Monday, July 6, 2026

Collar of the Wolf

Collar of the Wolf


Aura
Moderate transmutation; CL 9th
Slot Neck (animal only); Price See Table; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

The Collar of the Wolf is a series of enchanted leather collars designed to enhance the natural bite of canines and other creatures that rely upon their jaws in battle. Each collar is fashioned from thick, supple leather fitted with a polished silver clasp depicting the head of a snarling wolf. Delicate runes are etched into the clasp and continue around the collar's inner band. More powerful collars bear increasingly intricate engravings, though all share the unmistakable craftsmanship of the same ancient tradition.

When worn by a creature possessing a natural bite attack, the collar causes that attack to be treated as a magic weapon for the purpose of overcoming damage reduction. In addition, the bite attack's damage increases by the number of steps indicated on the table below, following the standard D&D 3.5 weapon damage progression used for increasing weapon size. Only the creature's natural bite attack is affected; the collar grants no benefit to claws, gore attacks, slams, manufactured weapons, or any other form of attack.

Only one Collar of the Wolf functions on a creature at any given time. Wearing multiple collars provides no additional benefit.

CollarDamage IncreaseTypical 1d4 BiteMarket Price
Collar of the Wolf+1 step1d62,000 gp
Collar of the Dire Wolf+2 steps1d88,000 gp
Collar of the Winter Wolf+3 steps1d1018,000 gp
Collar of the Worg+4 steps2d632,000 gp
Collar of the First Wolf+5 steps2d850,000 gp

A creature whose bite attack normally deals damage other than 1d4 increases its damage by the same number of steps using the standard weapon damage progression.

LORE

Although many assume these collars were created by druids, the oldest surviving examples display enchanting techniques more commonly associated with master artificers than guardians of the wild. Their makers evidently believed that a faithful animal companion deserved enchantments every bit as potent as those bestowed upon a knight's sword or a wizard's staff. Rather than altering the nature of the beast, the collars simply awaken the full potential already present within tooth, muscle, and instinct.

The collars are traditionally named after increasingly formidable canines known throughout legend and folklore. Beginning with the common wolf, each successive enchantment honors a creature of greater strength and renown until the series culminates in the Collar of the First Wolf. Whether this mysterious progenitor truly existed or merely symbolizes the untamed spirit from which all wolves descend remains a matter of spirited debate among sages, druids, and storytellers alike.

These collars have found homes around the necks of humble sheepdogs, disciplined war hounds, steadfast animal companions, and even the occasional wolf willing to trust a mortal. Veterans often remark that the collars possess a curious quality beyond their enchantment. Animals wearing them seem no more aggressive than before, yet they display an unmistakable confidence in battle, as though the magic reassures them that their courage will never be wasted when defending those they have chosen to protect.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, greater magic fang; Cost See Table

CollarCost to Create
Collar of the Wolf1,000 gp + 80 XP
Collar of the Dire Wolf4,000 gp + 320 XP
Collar of the Winter Wolf9,000 gp + 720 XP
Collar of the Worg16,000 gp + 1,280 XP
Collar of the First Wolf25,000 gp + 2,000 XP


KELWYN'S NOTES

One of the more curious habits of adventurers is their willingness to invest princely sums enchanting the weapons they carry while expecting the faithful creatures that accompany them to rely upon little more than breeding and bravery. It is a peculiar inconsistency. A seasoned hound may guard a sleeping camp for years without complaint, follow a trail invisible to every member of the party, and interpose itself between its master and mortal danger without hesitation. Yet when the time comes to divide the treasure, the poor beast is often rewarded with a strip of dried meat while everyone else debates the relative merits of enchanted steel.

The Collar of the Wolf has always struck me as an enchantment born not of vanity, but of gratitude. Its magic does not compel greater ferocity, nor does it awaken bloodlust within a gentle companion. Rather, it grants every bite the certainty one imagines nature herself intended before compromise and survival tempered her designs. The wearer does not become a monster. It simply becomes a finer example of the loyal guardian it has always chosen to be.

