Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Verdant Embrace

Verdant Embrace


Aura
moderate conjuration and transmutation; CL 9th
Slot shield; Price 18,750 gp; Weight 6 lbs.

This +2 darkwood heavy shield appears to be formed entirely from living vegetation woven into the shape of a broad circular bulwark. Thick root fibers coil together beneath layers of broad moss-covered bark, while flowering vines slowly creep and shift across its surface even when left unattended. The interior of the shield is hollow with a nest-like cavity of soft roots and tendrils designed to receive the wielder’s forearm.

Whenever the shield is donned, the living vines immediately tighten and wrap around the wearer’s arm and wrist, anchoring themselves with surprising gentleness. Tiny thornless rootlets pierce only the outermost layer of skin, drawing minute traces of blood and bodily warmth necessary to sustain the shield’s living structure. Though unsettling to many non-druids, wearers attuned to nature often describe the sensation as strangely comforting, akin to placing one’s hand beneath warm soil after rainfall.

While worn, Verdant Embrace grants the wielder fast healing 1 whenever they are at or below one-half their maximum hit points. This healing functions only while the wielder remains conscious and in contact with natural ground, living wood, or unworked stone. The shield ceases healing entirely if exposed to dead or barren environments utterly devoid of natural life, such as blasted wastelands, areas under the effects of desecrate, or similarly corrupted terrain.

In addition, once per day as an immediate action, the wielder may command the shield to erupt outward with protective vines after taking damage from a melee attack. Tangled roots and branches burst from the shield’s face, granting the wielder damage reduction 5/slashing for 5 rounds. During this time, the vegetation thickens visibly, blooming with leaves or flowers appropriate to the surrounding biome.

The shield is considered both a wooden shield and a living plant creature for spells and effects that specifically target such materials or beings. Druids may use Verdant Embrace without violating their spiritual restrictions regarding metal armor or shields.

LORE

The first Verdant Embrace shields were cultivated rather than crafted by circles of wandering druids who served as guardians of ancient groves during eras of widespread deforestation and war. According to surviving oral traditions, these shields were not created in workshops but grown over many years from carefully shaped living trees whose roots were entwined with sacred springs and burial grounds. Each shield supposedly carries within itself faint memories of every forest that contributed to its growth.

Many druids believe the shield possesses a primitive awareness of fear, pain, and affection. Wearers often report feeling subtle movements from the vines during moments of emotional distress - gentle tightening during danger, slow warmth during grief, or faint pulses resembling a heartbeat while sleeping beside campfires beneath the open sky. Some circles teach that the shield is not merely alive, but lonely, seeking companionship through physical symbiosis with its bearer.

Among rural communities, sightings of Verdant Embrace are commonly associated with traveling wardens, healers, and defenders of the wilderness. Villagers speak of moss-covered figures emerging from forests after floods, famines, or monster attacks, carrying shields that bled sap instead of resin and bloomed with flowers during rainfall. Such stories frequently end with the mysterious guardian vanishing before dawn, leaving behind only fresh plant growth where they once stood.

There are darker tales as well. Several corrupted versions of the shield have reportedly emerged from blighted forests touched by necromancy or abyssal influence. In such cases the vines no longer heal willingly, instead feeding ravenously upon the wielder’s flesh until little remains beyond bark-covered bone wrapped within grasping roots. Druids universally regard these twisted variants with profound horror.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, goodberry, barkskin, regenerate; Cost 9,375 gp + 750 XP + a living vine taken willingly from an ancient forest spirit

Kelwyn’s Notes

There are few objects more revealing of civilization’s true anxieties than the shield. One may learn much about a culture by observing what it places between itself and death. Iron kingdoms trust steel. Tyrants trust walls. Cowards trust distance. Yet the druid trusts something far stranger - reciprocity.

Verdant Embrace does not merely protect its bearer. It enters into relationship with them. It asks for blood, warmth, and closeness in exchange for preservation. The vines do not lash themselves around the arm with conquest, but with familiarity. The shield survives because the wielder survives, and the wielder survives because the shield remains alive enough to care. One cannot help but notice how unlike the philosophies of cities this arrangement truly is.

I once observed a druid asleep beside a riverbank while wearing one of these curious shields. During the night, small white flowers blossomed along the shield’s rim and slowly turned toward the warmth of the sleeper’s body as though listening for breath. I confess, dear reader, that the sight unsettled me far more than any necromancer’s tomb. Undeath is horrifying, certainly, but understandable. Nature’s affection, however - that quiet insistence that the living world might notice us, remember us, or perhaps even mourn us - is a far more intimate terror.

