Category Archives: RPGs

OSR Superstar Contest – All three Magic Items with S&W Rules

I wrote these up with AD&D in mind, not realizing that parts were vastly different than S&W Rules.

Magic Item 1 – S&W

1.) Magic Battle Standard

Court Wizards, and most wizards in general, are reluctant to risk their lives on the battlefield. Even for those so inclined or “convinced” to serve their liege or powerful neighbor in battle prefer to maximize their effectiveness while avoiding the line of battle. Thus, magic items that increase the effectiveness of troops is a general way of helping and can spare the need for the wizard to actually step foot on the field of battle, or at least stay as far from the fighting as possible.

There are 4 types of standards. Normal unit/army insignias, Lesser Standards, Holy/Unholy Standards, and Greater Standards. Conscripts/peasants will usually not have magic standards unless the lord/leader has been particularly unlucky in battle yet managed to retain his standards. Level 5 standards are usually the standards of the overall leader of a force, or really big armies, as in huge kingdoms or empires may have such standards for leading generals.

Non-magic standards have an effect on battle. They signify the unit and it is a great honor to be the standard bearer. A unit specific banner with words or symbols specific to the unit add +1 to morale and reaction rolls. Should a standard fall, the unit must make a morale/reaction roll without the bonus. If the standard is recovered, it restores the bonus, but for each additional time it falls in the same battle, it reduces the roll by 1%. (See page 87 of the Complete Swords & Wizardry Rules for Morale Checks.) If a larger unit has standard for its sub-units, the sub-unit standard falling only affects the morale modifier of that sub-unit. If the larger unit banner falls, it affects all of the sub-units. For example, an army lead by a king that has unit banners and the kings banner is with the King. If the King’s banner falls, the entire army must make a morale check.

NOTE: The abilities of the magic battle standards listed below are defensive in nature. It is possible, at the GM’s discretion that there be one or more offensive spell of the appropriate spell level for a standard. For a warlike culture that relies on magic instead of just force of arms, it will be very likely that they have offensive spell capabilities. Since the forces of chaos want to expand, the very often will have attack capabilities.

Lesser Standards are basic magic items that give the bonuses to their troops, in addition to the bonuses of non-magic standards. The unit will have the unit symbol on their shields, helmets, or tabards.
The magic in the standards is generally to allow the bearer to maintain the honor of the unit by keeping the standard upright.
A level 1 standard enables the standard bearer to cast Protection from Evil and Shield once per day/battle, as 1st level magic user spells.
A level 2 standard has the abilities of a level 1 standard plus Detect Evil, Detect Invisibility, Mirror Image, and Strength once per day/battle, as 2nd level magic user spells.
A level 3 standard has the abilities of level 1 and 2 standards plus Protection from Evil, 10-foot Radius, and Protection from Normal Missiles, as 3rd level magic user spells.
A Level 4 standard has the abilities of level 1, 2 and 3 standards plus Confusion, and Fear, as 4th level magic user spells.
A Level 5 standard has the abilities of level 1, 2,3 and 4 standards plus Hold Monster, as 5th level magic user spells.

Holy/Unholy Standards will have the symbol of the religion/deity/cult with some differentiation for the unit. (Unholy standards can cast spells to benefit the bearer or against those attacking the bearer or his unit.) The unit will have the unit symbol on their shields, helmets, or tabards.
A level 1 Holy standard enables the standard bearer to cast Cure Light Wounds and Protection from Evil once per day/battle as 1st level cleric spells.
A level 2 Holy standard has the abilities of a level 1 standard plus Bless and Hold Person once per day/battle as 2nd level cleric spells.
A level 3 Holy standard has the abilities of level 1 and 2 standards plus Cure Disease and Prayer as 3rd level cleric spells.
A level 4 Holy standard has the abilities of levels 1, 2, and 3 standards plus Create Water, Cure Serious Wounds, Neutralize Poison, Protection from Evil, 10-foot Radius as 4th level cleric spells.
A level 5 Holy standard has the abilities of levels 1, 2, 3, and 4 standards plus Create Food, Dispel Evil, and Detect Magic as 5th level cleric spells.
Greater Standards are more powerful magic items that gain power as their units are successful in battle. The unit will have the unit symbol on their shields, helmets, or tabards.
These standards require the cooperation of wizards and clerics in their creation.
Level 1 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 1 standard and a level 1 holy/unholy standard.
Level 2 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 2 standard and a level 2 holy/unholy standard.
Level 3 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 3 standard and a level 3 holy/unholy standard.
Level 4 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 4 standard and a level 4 holy/unholy standard.
Level 5 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 5 standard and a level 5 holy/unholy standard.

In addition to the above, greater standards allow the bearer to turn/control undead as a cleric of the same level as the standard.

By the very nature of the combined magics of a greater standard, these devices gain in power the more successful their units are in battle. A new standard must win ten battles for a 10% chance to add a miscellaneous ability. A new standard whose unit loses its first battle must win 15 battles for the 10% chance of a new ability.
Skirmishes and small actions where the unit easily wins are not as beneficial as an actual battle that requires effort and coordination for the unit. Five such skirmishes/easy wins are equal to one battle.

