Difference between revisions of "D&D Next Spellbooks"
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Basic spellbook prices assume simple leather covers, which are rarely "hard" leather - they tend to be softer leather covers that often tie shut. | Basic spellbook prices assume simple leather covers, which are rarely "hard" leather - they tend to be softer leather covers that often tie shut. | ||
* '''Other Leathers:''' A spellbook covered in "decorative" leathers such as buckskin, fish scale, shark- or snake-skin or goat- or wyvern-hide are possible for an additional 20gp. Those covered in "fine leather" such as dragonscale, eel- or stingray-skin, behir- or bullette-hide, giant snakeskin or displacer beast- or unicorn-hide are also possible, for an additional 40gp. Most of these are hard leather covers, though a skilled craftsman can make them hard or soft as the customer desires. | * '''Other Leathers:''' A spellbook covered in "decorative" leathers such as buckskin, fish scale, shark- or snake-skin or goat- or wyvern-hide are possible for an additional 20gp. Those covered in "fine leather" such as dragonscale, eel- or stingray-skin, behir- or bullette-hide, giant snakeskin or displacer beast- or unicorn-hide are also possible, for an additional 40gp. Most of these are hard leather covers, though a skilled craftsman can make them hard or soft as the customer desires. | ||
− | * '''Wood Covers:''' A spellbook covered in "decorative" woods - such as apple, ash, ebony, hornbeam, oak or many of the more common woods - can be had for an additional 15gp. Covers of rarer woods such as chime oak, laspar, | + | * '''Wood Covers:''' A spellbook covered in "decorative" woods - such as apple, ash, ebony, hornbeam, oak or many of the more common woods - can be had for an additional 15gp. Covers of rarer woods such as chime oak, laspar, roseneedle pine, shadowtop and similar specimens can be had for 25gp extra. On the other hand, books that are covered in scrap wood (often untreated and poorly constructed) reduce the base price of the spellbook by 5%. |
* '''Metal Covers:''' Spellbooks covered in "decorative" metals such as brass, bronze, copper, iron, silver or steel cost an additional 35gp. Those bound in electrum, gold, mithral, platinum or a lesser metal treated with everbright or blueshine cost 75gp (and softer metals such as gold are almost always plating rather than full solid covers, for strength if not cost). | * '''Metal Covers:''' Spellbooks covered in "decorative" metals such as brass, bronze, copper, iron, silver or steel cost an additional 35gp. Those bound in electrum, gold, mithral, platinum or a lesser metal treated with everbright or blueshine cost 75gp (and softer metals such as gold are almost always plating rather than full solid covers, for strength if not cost). | ||
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===Adornments=== | ===Adornments=== | ||
Decorations and other pieces of art may improve the quality of the final book's cost. | Decorations and other pieces of art may improve the quality of the final book's cost. |
Revision as of 12:46, 5 January 2014
Learning New Spells
A mage gains access to new spells in one of two ways: he can either research them or he can study spells that he finds. Either of these approaches allow him to understand the spell in question.
Researching Spells
- Automatic Research: As mages advance through their levels, they are assumed to constantly be researching, studying, experimenting and discovering or awakening new magical techniques and understandings. These form a body of ongoing "research". At each level, a mage may add 2 new spells to his spellbook.
- These spells must come from the list of common spells, or from spells whose formulae the wizard has had a chance to read but not copy.
- It costs 25gp per spell level once these spells are finished being researched.
- Additional Research: In addition to the normal, ongoing but painstakingly slow research that goes on for most wizards, others also maintain more immediate research projects.
- On any given week in which the mage is able to complete 25 hours of focused research, he may make an Arcana test.
- The DC for this test is 20 + 2 per spell level, and consumes 5gp per level of the spell in question.
- Success on this test results in learning a new spell of a spell level he is able to prepare.
- Failure on this test results in the reduction of the DC by a number of points equal to his Proficiency Bonus for subsequent research attempts.
- A researcher may instead spend 25 hours of general research. This is less experimenting and more reading and studying. He may choose to perform research on a number of spell research projects equal to his Intelligence bonus. He makes an Arcana check.
- The DC for this test is 10 + the total spell levels being researched, and consumes a number of gold pieces equal to twice the total spell levels being researched.
- Success on this test reduces the DCs of all the spells being researched by an amount equal to the mage's Proficiency Bonus.
- Failure on this test still reduces the DCs of all the spells being researched by 1.
- In any given week, a character may perform at most 50 hours of research - anything in excess of this is just spinning one's wheels.
- On any given week in which the mage is able to complete 25 hours of focused research, he may make an Arcana test.
- Once A Spell is Learned: Once a spell has been successfully researched, it must be immediately scrivened into a spellbook to be prepared.
- Even if this doesn't happen immediately, the insights and notes are there: they just have to be set down and codified into something useful.