And yet, there is tenderness within that terror.

The forest does not love humanity in the manner humans love one another. It does not forgive. It does not pity. It does not weep at graves. But now and again, in moments of rare alignment between mortal need and living wilderness, nature appears willing to hold us gently for a little while longer before reclaiming us. Verdant Embrace is not a denial of death. It is simply the forest placing one careful hand between death and the frightened creature trembling before it.

Aegis of the Open Hand

Aegis of the Open Hand


Aura
Moderate abjuration and transmutation; CL 9th
Slot shield; Price 18,320 gp; Weight 3 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This +1 mithral light shield resembles an elegant crescent of silvered metal attached to a reinforced leather bracer rather than a conventional shield. The shield’s face is unusually narrow, leaving the wielder’s fingers, wrist, and palm almost entirely unobstructed. Thin channels of glowing blue script run along the inside rim, shifting position to mirror the motions of the wearer’s hand whenever arcane magic is prepared or cast.

The Aegis of the Open Hand was created specifically for arcane spellcasters with no martial training. Any creature capable of casting arcane spells is automatically considered proficient with the Aegis of the Open Hand while wielding it. Non-arcane spellcasters gain no special proficiency from the shield.

The shield never imposes an arcane spell failure chance when used to cast arcane spells. In addition, the wielder may perform somatic components with the shield-bearing hand as though that hand were free.

Once per round, when the wielder successfully casts an arcane spell of 1st level or higher, shimmering force briefly extends from the shield’s rim. Until the start of the wielder’s next turn, the shield bonus granted by the Aegis increases by +1.

Three times per day, when struck by a melee attack, the wielder may cause the shield to erupt into a disk of translucent force as an immediate action. The wielder gains a +4 bonus to AC against that single attack. This ability must be declared after the attack roll is announced but before damage is rolled.

LORE

The Aegis of the Open Hand emerged from a simple observation shared among many academies of wizardry: most spellcasters died not because they lacked power, but because they lacked survivability during the brief moments between spells. Apprentices learned quickly that battlefields punished hesitation mercilessly. Unfortunately, the same institutions that taught devastating magic rarely provided meaningful martial instruction. Many promising arcanists perished while fumbling with shields they had never properly learned to use.

Several wizard colleges attempted to address this problem through magical wards and protective robes, yet these solutions often proved expensive, fragile, or mentally taxing. The artificers who ultimately created the Aegis pursued a different philosophy entirely. Rather than teaching mages to fight like soldiers, they designed a shield that behaved like an extension of spellcasting itself. The shield’s weight distribution, open grip, and responsive enchantments were all carefully calibrated to complement the natural gestures of arcane practice rather than interfere with them.

The design spread rapidly among younger adventuring mages, particularly hedge wizards, itinerant scholars, and planar researchers who lacked the resources or time for formal martial training. Veteran battlemages occasionally mocked the shield as “training wheels for apprentices,” yet many quietly adopted one after discovering how useful it was during prolonged expeditions. Surviving records suggest that entire generations of traveling wizards came to view the Aegis less as armor and more as a practical tool - no more unusual than a spellbook strap or component satchel.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, shield, mage armor, shield, creator must be able to cast arcane spells; Cost 9,320 gp + 720 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There is a peculiar arrogance among warriors who assume survival belongs naturally to the strong. Spend enough years traversing dimensions and one discovers that intelligence survives just as often through adaptation as through dominance. The wolf grows claws. The turtle grows a shell. The wizard, lacking both, learns to carry civilization itself between fragile fingers and hope nothing sharp reaches them before the incantation finishes.

I suspect this shield embarrasses traditionalists precisely because it refuses to romanticize combat. There is no grand declaration of valor within its design. No noble invitation toward glorious melee. It is practical in the most honest sense of the word. A frightened scholar wishes not to die while speaking impossible truths aloud to a hostile universe. The shield answers, quite sensibly, “Very well. Let us make that slightly harder.”

And perhaps there is wisdom in that humility. Entire kingdoms have endured not because they possessed the greatest swords, but because enough ordinary souls survived long enough to continue thinking, building, recording, healing, and remembering. The Aegis of the Open Hand belongs firmly to that philosophy. It is not a monument to conquest. It is a quiet argument that vulnerable people deserve protection too.


