Crystal Ball of Possibilities
Aura strong divination; CL 15th
Slot none; Price 90,000 gp; Weight 7 lbs.
Description
This flawless crystal sphere measures approximately ten inches in diameter and rests upon a simple carved walnut stand. At first glance it appears perfectly transparent, but those who gaze into its depths soon discover countless shimmering visions constantly forming, branching and dissolving into one another. Every possibility exists only for a heartbeat before giving way to another, creating the impression of an infinite tapestry of futures forever in motion.
A creature may spend 10 uninterrupted minutes gazing into the crystal while contemplating a single specific goal or task. As the visions unfold, the viewer witnesses innumerable possible futures, instinctively recognizing how individual choices, actions and circumstances shape each potential outcome.
At the conclusion of the vision, the viewer understands the most favorable attainable future relating to that single task and the sequence of actions most likely to bring it to pass.
For the next 24 hours, the viewer gains a +10 insight bonus on one attack roll, saving throw, skill check or ability check directly related to accomplishing the chosen objective. The bonus may be applied after the roll is made, but before the result is announced.
Once the bonus has been used, or after 24 hours have elapsed, the crystal's guidance ends.
A creature that has benefited from the Crystal Ball of Possibilities cannot do so again for 72 hours. This limitation is tied to the individual viewer rather than the crystal itself, allowing different creatures to consult the crystal independently.
The crystal does not reveal absolute destiny, nor does it grant knowledge beyond the viewer's ability to comprehend or influence. It cannot reveal another creature's private thoughts, nor can it show events completely beyond the viewer's ability to affect. Should circumstances change significantly or the viewer knowingly abandon the path revealed by the crystal, its guidance becomes unreliable, though the magical bonus itself remains available.
Construction
Requirements: Craft Wondrous Item, contact other plane, foresight, legend lore; Cost: 45,000 gp + 3,600 XP; Time: 90 days
Lore
Among the oldest schools of divination, there exists a philosophical disagreement that has endured for millennia. One tradition teaches that the future is fixed, waiting patiently to unfold exactly as foreseen. The other contends that the future is a living tapestry woven from countless decisions, each choice creating new threads while quietly unraveling others. The Crystal Ball of Possibilities was born from the latter belief, rejecting prophecy in favor of potential.
Its creator, the archmage Arandel the Far-Seeing, spent nearly half a century studying why so many prophecies failed despite being sincerely recorded. He eventually concluded that prophets were not witnessing a single future at all, but merely the most likely one at that particular moment. Determined to prove his theory, he crafted a crystal capable of revealing not one destiny, but an endless sea of branching possibilities. When his apprentices first peered into the completed sphere, they described seeing thousands of futures blooming like the branches of an ancient oak, each altered by the smallest decision.
Only a handful of these crystal balls are believed to exist today. They rarely remain in the possession of conquerors or ambitious rulers for long, for such individuals often become frustrated by the crystal's refusal to promise certainty. Instead, the spheres have found lasting homes among wise judges, respected teachers, thoughtful rulers and seasoned adventurers who understand that wisdom lies not in knowing what will happen, but in choosing what should happen.
Kelwyn's Notes
Many have asked whether I believe in fate. I generally reply that fate has never troubled itself with introducing its acquaintance, and I see little reason to return the discourtesy by assuming its existence. Experience has convinced me that tomorrow is negotiated rather than assigned. Every conversation, every kindness, every hesitation and every act of courage quietly alters what follows. If that notion seems daunting, I encourage you to consider its far more pleasant implication: no mistake need become permanent.
Those who first behold this crystal often make the same error. They search for certainty. They wish to discover the one correct path so that every difficult decision may thereafter become wonderfully uncomplicated. The crystal offers no such luxury. Instead, it reveals that there are always many roads before us, some brighter than others, and that wisdom consists not in discovering perfection but in recognizing possibility.
I have spent many evenings watching the futures dance within this sphere, and I confess they possess a curious habit. The greatest victories seldom arise from spectacular gestures. More often they begin with astonishingly ordinary choices. A stranger is greeted rather than ignored. A question is asked rather than assumed. Forgiveness is offered instead of resentment. Entire generations may be transformed by moments so small that history scarcely remembers they occurred.
You may wonder why the crystal refuses to reveal its visions to the same individual more than once every three days. I suspect the answer is kindness. Were it consulted too frequently, one might become so consumed with seeking better futures that one neglected to live the present. Possibility is a marvelous teacher, but a dreadful master. At some point the crystal must fall silent, leaving us to walk the path we have chosen with confidence rather than constant hesitation.
Should this crystal ever come into your keeping, resist the temptation to ask how your story ends. That question has never particularly interested me. Instead, ask which decision before you today leads toward greater compassion, deeper understanding or stronger hope. The future is not an inheritance awaiting our arrival. It is something we create together, one thoughtful choice at a time. If this collection has sought to teach anything throughout these past thirty days, I should like to think it is precisely that.






