortress has a are members of other classes—former mercenaries, ne’er9th-level cleric on hand to cast spells on its members’ do-wells, and adventurers who have taken up the banner behalf, asking only for the relevant material components of the Shining Crusade. in exchange for the spellcasting. Spells that crusaders Initial training for new Shining Crusade members is often ask for (and the cleric often has prepared) include minimal. New crusaders learn about the organization’s break enchantment, restoration, remove blindness/deafness, history, the tenets of the crusaders’ code, and various remove curse, remove disease, and lesser restoration. If PCs passwords and means of communicating with the crusade’s want divination, atonement, or raise dead, they will have to leadership. In the likely event that a group qualifies to join wait a day for the cleric to prepare them. the Shining Crusade together, the organization encourOnce characters reach the upper echelons of the Shining Crusade (around 10th level, if they’ve spent most of their ages that group to continue operating as a team. Training time successfully completing missions for the crusade), usually ends when characters stride forth on their first they receive a greater benefit: a headquarters for their group mission as shining crusaders. to call its own. pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
“We have all grown weary of manning the barricades, waiting for the next undead army or demon horde. Instead, we’re taking the fight to the enemy.” Athurax, Crusader Captain
THE CRUSADERS’ CODE Members of the Shining Crusade are expected to adhere to the following code. It’s intentionally less restrictive than the paladin’s code; paladins who are shining crusaders are expected to obey the stricter rules. • Suffer not the undead to live, nor fiends of any sort. Do not negotiate with them under any circumstance.
216
• Other evildoers will face justice in the afterlife. Do not hasten their journey there unless they use lethal force against you first. • When innocents are at peril, rescue them before slaying undead and fiends, unless a delay or distraction would put even more innocents at peril. • Hack at the root of evil, not its branches. Better yet, crush the seed and sow the earth with salt.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
Members of the Shining Crusade tend to be aggressive— the whole point of the crusade is to attack evil before it takes root and spreads. That doesn’t mean they heedlessly charge into battle with every demon they see. If an undead or fiendish foe is simply too strong for a group to handle, there’s no shame in retreating, warning nearby noncombatants, and asking the crusade leadership for aid. While the Shining Crusade leadership isn’t always able to respond to every fiendish incursion or undead machination, it makes every effort to send the right force against the right enemy. It generally lacks the resources to send overwhelming force against a foe, but it won’t order PCs to defeat a flight of rampaging balors unless they have demonstrated that they’re up to the task. Communication between a PC group and the crusade leadership is thus a two-way street: The characters tell the crusade about threats as they uncover them, especially if they’re too great for the PCs to handle themselves, and the crusade points them toward new sources of evil that must be expunged.
CHAPTER 6
PLAYING A SHINING CRUSADER
Combat: Most crusaders know their foes quite well, and they’re armed for the task. The Shining Crusade’s clerics are adept at turning undead, and arcane spellcasters have spells such as dismissal and banishment ready for evil outsiders they find on the Material Plane. Nonspellcasters often carry holy or bane weapons. Rogues in particular are fond of magic weapons with the undead bane special ability, because it helps make up for the fact that they can’t sneak attack undead foes. Crusaders in combat are also mindful of the crusaders’ code (see the sidebar), which bids them show no mercy to evil outsiders and undead, but forbids them from using lethal force on other enemies—no matter how evil—unless those enemies use lethal force fi rst. Early in a fight, members of the Shining Crusade focus their efforts on undead and evil outsiders until the cultists, mad necromancers, and other evildoers nearby make their intentions clear. When any member uncovers regional or global threats, such as an undead army on the march or a massive open portal to the Abyss, the Shining Crusade goes to war with all the might of a small nation. When it gathers all its resources together, the Shining Crusade can call on thousands of troops, many of whom are mid- to high-level paladins and other battle-ready characters. Such great crusades typically happen only once every five years or so, but the Shining Crusade responds whenever the need is great. Advancement: The Shining Crusade has no formal system of ranks, relying instead on an almost feudal system of patronage. When characters fi rst join the Shining Crusade, their efforts will be guided by a mid- to highlevel crusader, who in turn reports to a more powerful superior, and so on. As they attain more levels, slay more evildoers, and do the good work of the Shining Crusade, they are “handed off” to higher and higher echelons of the crusade’s leadership and given missions of greater importance. Eventually PCs might take a leadership position within the crusade, directing its efforts to stamp out evil everywhere. Missions: Shining Crusade missions are archetypal D&D fare: destroy the lich wizard, unmask the secret cultists, and destroy the gate to the Nine Hells, for example. As long as a villain employs demons, devils, or undead to work evil in the world, characters are likely to be sent into battle on behalf of the Shining Crusade. The Shining Crusade particularly favors missions where it has the strategic initiative. Its members would much rather attack the lich-king’s stronghold than defend the city gates against a horde of flesh-starved ghouls. The crusaders won’t pass up the opportunity to defend innocents against evil depredations, of course, but they emphasize taking the attack to the enemy. High-level crusaders, for example, travel to the Abyss and the Nine Hells to attack
CHARACTERS
A 15th-level cleric armed with multiple move earth, wall of stone, stone shape, and similar spells builds the characters a base of operations, assisted by a team of low-level stonemasons, carpenters, and other craftspeople. The PCs choose the site and consult with the cleric ahead of time to make sure the finished product meets their needs. Construction typically takes a month, although any special requests the PCs make might lengthen this time. The crusade’s cleric won’t construct an entire keep on their behalf, but a sturdy tower is certainly within bounds, as are a series of linked dungeon rooms. The PC group can augment the cleric’s efforts with their own spellcasting, if they like. When the crusade’s cleric is done building the new headquarters, a 17th-level wizard arrives briefly to create a permanent set of teleportation circles linking the headquarters to the nearest Shining Crusade fortress. Information: While individual members of the Shining Crusade are quite knowledgeable, the organization doesn’t keep its own libraries or other information stores. The crusade is always at war, so even its internal recordkeeping is spotty. Access: Characters can always find clean but spartan accommodations at a Shining Crusade fortress, and wearing the tabard of the Shining Crusade is often sufficient to grant them an audience with the ranking clerics at temples of good-aligned deities, such as St. Cuthbert, Heironeous, and Pelor. Status: Crusaders in good standing gain a +2 circumstance bonus on interactions with mid- to high-level clerics in good-aligned churches and with the political leaders of nations beset by undead or fiendish attacks.
