I figure, if there's "Monstrous Monday," then why not "Wondrous Wednesday" where we post magic items? So, here's one that's I did decades ago, reimagined and reinterpreted for 5E: the minimaton.
So, one of the many games I've backed on Kickstarter is Old School Essentials , which is a cleaned-up, streamlined, and corrected version of the B/X version of Basic Dungeons & Dragons (Moldvay/Cook) rules. Gavin Norman (who posts as Necrotic Gnome) does an incredible job editing and collating info into a super-easy-to-read format. One of the modifications to the B/X rules introduced in the OSE Advanced Fantasy book is separating race from class. In original B/X, the races are represented as classes, with the idea that, if you're playing an elf, that should be special enough in-and-of-itself. If you allowed non-human races to take classes, then players will play the non-humans because their innate abilities make them better than equal-leveled human characters. Separating race from class, the default introduced in AD&D, caused huge flamewars and continues to do so today. The Advanced Fantasy book has reasonable versions of the races so that, if it's your preferen...
Another creature adapted from Dragon issue #156, "Not Necessarily the Monstrous Compendium" -- the feared Blink Wooly Mammoth! It probably would have been even more thematically appropriate to have worked up the werelagomorph (were-hare) but I only thought of that last night. Ancient people, accompanied by the first domesticated dogs, hunted mammoths during the Endless Winter at the beginning of the world. Some mammoths developed a strange magical ability to escape their pursuers – the ability to teleport short distances. While the vast herds of mammoths were eventually greatly reduced through hunting, these blink wooly mammoths proved tricky and many herds survive at the outskirts of civilization, especially in areas that border frozen climates. Some sages believe that some ancient hunters may have bred their dogs in an attempt to create a hunting companion that was a match for these mammoths; these sages believe that this is the origin of the blink dog species. Blink Wooly ...
So, in the past I've picked up all sorts of music for tabletop RPG ambience. I treasure both of Stephen Michael Sechi's Music from Talislanta CDs, for example, and the first year they did GenCon I bought all of Toxic Bag Productions' available sound effects CDs . I love me some tabletop ambience, which is ironic as most of my face-to-face gaming lately has been in hobby shops, which are the worst places to do ambience; my FLGS doesn't have rooms, so we're out in the middle of the shop floor with all the noise of 40K players competing with my GM voice. And there are plenty of people who do tabletop gaming music for free. There was a point where I had listened to everything Matti Paalanen put online for tabletop ambience; he put whole albums online for free for people to use at their tabletop games. And for Traveller, the band Lord Weird Slough Feg put out the album Traveller , which actually tells a story. So, all that to say, I have no problem paying somebody for ...
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