I have observed several examples over the centuries, and each has shared a curious characteristic. The animals themselves seem blissfully unaware that anything extraordinary has occurred. They neither posture nor seek unnecessary conflict. A dog wearing such a collar still greets familiar faces with an enthusiastic wag of the tail, still chases thrown sticks with embarrassing determination, and still regards a kind word from its master as reward enough. The magic strengthens the jaws, but it leaves the heart delightfully untouched. I consider that a far greater accomplishment than any increase in damage could ever represent.

The Collar of the Worg and the exceedingly rare Collar of the First Wolf are another matter entirely. Their workmanship surpasses mere craftsmanship and approaches artistry of the highest order. I have examined only one example of the latter, and I departed with more questions than answers. The runes appeared subtly different each time I studied them, as though they reflected not the light about them, but the memories of every faithful beast that had ever worn the collar. Such observations are, admittedly, difficult to verify, though I confess I have long since ceased dismissing impossible things merely because they decline to behave sensibly.

If fortune ever places one of these collars in your possession, remember that it is not the leather, nor the silver, nor even the enchantment that gives the relic its greatest worth. Those are merely tools. The true magic lies in the quiet bond between a person and the creature that chooses to walk beside them without expectation of glory, wealth, or recognition. Any fool may purchase a stronger bite. Loyalty, however, remains among the rarest treasures ever granted to this world, and no wizard - however accomplished - has yet devised a spell capable of creating it.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Amulet of the Honest Heart

Amulet of the Honest Heart


Aura
Strong divination and enchantment; CL 13th
Slot Neck; Price 54,000 gp; Weight

DESCRIPTION

Fashioned from polished silver in the shape of an open eye enclosed within a heart, this elegant amulet is warm to the touch and seems to pulse faintly whenever spoken words carry great emotional weight. Tiny runes etched around its edge cannot be deciphered by mundane means, yet every wearer instinctively understands one simple truth the moment the amulet is donned: truth demands a price.

While worn, the amulet grants its bearer supernatural certainty whenever they hear a deliberate falsehood spoken by another creature. Whenever the wearer can hear and understand a spoken statement made by a creature within 60 feet, they instantly know whether that specific statement is an intentional lie. This ability functions continuously and requires no action, concentration, or activation. It penetrates magical disguises, mundane deception, illusions, enchantments, and even effects such as glibness, provided the speaker knowingly communicates something false.

The amulet does not reveal the truth behind a lie, expose omissions, determine motives, or distinguish sarcasm from sincerity. A creature stating something it genuinely believes to be true, even if factually incorrect, does not register as lying.

The gift is inseparably bound to a supernatural compulsion toward honesty. While wearing the amulet, the bearer cannot knowingly communicate false information in any form. Spoken words fail, written falsehoods refuse to form, magical messages cannot contain intentional lies, and any attempt to deceive is involuntarily altered into a truthful statement or ends in silence.

The wearer automatically fails any Bluff check made to deceive another creature, including feinting in combat. The wearer may still withhold information, refuse to answer questions, speak ambiguously, or remain silent. Removing the amulet immediately ends both its benefits and its restrictions.

LORE

Legends speak of an ornament known among judges and magistrates as the Honest Heart. Though descriptions of its appearance vary from culture to culture, every account agrees upon two remarkable qualities. Its bearer becomes incapable of being deceived by deliberate falsehood, yet loses the ability to utter one themselves. Many have sought such a relic believing it to be the perfect instrument of justice, only to discover that truth is often far more difficult to wield than deceit.

In Ville des Marai, one tale attributes the first amulet to a grieving widow whose husband was executed after false testimony secured his conviction. Refusing to allow another innocent life to be stolen through lies, she commissioned priests, witches, and arcane scholars to create a relic capable of exposing every deliberate deception. Their enchantment succeeded beyond expectation. The widow spent the remainder of her life serving as an impartial arbiter whose judgments were never questioned, though she became increasingly isolated as friends and nobles alike learned that even the smallest polite lie was impossible in her presence.