- If more than a week passes between successfully researching the spell and writing down, the mage must make an Intelligence check (DC 5 + 1 per week that has passed) and the amount of time needed to scribe the spell. Failure on this roll results in wasted time, and 1d6gp worth of wasted scrivening materials.
Copying A Spell
The other way to learn new spells is to copy and already-finished formula, whether one that is written out in another mage's spellbook or one that has been imbued onto a spell scroll.
- Another's Spell Book: Whether a mentor's spellbook lent for the purpose of copying, or an enemy's taken as a trophy of war, a mage may copy a spell out of another spellbook.
- This process takes a number of hours equal to half the level of the spell in question, and materials equal to 25gp per level of the spell used up in the experimentation.
- Once this time and materials are spent, the mage now knows the spell as though he'd just successfully finished researching it, and can move on to scrivening it in his spellbook.
- A benefit to using this method is that the experimentation time above also counts as time spent scrivening the spell.
- The other benefit is a simple one: this spell need not be scrivened into the mage's spellbook. If he continues to have access to the written form of the spell he studied already, he may simply prepare the spell from that book, rather than also add it to his own.
- This is the reason so many mages collect the spellbooks of their foes and end up with vast libraries: it is expensive to both learn and scribe spells, so it is often easier (and cheaper) to simply keep the other spellbook on hand to learn from. Many mages will consolidate the best of their trophies' contents into singular traveling spellbooks and the like sometimes.
- Spell Scroll: Perhaps the easiest of the methods, it literally takes only a single round and no materials in order to divine the formula of a spell from a spell scroll on which it is written.
- Using this method does consume the spell scroll as though its spell had been cast, however.
- The downside is that there is no room for lolly-gagging - the mage must immediately scribe it into his spellbook. If even an hour passes between the reading of the scroll and the beginning of the scrivening, the spell is lost.
Scrivening New Spells
By whatever method is used, once a spell is understood by a mage, he may now copy it into his spellbook.
- No roll is involved to do so.
- This takes one hour per level of the spell to be added. (Note that if copying another's spellbook, the hours spent experimenting during that process count as time towards this total.)
- This requires the expenditure of 25gp per level of the spell to be added.
- Once both these requirements have been met, the spell is added to the character's spellbook.
- A newly added spell takes up a number of pages in a text equal to 1d4+level of the spell in pages.
- This is halved if the spell is being scribed into a folio, or doubled if being scribed into an octavo.
Spellbook Types & Costs
Spellbook Costs
These prices provide the Base Cost referred to below
- Blank Spellbook, Quarto (Standard; 12" x 9.5")
- 100 pg: 75gp
- 200 pg: 150 gp
- 300 pg: 225 gp
- Blank Spellbook, Octavo (Traveling; 9" x 6")
- 100 pg: 40gp
- 200 pg: 80 gp
- Blank Spellbook, Folio (Sanctum; 15" x 12")
- 100 pg: 150gp
- 200 pg: 300 gp
- 300 pg: 450 gp
- 400 pg: 600 gp
- 500 pg: 750 gp
Bindings
Costs expressed in gold piece amounts (rather than percentage amounts) should be halved for octavo-sized spellbooks, and doubled for folio-sized ones.
- Standard: None (assumed a base-line leather cover)
- Cloth Cover: Clothboard: -10% of Base Cost; Ragcloth Cover: -15% of Base Cost
- Leather Cover: Decorative Leather: +20gp; Fine Leather: +40gp
- Wood: Scrap Wood: -5% of Base Cost; Decorative Wood: +15gp; Fine Wood: +25gp
- Metals: Decorative Metal: +35gp; Fine Metal: +75gp
Adornments
- Gilding: Silver +10% of Base Cost; Gold +20% of Base Cost
- Precious Metal & Gem Accents: Cost of gems and metals, plus 10gp (5gp for octavos, 20gp for folios)
- Cover Artwork: Varies
Practical Additions
- Sealing Cover: Quarto 30gp; Octavo 20gp; Folio 50 gp
- Key Lock: DC 15 - 25gp; DC 20 - 50gp; DC 25 - 100gp
- Puzzle Lock: DC 15 - 35gp; DC 20 - 70gp; DC 25 - 150gp
Enchantments
- Minor Property: 150gp
- Arcane Locking: 250gp
- Arcane Words: 50gp
- Immunity: 100 gp + 50gp per additional damage type
- Illusory Appearance: Single Appearance 100gp; Variable Appearance 200gp; Mutable Appearance 400gp
- A quarto spellbook is the standard for most wizards. They are usually 12 inches in height by 9.5 inches in width. A quarto spellbook can be purchased for 75 gp per 100 pages, with a practical maximum (in terms of binding strength) of 300 pages. The page count modifier for the quarto is 100% (i.e. unmodified).
- The so-called "traveling spellbooks" are octavo in size, measuring 9" x 6". These can be purchased for 40 gp per 100 pages, with a practical maximum of 200 pages. The page count modifier for the octavo is 200%.