Miscellaneous Ability Table 3d6
3 – Intelligence. Battle standard becomes intelligent as per rules for intelligent swords and is able to advise the bearer and help hinder/influence the battle.
4 – Random additional magic user defensive spell of same level as the standard.
5 – Random additional magic user offensive spell of same level as the standard.
6 – Random additional magic user offensive and defensive spell of same level as the standard.
7 – Random additional cleric defensive spell of same level as the standard.
8 – Random additional cleric user offensive spell of same level as the standard.
9 – Random additional cleric offensive and defensive spell of same level as the standard.
10 – Random additional cleric and magic user defensive spell of same level as the standard.
11 – Random additional cleric and magic user offensive spell of same level as the standard.
12 – Random spell of any level useable once per day.
13 – Holy standards permanent protection of evil 15′ radius. Unholy standard, protection from good.
14 – Permanent detect magic 10′ radius.
15 – Roll on benign effects table.
16 – Roll on adverse effects table.
17 – Roll on benign and adverse effects table.
18 – Increase to next level of standard. For standards at level 5 roll again on this table, ignoring this result.
Benign Effects Table 1d10, or [d100 with 10% range for each.]
1 [01-10] – Unit fights as one level higher.
2 [11-20] – Entire unit is healed of 1d6 hp once per battle.
3 [21-30] – Entire unit is hasted 1d10 rounds into a battle. Re-roll at the beginning of each battle.
4 [31-40] – Enemy unit facing the unit with standard is held as per hold person.
5 [41-50] – Enemy unit facing the unit with the standard is slept as per sleep.
6 [51-60] – Unit can fight 1d10 rounds past the point they would normally face exhaustion. Re-roll for each battle.
7 [61-70] – Standard randomly summons a unit mascot. Something fitting the units reputation or insignia. Once there is a unit mascot roll again if this comes up until the mascot retires dues to age or infirmity or is killed in battle. If the mascot is killed in battle, there is a 10% change that a new mascot will be summoned and appear in 1d6 rounds. The mascot will stay near the banner and fight to protect the banner and the beater. Birds and smaller flying mascots will perch on the cross piece of the banner, other mascots will stay within 30 feet of the banner.
8 [71-80] – Opposing unit(s) must roll save vs. fear as the spell.
9 [81-90] – Units troops roll at +1 on 1d6th saving throw needed in a battle. Re-roll for each battle.
10 [91-100] – Unit is not surprised/caught unawares by flanking attacks and ambushes.
Adverse Effects Table 1d8
1 – Random enemy unit is healed of 1-4 HP for each member.
2 – Units troops are slowed if attacked by specific humanoid type (kobolds, goblins, orcs, bugbears, etc.)
3 – Units troops are held as per hold person for one round 1d10 rounds into a battle.
4 – Units troops are confused 1 round as per spell confusion.
5 – Standard randomly summons a monster as per monster summoning.
6 – Standard attracts the attention of the most powerful single foe in the opposing force.
7 – Standard attracts the attention of the most renowned unit in the opposing force.
8 – Units troops roll at -1 on 1d6th saving throw needed in a battle. Re-roll for each battle.
Planting the standard:
When a unit with a greater standard is in dire straights, they can “plant the standard” and stand and fight to the last man. Merely planting the standard is not enough, the unit commander, or highest ranking/senior member present, must rally the unit around the standard. A successful morale/reaction roll will enable this action. This will negate their need to roll for morale for the remainder of the battle, and they will get a second wind and will each be healed 1d4 hit points. Should the unit somehow prevail or the cavalry arrives and the danger is at an end, the members of the unit will fall exhausted and unable to march for 1d8 hours. NOTE: Troops that do not have a warrior ethic or unit cohesion or a lawful alignment cannot do this easily, with a few exceptions. Orcs can do this when fighting elves, goblins when fighting dwarves, etc. But if the troops are conscripts, slaves, unruly, chaotic, or not a warrior culture, they can attempt this, but with a penalty.

Aura and Renown:
Successful and famous units will be known by their standard. This can cause others to refuse to face them in the line of battle and cause weak minded bullies to back down when encountering someone wearing the unit’s insignia. NOTE: Counterfeit insignia only works for so long, the bearer must be able to back up the symbol he wears.

Unsuccessful and infamous units will also be known by their standard and will attract derision and insults and possibly thrown rotten vegetables or even stones. A player who dons such a unit’s insignia is in for a big surprise at the first settlement where the unit is known.

Finding Battle Standards.
Battle standards will be common in barracks, forts, castles, and the homes of nobles and kings. Magic Standards will only be as common as the prevalence of magic in a campaign. For low magic settings, such items will be ancient and their manufacture will be lost to the mists of time, or only found in rare and hard to locate manuscripts.

It is possible that a standard might be found on an ancient battlefield. Evil/chaotic standards would be destroyed by good/lawful forces and vice versa. However, intelligent greater standards can fight back, and might be buried and warded to keep out of the hands of like aligned forces. It is also possible that a greater standard has been used as part of the wardings to contain a powerful creature. A holy standard could be part of the containment of an ancient evil, or an unholy standard is used to help trap a long lost hero of renown, for example.

Magic standards found in a dungeon/ruin/abandoned castle setting will have the appropriate amount of dust, but will not show signs of wear and tear. Good creatures and especially paladins and clerics will avoid unholy standards, even if they are not magic. Intelligent unholy standards will attempt to attack paladins and good/lawful clerics, or vice versa Holy standards versus anti-paladins and evil/chaotic clerics.

For unintelligent magic battle standards, the players will have to find a sage or cast appropriate informational spells or find ancient manuscripts to explain their workings in low magic campaigns. In high magic campaigns the characters might have general knowledge that they exist, but will not know how to operate them, etc.

A small party or single adventurer using a standard can potentially gain some benefits. If the party does not have the same insignia as the banner, only the bearer will benefit unless the effect is an area of effect spell. As with rods, staves, and wands, they can be activated merely by touching an appropriate rune, or by the correct command, or by both command and touching a rune. Holy/Unholy Standards will usually require the battle cry of the deity/religion or shouting the name of the deity to activate.

Fun twist: Druidic Banners.
An army of nature worshipers, led by druids, could have nature banners and go after any forces of law or chaos that are using their forest for their war machines. Such banners could be bundles of oak leaves, or an oak brank, bundles of mistletoe, a branch of holly, etc. These banners would be similar to Holy/Unholy Banners, and because outside forces so threaten them, they will have offensive spell capabilities. It would be extremely rare for a druidic group to cooperate with a wizard to make a more traditional Greater Magic Banner. However, druidic forces that are aligned toward law or chaos would not have the same reservations. Greater druidic banners are possible by the nature force of the spirit of the forest/jungle/spring/cave/etc. that is the center of druidic worship.