217
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
fiendish fortresses and slay archfiends. Their low-level counterparts watch for signs of malevolent influence on the Material Plane, then stamp it out preemptively if they can. Responsibilities: The Shining Crusade expects its members to live as crusaders, battling evil whenever possible. The crusade leadership recognizes that the tides of evil ebb and flow. The organization is also too busy watching evildoers to keep close track of every group of crusaders. As long PCs adhere to the crusader’s code and are generally available for crusade missions, they remain members in good standing. Unless a global threat arises, they can take as much time off as they need to construct magic items and perform side missions that involve other evil foes. If characters have a string of successes under their belt, the Shining Crusade will look the other way at side missions that don’t involve evildoers or are primarily efforts at self-enrichment.
THE SHINING CRUSADE IN THE WORLD “The entrance guards are missing? Ropes leading up the tower walls? Sound the alarm and make ready my armor—the Shining Crusade has found us.” Choronak, hamatula general
218
of Corellon Larethian), and Athrau Stonegallow (one of Moradin’s dwarven defenders) defeated a lich-king that had usurped the throne of a mighty kingdom and nearly conquered an entire continent. The trio, chastened by their failure to defeat the lich before its power grew, vowed never again to let evil lurk in the darkness and grow in strength. Calling themselves the Shining Crusade, they urged like-minded heroes to carry their banner and began training a new generation of crusaders. Aryesha and Athrau have passed on to the afterlife, but Rurithane remains an influential member of the Shining Crusade. Rurithane rarely contacts the other high-level members of the Shining Crusade’s leadership, but his counsel is accorded great weight when he does. With Rurithane often absent and Aryesha and Athrau gone, national governments and organized good-aligned religions have the strongest influence on the Shining Crusade’s leaders, because those churches and governments fund the crusade from their own treasuries. The Shining Crusade relies on enough different funding sources that no one government or church can convince the crusade’s leaders to change the direction of its mission. Highly lawful and highly chaotic churches sometimes withdraw their support of the Shining Crusade, but they usually come back into the fold once the crusade deals a particularly telling blow to the forces of evil.
The Shining Crusade is designed as an adventure enabler. It offers missions to the PCs to get matters started and NPC Reactions Anywhere the Shining Crusade goes, it carries the thanks provides noncombatant assistance such as spellcasting of the countless innocent lives the organization has saved that enables hurt or killed PCs to return to the fray. If by striking at the roots of evil. Because the Shining the PCs are captured or trapped, their fellow crusaders Crusade specializes in preemptive strikes and battles on can be the figurative (or even literal) cavalry that rides to enemy ground, those innocent lives often don’t know their rescue. how threatened they were, and they don’t see the Shining Structure: The Shining Crusade is a sprawling orgaCrusade’s work firsthand. nization that relies on the competence and good graces Accordingly, most NPCs have an initial attitude of of its individual members; it has only as much internal indifferent toward the Shining Crusade. The officials of structure as it needs to get its mission done. No single leader or council sets the crusade’s direction—just a handgood-aligned churches have a starting attitude of friendly ful of powerful characters trying to preempt the forces of toward crusaders, and undead and outsiders have a starting attitude of hostile toward anyone wearing the Shining darkness as best they can. The simplicity of the crusade’s Crusade’s tabard if they know that the tabard signifies an mandate—attack evil outsiders and undead—is the only imminent fight to the death. reason that different wings of the crusade don’t get in The Shining Crusade’s enemies are many: all demons, each other’s way. Outright rivalries among the leadership devils, and undead, plus most other evil organizations, are rare, but frequently one part of the Shining Crusade evil gods, and their worshipers. Two enemies deserve doesn’t know what the others are doing. particular notice. Crusaders tend to operate in small, mixed groups not The crusade often finds itself in conflict with followers unlike adventuring parties. At first, they plan missions of Wee Jas. Wee Jas isn’t evil, and many of her followers are from within the crusade’s fortresses near major cities. Eventually, elite crusaders receive private headquarters of likewise neutral or even good. But the Witch Goddess’s their own. In either case, most members are out crusading followers often consort with the undead and so draw the against evil at any given time, not acting as a garrison for Shining Crusade’s ire. Some within the Shining Crusade the fortress. would like to attack the church of Wee Jas directly, but The Shining Crusade began centuries ago when Aryeto do so would violate the crusaders’ code. Particularly sha (a human cleric of Pelor), Rurithane (an elf paladin committed crusaders chafe at the restriction, wishing
Characters with ranks in Knowledge (religion) or Knowledge (the planes) can research the Shining Crusade to learn more about the organization. DC 10: The Shining Crusade is a militant order, mostly composed of paladins, devoted to wiping out evil. DC 15: The crusade focuses on defeating demons, devils, and undead. DC 20: Whenever possible, the Shining Crusade attacks fiends and undead in their own lairs, before their evil plots have come to fruition. The doctrine of preemption is what separates this group from countless other knightly orders. DC 30: Recently the Shining Crusade has fallen victim to several traps laid by the archdevil Dispater.