- Finally, "sanctum spellbooks" are larger spellbooks - highly impractical to transport, save as cargo - are called folio sized tomes, measuring 15" x 12". These sell for 150 gp per 100 pages, and can be bound in books of up to 500 pages. The page count modifier for the folio is 50%.
Covers
Basic spellbook prices assume simple leather covers, which are rarely "hard" leather - they tend to be softer leather covers that often tie shut.
- Other Leathers: A spellbook covered in "decorative" leathers such as buckskin, fish scale, shark- or snake-skin or goat- or wyvern-hide are possible for an additional 20gp. Those covered in "fine leather" such as dragonscale, eel- or stingray-skin, behir- or bullette-hide, giant snakeskin or displacer beast- or unicorn-hide are also possible, for an additional 40gp. Most of these are hard leather covers, though a skilled craftsman can make them hard or soft as the customer desires.
- Wood Covers: A spellbook covered in "decorative" woods - such as apple, ash, ebony, hornbeam, oak or many of the more common woods - can be had for an additional 15gp. Covers of rarer woods such as chime oak, laspar, roseneedle pine, shadowtop and similar specimens can be had for 25gp extra. On the other hand, books that are covered in scrap wood (often untreated and poorly constructed) reduce the base price of the spellbook by 5%.
- Metal Covers: Spellbooks covered in "decorative" metals such as brass, bronze, copper, iron, silver or steel cost an additional 35gp. Those bound in electrum, gold, mithral, platinum or a lesser metal treated with everbright or blueshine cost 75gp (and softer metals such as gold are almost always plating rather than full solid covers, for strength if not cost).
Adornments
Decorations and other pieces of art may improve the quality of the final book's cost.
- Gilding: Silver gilding costs an additional +10% of the Base Cost, while gold gilding on the pages costs an additional +20% of the base cost.
- Precious Metal & Gem Accents: This costs the cost of the materials used (precious metals and gems), plus an additional 10gp for the design work and incorporation (5gp for octavos, 20 gp for folios).
- Carvings, Tooling and Other Artwork: This can cost anywhere between 5gp for a simple tooling into leather, carving/burning into wood or etching into metal, all the way to several hundred gold pieces for full cover pieces lovingly wrought by a skilled craftsman.
Practical Additions
- Sealing Cover: Only available on wood or metal covered books, the covers are designed so that when the book is closed, portions extend over the pages and fit together, closing like the lid on a box. The fastener easily closes it well, giving it additional resistance to wear and tear. It is also very easy to fit a lock into the cover. This costs an additional 20gp for octavo, 30gp for quarto and 50gp for folio spellbooks.
- Key Lock: A lock is set into the cover. If the book does not have the sealing cover addition (above), the other end of the locking mechanism is in a strap of leather which extends from the back cover. When locked in place, it is sealed (the leather is quite difficult to cut without damaging the book). The key lock's price includes the small lock and a pair of keys that unlock it. These locks are priced according to how difficult they are to pick: 25gp for DC 15, 50gp for DC 20, 100gp for DC 25.
- Puzzle Lock: Like the key lock, except in order to unseal it, the lock requires the solving of a strange puzzle made up of grooves and sliding mechanisms that not only require brain power to solve, but make them nigh unpickable (Lock Picking DC is 5 higher than the DC to solve them). Anyone who is taught the trick for them gains a +5 to their Intelligence checks to open it. Each attempt to open the lock takes 30 minutes (or 5 minutes for those who've been taught the lock solution). These locks are priced according to how difficult they are to solve: 35gp for DC 15, 70gp for DC 20, 150gp for DC 25.
Enchantments
Certain priesthoods or wizards can enact these enchantments.
- Minor Properties: A spellbook imbued with a Minor Property such as beacon, compass, conscientious, delver, gleaming, guardian, harmonious, hidden message, illusion, key, language, luminous, sentinel, songcraft, strange material, temperate, unbreakable, war leader, waterborne or wicked. This costs an additional 150gp.
- Arcane Locking: With a command word, the book seals as though by an arcane lock spell. The same word unseals it. (Unless a book has a lock or sealable cover built into it, it cannot normally be affected by arcane lock.) 250gp
- Arcane Words: When the book is opened, words speak aloud, emanating from the book. This can happen everytime, or only if a command word is either spoken or not spoken. The words and volume (from a whisper audible only to the one who opens it to the loudness of a large-lunged man shouting) are chosen when it is enchanted. (50gp)
- Immunity: The book is immune to damage of one type entirely. (100gp + 50gp per additional damage type)
- Illusory Appearance: With a command word, the book can be made to look like another book entirely. The cheapest such enchantments make it look like a single alternate appearance, but more expensive ones can cause it to look like any other sort of book the one who speaks the word imagines, or even any inanimate object of roughly similar size. (Single Appearance 100gp, Variable Appearance 200gp, Mutable Appearance 400gp)