Shield of the Arcane Bastion

Shield of the Arcane Bastion


Aura
Moderate evocation; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 18,500 gp; Weight 12 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This polished steel heavy shield bears a circular boss engraved with concentric rings of silver and blue crystal filaments that faintly glow whenever arcane energy is nearby. Tiny runes line the inner rim of the shield, each representing an ancient sigil of force and precision. Though crafted for defense, the shield hums with restrained aggression, eager to answer violence with disciplined magical retaliation.

The Shield of the Arcane Bastion functions as a +1 heavy steel shield. In addition, any creature proficient with shields may activate the shield’s primary ability regardless of whether they possess spellcasting capability. Three times per day, the wielder may speak the shield’s command word as a standard action to cast magic missile as though produced by a 9th-level wizard. The missiles strike unerringly and may be directed at one or multiple targets within range as normal for the spell. The shield’s crystalline channels briefly flare with pale blue light as the missiles launch outward from the shield’s face.

Once per day, when the wielder is struck by a melee attack, they may immediately trigger a defensive surge as an immediate action. This causes a single magic missile dart to automatically strike the attacker. This retaliatory dart is treated as originating from a 5th-level caster.

The shield’s magical force effects are considered arcane in nature, but they require no spellcasting aptitude to command. Even common soldiers and mercenaries can unleash its power after learning the proper command word.

LORE

The first Shields of the Arcane Bastion were commissioned during a brutal border conflict in which noble levies repeatedly suffered devastating losses against enemy battlemages. Traditional infantry could withstand arrows and blades well enough, but arcane bombardment shattered formations and morale alike. In response, a conclave of artificers sought to create a defensive implement that allowed ordinary soldiers to answer magic with magic of their own.

The resulting shields quickly transformed battlefield tactics. Shield walls that once served merely as barriers became advancing batteries of force missiles, capable of unleashing coordinated bursts of arcane fire while maintaining disciplined defensive formations. Veterans spoke of entire night battles illuminated by streaks of blue-white energy arcing from ranks of armored infantry.

Many surviving examples bear subtle signs of prolonged magical strain. The inner metal grows warm during thunderstorms, and some shields emit faint whispering vibrations when held near wizard towers or enchanted ruins. Scholars disagree whether this phenomenon is harmless resonance or evidence that repeated force-magic exposure slowly awakens a primitive magical consciousness within the shield itself.

A peculiar tradition developed among mercenary companies that employed these shields extensively. Soldiers would personalize the inner rim with etched tally marks representing confirmed kills made by the shield’s missiles. Over decades of warfare, some shields accumulated hundreds of such markings, transforming them into grim historical records of campaigns long forgotten.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, magic missile, shield; Cost 9,250 gp + 740 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists something profoundly unsettling about a shield that longs to answer injury. One expects a blade to hunger. One expects a wand to yearn for release. But a shield - ah, a shield is meant to embody restraint. It is civilization condensed into iron. It is the physical declaration that survival matters more than slaughter. When such an object begins to retaliate of its own accord, one feels the faint trembling of a boundary best left uncrossed.

I have observed soldiers carrying these implements with expressions curiously unlike those borne by swordsmen. A swordsman accepts risk as the cost of violence. The bearer of the Arcane Bastion often grows comfortable in ways that concern me deeply. They learn that protection itself can become aggression. The distinction between defending oneself and punishing others begins to erode with alarming speed when one need only raise an arm to unleash invisible death.

And yet - perhaps inevitably - I cannot wholly condemn the thing. I have seen frightened caravan guards clutch these shields while crossing corpse-haunted roads, their hands trembling less because they knew they possessed some answer against the horrors lurking beyond the lantern light. There is mercy in empowering the powerless, even if the tool itself carries uncomfortable implications.

Still, whenever I hear the sharp crack of force missiles erupting from behind a defensive line, I am reminded that civilization often survives not by remaining pure, but by teaching even its walls how to bite.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Dreamwater Distillate

Dreamwater Distillate


Ingested or Injury Poison

Type: Ingested or injury
Initial Damage: Euphoric hallucinations and disorientation
Secondary Damage: Cognitive collapse and sensory destabilization
Price: 350 gp per vial
Craft (Poisonmaking) DC: 22

Dreamwater Distillate is a cloudy blue-green alchemical narcotic refined from the venom glands of the Marais Dream Eel. Swamp goblin refiners extract the glands, ferment them in chicory spirits and marsh herbs, then repeatedly distill the mixture through heated copper pipes submerged in cold blackwater barrels. The result is a glowing oily liquid smelling faintly of river mud, burnt sugar, mold, and citrus peel.