Some philosophers reject the notion that the amulet bears any curse at all. They argue that absolute discernment and absolute honesty are merely two halves of the same principle. To perceive truth perfectly while remaining free to manipulate it would invite corruption beyond measure. Thus, they claim, the amulet does not punish its wearer - it simply demands that anyone entrusted with perfect knowledge of lies must also become incapable of creating them.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, discern lies, zone of truth, geas/quest; Cost 27,000 gp + 2,160 XP

Kelwyn's Notes

Many adventurers see an object such as this and immediately imagine interrogations, criminal investigations, and dramatic courtroom confessions. That is because they imagine lies as rare things uttered only by villains. Spend a single afternoon wearing this amulet in any bustling marketplace and that illusion evaporates with astonishing speed. Merchants exaggerate, children invent excuses, lovers flatter one another, and politicians breathe. One quickly discovers that falsehood is woven through civilization in threads both dark and surprisingly gentle.

I have long maintained that deception is neither wholly evil nor wholly virtuous. A physician may reassure a frightened patient. A parent may soften a painful truth for a child. A diplomat may spare thousands of lives through carefully measured words that reveal less than the whole picture. This amulet grants no wisdom to distinguish kindness from manipulation. It merely announces that a lie has been spoken and forbids its bearer from answering with one of their own.

I once encountered a magistrate who wore such an amulet for nearly twenty years. His reputation became legendary, and litigants traveled hundreds of miles simply to have their disputes heard before him. Yet the poor fellow confessed that he dreaded attending social gatherings more than presiding over murder trials. Friends stopped inviting him to dinner because every conversation became an exercise in uncomfortable sincerity.

The clever soon learn that silence remains a powerful companion. One need not answer every question. One need not volunteer every unpleasant fact. There exists an enormous difference between deception and discretion, and those who master that distinction often become remarkably effective negotiators despite the amulet's restrictions. In truth, I suspect the relic teaches restraint every bit as much as honesty.

Would I wear it? Only for the briefest of moments, and only when the stakes justified such sacrifice. There are times when discovering a single deliberate lie may avert a war or expose a monstrous conspiracy. There are equally many moments when compassion requires gentleness rather than relentless candor. The amulet possesses no judgment of its own. It merely places truth in one's hands and leaves wisdom to determine what should be done with it.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Wheel of Endless Brie

Wheel of Endless Brie


Aura
moderate conjuration; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 18,000 gp; Weight 5 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

At first glance, this item appears to be an enormous wheel of pale golden brie wrapped in a flawless wax rind. The cheese is always cool to the touch and never spoils, regardless of age or environmental conditions. It emits a rich, buttery aroma that is pleasantly inviting to humanoids yet does not attract vermin or scavengers.

Once per day, the wielder may activate the Wheel of Endless Brie by speaking its command word as a standard action. For the next 10 minutes, the wheel continuously replenishes itself as portions are removed. During this time, the wheel can produce enough nourishing cheese to feed up to 100 Medium creatures. Any creature that spends at least 1 minute consuming the cheese receives nourishment equivalent to a full day's meals and gains the benefits of a goodberry spell, healing 1 hit point. A creature can benefit from this healing only once per day, regardless of how much cheese it consumes.

Sharing a meal from the wheel inspires fellowship and goodwill. Any creature that eats at least three servings gains a +2 morale bonus on Diplomacy checks for 1 hour. In addition, domesticated animals eagerly accept the cheese as a treat, granting the bearer a +4 circumstance bonus on Handle Animal checks made while offering portions from the wheel.

At the conclusion of the 10-minute duration, the wheel immediately returns to its original size. Any slices removed during the activation remain mundane, wholesome cheese indefinitely, but any magical properties they possess fade after 24 hours. The Wheel of Endless Brie cannot be activated again until the following dawn.

LORE

The first Wheel of Endless Brie was commissioned by Duchess Élodie de Fromage, a noblewoman whose estates bordered the fertile grazing lands of western Da'Ma. Believing that no traveler should ever be turned away hungry, she employed a circle of conjurers, druids, and master cheesemakers to create a feast that could sustain entire villages through the lean months. The resulting enchantment proved so successful that the duchess's annual harvest festivals became legendary throughout the kingdom.