Size and Shape:
Standards come in all sizes and shape and length of poles. They need to be big enough to communicate where a unit is on the field of battle, but not too big or unwieldly for the bearer to easily navigate the field of battle. The pole can be from six to ten feet in length. They could come with a chest strap to help carry them like you see flag bearers use in parades, or a spike to plant it in the ground. Some banners could be on lances or spears, but this would depend on the culture/warrior code of the unit/army. These would also require smaller cloth/material dimension, like a pennant instead of a banner.

Dyson’s Dodecahedron has some handy tables for generating the appearance of Battle Standards NOTE: The last table has his take on magic standards. January 13, 2011 on Dyson’s blog. On my blog I mentioned them on August, 2009 about my first hearing of them in the late 70’s early 80’s. This is my attempt to create them.

http://rpgcharacters.wordpress.com/2011/01/13/random-thursday-banners-and-standards/

 

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Magic Item 2 S&W

Wizard’s Bookstand

This item appears to be a normal, yet high quality bookstand or lectern. Some have a delicate appearance like a music stand, others appear to be sturdy and heavy like a lectern. Others are small angled items designed to sit on a desk or table to allow the user to stand an read as at a lectern. The lectern has a cabinet below with a latching door than can hold three spell books or ten scrolls. The table top form can hold one spell book or three scrolls.

It is carved of the most exquisite wood with fine inlays and mystical runes. They can also be crafted of metal, such as, fine steel, adamantite, or mithril.

The bookstand protects the wizard’s spell book(s). It gives a +2 on all saves that the spell book may need to make.

It can hold the book shut and secure to the bookstand as a wizard lock at 11th level.

It conveys protection of the book versus fire and electrical magic, and bookworms and other pest that feast on spell books.

The wizard can summon the bookstand and it will walk to the caster bearing the book and can open the book to the desired page or turn the page of an open book to the desired page.

Use of the bookstand while learning spells allows the wizard to memorize spells in 3/4 the time.

The wizard can cast one spell from the book per day as a scroll, but the spell is preserved. However, if the wizard is interrupted in his casting, there is a 20% chance the spell will fade from his book and a 1% change per level of the spell that the spell before it and after it in the book will be lost. Roll separately for the preceding and following spell. If the spells immediately preceding and following are destroyed, there is a 10% chance that this is a catastrophic failure and every spell in the book is lost.

Some bookstands grant their owner additional spells per day while in their tower/residence or within 30 feet of the bookstand if the wizard is out and about with his bookstand. In both cases, this is only true while their spell book is on the bookstand.

When in a wizard’s tower/cast;e/residence, the bookstand will act to protect the book and if a stand with a compartment, its contents. It can turn itself invisible once per day and stay invisible until the wizard returns and calls it. If there are protective circles and such in the wizard’s tower it will seek to enter those areas. It will move away from anyone attempting to enter the wizard’s residence. If a party’s wizard is killed, the remaining party will have a great challenge trying to get the bookstand to cooperate with them. If there is not book or contents in the bookstand, it will appear to be a normal set of furniture.

A “lost” bookstand, i.e. one whose owner is deceased, encountered by an adventure party with a spell book on or in it, or with scrolls in it, will act as above.

There are two variations on the Wizard’s Bookstand.

1.) Jealous Bookstand. This Wizard’s bookstand is semi-intelligent and will not relinquish a book to the owner unless another spell book is immediately available to take its place. There is a 1% chance on any given day that the bookstand will refuse to give up the book. There is nothing to do short of a wish or limited wish, to get the book away from the bookstand without destroying both the bookstand and the book. It is simplest to wait for the next day and hope for the best.

2.) Cursed Bookstand. This appears to be a normal bookstand until the wizard places his or her book on it. There is only a 1% chance for the wizard to notice anything odd. The nature of the Cursed Bookstand is to alter the spells in the book so that they have limited, ineffectual, inaccurate, or opposite effect. Roll separately for each spell in the spell book.

Spell Results Table: 1d6
1 – Limited Range. 3/4, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4. 1/8, 1/16 range. 1d6 for range effect.
2 – Limited Damage 3/4, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4. 1/8, 1/16 damage. 1d6 for damage effect.
3 – Limited Range and Damage. 3/4, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4. 1/8, 1/16 range. 1d6 for range and damage effect. Roll once for each.
4 – Ineffectual. Spell has all the appearance and sound, but no damage. A fireball looks impressive but does not burn. A magic missile looks right but no damage. Illusions have no visual or auditory effect. Informational spells either give static, partial, inaccurate, or outright wrong results. Protection spells have a 50% chance to be limited and a 50% chance to have the opposite effect. Opposite effect can be weakness instead of strength on an ally, or protection from normal missiles on a foe instead of an ally.
4 – Opposite effects, see Ineffectual above.
6 – Roll twice, ignoring this result on further rolls.

There is a 30% chance that an encountered Bookstand will have Bond Breaker in or on it, or in close proximity.

The above bookstands are AC:4 [15], with 10 HP, ST of 14, and a movement rate of 9.

Bookstand Mimic:
There is a rare creature that some sages and wizards have theorized resulted from some wizard’s experiment that combined a jealous and cursed bookstand resulting in a magical creature. This creature is alive and seeks to devour magic items. It prefers spell books. In the first week of use, it will function as a normal Wizard’s Bookstand, thereafter there is a 10% chance increasing each week, so that the second week it is 20%, third week 30%, etc. until the tenth week after the first, i.e. the 11th week that the bookstand will eat the wizards’s spell book. Starting the second week, the Bookstand Mimic will act as a Jealous Bookstand that refuses to give up its book. If the wizard is unable to free the book before the Bookstand Mimic can devour it, the book is lost. A wizard will only know about this if he or she encounters the information from a sage, fellow wizard, or his or her own research BEFORE placing his spell book on the stand.
If it has a compartment for holding additional spell books or scrolls, it will attempt to devour them as above, but the Bookstand Mimic can only devour one item at a time.
NOTE: If a normal book is placed on the Bookstand Mimic, the Mimic will not react.