When consumed or introduced into the bloodstream, Dreamwater rapidly destabilizes higher sensory processing and emotional regulation. Colors appear painfully vivid, sounds stretch unnaturally, time perception fractures, and victims frequently report hearing distant music, phantom voices, or whispered conversations emerging from still water. Mild users experience euphoric fascination and emotional openness. Heavy exposure often results in panic, dissociation, paranoia, or complete inability to distinguish hallucination from reality.

A creature exposed to Dreamwater Distillate must succeed on a DC 17 Fortitude save or immediately become fascinated by nearby lights, sounds, movement, or emotionally significant stimuli for 1d6 rounds. While affected, the creature takes a -4 penalty on Wisdom-based checks, Spot checks, Listen checks, and Sense Motive checks. Spellcasters must succeed on a Concentration check (DC 15 + spell level) to cast spells successfully.

One minute later, the victim must attempt a second DC 17 Fortitude save. Failure causes severe perceptual destabilization for 2d4 hours. During this period, the victim becomes highly suggestible, cannot take 10 or take 20, and whenever exposed to stress (combat, loud noises, taking damage, sudden movement, intense emotion, or spell effects) must succeed on a DC 15 Will save or become confused for 1 round, as the spell.

Additionally, while under the secondary effects, the victim suffers vivid visual and auditory hallucinations determined by the DM. Common manifestations include:

  • Seeing lantern lights drifting through fog

  • Hearing distant funeral music

  • Believing statues or corpses are speaking

  • Perceiving walls, water, or shadows as moving subtly

  • Experiencing overwhelming emotional attachment or fear toward random objects or individuals

  • Temporary certainty that one has received profound cosmic insight

Creatures immune to poison are immune to Dreamwater Distillate.

Lore

Dreamwater Distillate remains heavily illegal throughout most civilized districts of Ville des Marais, though enforcement waxes and wanes depending entirely upon how many officials are currently related to the smugglers involved. Goblin river clans were the first to discover proper refinement techniques after generations of accidental poisonings, religious experimentation, and catastrophically poor decision-making.

Unlike many narcotics, Dreamwater is considered genuinely dangerous not because it directly kills its users, but because it annihilates their ability to properly interpret reality for several hours. Victims have wandered into flood canals believing themselves capable of breathing water, mistaken strangers for dead relatives, or become entirely convinced they were receiving prophecy from decorative architecture.

Swamp goblins frequently insist that Dreamwater “opens the inward lantern,” though scholars remain divided on whether this statement is mystical philosophy or simply goblins attempting to sound profound while catastrophically intoxicated. Both explanations remain plausible.

Improperly refined Dreamwater is even more dangerous. Failed batches may induce seizures, temporary blindness, emotional collapse, or violent paranoia. One infamous incident involved an entire goblin river band becoming convinced the moon was “descending to negotiate” with them personally. The negotiations reportedly lasted seven hours and ended with three arrests, a capsized barge, and a municipal heron somehow catching fire.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exist poisons that merely end life, and then there exist substances such as Dreamwater Distillate - compounds which instead pry open the mind itself and leave the victim defenseless before whatever horrors crawl within its architecture. I find the latter infinitely more disturbing. Death, for all its cruelty, is at least honest in intention. Dreamwater instead whispers. It convinces. It smiles with borrowed comfort while quietly dismantling the sufferer’s ability to distinguish truth from nightmare. Such things do not kill the body immediately because they do not need to. They first murder certainty, reason, dignity, memory, and finally trust in one’s own senses. What remains afterward is often merely a frightened animal wearing the shape of a person.

I have witnessed the aftermath personally. One man drowned peacefully in knee-deep water because he had become convinced he was “walking through the sky.” Another spent six hours speaking lovingly to the corpse of a cypress stump while weeping openly over conversations that never occurred. Most unsettling of all are those who emerge from the experience insisting it was beautiful. That is the true obscenity of the distillate. It transforms psychological violation into longing. The victim often desires to return willingly to the very condition that stripped them of agency. Few curses are so efficient.

The goblins who refine this toxin frequently defend it with tiresome language concerning “expanded perception,” “spiritual lanterns,” or “loosening the chains of ordinary thought.” Such rhetoric has always struck me as the philosophy of individuals too enamored with sensation to understand consequence. One does not achieve enlightenment by setting fire to the mechanisms responsible for discernment. If smashing a clock grants temporary freedom from schedules, it does not therefore improve one’s understanding of time.