Today, Wheels of Endless Brie are prized not only by wealthy households but also by military quartermasters, charitable temples, and adventuring companies preparing for long expeditions. A single wheel can transform a desperate refugee camp into a place of comfort, or keep an isolated mountain outpost well-fed through an unforgiving winter. Many rulers consider ownership of one to be both a symbol of prosperity and an obligation to provide for those in need.

Not all stories surrounding the wheel are entirely wholesome. Tavern tales insist that a particularly greedy merchant once attempted to monopolize its bounty by selling endless slices throughout an entire kingdom. Before the year was over, every wheel of ordinary cheese in his warehouses had inexplicably transformed into bland, tasteless curds overnight. Whether this was divine punishment, fey mischief, or merely an amusing coincidence remains a matter of spirited debate among scholars and cheesemakers alike.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, create food and water, goodberry; creator must possess 9 ranks in Craft (Cooking) and use a full wheel of artisan-crafted brie aged no fewer than six months as the focus of the enchantment; Cost 9,000 gp + 720 XP

Kelwyn's Notes

There exists a curious tendency among wizards to believe that true magical achievement must always be spectacular. They strive to command storms, imprison dragons, or unravel the very laws governing time itself. Yet I have lived long enough to observe that the enchantments most fondly remembered are often the simplest. A warm fire on a bitter evening. A lantern that never gutters. A blanket that always remains dry. Or, in this case, an inexhaustible wheel of remarkably fine cheese.

One quickly discovers that there are two kinds of adventurers. The first carefully ration every crumb of food, calculating supplies with admirable discipline and worrying endlessly over the next meal. The second see an enchanted wheel of brie and immediately begin discussing wines, crackers, and whether mushrooms might improve the experience. I have traveled beside both sorts, and while the former undoubtedly survive longer on paper, the latter generally tell far better stories.

There is an undeniable magic in sharing food that no spell description can adequately capture. Around a meal, strangers become companions, frightened children remember how to laugh, and even the most hardened mercenary often finds themselves lingering to hear another tale before continuing down the road. One should never underestimate how thoroughly an empty stomach can poison good judgment, nor how effectively a satisfying meal can restore hope when swords and sorcery have accomplished very little.

I recall one particularly obstinate mule that refused to haul a supply wagon another inch until it received its customary slice from one of these wheels. The teamsters insisted the creature had become spoiled by the enchantment. I argued that it had merely learned the value of negotiating from a position of strength. The mule got its cheese. The wagon reached its destination. Everyone involved considered the arrangement entirely satisfactory, save perhaps the accountant responsible for purchasing ordinary feed.

Should fortune ever place one of these marvelous wheels into your possession, cherish it not because it produces endless food, but because it grants endless opportunities to gather people together. Heroes are remembered for slaying monsters, kings for winning wars, and archmages for crafting impossible wonders. Yet ask an old traveler what they remember most vividly, and more often than not they will tell you about a shared meal, good company, and laughter echoing long after the plates had been cleared. That, I think, is a kind of magic worthy of preservation.

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Ring of the Tailor's Wardrobe

Ring of the Tailor's Wardrobe


Aura
moderate transmutation; CL 9th
Slot ring; Price 18,000 gp (18 pp); Weight

Description

This elegant silver ring is engraved with an endless pattern of needles, thread, and flowering vines. Tiny gemstones set into the band subtly shift in color to complement whatever garments the wearer currently possesses.

Three times per day, the wearer may speak a command word while mentally visualizing a complete outfit. Over the course of 1 full round, their current mundane clothing transforms into a new ensemble matching the wearer's mental image.

The wearer has complete control over every aspect of the outfit's appearance, including its style, cut, colors, patterns, apparent fabrics, embroidery, trim, heraldry, insignia, and decorative details. The ring may create accessories appropriate to the ensemble, including cloaks, gloves, scarves, hats, belts, boots, decorative jewelry, and similar articles of attire.

