March is almost gone and we are proud to announce we are hosting one more time the RPG Blog Carnival and the Blogging from A to Z Challenge. I’ve selected my theme to match my challenge and I’d love all you reading this to join in such a rewarding endeavour as it is to write 26 entries in your blog during one month (you can rest on Sundays!). If you think it requires too much preparation in order to join, mark your calendars for next year, but feel free to read and get some inspiration from out there.
OK, so it’s time to reveal and explain the theme for April’s RPG Blog Carnival. Let those drumrolls begin and get those dice ready for initiative…
As you gain levels, the mundane equipment you started your adventures with becomes less and less important as it is overshadowed by the magic items you acquire during a campaign. In Dungeons & Dragons, magic items may be tools of the character possessing them or even act on their own. They are generally found in treasure hoards, or recovered from fallen opponents, but sometimes, a powerful or important magic item is the object of a quest. Whatever their origin, their importance can’t be underestimated, and that’s why they have been prevalent in the game in every edition and setting, from the original edition in 1974 until the current fifth edition. Many things have changed during the years, but we’ll take a look at the most important ones after requesting your participation…
JOIN THE CARNIVAL!
All you have to do is to post an entry in your own blog about anything related to magic items. After doing so, leave a link to it in the comments below and I’ll be sure to read it and comment it as the month ends in a summary post. You can try the following ideas about using, attuning, wearing, wielding and activating magic items.
If you’re a player:
- what you think is the must-have magic item for a character class and why;
- the most memorable magic weapon you have wielded;
- the most innovative use you gave to a magic item;
- if you prefer “mass market” or “high-couture” items;
- how you customized the way your character attunes.
If you’re a DM:
- any system or table you use to handle magic items as part of treasure;
- an artifact you customized or created from scratch;
- a magic item creation system;
- ideas on sentient items;
- ways to destroy artifacts;
- how you make weapons feel special and full of history lore.
As I have planned it so far, I will write an article everyday (except Sundays!). All of them will be converting a MtG artifact into a D&D magic item. I’ll make some of them regular magic items, but most will actually be artifacts, relics and even eldritch machines with ideas to spark your imagination on how to use them in your campaign.
You can find some more details about the RPG Blog Carnival here.
Magic Items 101
As introduced above inviting you to participate, the 5e Dungeon Master’s Guide introduced some new concepts to magic items and make previous others disappear. I think giving you this historical approach can spark some interesting ideas to incorporate into the 5e system.
In the first edition of the game, all artifacts had a certain number of minor, major, and prime Powers and side Effects which triggered when they were acquired or used. The powers and effects were selected by the DM from a set of lists, so players couldn’t predict the artifact’s powers. In 1994, Encyclopedia Magica Volume One, the first of a four-volume set, was published. The series lists all of the magical items published in two decades of TSR products from Dungeons & Dragons. The books total more than 1500 pages with each volume containing over a thousand magic items, but there was no attempt to correct rule imbalances or even match AD&D mechanics at all. They are nonetheless, a great source of inspiration.
Third edition arrived along the new millennium with its very complex and detailed magic item creation process and its approach to “slots”, grouping items according to the part of the body you used to carry it. The Magic Item Compendium from 2007 also showed some early hallmarks of 4e design, with some items having levels and some even versions with powers according to such level. It also introduced the idea of item sets, where components of a set would improve as more were collected (my favorite being the Regalia of Galifar, from Eberron’s “The Forge of War”).
And the current edition of the game recategorized the items as Armor, Potions, Rings, Rods, Scrolls, Staffs, Wands, Weapons, and Wondrous Items (as usual acting as a miscellaneous category) as well as introduced two core rules for their use:
- the concept of item rarity, in which magic items are given a rating between Common, Uncommon, Rare, Very Rare, and Legendary to denote the frequency in which this item is expected to be found within the game. The only Common magic item you can find in the Dungeon Master’s Guide is the Potion of Healing, with some more been added when Xanathar’s Guide to Everything was published. Artifacts act as a sixth rarity category for unique items, such as the Hand of Vecna or the Wand of Orcus.
- the attunement rule, as for which some items require a personal bonding process to be used, limiting the number of items a character can benefit from at once to three attunable items (with some specific exceptions, of course).
Well, that was quite an introduction. I hope to read your articles soon!
Update: This is our planned list of articles. As we finish and publish them, we’ll be updating the links, so this post works also as a handful index.
- A is for Azor’s Gateway
- B is for Blackblade
- C is for Chain Veil
- D is for Dragon Throne of Tarkir
- E is for Embercleave
- F is for Forsaken Monument
- G is for Godsend
- H is for the Helvault
- I is for Immortal Sun
- J is for Jhoira’s Familiar
- K is for Kaldring, the Rimestaff
- L is for Lithoform Engine
- M is for Mirari
- N is for Nyx Lotus
- O is for Ozolith
- P is for Planar Bridge
- Q is for Quicksilver Amulet
- R is for Ramos, Dragon Engine
- S is for Shield of Kaldra
- T is for Tome of the Guildpact
- U is for Urza’s Tome
- V is for Visage of Bolas
- W is for (that) Which Was Taken
- X is for Xanthic Statue
- Y is for Yotian Soldier
- Z is for Zuran Orb
#ChallengeFulfilled!
Campaign Mastery offers http://www.campaignmastery.com/blog/demi-relics-bc-apr-2021/
My entry to the Blog Carnival is about a cursed artifact from my homebrew world.
https://fullmoonstorytelling.com/2021/04/28/whistle-of-az-and-sel-for-the-blog-carnival/
We created a few more cruel magical items that are both a blessing and a curse:
https://www.risingphoenixgames.com/blog/more-cruel-trinkets/
Thanks for hosting!
Loved to help with some of those Magic Items concepts
Always appreciated!