AC: 4 [15]
HD: 2
ATTACKS: Special. Only the spell book placed on it or the spell books and scrolls placed in it.
ST: 14
Special: Eats spell books & scrolls.
Move: 9
Challenge Level/XP: 2/30

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Magic Item 3 S&W

Ring of Preparedness

The wearer is never surprised and when enemies are plotting something, for ex. a thief planning to break in in the night, the thief will meet the ring bearer outside the point of entry or just inside. However, the wearer could also reinforce the weak points with additional bars, traps, or magic defenses and only intervene if the thief makes it past those.

A thief planning to pick pockets will be noticed prior to making their attempt. The bearer will “know” what is involved and can confront the thief in a manner of their choosing, or ignore it. A stubborn or foolish thief may persist until confronted.

Multiple assailants from multiple directions will be known, but the wearer can only be in one place at a time and will have to choose to focus on the closest assailant, the most powerful, or the one about to hurt friends, or loved ones. Circumstances will determine if the wearer can choose which of multiple assailants to confront.

There is a 10% chance that the ring is an Advanced Ring of Preparedness. The wearer knows with enough sense of urgency to get out of the weather, like a downpour or blizzard. They will find the nearest comfortable shelter and prepare a fire and a meal before the storm hits, even to the derision of party members. If there is an impending earthquake the bearer will feel the need to go outside or dine a sturdy doorway. If social unrest, like a riot is coming, the wearer will seek to get out of town, or find secure lodging. In a dungeon setting, the bearer will know if the creature on the other side of a door is intent on causing harm. This only works on intelligent monsters. Slimes, molds, and cubes give no such aura of malevolence, they are just seeking food.

Cursed Ring of Preparedness. The wearer of this ring is always surprised and after a month the wearer must roll once per week to make a saving throw or become paranoid. Prior to the wearer becoming paranoid, the ring can be removed with remove curse. Once the wearer falls victim to paranoia an elaborate process to cure the paranoia must be completed, then a remove curse can remove the ring. If the ring is not removed after paranoia is cured, after a month the chance of paranoia returns. Subsequent procedures to cure the paranoia will require an additional exotic ingredient. However, wishes can solve the problem….

At the GM’s discretion the cursed ring can have an aura that affects rolls for surprise and initiative for the party if the wearer is in a party or group.

Ring of Preparedness – Entry #3 into OSR Superstar Contest

Entry #3. Actually, this is the version for AD&D. I will post all three items with the S&W Rules versions all together in one post.

Ring of Preparedness

The wearer is never surprised and when enemies are plotting something, for ex. a thief planning to break in in the night, the thief will meet the ring bearer outside the point of entry or just inside. However, the wearer could also reinforce the weak points with additional bars, traps, or magic defenses and only intervene if the thief makes it past those.

A thief planning to pick pockets will be noticed prior to making their attempt. The bearer will “know” what is involved and can confront the thief in a manner of their choosing, or ignore it. A stubborn or foolish thief may persist until confronted.

Multiple assailants from multiple directions will be known, but the wearer can only be in one place at a time and will have to choose to focus on the closest assailant, the most powerful, or the one about to hurt friends, or loved ones. Circumstances will determine if the wearer can choose which of multiple assailants to confront.

There is a 10% chance that the ring is an Advanced Ring of Preparedness. The wearer knows with enough sense of urgency to get out of the weather, like a downpour or blizzard. They will find the nearest comfortable shelter and prepare a fire and a meal before the storm hits, even to the derision of party members. If there is an impending earthquake the bearer will feel the need to go outside or dine a sturdy doorway. If social unrest, like a riot is coming, the wearer will seek to get out of town, or find secure lodging. In a dungeon setting, the bearer will know if the creature on the other side of a door is intent on causing harm. This only works on intelligent monsters. Slimes, molds, and cubes give no such aura of malevolence, they are just seeking food.

Cursed Ring of Preparedness. The wearer of this ring is always surprised and after a month the wearer must roll once per week to save vs. magic or become paranoid. Prior to the wearer becoming paranoid, the ring can be removed with remove curse. Once the wearer falls victim to paranoia an elaborate process to cure the paranoia must be completed, then a remove curse can remove the ring. If the ring is not removed after paranoia is cured, after a month the chance of paranoia returns. Subsequent procedures to cure the paranoia will require an additional exotic ingredient. However, wishes can solve the problem….

At the GM’s discretion the cursed ring can have an aura that affects rolls for surprise and initiative for the party if the wearer is in a party or group.

Magic Bookstand – Entry #2 into OSR Superstar Contest

Here is entry #2. Actually, this is the version for AD&D. I will post all three items with the S&W Rules versions all together in one post.

I got this idea from my brother Robert’s campaign. My character, Griswald, owed a favor to a powerful wizard, Moran Redbeard. It turned out that all the high level players in the game owed him a favor or were willing to help him. I don’t know how Robert stated this, this is my interpretation.

Wizard’s Bookstand

This item appears to be a normal, yet high quality bookstand or lectern. Some have a delicate appearance like a music stand, others appear to be sturdy and heavy like a lectern. Others are small angled items designed to sit on a desk or table to allow the user to stand an read as at a lectern. The lectern has a cabinet below with a latching door than can hold three spell books or ten scrolls. The table top form can hold one spell book or three scrolls.

It is carved of the most exquisite wood with fine inlays and mystical runes. They can also be crafted of metal, such as, fine steel, adamantite, or mithril.

The bookstand protects the wizard’s spell book(s). It gives a +2 on all saves that the familiar may need to make.

It can hold the book shut and secure to the bookstand as a wizard lock at 11th level.

It conveys protection of the book versus fire and electrical magic, and bookworms and other pest that feast on spell books.

The wizard can summon the bookstand and it will walk to the caster bearing the book and can open the book to the desired page or turn the page of an open book to the desired page.

Use of the bookstand while learning spells allows the wizard to memorize spells in 3/4 the time.

The wizard can cast one spell from the book per day as a scroll, but the spell is preserved. However, if the wizard is interrupted in his casting, there is a 20% chance the spell will fade from his book and a 1% change per level of the spell that the spell before it and after it in the book will be lost. Roll separately for the preceding and following spell. If the spells immediately preceding and following are destroyed, there is a 10% chance that this is a catastrophic failure and every spell in the book is lost.