The ring may create clothing suitable for virtually any social or professional role, including commoners, nobles, merchants, sailors, scholars, priests, entertainers, travelers, hunters, servants, or diplomats. The garments are always perfectly fitted, immaculately clean, and appropriate to the wearer's size.

The ring cannot create armor, shields, weapons, tools, containers, masterwork items, magic items, or any object that provides a game effect. Likewise, it cannot create clothing that grants an armor bonus, skill bonus, enhancement bonus, energy resistance, damage reduction, or any other mechanical benefit. The clothing is entirely mundane despite its flawless craftsmanship.

Any article created by the ring remains only while worn by its owner. If a created garment is removed from the wearer for more than one round, it immediately crumbles into a fine gray dust. A cloak loaned to another creature, boots removed before retiring for the evening, or a hat left upon a table all vanish in this fashion.

If the ring itself is removed while conjured clothing still exists, every article created by the ring disintegrates into dust one round later unless the wearer has already changed into ordinary clothing.

The ring cannot alter the wearer's body, race, age, gender, height, weight, or physical features. It affects only clothing and decorative accessories.

Construction

Requirements Forge Ring, major creation, prestidigitation; Cost 9,000 gp (9 pp) + 720 XP

Lore

The Ring of the Tailor's Wardrobe has long been prized by those whose success depends more upon presentation than upon martial prowess. Diplomats carry one to ensure they are appropriately attired for every court they visit, merchants use them to present an image of prosperity regardless of the hardships endured upon the road, and performers delight in changing costumes with impossible speed. Even seasoned adventurers have been known to keep one tucked away for those rare occasions when appearing respectable is more valuable than carrying another weapon.

The earliest examples are believed to have been commissioned jointly by master tailors and accomplished transmuters in one of the great trade cities of the ancient world. Their goal was not to replace the tailor's craft, but to create a magical wardrobe that could adapt instantly to changing circumstances without diminishing the value of genuine clothing. To that end, the enchantment was deliberately designed so that no garment could exist apart from its wearer, ensuring that the ring could never flood markets with counterfeit finery.

Collectors have noted that authentic Rings of the Tailor's Wardrobe invariably produce clothing of remarkable quality regardless of the wearer's own knowledge of fashion. The magic seems to understand proportion, balance, and elegance instinctively, often producing garments more refined than the wearer consciously imagined. Despite this subtle intelligence, every attempt to force the ring to create armor, protective equipment, or permanent goods has failed, suggesting that its enchantment is bound by carefully crafted limitations established by its original creators.

Kelwyn's Notes

I have often maintained that clothing is a language every bit as expressive as speech. Before a single word is exchanged, one's attire announces station, profession, confidence, wealth, and sometimes even intent. Those who dismiss such things rarely understand why doors seem to open more readily for others.

There exists a temptation among younger wizards to rely upon illusion whenever appearances matter. I have never shared that enthusiasm. An illusion invites suspicion from those trained to recognize magic, whereas a finely tailored coat is seldom questioned. Reality, even magically created reality, possesses a credibility illusion seldom achieves.

I find the ring's refusal to create armor particularly wise. Clothing serves comfort, dignity, ceremony, and expression. Armor serves survival. Confusing the purposes of the two has led more than one overconfident noble to discover precisely how little embroidered silk contributes to one's defense.

The enchantment's insistence that abandoned garments dissolve into dust is equally sensible. Were these outfits permanent, every marketplace in the realm would soon overflow with flawless clothing requiring neither loom nor tailor. Honest craftsmen would find themselves competing against inexhaustible magic, a contest few professions could survive.

Wear this ring to express who you are, or perhaps who circumstances require you to become for an evening. Just remember that no garment, however magnificent, can disguise poor character forever. Eventually every conversation reaches the point where appearances fall silent, leaving only the substance of the person wearing them.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Flask of Ingratitude

Flask of Ingratitude


Aura
: Faint Conjuration; CL 5th
Slot: None; Weight: 1 lb.