THE SHINING CRUSADE IN YOUR GAME The Shining Crusade works best when you introduce it into your game gradually. Low-level characters might meet a duke wearing a tabard from his days with the Shining Crusade. They might ride past one of the crusade’s fortresses on their way elsewhere. Such brief mentions plant the seeds for a more robust introduction later on in your campaign. In most ongoing games, PCs achieve a victory of at least regional importance by 5th level or so. Maybe they rescue the town from a gnoll attack or clean out the haunted caverns that threaten nearby caravan routes. At that point, they attract the attention of a high-level Shining Crusade member, who gives them a mission against fiends or undead, with membership in the crusade as the reward for success. As your players approach the point where the Crusade will build them a headquarters, encourage them to take an active hand in its design. Don’t give them an entire castle, but give them a cool lair where they can retreat in safety and spend their downtime, and that they can customize as they see fit.
CHAPTER 6
SHINING CRUSADE LORE
When you have a table full of crusaders ready for action, make sure your adventures have a degree of variety. Because the crusade focuses on fiendish and undead opponents, you run the risk of falling into a rut and offering the same opponents in adventure after adventure. Make sure that you use templates, class levels, and the full panoply of fiends and undead to ensure that the PCs don’t become bored with the opposition—or take their evil enemies for granted. Encounters: When most PCs encounter the Shining Crusade, it’ll be as allies. (If the PCs are affiliated with demons, devils, or undead, the Shining Crusade make tenacious opponents, however.) When the PCs first meet members of the Shining Crusade, emphasize the crusaders’ zeal for attacking evil and their sense of fair play with mortals. If the PCs spend any time with the crusaders, they also get a sense of the Shining Crusade’s doctrine of preemption and what it takes to join the crusade. Adaptation: The Shining Crusade intentionally encompasses all good-aligned races and religions, so it’s appropriate for the widest variety of D&D groups. You have only one D&D group in your campaign, though, so you can narrow the focus if you like. Perhaps only humans and elves join the Shining Crusade, or maybe the crusade is the militant arm of the church of Pelor. As long as the crusade doesn’t keep out good-aligned players that want in, you can ground it in a specific faith or nation. Another way to adapt the Shining Crusade is to change its mandate. You can narrow it (a Shining Crusade that battles only demon hordes), refocus it (a Shining Crusade devoted to ridding the underdark of mind flayers and drow), or even obscure it (a Shining Crusade for whom the antifiend, antiundead crusade is just a means to a specific end).
CHARACTERS
they could strike at Wee Jas’s temples before they train the next generation of necromancers. A group of cultists and devils affiliated with the archdevil Dispater are trying to defeat the Shining Crusade with subterfuge and trickery, not fell might. They have attempted numerous times to place long-term agents among the membership of the Shining Crusade. While the crusade’s leadership has caught devilish spies and traitors, they wonder whether other “moles” remain within the crusade. Dispater’s followers also trap strongholds, designing them to catch crusaders eager to preempt an evildoer’s plot. Crusaders are lured to these sites using false hints of evil plots in the hopes of turning the strongholds into Dispater’s killing grounds.
RED KNIVES THIEVES’ GANG “Obey the gang, and you’ll see gold. Cross the gang, and you’ll see red.” Street aphorism common among Red Knives guild members The gang of thieves known as the Red Knives can make anyone disappear—voluntarily or involuntarily. It can spring a prisoner from the baron’s dungeon. It can tell bandits when the silk caravan is due to arrive. It can do all these things and more—for loyal members of the gang.