Some bookstands grant their owner additional spells per day while in their tower/residence or within 30 feet of the bookstand if the wizard is out and about with his bookstand. In both cases, this is only true while their familiar is on the bookstand.

There are two variations on the Wizard’s Bookstand.

1.) Jealous Bookstand. This bookstand is semi-intelligent and will not relinquish a book to the owner unless another familiar is immediately available to take its place. There is a 1% chance on any given day that the bookstand will refuse to give up the book. There is nothing to do short of a wish or limited wish, to get the book away from the bookstand without destroying both the bookstand and the book.

2.) Cursed Bookstand. This appears to be a normal bookstand until the wizard places his or her book on it. There is only a 1% chance for the wizard to notice anything odd. The nature of the Cursed Bookstand is to alter the spells in the book so that they have limited, ineffectual, inaccurate, or opposite effect. Roll separately for each spell in the familiar.

Spell Results Table: 1d6
1 – Limited Range. 3/4, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4. 1/8, 1/16 range. 1d6 for range effect.
2 – Limited Damage 3/4, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4. 1/8, 1/16 damage. 1d6 for damage effect.
3 – Limited Range and Damage. 3/4, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4. 1/8, 1/16 range. 1d6 for range and damage effect. Roll once for each.
4 – Ineffectual. Spell has all the appearance and sound, but no damage. A fireball looks impressive but does not burn. A magic missile looks right but no damage. Illusions have no visual or auditory effect. Informational spells either give static, partial, inaccurate, or outright wrong results. Protection spells have a 50% chance to be limited and a 50% chance to have the opposite effect. Opposite effect can be weakness instead of strength on an ally, or protection from normal missiles on a foe instead of an ally.
4 – Opposite effects, see Ineffectual above.
6 – Roll twice, ignoring this result on further rolls.

There is a 30% chance that an encountered Bookstand will have an Unfamiliar in or on it, or in close proximity.

Bookstand Mimic:
There is a rare creature that some sages and wizards have theorized resulted from some wizard’s experiment that combined a jealous and cursed bookstand resulting in a magical creature. This creature is alive and seeks to devour magic items. It prefers spell books. In the first week of use, it will function as a normal Wizard’s Bookstand, thereafter there is a 10% chance increasing each week, so that the second week it is 20%, third week 30%, etc. until the tenth week after the first, i.e. the 11th week that the bookstand will eat the wizards’s familiar. Starting the second week, the Bookstand Mimic will act as a Jealous Bookstand that refuses to give up its book. If the wizard is unable to free the book before the Bookstand Mimic can devour it, the book is lost. A wizard will only know about this if he or she encounters the information from a sage, fellow wizard, or research BEFORE placing his familiar on the stand.

NOTE: If a normal book is placed on the Bookstand Mimic, the Mimic will not react.

AC: 4
HD: 6 HP
ATTACKS: Special. Only the spell book placed on it.
ST:
Special: Eats spell books.
Move:
Challenge Level:
XP:

Magic Battle Standards – Entry #1 into OSR Superstar Contest

As promised, here is the first of my three entries into the OSR Superstar Contest. Actually, this is the version for AD&D. I will post all three items with the S&W Rules versions all together in one post.

1.) Magic Battle Standard

Court Wizards, and most wizards in general are reluctant to risk their lives on the battlefield. Even for those so inclined or “convinced” to serve their liege or powerful neighbor in battle prefer to maximize their effectiveness while avoiding the line of battle. Thus, magic items that increase the effectiveness of troops is a general way of helping and can spare the need for the wizard to actually step foot on the field of battle.

There are 4 types of standards. Normal unit/army insignias, Lesser Standards, Holy/Unholy Standards, and Greater Standards. Conscripts/peasants will usually not have magic standards unless the lord/leader has been particularly unlucky in battle yet managed to retain his standards. Level 5 standards are usually the standards of the overall leader of a force, or really big armies, as in huge kingdoms or empires may have such standards for leading generals.

Non-magic standards have an effect on battle. They signify the unit and it is a great honor to be the standard bearer. the presence of a standard with a body of troops add to their morale. A general standard with the basic arms of the lord/general/king has a +1 bonus to morale and reaction rolls. A unit specific banner with words or symbols specific to the unit add +5 to morale and reaction rolls. Should a standard fall, the unit must make a morale/reaction roll without the bonus. If the standard is recovered, it restores the bonus, but for each additional time it falls in the same battle, it reduces the roll by 1%.

Lesser Standards are basic magic items that give the bonuses to their troops, in addition to the bonuses of non-magic standards. The unit will have the unit symbol on their shields, helmets, or tabards.
The magic in the standards is generally to allow the bearer to maintain the honor of the unit by keeping the standard upright.
A level 1 standard enables the standard bearer to cast Protection from Evil and Shield once per day/battle, as 1st level magic user spells.
A level 2 standard has the abilities of a level 1 standard plus Detect Evil, Detect Invisibility, Mirror Image, and Strength once per day/battle, as 2nd level magic user spells.
A level 3 standard has the abilities of level 1 and 2 standards plus Protection from Evil, 10-foot Radius, and Protection from Normal Missiles, as 3rd level magic user spells.

Level 4
Confusion
Fear
Wall of Fire
Wall of Ice

Level 5
Cloudkill
Hold Monster

Holy/Unholy Standards will have the symbol of the religion/deity/cult with some differentiation for the unit. (Unholy standards can cast spells to benefit the bearer or against those attacking the bearer or his unit.) The unit will have the unit symbol on their shields, helmets, or tabards.
A level 1 Holy standard enables the standard bearer to cast Cure Light Wounds and Protection from Evil once per day/battle as 1st level cleric spells.
A level 2 Holy standard has the abilities of a level 1 standard plus Bless and Hold Person once per day/battle as 2nd level cleric spells.
A level 3 Holy standard has the abilities of level 1 and 2 standards plus Cure Disease and Prayer as 3rd level cleric spells.
A level 4 Holy standard has the abilities of levels 1, 2, and 3 standards plus Create Water, Cure Serious Wounds, Neutralize Poison, Protection from Evil, 10-foot Radius as 4th level cleric spells.
A level 5 Holy standard has the abilities of levels 1, 2, 3, and 4 standards plus Create Food, Dispel Evil, and Detect Magic as 5th level cleric spells.