Nor am I convinced the visions themselves are entirely harmless. The human mind is not designed to perceive reality without filtration. Those filters exist for survival. Dreamwater tears at them violently. Whether the resulting hallucinations are merely neurochemical chaos or glimpses into regions mercifully hidden from ordinary cognition remains uncertain. I confess I do not particularly wish to discover the answer. There are doors within existence that wisdom demands remain closed.

And yet, despite all this, the distillate persists. Civilization repeatedly creates instruments designed to erode itself from within, then acts surprised when they succeed. Perhaps that is the final cruelty of Dreamwater. It does not merely intoxicate the individual. It reveals humanity’s eternal hunger to escape itself - even at the cost of becoming something broken upon return.

Rainbow Bastion

Rainbow Bastion


Aura
Strong abjuration and transmutation; CL 13th
Slot —; Price 48,000 gp; Weight 15 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This heavy steel shield bears a surface of polished silver beneath an ever-shifting layer of translucent magical color. When viewed directly, ribbons of radiant crimson, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, pink, white, brown, black, and cyan slowly move across its face like flowing stained glass illuminated from within. Along the rim are etched hundreds of tiny names in dozens of languages - not all of them known to history - representing those who stood openly as themselves despite persecution, hatred, exile, or fear. The shield is warm to the touch whenever used to protect another creature from harm.

Rainbow Bastion functions as a +3 heavy steel shield. While carried, the wielder gains immunity to magical fear effects and a +4 morale bonus on saving throws against charm, compulsion, and intimidation-based effects. Allies within 20 feet gain a +2 morale bonus on saves against fear.

Three times per day, when an ally within 30 feet would be struck by a melee or ranged attack, the wielder may declare the shield’s Interposing Radiance ability as an immediate action. Bands of multicolored force erupt outward, granting the ally a +6 deflection bonus to AC against the triggering attack. If the attack misses, shimmering spectral light explodes outward, causing hostile creatures within 10 feet of the protected ally to become dazzled for 1d4 rounds (Will DC 19 negates). The save DC is Charisma-based.

Once per day, Rainbow Bastion may invoke Stand Together as a standard action. For 10 rounds, all allies within 30 feet are linked by radiant strands of prismatic light. During this time, allies gain a +2 bonus to AC and saving throws while adjacent to at least one ally. In addition, whenever one affected ally is reduced below 0 hit points, another affected ally within range may voluntarily take up to half the damage that creature suffered as glowing force transfers the wound between them. Damage transferred this way bypasses damage reduction and resistances.

If the wielder uses the shield to successfully protect a helpless creature, stop a hate-driven mob, defend innocents from persecution, or openly oppose tyranny despite personal danger, Rainbow Bastion sheds bright light in a 60-foot radius for 24 hours thereafter. During this time, the shield’s enhancement bonus increases to +4. This increase is a sacred effect and does not stack with similar temporary enhancement increases.

LORE

Rainbow Bastion was first forged not for kings, conquerors, or saints, but for ordinary people who simply wished to survive long enough to exist openly beneath the sun. The oldest surviving accounts speak of hidden districts, secret festivals held behind locked doors, coded songs shared in crowded taverns, and defenders who stood watch outside gatherings that the wider world considered shameful or dangerous. In those fearful years, shields mattered far more than swords. The goal was rarely victory - only survival, dignity, and the hope of seeing another dawn beside those one loved.

The shield’s shifting colors are said to represent not merely identity, but visibility itself. Ancient enchanters believed that hatred depended upon isolation - upon convincing individuals that they stood alone against the world. Rainbow Bastion was therefore crafted as an ideological weapon as much as a magical one. Its enchantments were designed to make solidarity physically tangible. The flowing strands of light, the shared protection, the emotional resistance against fear and coercion - all were deliberate attempts to transform community into literal magical force.

Over centuries, the shield became associated with traveling guardians, rebellious temple sects, wandering performers, healers, and knightly orders devoted to protecting marginalized peoples across countless cultures. In some cities, carrying the shield openly became a declaration that one would stand between cruelty and its victims regardless of law, tradition, or consequence. Entire riots have reportedly broken upon its radiant barriers without claiming a single innocent life.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, heroes’ feast, shield other, holy aura, creator must be good-aligned; Cost 24,000 gp + 1,920 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There are artifacts born from conquest, and there are artifacts born from endurance. The distinction matters more than many kingdoms care to admit. One may build empires through domination, yes, but civilization itself is more often preserved by those willing to stand in front of frightened strangers and quietly say, “No further.”