JOINING THE RED KNIVES THIEVES’ GANG Not every rogue is a thief, and not every thief is a rogue. Regardless of a character’s class, the Red Knives look for earners—criminals to help fill the gang’s coffers. The guild leaders let nearly anyone join the gang as long as they see earning potential in the applicant’s illicit activities.
219
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
The gang is always on the watch for potential traitors and stool pigeons. Each new member must go through an initiation that includes illegal activity (often an assault, robbery, or major burglary). The gang bosses keep evidence of the applicants’ guilt, which they use as leverage and insurance against future disloyalty. Entry Requirements: Must pass questioning under zone of truth; must successfully complete initiation crime. More than two-thirds of the Red Knives have at least one level of rogue, but every class (except paladin, obviously) has a place in the gang. Bards use entertainment as a cover for more illicit activities, and sorcerers and wizards use arcane magic as a cover for theirs. Barbarians, fighters, and rangers serve as muscle for protection rackets. Clerics heal wounded bandits and magically enhance the abilities of fellow gang members. Druids and monks are rare in the gang. Druids might use networks of rats, crows, or other urban animals to spy for the gang. A sense of personal honor could lead a monk to act as bodyguard or trainer for a gang boss. After joining the gang, PCs meet at least two superiors: the master of whatever illicit activity they specialize in (Master of Burglars, Master of Robbers, and so on) and the boss responsible for coordinating gang activity in a particular neighborhood. They then receive approval for their first caper, which is done under gang surveillance to make sure nothing goes awry. Some would-be thieves seek out the Red Knives, but others make their acquaintance under less polite circumstances. Cutpurses, burglars, and other petty thieves experience their first contact with the gang early in their career—when they meet a gang enforcer in an alley. The enforcer explains to them the benefits of membership and threatens the consequences of spurning the gang. If the criminals don’t join right away, they wind up under gang surveillance. Then they are visited repeatedly by gang enforcers, who escalate the threats and violence each time until they succeed at the recruiting efforts, kill the stubborn thieves, or drive them out of town.
RED KNIVES BENEFITS The Red Knives Thieves’ Gang does more for its elite members than for the rank and fi le. In some ways, the gang is a racket, with experienced thieves stealing from the proceeds of less powerful counterparts. Economics: Its fencing operation is one of the biggest sources of income for the Red Knives. All the city’s burglars sell their stolen goods to the gang, which then works them back into circulation through a network of shady but technically legal businesses. Because the gang has a virtual monopoly on trade in stolen items, it can afford to take a smaller percentage cut from its members and make up the difference in volume. When characters sell stolen goods to the Red Knives, they get 60% of its market price, rather than the usual 50%. When characters steal gold or other items that don’t need to be fenced, however, it’s a different story. Street muggers, for example, are expected to give 20% of their nightly take to the gang. Because they’re criminals, most muggers cheat the Red Knives a little, but any mugger who isn’t turning over at least 10% draws the attention of gang enforcers. Services: Gang resources include experts in forgery, appraisal, magic item identification, alchemy, disguise, locksmithing, trapmaking (or trap disabling), and interrogation. With a word to the local gang boss, PCs can get access to an expert with a relevant skill modifier of +15 within hours. Experts with modifiers of +20 or higher are also available, but it might take days for the request to work its way through the entire Red Knives network. Characters are expected to pay for these services, negotiating with the expert involved. The gang merely provides easy access to specialists who might otherwise be hard to find. Information: Checking with the neighborhood boss is functionally the equivalent of having the boss make a Gather Information check on the PCs’ behalf. A typical neighborhood boss has a Gather Information modifier of +10. Asking a question of the neighborhood boss isn’t
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs RULES OF THE RED KNIVES Each neighborhood boss and grandmaster is responsible for discipline among gang members. A set of unwritten rules exists to keep the gang running smoothly. Bosses often change or add to the rules according to the situation on the streets or for darker reasons of their own. • Never rat out another Red Knife. • Don’t pull a job at any of the trade guild chapterhouses. They pay a lot of protection money. Anything outside the guildhall walls is fair game. • Many of the temples are off limits too, depending on whether they pay the guild off. Check with the Temple District boss for the current lowdown.
220
• Give the gang its cut by dawn, or else. • Don’t kill city guards or soldiers of the garrison. Hurting them real bad is acceptable, though. • If you see a freelancer, tell the neighborhood boss right away. • Nobody sees you go into the storm sewers, and nobody sees you come out. • If you don’t check with the neighborhood boss and the grandmaster before you do a job, you forfeit the entire haul—and maybe a finger, if you screwed up somebody else’s job. • If two Red Knives eye the same loot, it’s first come, first grabbed.
pqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqrs
Most members of the Red Knives are in the gang for the money, and the PCs might be no exception. Perhaps they regard gang membership as a way to strike back at the city’s tyrannical rulers. Perhaps they have a Robin Hood mentality, stealing from the city’s wealthy to support the impoverished. Regardless of the reasons for joining the Red Knives, it takes continual work to make sure the relationship with fellow gang members is solid. Thieves are a distrustful lot, and periodic demonstrations of loyalty and competence are the only ways to ease that distrust. On the other hand, characters have to decide which of their fellow thieves are worthy of their trust, and that isn’t any easier. Combat: The Red Knives are primarily thieves, not assassins. They know firsthand that a bloody trail of bodies is an easy path for the city guard to follow. When possible, they strike quickly to put their opponents off balance, then flee into the shadows with their ill-gotten gains. The Red Knives reserve their most cold-hearted violence for when they want to send a message. The gang’s protection rackets can be heartlessly violent when they’re trying to persuade reluctant victims. Freelance thieves who repeatedly refuse to join the Red Knives or surrender the gang’s percentage find themselves on the receiving end of violence that borders on the sadistic. Advancement: Among the rank and file, the Red Knives Thieves’ Gang is a meritocracy. If a PC group pulls off successful heists and gets a reputation as an earner, the characters receive better leads on potential targets and better treatment from their superiors. Advancing through the gang’s leadership is harder. The neighborhood bosses and grandmasters are entrenched in their positions, and the only way to rise up through the gang is to knock someone else down. Rivalries among the leadership can be intense, although the gang’s Grandmaster of Thieves quashes destructive vendettas within the organization. Missions: As gang members, characters are free to plan their own heists, but they can also consult with the neighborhood boss and grandmaster for potential targets.
CHAPTER 6
PLAYING A RED KNIVES MEMBER
The leadership’s network of informants can provide them with particularly lucrative targets and give them logistical help such as identifying which watchmen are on the take and what sorts of magic traps guard whatever they want to steal. In any case, members are expected to run their illicit operations past the relevant neighborhood boss and grandmaster beforehand, although trusted gang members can obtain permission for minor jobs on an ongoing basis. Responsibilities: Staying in the gang’s good graces is mostly a matter of reputation. As long as characters aren’t caught by the authorities and keep earning money, they retain the benefits of gang membership. Their specific responsibilities are few. Accordingly, gang membership doesn’t interfere with a career as an adventurer in most cases. Members shouldn’t openly consort with city authorities, nor should they disappear for months at a time; both would make the gang leadership suspicious.
CHARACTERS
necessarily any faster than the PCs making their own queries, because the neighborhood boss will often say, “I’ll ask around” and have an answer in 1d4+1 hours. Access: Low-level gang members learn a series of passwords to identify other gang members working in the same neighborhood, and they receive a skeleton key that opens most city storm sewer grates (a common way for gang members to get around). High-level members who have been with the gang for at least a year also learn the passwords and secret doors that lead to the gang’s central headquarters in the catacombs under the city’s temple district.
THE RED KNIVES IN THE WORLD “The only thing worse than the Red Knives is the alternative— criminals running wild across the city. The Red Knives at least show a little restraint.” Thora Ninegal, city councilor Membership in the Red Knives immerses the PCs in the underworld and gives them access to all that entails. They can buy and sell on the black market, plan their own capers, and live in a world that combines D&D with countless stories about organized crime syndicates. Structure: The day-to-day leadership of the Red Knives functions on two tracks. Each neighborhood in the city has a neighborhood boss responsible for all organized crime in that neighborhood. A neighborhood boss coordinates the Red Knives’ efforts to keep the authorities off balance or on the payroll, receiving information from a vast network of informants from all walks of life. The gang also has several dozen grandmasters, each in charge of a particular kind of crime. The Red Knives have a grandmaster of burglary, for example, and a grandmaster of protection rackets. The grandmasters train less experienced members in the fi ner points of their craft, and they coordinate those efforts on a citywide basis. The Grandmaster of Protection makes sure that her thugs in one neighborhood aren’t charging a vastly different rate for Red Knives protection than elsewhere in the city. Both the neighborhood bosses and grandmasters have a high degree of autonomy, and they’re free to appoint and remove whatever subordinates and assistants they like. All the bosses and grandmasters report to one man: Voskoff, the city’s Grandmaster of Thieves. Voskoff controls
221
NPC Reactions Most denizens of the city hate and fear members of the Red Knives Thieves’ Gang. They have an initial attitude of unfriendly toward known members—which is why few thieves let their affi liation be known to anyone other than fellow members. The Red Knives’ ruthless reputation does have a side benefit: a +2 circumstance bonus on Intimidate checks when members interrogate a helpless captive. Members of the city’s underworld view the Red Knives more positively, because they benefit from the gang’s smuggling operation, black markets, and information network. They have an initial attitude of friendly toward those who reveal themselves as Red Knives members.
Illus. by R. Spencer
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
the overall efforts of the Red Knives, handles the organization’s treasury, and pulls the political strings that make sure the gang remains safely in the shadows. Voskoff knows he’s only one betrayal away from permanent retirement, so he plays the more powerful neighborhood bosses and grandmasters against one another, encouraging competitive rivalries and ensuring that no one amasses enough power to become a rival to him. He steps in when the rivalries become bloody vendettas or otherwise threaten to expose the gang’s lucrative but shadowy activities.