Greater Standards are more powerful magic items that gain power as their units are successful in battle. The unit will have the unit symbol on their shields, helmets, or tabards.
These standards require the cooperation of wizards and clerics in their creation.
Level 1 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 1 standard and a level 1 holy/unholy standard.
Level 2 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 2 standard and a level 2 holy/unholy standard.
Level 3 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 3 standard and a level 3 holy/unholy standard.
Level 4 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 4 standard and a level 4 holy/unholy standard.
Level 5 Greater Standard has the abilities of a level 5 standard and a level 5 holy/unholy standard.

In addition to the above, greater standards allow the bearer to turn/control undead as a cleric of the same level as the standard.

By the very nature of the combined magics of a greater standard, these devices gain in power the more successful their units are in battle. A new standard must win ten battles for a 10% chance to add a miscellaneous ability. A new standard whose unit loses it’s first battle must win 15 battles for the 10% chance of a new ability.
Skirmishes and small actions where the unit easily wins are not as beneficial as an actual battle that requires effort and coordination for the unit. Five such skirmishes/easy wins are equal to one battle.

– Intelligence. Battle standard becomes intelligent as per rules for intelligent swords and is able to advise the bearer and help hinder/influence the battle.
– Random additional magic user defensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random additional magic user offensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random additional magic user offensive and defensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random additional cleric defensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random additional cleric user offensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random additional cleric offensive and defensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random additional cleric and magic user defensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random additional cleric and magic user offensive spell of same level as the standard.
– Random spell of any level useable once per day.
– Holy standards permanent protection of evil 15′ radius. Unholy standard, protection from good.
– Permanent detect magic 10′ radius.
– Roll on benign effects table.
– Roll on adverse effects table.
– Roll on benign and adverse effects table.
– Increase to next level of standard. For standards at level 5 roll again on this table.

Benign Effects Table 1d10
– Unit fights as one level higher.
– Entire unit is healed of 1d6 hp once per battle.
– Entire unit is hasted 1d10 rounds into a battle. Re-roll at the beginning of each battle.
– Enemy unit facing the unit with standard is held as per hold person.
– Enemy unit facing the unit with the standard is slept as per sleep.
– Unit can fight 1d10 rounds past the point they would normally face exhaustion. Re-roll for each battle.
– Standard randomly summons a unit mascot. Something fitting the units reputation or insignia. Once there is a unit mascot roll again if this comes up until the mascot retires dues to age or infirmity or is killed in battle. If the mascot is killed in battle, there is a 10% change that a new mascot will be summoned and appear in 1d6 rounds. The mascot will stay near the banner and fight to protect the banner and the beater. Birds and smaller flying mascots will perch on the cross piece of the banner, other mascots will stay within 30 feet of the banner.
– Opposing unit(s) must roll save vs. fear as the spell.
– Units troops roll at +1 on 1d6th saving throw needed in a battle. Re-roll for each battle.
– Unit is not surprised/caught unawares by flanking attacks and ambushes.

Adverse Effects Table 1d8
– Random enemy unit is healed of 1-4 HP for each member.
– Units troops are slowed if attacked by specific humanoid type (kobolds, goblins, orcs, bugbears, etc.)
– Units troops are held as per hold person for one round 1d10 rounds into a battle.
– Units troops are confused 1 round as per spell confusion.
– Standard randomly summons a monster as per monster summoning.
– Standard attracts the attention of the most powerful single foe in the opposing force.
– Standard attracts the attention of the most renowned unit in the opposing force.
– Units troops roll at -1 on 1d6th saving throw needed in a battle. Re-roll for each battle.

Size and Shape:
Standards come in all sizes and shape and length of poles. They need to be big enough to communicate where a unit is on the field of battle, but not too big or unwieldly for the bearer to easily navigate the field of battle. The pole can be from six to ten feet in length. They could come with a strap to carry them like you see flag bearers use in parades, or a spike to plant it in the ground. Some banners could be on lances or spears, but this would depend on the culture/warrior code of the unit/army.

Planting the standard:
When a unit with a greater standard is in dire straights, they can “plant the standard” and stand and fight to the last man. Merely planting the standard is not enough, the unit commander must rally the unit around the standard. A successful morale/reaction roll will enable this action. This will negate their need to roll for morale for the remainder of the battle, and they will get a second wind and will each be healed 1d4 hit points. Should the unit somehow prevail or the cavalry arrives and the danger is at an end, the members of the unit will fall exhausted and unable to march for 1d8 hours. NOTE: Troops that do not have a warrior ethic or unit cohesion or a lawful alignment can’t do this. Orcs can do this when fighting elves, goblins when fighting dwarves, etc. But if the troops are conscripts, slaves, unruly, chaotic, or not a warrior culture, they can attempt this, but with a penalty.

Aura and Renown:
Successful and famous units will be known by their standard. This can cause others to refuse to face them in the line of battle and cause weak minded bullies to back down when encountering someone wearing the unit’s insignia. NOTE: Counterfeit insignia only works for so long, the bearer must be able to back up the symbol he wears.

Unsuccessful and infamous units will also be known by their standard and will attract derision and insults and possibly thrown rotten vegetables or even stones. A player who dons such a unit’s insignia is in for a big surprise at the first settlement when the unit is known.

Finding Battle Standards.
Battle standards will be common in barracks, forts, castles, and the homes of nobles and kings. Magic Standards will only be as common as the prevalence of magic in a campaign. for low magic settings, such items will be ancient and their manufacture will be lost to the mists of time, or only found in rare and hard to locate manuscripts.