Description

At first glance, this appears to be an ordinary leather-wrapped steel travel flask with a polished wooden stopper. The metal is always cool to the touch, even when left beneath the blazing sun or beside a roaring fire. No matter how much water is poured from it, the flask never empties, continuously replenishing itself with cool, crystal-clear drinking water.

Any creature that drinks from the flask regains 1d4 hit points of damage. A creature can benefit from this healing no more than once per hour, though the water remains refreshing regardless of how often it is consumed.

The flask, however, possesses an enchantment that borders on the absurd.

Immediately after every drink, the user must offer a sincere expression of gratitude to the flask before taking any other action. The wording is unimportant. "Thank you," "Much appreciated," "You're a lifesaver," or any similarly genuine expression of thanks is sufficient.

Failure to do so invokes the flask's curse.

The creature must succeed on a DC 16 Fortitude save or become afflicted with an intense bout of magical diarrhea. While afflicted, the creature is sickened for 1d4 hours and must spend a move action every 10 minutes tending to its discomfort. The creature cannot run or charge while the curse persists.

Additional failures while already afflicted do not worsen the effects but immediately reset the remaining duration to its full value.

The curse ends immediately if the afflicted creature sincerely apologizes to the flask while holding it. Otherwise, the condition ends naturally when its duration expires. A remove curse spell suppresses the flask's curse for 24 hours but does not permanently alter the item.

Lore

No one agrees where the first Flask of Ingratitude was created. Monastic records speak of an order that believed gratitude was among the highest virtues, teaching that even the simplest kindness deserved acknowledgment. Other scholars dismiss this explanation, insisting that no sane cleric would intentionally bind so ridiculous a curse into an otherwise useful item.

A more popular tale credits an elderly enchanter who grew tired of apprentices constantly helping themselves to his magical supplies without so much as a word of thanks. After enduring years of perceived disrespect, he supposedly vowed that his next creation would teach manners more effectively than lectures ever could. If the stories are true, the experiment proved remarkably successful.

Veteran adventurers often laugh when hearing of the flask for the first time. Few continue laughing after witnessing a seasoned warrior sprint awkwardly behind the nearest bush because they absentmindedly took a drink during a long march. Consequently, owners of the flask tend to become the most consistently polite travelers anyone has ever met.

Kelwyn's Notes

I have long maintained that the difference between civilization and barbarism is often measured in the smallest of courtesies. Holding a door, offering a greeting, acknowledging a kindness - these cost nothing and yet enrich every soul involved. Whoever created this flask clearly shared that sentiment, although perhaps with a somewhat unbalanced enthusiasm.

The enchantment fascinates me because it demonstrates no malice. The flask eagerly provides clean water without limit and heals injuries without hesitation. Only after its generosity has been accepted without acknowledgment does the curse awaken. It is as though the magic itself finds ingratitude fundamentally offensive.

I once observed a company of mercenaries traveling with one of these curious relics. By the second day, every member of the company had developed the habit of thanking nearly every object they handled. They thanked ropes for holding, tents for sheltering them from the rain, cooking pots for producing decent stew and, on one memorable occasion, a mule for standing still while being loaded. None of them seemed to realize how their manners had quietly improved.

There are, admittedly, moments when the flask's standards become somewhat unreasonable. During an ambush, one young ranger took a hurried drink between volleys of arrows and instinctively rushed back into the fight. Several minutes later, I watched him disappear into the underbrush with an expression that suggested he had made a profound tactical error. His companions won the battle but never allowed him to forget what had truly defeated him.

Should you ever come into possession of this item, I offer only one piece of advice: cultivate good habits. Make gratitude your first response, not because the flask demands it, but because the world is improved by those who freely express appreciation. The flask merely provides... unusually persuasive encouragement.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Crystal Ball of Possibilities

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.

Amulet of Resilience

Amulet of Resilience


Aura
moderate abjuration and enchantment; CL 7th
Slot throat; Price 18,000 gp; Weight 1 lb.