I find this shield deeply fascinating because it understands a truth that history repeatedly attempts to bury beneath banners and battlefields - hatred is frequently less interested in destruction than in erasure. There exists a particular cruelty in demanding that another soul make itself smaller, quieter, dimmer, less visible, less honest, merely to satisfy the discomfort of others. Rainbow Bastion opposes this not through vengeance, but through presence. It transforms visibility into defiance and companionship into armor.

Most remarkable of all is the shield’s refusal to glorify isolation. Many magical relics celebrate the singular hero, the lone champion standing above lesser mortals. This artifact instead grows stronger through proximity, mutual care, and collective survival. It does not ask whether its bearer is mighty. It asks whether they are willing to remain beside those who are afraid.

There is, I think, something profoundly beautiful about an object whose greatest magical power is the refusal to abandon people when the world decides they are inconvenient to love.


Rainbow’s Rebuke

Rainbow’s Rebuke


Aura
Moderate abjuration and evocation; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 18,312 gp; Weight 8 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This finely crafted heavy mace is forged from silvered steel polished to a mirror sheen. The head of the weapon resembles an unfolding blossom composed of six overlapping crystal petals, each subtly reflecting a different hue when struck by light. Though elegant in appearance, the petals are magically hardened to a supernatural degree, capable of shattering armor and bone with the same brutal force as forged steel. Along the haft are engraved dozens of tiny names in multiple languages - some faded with age, some impossibly sharp and new - each representing individuals who stood openly against hatred, cruelty, or persecution. When held by a creature of good alignment, the weapon emits a faint warmth similar to sunlight through stained glass.

Rainbow’s Rebuke functions as a +2 heavy mace. Against creatures actively attempting to harm, persecute, intimidate, or oppress others due to identity, orientation, expression, culture, ancestry, or sincere personal truth, the weapon’s enhancement bonus increases to +3 and it deals an additional 2d6 points of holy damage. This additional damage only functions against evil creatures.

Whenever the wielder uses the total defense action or fights defensively while wielding Rainbow’s Rebuke, all allies within 15 feet gain a +2 morale bonus on saving throws against fear, charm, compulsion, and intimidation effects. Allies benefiting from this aura feel a profound sense of solidarity and emotional grounding, as though reminded they do not stand alone.

Three times per day, upon striking an evil creature with the mace, the wielder may invoke a pulse of radiant color as a swift action. This creates a 20-foot burst centered on the target. Allies within the area immediately gain the benefits of remove fear and temporary hit points equal to the wielder’s Charisma modifier + level (maximum 15). Evil creatures within the burst must succeed on a DC 17 Will save or become shaken for 1d4 rounds as the weapon forces them to confront the emotional weight of the suffering they inflict. This is a mind-affecting fear effect. The save DC is Charisma-based.

If the wielder willingly uses Rainbow’s Rebuke to participate in torture, humiliation, or cruelty toward helpless individuals, the weapon immediately loses all magical properties until the wielder sincerely performs an act of meaningful protection or compassion toward a vulnerable person or community.

LORE

Rainbow’s Rebuke was never created for conquest. It was born during an era in which fear became fashionable among the powerful, and cruelty disguised itself as righteousness. In city after city, vulnerable people vanished quietly into prisons, alleyways, and graves while polite society debated whether their suffering was unfortunate or deserved. The first wielders of these maces were not conquerors or kings, but guardians - tavern owners, priests, retired soldiers, healers, dancers, scribes, and ordinary citizens who realized that survival sometimes required standing visibly between hatred and its victims.

The earliest known example emerged from a hidden forge beneath a sanctuary district where refugees gathered under magical wards painted into stained-glass ceilings. The forge-smith, an aging dwarf named Taldrin Veilhammer, reportedly lost his son to a mob incited by demagogues claiming moral purity. Witnesses claimed Taldrin forged the mace in silence for nine consecutive days while choirs above sang funeral hymns and protest songs interchangeably, until the distinction between mourning and defiance disappeared entirely.

Over time, Rainbow’s Rebuke became less a single weapon and more a philosophy expressed through steel. Different cultures recreated it according to their own symbols and traditions. Some resembled cathedral relics adorned with gemstones and scripture. Others were rough iron cudgels wrapped in scraps of festival banners. In every form, however, the purpose remained unchanged - to remind frightened people that dignity defended together becomes harder to extinguish.