It is possible that a standard might be found on an ancient battlefield. Evil standards would be destroyed by good forces and vice versa. However, greater intelligent standards can fight back, and might be buried and warded to keep out of the hands of like aligned forces.

Magic standards found in a dungeon/ruins/abandoned castle setting will have the appropriate amount of dust, but will not show signs of wear and tear. Good creatures and especially paladins and clerics will avoid unholy standards even if they are not magic. Intelligent unholy standards will attempt to attack paladins and good clerics, or vice versa Holy standards and anti-paladins and evil clerics.

For unintelligent standards, the players will have to find a sage or cast appropriate informational spells or find ancient manuscripts to explain their workings in low magic campaigns. In high magic campaigns the characters might have general knowledge that they exist, but will not know how to operate them, etc.

A small party or single adventurer using a standard can potentially gain some benefits. If the party does not have the same insignia as the banner, only the bearer will benefit unless the effect is an area of effect spell. As with rods, staves, and wands, they can be activated merely by touching an appropriate rune, or by the correct command, or by both command and touching a rune. Holy/Unholy Standards will usually require the battle cry or shouting the name of the deity to activate.

Dyson’s Dodecahedron has some handy tables for the appearance of Battle Standards NOTE: The last table has his take on magic standards. January 13, 2011 on Dyson’s blog. I wrote about them on my blog August, 2009.

 

 

Sandbox Plus New Ideas

I had an idea for a missing NPC. An artist, Trebor, who works odd jobs to support his wife and kids and allow free time to work on his art. He goes out south of town seeking pigments and items to make his paints, dyes, and glazes, and clay for his pottery. He is also planning to scout the ancient quarries for rock suitable for making statues. He goes out and is usually not gone more than one night. However, he has gone missing and had been gone two nights.

His wife is frantic and seeks out someone to find him.

This fit in with the direction the players planned to travel.

They had an encounter along the way, but managed to find him trapped atop a rock surrounded by kobolds. The players managed to defeat the kobolds and get the artist back home. His wife has promised to make them a good home-cooked meal.

This was just something that came to me off the top of my head and I added in to add some interest to the game. I didn’t need to do that, as I mentioned in a previous post, my youngest son’s character started a riot.

I still have one more NPC and family in the mix of NPCs in town.

While out walking the dog yesterday, I came up with a couple more.

Adding NPCs to the town to help flesh it out and bring it to life are difficult to just do, but when an idea comes up and I put it to use, they always seem to work well. Even dumb ideas I have, or I think are dumb, tend to work out when the players encounter the idea for an NPC, adventure, etc.

I find that thinking about building my world while doing mundane, thoughtless tasks, like walking the dog, doing dishes, laundry, etc. frees me to let ideas bubble to the surface and I don’t think about my troubles. Most of my troubles are of my own making and building my game world and the surroundings of the players gives me entertainment without having to spend a lot of money. Ten dollars buys a lot of graph paper, index cards, etc. I have computer equipment and other game materials that are paid for, so I don’t have to spend a lot to have fun.

I decided a couple years ago that I spent too much time on my career, more doing the work of the job, than working towards advancement in position or salary. I tried for a better position and it became clear to me that my nose is the wrong color for advancement. I am at a place in my job where it is as secure as it can be, and it is mine to lose, unless something happens out of left field. So I have a job that I know how to do and I can get paid a salary that pays my bills and helps me work down my debt. I will put in my 8 hours each day and come home. On my lunch break, I don’t worry about work. I can use my free time to take care of my house and yard, spend time with my dog, watch the few shows I follow on Hulu for free. I’ve gotten into an online D&D group that had an excellent first session and promises to be a long term one if the next few sessions go as well.

I have thought a lot about RPGs over the years and not allowed myself the time to explore and play. Now that I have given myself that freedom, things seem to be falling into place to be able to find people to play with and actually play. My own efforts as a DM have gone well each session, I just need to get more comfortable with parts of it. I am comfortable just making up things on the fly, but certain mechanics of the game I want to use the rules to give a framework, so I end up looking things up, like mining and construction. I don’t want to make some things up, as it will be way off one way or the other. One gets better as a DM by doing it more. I look forward to trying to use Google+ Hangouts and Roll20 with my sons to perhaps do a weekly game. I need to spend less time reading RPG blogs and fleshing out the bits of the sandbox. I have a key with some basics of what is there, but nothing worked up for more specifics. I need to stat that stuff out and then build an encounter table for the area. Probably the equivalent on one night’s RPG reading, blogging and other activities would get that done. I’m really good at the big, high-level aspect of designing a campaign. I don’t mean level as in PC level, but the larger framework of the campaign and themes. Getting into the details seems to grab my attention and the less important things end up with minute detail, and the things that really need that minute detail get the back-burner treatment. I plan this week to work on this. I am writing this on Sunday, March 23, 2014, so by the time this publishes on Sunday the 30th, I hope to have those items done.

Impulse Purchase – AD&D DM Screen

My original AD&D DM screen was damaged in the leaky pipe incident that took most of my original books, that is the portion with the dragon and the fighter, the other tri-fold is okay.

I found one guy on e-bay selling each tri-fold separately for $25.00. I found another that appears to be selling both tri-folds for a little more, so I went with that one.

I had been planning to do this, but with the news of the passing of Dave Trampier, I am sure anything with his artwork will see a spike in price.

I hope I am not disappointed.

If his family ever decide to put out a new screen with his art, I will buy it!

Killing Dieties

I remember when Dieties and Demigods with the Cthulhu and Melnibone and other copyright violation mythologies were in it. Players and DM’s alike got the idea that if something has stats, it can be killed. I see the stats as a way to indicate the “avatar” of a divinity’s capabilities are. The “avatar” might be “killed”, but the divinity can’t be. For example, a god of magic could cast an illusion of his death. If the players fail their saves and believe it, how would they ever know? If they did figure it out, how would they ever get another chance?