RED KNIVES LORE Characters with Gather Information or ranks in Knowledge (local) can research the Red Knives Thieves’ Gang to learn more about them. DC 10: The Red Knives run all organized crime in the city, from burglary to muggings to protection rackets. DC 15: The gang also runs a thriving black market and smuggling operation. It has a near-monopoly on the trade in stolen goods. DC 20: A mysterious man named Voskoff runs the Red Knives. Their main hideout is somewhere under the city, accessed through the storm sewer system. If the PCs are looking for illicit goods, a DC 15 Gather Information check is sufficient to put them in contact with the Red Knives for a bargaining session.
THE RED KNIVES IN YOUR GAME
222
A training room operated by the Red Knives Thieves’ Gang
The Red Knives are designed to work in any large city or metropolis. They’re a syndicate like the American mafia, so they operate a little more openly due to corrupt allies in high places. Keeping PCs happy in the thieves’ gang is a matter of making sure that the benefits of membership outweigh the costs—both the concrete costs of doing business with the gang and the more abstract costs of having to
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
deal with gang rivalries. The Red Knives aren’t supposed use the rules for guilds only for “minor” guilds, usually ones that play roles as NPC organizations. For player to be a unified, cooperative organization. Dealing with ambitious, untrustworthy criminals as ostensible allies is characters, it’s best to use custom-built organizations supposed to be a tricky challenge for PCs who like political such as the Red Knives. machinations and double-crosses. Encounters: What makes a Red Knives encounter memo- Arcane Guilds rable is often the dialogue that precedes the fight—dialogue An arcane guild is a group of spellcasters—usually wizthat continues as the fight progresses. Red Knives memards. Such a guild typically provides shared libraries and bers live in a world of intrigue, intimidation, and ruthless an atmosphere that nurtures the creativity of its members. reputation, but they use violence only as a means to an Assistance with the creation of new spells and magic items might also be offered. end. They first try to get their way by brandishing their Examples: Mages’ guilds, alchemists’ guilds. blades and threatening violence. If you have ever wanted Associated Classes: Adept, artificer (EBERRON Campaign to impersonate the mafia dons of movies and television, Setting), hexblade (Complete Warrior), sorcerer, wizard. the Red Knives are your chance. Adaptation: As written, the Red Knives are a syndicate Associated Skills: Concentration, Craft (alchemy), focused on burglary and robbery, but in your campaign Decipher Script, Knowledge (arcana), Spellcraft, Use they might have a different focus. In a more law-andMagic Device. order city, they might primarily be a league of smugglers Sample Contact: Agosti of the Shadow Shore (see Table bringing contraband inside the city walls. They might 5–1: Sample Contacts, page 154). or might not have a group of assassins in their employ. In a city full of political intrigue, they might be spies Criminal Guilds Criminal guilds serve one primary purpose: to protect for hire, digging up the secrets of one power group on their own. A guild of this type offers its members a place behalf of another. to hide and train, compare notes, and learn about opporAnother factor to consider is the leadership. The Red Knives might be a stab-your-way-to-the-top organization, or tunities for profit. Members can also use their association the leadership might be hereditary (like in a mafia family). with the guild as leverage when interacting with others More sinister leadership possibilities exist as well: thieves’ who know its power. gangs run by mind flayers, vampires, or lycanthropes, Examples: Thieves’ guild. Associated Classes: Bard, rogue, scout (Complete for example. Adventurer). Associated Skills: Disable Device, Forgery, Hide, Move Silently, Open Lock, Sleight of Hand. Of course, not all organizations are about exploring lost Sample Contact: Deogol Knifethrower (see Table 5–1: Sample Contacts, page 154). ruins, defeating brooding strongholds of evil, or robbing a city blind. Most organizations are much more narrowly focused than this. These organizations have as many Government Guilds A government guild consists of public servants, politicians, different names as there are occupations in the world, soldiers, and others dedicated to the betterment of society. and even those based on identical trades can have wildly Such organizations are among the few that finance their different compositions and agendas. As a whole, these operations through taxes and tariffs rather than through narrowly focused organizations are known as guilds. A the sale of goods and services. guild’s purpose and benefits are more likely to appeal to Examples: City guards, embassy. a single character than to the entire party. Associated Classes: Cleric, expert, fighter. GUILD TYPES Associated Skills: Bluff, Diplomacy, Gather InforEach guild type has associated skills useful to members, mation, Intimidate, Knowledge (nobility and royalty), skills its members are expected to master. These skills, Sense Motive. along with sample contacts for each type of guild, are Sample Contact: Farhaan Nicabar (see Table 5–1: given in the following descriptions. As the DM, you Sample Contacts, page 154). can modify this information to suit a particular guild. For example, if your campaign world features a criminal Mercantile Guilds guild of pirates, you might want to swap Swim for Open A guild of this type provides a place in which its members Lock in its Associated Skills list. Finally, remember that can meet and talk with fellow shop-owners and merchants while these guilds can cover rules for organizations such who deal in similar products and services. In addition, as thieves’ guilds, mages’ guilds, and the like, you should mercantile guilds offer their members protection from
GUILDS
223
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
224
fraud, theft, and other dangers of doing business. A few of the wealthier mercantile organizations even provide loans for members who wish to start new businesses. Merchants who make their living with the Craft skill often form guilds of this type. Examples: Carpenters’ guild, smiths’ guild. Associated Classes: Expert, rogue. Associated Skills: Appraise, Bluff, Craft (any one), Knowledge (local), Profession (any one), Speak Language. Sample Contact: Vasilii the Fat (see Table 5–1: Sample Contacts, page 154).