Description

This simple bronze pendant is fashioned in the shape of a tightly clenched fist and hangs from a sturdy leather cord. It bears no jewels, precious metals or decorative embellishments. Countless tiny scratches and nicks cover its surface, each seeming to tell the story of a hardship overcome rather than a battle won. Though humble in appearance, it radiates a quiet determination that reassures its wearer in moments of doubt.

The wearer gains a +2 morale bonus on saving throws against fear effects and despair effects.

Three times per day, if the wearer is reduced to –1 hit points or lower, but not slain outright, the amulet immediately stabilizes the wearer. This ability requires no action and functions even if the wearer is unconscious.

Once per day, when damage would cause the wearer to fall unconscious from hit point loss, the amulet surges with indomitable resolve. The wearer immediately regains 1d8+5 hit points. In addition, the wearer gains the benefits of the Diehard feat for 5 rounds, even if they do not meet its prerequisites. This ability activates automatically and requires no action from the wearer.

The amulet functions only if the wearer is alive. It has no effect upon creatures slain by massive damage, death effects or similar magic.

Construction

Requirements: Forge Wondrous Item, bear's endurance, heroism, close wounds; Cost: 9,000 gp + 720 XP; Time: 18 days

Lore

The earliest tales of the Amulet of Resilience do not speak of kings, saints or mighty champions. Instead, they tell of ordinary laborers, refugees, healers and travelers who refused to surrender despite overwhelming hardship. It is said that the first such pendant was forged after a devastating famine, when a village elder remarked that survival was seldom the work of the strongest among them. Rather, it belonged to those who simply refused to stop taking one more step.

The clenched fist has carried many meanings throughout history, yet among the oldest traditions it symbolized neither aggression nor conquest. Instead, it represented resolve. A hand formed into a fist could no longer grasp wealth or wield elaborate tools, but it could endure pain, weather hardship and rise again after every fall. For this reason, generations of artisans deliberately left these pendants plain and scarred, believing that an object untouched by hardship could never truly represent resilience.

Authentic Amulets of Resilience are seldom found in treasure vaults or royal collections. More often they appear around the necks of village guardians, aging adventurers, devoted caregivers and those whose greatest victories have never been celebrated in song. Many are passed from parent to child, mentor to student or friend to friend, each new scratch adding another chapter to a story that has yet to reach its conclusion.

Kelwyn's Notes

Many believe resilience to be synonymous with strength. I have lived sufficiently long to assure you that this is a misunderstanding. Strength may win a contest. Resilience determines who remains standing after the contest has ended. Mountains are strong, yet even they surrender to wind and water given enough centuries. The willow, by contrast, survives because it bends.

There exists an unfortunate tendency among scholars to celebrate dramatic victories while overlooking quieter triumphs. A dragon slain is undoubtedly worthy of a ballad. A grieving soul who rises from bed despite believing the day unbearable receives no such applause, despite having displayed courage of an equally remarkable variety. I have often wondered whether history places its admiration upon the wrong achievements.

Observe carefully the surface of this amulet. It is scarred, weathered and imperfect. I consider this essential. Were it polished until flawless, it would become a symbol of untouched innocence rather than hard-earned perseverance. Every mark upon its bronze reminds us that surviving adversity invariably leaves us changed. One should not fear such changes. They are evidence that one has continued onward.

There is a curious misconception that resilience means never requiring assistance. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have crossed deserts only because companions shared their water. I have escaped dangers only because wiser minds offered counsel where my own judgment faltered. To accept help is not weakness. It is often the very act that allows resilience to flourish.

Should fortune ever place this humble pendant in your keeping, remember that its greatest enchantment is not the magic that steadies your heartbeat or grants you the strength to rise once more. Those blessings, though welcome, are temporary. Its true power lies in the lesson it quietly repeats each time your hand closes around it: falling is inevitable, surrender is optional. I have found that distinction to be among the wisest lessons this world has ever offered.

Collar of the Wolf

Collar of the Wolf Aura Moderate transmutation; CL 9th Slot Neck (animal only); Price See Table; Weight 1 lb. DESCRIPTION The Collar of...