One should be very careful playing at battling/confronting deities. They have countless minions of minute to great power to throw at you. How many saving throws will your +5 Holy Avenger make when it sees the test of battle with a host of evil? If it shatters, can it be remade? If not, is there another one somewhere in the world? Unless you are in a Monty Haul campaign, you won’t have +5 weapons and armor and lots of artifacts to rage against the gods.

I don’t like the idea that a deity can be killed. Players would be messing with the fabric of the universe. Even though we all had grand ideas of getting tough enough to go kill Tiamat, etc. it would be very difficult to do so and would have some sort of repercussions in the fabric of space and time, or tip the scales drastically in good vs. evil or law vs. chaos. If it were possible to kill a deity, make it very difficult, not just to kill the deity, but to get past all their minions. How many huge ancient red dragons can you beat by yourself? Of how many balrogs can you fight by yourself? If it is possible to kill an evil deity, it should be possible to kill a good one. What about an NPC party of powerful evil characters going to kill the head of the pantheon? What’s to stop them from doing that?

Can a wish bind a deity? In Greek mythology, the titans were displaced, but were not truly dead and defeated, there is the far off future when they might rise again. If they are “killed”, how long do they stay dead? Just as a PC can be raised, why not a deity. If they can be killed, then they can be raised.

If you are going to have your deities playing chess with players and other creatures as pawns, a la ancient Greek mythology, then perhaps you want to have a god-killer option, but be sure it makes sense and is consistent. Make it very hard for your players to learn of such a thing and put them through great trials were the dice that come up death to a character means a character dies and may not be able to be raised. Then go against the god(s).

 

R.I.P Dave Trampier

As is all over the RPG blogosphere today, we lost another of the greats from the early days of D&D.

He was one of my favorite artists. I like nearly all of Trampier’s art. Emirikol the Chaotic is one of my favorites.

Like so many others, I was disappointed the Wormy ended mid-story. He definitely left us all wanting more.

Castle Perilous Game & Books has this article about his plans to return to his art and make a convention appearance.

If his executor’s are paying attention, I would pay for a Wormy collection and a DM screen.

Divine Intervention

As I watched “Jason and the Argonauts”, which is taken straight from Greek mythology, I thought about how much divine intervention there was.

The ancient Greek divinities were nothing more than super powerful beings exhibiting the traits of human kind to an exaggerated degree. They meddled in human affairs, played favorites in their schemes against other divinities, demanded respect and sacrifice from humans, and judged humans for the same acts they themselves performed. I’m not going into any theological or literary analysis here, since this is an RPG blog. I’m just looking at the game mechanics of it.

If you have a game where players get a lot of divine intervention, the examples of Greek mythology are one example. I am not as familiar with other mythologies and their acts of divine intervention, so I will use them as the extreme example on one end of the spectrum.

The Greeks had oracles in locations all over the shores and islands of the Aegean Sea. The locations of the oracles where also often the site of temples to specific deities. There were shrines and temples all over. The biggest temple in a city was for the patron deity of the city. Of course, that model is each city being a city-state with a city controlling a surrounding territory. They had all kinds of different forms of governments from monarchies to democracies, with oligarchies and dictators among them.

They had nature spirits, like nyads and dryads, demi-gods like Herakles, and a full pantheon with a king and queen of the gods and gods for every purpose. There are even the titans, the old gods, overthrown and replaced by the current ones.

The myths are full of stories of everyday people who do some affront to a god and are punished for it, or are one some great quest or series of quests from the gods, or agents of the gods. From the myths, it seems that a rules system like that would make it relatively easy to get the gods involved. Insulting the gods seems to be the best way to get their attention.

Some other RPG setting would have a middle of the road mythology where the ability to draw the positive or negative attention of the gods is indeed rare. Some games this might be limiting clerics to gaining their spells, even though AD&D 1st edition says that 6th or 7th level spells are granted directly by the cleric’s diety, assuming they are in good standing.

I have read of other RPG settings where the campaign has little or no contact from the gods and few to no real clerics. To me, this is a little too far for my taste. How about magic in such a situation? Is it more or less powerful? Does it take the place of the gods?

Personally, I don’t feel comfortable doing too much work on a religious system for my campaign setting(s). I don’t like using real mythologies for divinities. I can see skinning a real world mythology and changing the names to speed things up, or making a few main divinities for weather, harvest, sea, death, magic, etc.

In my brother, Robert’s campaign, he has a diety called, The Justice Maker. There are no temples to him, at least non that we have ever encountered. He is true neutral and holds the scales of judgement. One time a player was in trouble and yelled, “Help me, anybody.” and rolled something like 01 out of 100, and “fortunately” got The Justice Maker, who in return for his aid, required a service that had to be done within the bounds of one’s alignment or have it shifted. My character, a cleric to a different diety, somehow got sucked into helping with that quest. Robert is quite the artist and he made a painting of The Justice Maker. He is a figure with a faceless helmet, with a billowing cloak about him, and in his hand is a point-down sword where the hilt functions as the beam to the scales of justice. My words can’t do the painting justice, ugh sorry for the pun.

My character once got divine intervention from his diety to help make a crystal ball, but had to trade most of his magic items, build a temple, and do another great service. That was expensive in magic, treasure, time, and risk.

The same character later sought intervention again, but there is some table weighted by how often or recently we last had aid. Robert always hams it up, and says, “Diety’s hotline, how may I help you?” Or he says there is a busy signal, or no signal, or you get somebody else. The somebody else bit can be really bad if you are in alignment deviation territory. Since my fighter/magic-user/cleric has been faithful to his diety, while not getting his diety, got a demi-god assistant, who is now Griswald’s patron.

I believe we have a base 10% chance for divine intervention. Doing really great deeds that further the cause of law or good or the main bent of our deity helps as do actions that directly help the diety’s aims. It is not as divine intervention heavy as Greek mythology conveys, but there is a back story of good vs. evil on an epic level. Sometimes the characters get a glimpse of that, and take part. For example, Griswald has Orcus mad at him for desecrating a temple to Orcus. As a hero type, Griswald has made a lot of enemies among the really nasty types, and due to politics among the not so bad types has some of them for enemies too.