performer guild encourages members with similar talents to practice together, and to trade songs, poems, plays, or performance tips. Examples: Minstrel society, playwright organization, theater or theatrical company. Associated Classes: Bard, rogue. Associated Skills: Balance or Tumble, Disguise, Diplomacy, Escape Artist, Perform, Profession (any one), Sleight of Hand. Sample Contact: Nisha of the Many Eyes (see Table 5–1: Sample Contacts, page 154).
Mercenary Guilds Psionic Guilds These guilds provide their members with safe places to rest A psionic guild is a group of psionic NPCs—primarily in dangerous regions, centralized postings of job opportupsions, although other psionic characters are normally nities, and the benefit of the guild’s reputation. Mercenary welcome as well. This kind of guild is dedicated to enhancguilds also offer healing for wounded members and safe ing the mental might of its members by pooling resources, offering shared mentalities, and assisting with the creation havens for those who need to hide from enemies. of new psionic powers and artifacts of cognizance. Examples: Barbarian clan, mercenary group. Associated Classes: Barbarian, fighter, monk, soulknife Examples: College of psychics, soothsayers’ guild. (Expanded Psionics Handbook), warrior. Associated Classes: Psion, wilder (both from Expanded Associated Skills: Climb, Handle Animal, Intimidate, Psionics Handbook). Jump, Ride, Use Rope. Associated Skills: Autohypnosis, Concentration, Sample Contact: Jal Omari (see Table 5–1: Sample Knowledge (psionics), Psicraft, Use Psionic Device. Contacts, page 154). Sample Contact: Ialdabode (see Table 5–1: Sample Contacts, page 154). Naturalist Guilds A naturalist guild can be a group of people who prefer Religious Guilds A religious guild typically claims the faithful of a specific the simple life, an organization of bounty hunters who religion as its members. However, this category can also specialize in tracking targets through the woodlands, a encompass organizations that span multiple faiths, as well cult of nature worshipers, or just about any other group as secret orders that operate without the knowledge of the whose members live and work in the natural areas of bulk of the faithful. the world. Such a guild provides its members with a support structure and offers them services not available Examples: Church of St. Cuthbert, nature cult. in the wild. Associated Classes: Cleric, favored soul (Complete Examples: Explorer society, hunters’ lodge members. Divine), paladin. Associated Skills: Concentration, Diplomacy, Heal, Associated Classes: Barbarian, druid, ranger. Associated Skills: Handle Animal, Listen, Knowledge Knowledge (religion), Knowledge (any one other), (nature), Search, Spot, Survival. Spellcraft. Sample Contact: Cynric the Pure (see Table 5–1: Sample Sample Contact: Wildcat Rodorsson (see Table 5–1: Contacts, page 154). Sample Contacts, page 154). Performer Guilds Scholastic Guilds Those who make a living with the Perform skill band Scholastic guilds are dedicated to furthering the education together into guilds to promote the services they provide. of their members, and sometimes of whole communities. Affi liation with such a guild also allows members to These organizations provide places of learning, libraries, provide more spectacular shows than they could singly by study chambers, and an intellectual atmosphere to facilicombining the talents of several members. Typically, the tate the acquisition of knowledge. membership includes performers who complement one Examples: Secret societies, universities. another’s specialties—dancers and singers with musicians, Associated Classes: Expert, wizard. for example. If a performer guild maintains a guildhouse, Associated Skills: Decipher Script, Gather Informaits members can often draw patrons there in groups to tion, Knowledge (any four). watch performances, rather than seeking out individual Sample Contact: Orkatz of the Green City (see Table inns or taverns at which to ply their trade. Finally, a 5–1: Sample Contacts, page 154).