Stories surrounding the weapon often focus less on battles won and more on moments prevented. Riots that dissolved when defenders refused to retreat. Sanctuaries that held through long nights. Young people who survived despair because someone stood beside them openly and without shame. Scholars who study Rainbow’s Rebuke frequently note that its magic appears strengthened not by anger, but by communal courage. The weapon does not thrive on vengeance. It thrives on solidarity.

Many wielders describe an unusual emotional sensation when carrying the mace into dangerous situations. They report hearing distant music with no identifiable source - laughter, marching feet, whispered encouragements, and festival songs layered together as though generations of unseen voices walk beside them. Whether this phenomenon is divine intervention, psychic resonance, or simple imagination remains fiercely debated among theologians.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, holy smite, remove fear, heroism, creator must be good-aligned; Cost 9,156 gp + 732 XP + a fragment of stained glass willingly donated from a place of sanctuary or celebration associated with a marginalized community.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a peculiar cowardice common among societies convinced of their own virtue - the belief that cruelty becomes sanctified when wrapped in tradition, law, or majority approval. One observes this repeatedly throughout history. Entire civilizations become so frightened of difference that they mistake persecution for stability. They begin to fear joy expressed openly. Love expressed honestly. Identity spoken aloud without apology. Such cultures inevitably produce violence not because they are strong, but because they are terrified.

Rainbow’s Rebuke is fascinating precisely because it understands this truth. It is not truly a weapon of wrath, despite appearances. It is a weapon of interruption. It exists to place itself physically between the vulnerable and the machinery of shame. The mace does not celebrate conflict. Rather, it acknowledges that there are moments in which peace survives only because someone chose to stand their ground instead of lowering their eyes.

I find the symbolism of the weapon unusually elegant. A mace is historically an instrument designed to break armor - to crush hardened shells through blunt inevitability. There is something poetically appropriate in transforming such a weapon into an answer against ideological cruelty. Hatred often functions like armor. People bury themselves within dogma, certainty, inherited prejudice, and communal approval until empathy can no longer penetrate them cleanly. Rainbow’s Rebuke does not stab such defenses delicately. It strikes them directly.

And yet, what lingers with me most is not the weapon’s power, but its condition for failure. The enchantment abandons those who become cruel themselves. That detail matters immensely. Many righteous causes rot from within once vengeance replaces compassion. The mace appears aware of this danger. It understands that protection and domination are not the same thing, though frightened people frequently confuse them.

Civilization, at its best, is measured by whether frightened individuals may exist openly without fear of annihilation. Any society capable of protecting only the familiar eventually begins devouring itself piece by piece. First the strange. Then the inconvenient. Then the merely different. In this regard, Rainbow’s Rebuke is less a weapon and more a declaration - a refusal to permit fear to masquerade as morality.

Rainbow Concordance

Rainbow Concordance


Aura
Moderate enchantment and abjuration; CL 9th
Slot Neck; Price 18,400 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This elaborate silver pendant bears an ever-shifting crystal prism suspended within a circular frame of intertwined metals. The prism slowly cycles through vivid spectral colors whenever worn by a creature capable of empathy or sincere emotional connection. Tiny inscriptions in dozens of languages spiral along the inner rim, each one translating roughly to the same phrase: “No soul diminishes another by existing.”

The Rainbow Concordance grants the wearer a +2 resistance bonus on saving throws against fear effects and mind-affecting effects that rely upon shame, coercion, humiliation, or emotional domination. In addition, the wearer gains a +4 competence bonus on Diplomacy checks made to de-escalate hostility, defend marginalized individuals, calm frightened crowds, or negotiate peaceful coexistence between groups with cultural or ideological differences.

Three times per day, the wearer may invoke the pendant as an immediate action when a creature within 30 feet is subjected to magical fear, emotional abuse, magical intimidation, or a compulsion effect that attempts to suppress their identity, memories, or sense of self. The target immediately gains a new saving throw against the effect with a +4 morale bonus. If successful, shimmering rainbow light briefly manifests around them like fractured stained glass before fading harmlessly away.

Once per day, the Rainbow Concordance may generate an aura of emotional solidarity in a 20-foot radius for 9 rounds. Allies within the area become immune to fear effects originating from creatures with the lawful evil subtype or from magical effects specifically designed to induce shame, self-loathing, social submission, or despair. During this time, affected allies also gain a +2 morale bonus on attack rolls and saving throws so long as they stand adjacent to at least one conscious ally.

The Concordance functions only for wearers who willingly defend the dignity and autonomy of others. A creature who knowingly uses the item to persecute vulnerable people, encourage mob violence, or enforce cruel ideological conformity immediately loses access to all magical properties for one full year.