JOINING A GUILD
CHAPTER 6
Most guilds are strictly NPC organizations. For most PCs, the prospect of joining the Benevolent Order of Bakers is simply not exciting enough to become a major feature of their character’s development. At the same time, guilds demand much less from their members than the more aggressive and dangerous organizations presented earlier in this chapter. If a PC simply wants a place to invest some of his earnings, practice some of his skills, or earn a little cash on the side, joining a guild is probably his best choice. Entry Requirements: At least one level in a guild associated class, 4 ranks in a guild associated skill , entry dues (25 gp). Unlike other organizations, guilds only rarely actively recruit members. Once a character has become a master of a specific trade, he’s more likely to found his own guild; established guilds generally don’t have much interest in recruiting new upstarts who have already mastered their chosen craft. As a result, a PC typically has to track down the guildhouse or its members and apply for membership. A Gather Information check can provide specific information about a known guild, such as the location of its guildhouse. Finding the meeting place of a relatively well-known, open guild (such as a local baker’s guild) is a fairly simple task (DC 10). Locating the guildhouse of the secret society Table 6–12: Guild Loans Desired Loan Amount Diplomacy DC that pulls the strings of the city government, on the other Up to the member’s monthly dues 15 hand, might be quite difficult, requiring characters to Up to the member’s monthly dues × 10 20 gather clues through adventuring before even attempting Up to the member’s monthly dues × 100 25 the DC 30 Gather Information check. • Every member gains a contact specific to her guild (see A guild obtains the lion’s share of its income from the Table 5–1: Contacts, page 154, for sample contacts). dues paid by its lay members, plus aid and residuals from its active members. When a character first joins a guild, It’s possible for a character to lose her guild memberhe must pay a one-time entrance fee. As a general rule, a ship, especially if the guild leaders learn that she has compromised the guild in some way (giving guild secrets guild’s entrance fee is 25 gp. away to an enemy guild, for example). Banishment from a In addition, guild members are expected to pay a guild results in immediate loss of all benefits gained from monthly fee equal to 5 gp per character level. Feel free both the guild and any guild feats the character possesses. to adjust these amounts to fit the style of play if your Additionally, the attitudes of guild members toward the campaign does not follow the expected PC wealth model character become one step less friendly (returning to detailed in the Dungeon Master’s Guide. their original status unless other changes have occurred). GUILD BENEFITS For example, guild members who became friendly to the Once a character has joined a guild, she can immediately character when she joined the guild revert to indifferent enjoy the benefits. New guild members receive general when she is banished. benefits, as given in the following section, that are indistinguishable from one guild to the next. An active PLAYING A GUILD MEMBER Joining a guild brings responsibilities. Each member guild member (one who has taken the Favored in Guild is expected to serve the guild on an ongoing basis. If a feat) enjoys all these general benefits plus one specialized benefit specific to the guild type (see the Favored in Guild character expects to be away from her responsibilities feat, page 227, for details). while pursuing other goals (such as adventuring), she can ask her guild to waive these service requirements while • All guildhouses include barracks and kitchens, so that she is away, but in return for that favor she must agree to every member can be guaranteed food and a safe place pay the guild 10% of the value of any income or treasure to sleep while she’s in the vicinity. In smaller guilds, she gained on her expedition. might need to cook for herself, but the food is supplied.
CHARACTERS
• Membership in a guild means a better likelihood of a positive response to requests. The initial attitude of a fellow guild member is always one step closer to helpful than her normal starting attitude (see Player’s Handbook page 72). • Guild members help their own. A character gains a +2 circumstance bonus on Diplomacy or Gather Information checks made while talking to a fellow guild member. • The guild subsidizes the cost of goods, supplies, and guild-related services, reducing the price to a member by 10%. • Any member who falls on desperate times can call upon her guild for aid. To make such a request, she must make a Diplomacy check with a cumulative –2 penalty for each previous call for aid she has made to that guild. If aid is given, it most often comes in the form of a monetary loan for a term of one month (see Table 6–12: Guild Loans for amounts and Diplomacy DCs). If the member fails to repay the money on time, she is typically expelled from the guild, and the loan is absolved. Certain guilds (especially criminal guilds) have stricter penalties for those who default on guild loans. Such guilds might even hire assassins to make examples of those who fail to repay.
225
CHAPTER 6
CHARACTERS
226
Specific guild service requirements depend on the guild’s type. Arcane: Any scholastic research or new spells the member researches must be copied and donated to the guild’s library. Criminal: The only stated requirement of a criminal guild is that members must not divulge guild secrets to any nonmember. Any particularly large-scale or high-profile crime requires guild consent, and the guild usually takes 15% of the member profits from such capers. Government: Each member of a government guild must spend at least 20 hours a week working for the guild. Mercantile: In addition to the regular dues it collects, a mercantile guild levies a guild tax of 15% on the monthly income that members’ guild-affiliated business ventures produce. Mercenary: A mercenary guild requires each member to spend no fewer than 20 hours per week on missions and patrols. Generally, such duties are fairly safe and do not require much (if any) combat. In times of war or danger, however, members are required to support whatever cause the guild does. With a successful DC 25 Diplomacy check, a member can have an adventure with her companions registered as a “patrol,” and time spent adventuring counts toward this 20 hour week. Each additional attempt to register an adventure as a “patrol” increases the target Diplomacy DC by 2. Naturalist: Because of their isolation, naturalist guilds require more support and supplies than other guilds. Since their members are often absent for extended periods, each is required to pay a tithe equal to at least 25 gp per character level on every visit to a guildhouse, but no more often than once a month. This is in addition to the member’s monthly dues. Tithes are usually paid in gear, food, or magic items. Performer: A performer guild requires each member to perform his chosen services in support of other guild members as necessary. Generally, such service requires 1d4–1 days (8 hours per day) each week. Psionic: Any new powers or psioni