LORE

The first Rainbow Concordances were not crafted by kings, churches, or great wizard academies, but by frightened people hiding in cellar sanctuaries beneath crowded cities. Historians argue endlessly over who forged the original pendant, though surviving records consistently describe clandestine circles of bards, healers, hedge mages, and rejected apprentices gathering beneath lantern light to preserve one another from regimes that demanded sameness at swordpoint. Many of these early communities vanished from official history entirely, yet the pendants endured - quietly passing from hand to hand through generations like tiny declarations that existence itself required no apology.

Among traveling performers, the Concordance became known as “the lantern beneath the coat.” Couriers, actors, alchemists, wandering priests, and sailors often wore them concealed beneath ordinary clothing while moving between hostile territories. Entire coded traditions emerged around the pendants. A glimpse of refracted spectral light in a tavern mirror might signify sanctuary nearby. Certain songs sung in specific harmonic patterns allegedly caused dormant Concordances to glow faintly in recognition of one another. In some cities, old hidden doors bearing tiny prism-shaped etchings still remain sealed behind layers of newer architecture, forgotten by everyone except those who continue searching for them.

Religious authorities remain sharply divided regarding the item. Certain faiths denounce the Concordance as an artifact of rebellion, claiming it encourages dangerous individualism and undermines “natural order.” Others revere it as a sacred reminder that mortal diversity reflects the vastness of creation itself. In regions touched by more compassionate traditions, Rainbow Concordances are sometimes exchanged during commitment ceremonies, adoptions, declarations of chosen family, or reconciliations between estranged communities. To many wearers, the pendant symbolizes not merely romance or identity, but survival through mutual recognition.

Stories persist of Concordances activating even after their owners’ deaths. Survivors of massacres and purges sometimes describe finding abandoned pendants glowing softly amid ash, rubble, or floodwater. Whether these tales are literal truth or collective mythology remains uncertain. Nevertheless, many scholars of emotional magic believe the artifacts absorb fragments of courage from those who wore them during moments of terror and defiance. If so, each Concordance may contain the accumulated emotional echoes of countless souls who refused to vanish quietly.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, calm emotions, heroism, remove fear, creator must have 5 ranks in Diplomacy; Cost 9,200 gp + 736 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There are some objects which reveal the true shape of a civilization not by how loudly they are celebrated, but by how desperately certain people attempt to destroy them. One does not expend such effort erasing harmless things. No empire burns books, shatters symbols, outlaws songs, or hunts frightened young people through midnight alleys because it fears weakness. It does so because somewhere beneath all the armor and doctrine, it understands that compassion possesses a terrible endurance. Cruelty survives through force. Humanity survives through recognition.

I have observed, across more worlds than I care to count, that societies become deeply uncomfortable whenever individuals refuse to fit neatly into structures designed for administrative convenience. The machine prefers predictability. Souls, regrettably for the machine, are rarely predictable things. They drift. They transform. They love unexpectedly. They reconstruct themselves after grief. They discover names for feelings ancient cultures lacked the language to describe. And every generation inevitably produces those who mistake this complexity for corruption rather than evidence of life itself.

The Concordance fascinates me because it is not truly a weapon, nor even primarily a defensive tool. It is a declaration that identity need not justify its existence in order to deserve safety. That is a profoundly dangerous idea to tyrants. Many oppressive systems rely upon convincing people that dignity must first be earned through obedience. Yet the pendant rejects this premise entirely. It does not ask whether a soul is sufficiently conventional before extending protection. It merely asks whether suffering is occurring and whether someone chose kindness in response.

I once encountered a young violinist in a rain-soaked river district who wore one beneath three layers of clothing and a false holy symbol besides. The poor lad shook whenever soldiers passed near the tavern door, though he played with such astonishing tenderness that the entire room fell silent to hear him. At the evening’s conclusion, an elderly dockworker quietly revealed a matching Concordance beneath her coat. Neither spoke a word. They simply nodded to one another with the exhausted recognition of survivors discovering they are not alone. I believe that moment contained more holiness than half the cathedrals I have visited.

Civilization is often measured through monuments, armies, laws, or wealth. I disagree. A culture reveals its actual soul through whom it permits to live openly without fear. The Rainbow Concordance remembers this long after governments forget it.

Verdant Embrace

Verdant Embrace Aura moderate conjuration and transmutation; CL 9th Slot shield; Price 18,750 gp; Weight 6 lbs. This +2 darkwood heavy shiel...