+0 | Strength |
-1 | Dexterity |
+3 | Constitution |
+1 | Intelligence |
+6 | Wisdom |
-1 | Charisma |
-1 | Acrobatics |
+4 | Animal Handling |
+5 | Arcana |
+0 | Athletics |
-3 | Deception |
+3 | History |
+4 | Insight |
-3 | Intimidation |
+1 | Investigation |
+6 | Medicine |
+1 | Nature |
+6 | Perception |
-3 | Performance |
-1 | Persuasion |
+5 | Religion |
-1 | Sleight of Hands |
-1 | Stealth |
+4 | Survival |
Weapon | Type | Attack | Damage | Damage Type | Range | Properties |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shortsword | Martial | 1d20+2 | 1d6+2 | Piercing | Finesse, Light | |
Shortbow | Simple | 1d20+1 | 1d6+1 | Piercing | 80/320 ft | Ammunition, Two-Handed |
Heroes Enabled
The statblocks of your Weapons, armor and other important/magical equipment
DnD 5e SRD SRD
Medium Armor Common
This armor consists of a coat and leggings (and perhaps a separate skirt) of leather covered with overlapping pieces of metal, much like the scales of a fish. The suit includes gauntlets.
Type | AC | STR Req. | Stealth Dis. | Properties |
---|---|---|---|---|
Medium | 14 + Dex Modifier (max 2) | YES |
Cost: 50 gp Weight: 45 lb
DnD 5e SRD SRD
Ranged Weapon Ammunition, Two-Handed Common
Type | Damage | Damage | Range | Properties |
---|---|---|---|---|
Simple | 1d6 | Piercing | 80/320 ft | Ammunition, Two-Handed |
Cost: 25 gp Weight: 2 lb
DnD 5e SRD SRD
Melee Weapon Finesse, Light Common
Type | Damage | Damage | Range | Properties |
---|---|---|---|---|
Martial | 1d6 | Piercing | Finesse, Light |
Cost: 10 gp Weight: 2 lb
DnD 5e SRD SRD
Shield Common
A shield is made from wood or metal and is carried in one hand. Wielding a shield increases your Armor Class by 2. You can benefit from only one shield at a time.
Type | AC | STR Req. | Stealth Dis. | Properties |
---|---|---|---|---|
Shield | +2 |
Cost: 10 gp Weight: 6 lb
Player's Handbook, Wizards of the Coast, p. 150
Ammunition Common
Cost: 1 GP (5 CP per arrow) Weight: 1 lb. / 0.5 kg (0.05 lb. / 0.025 kg per arrow)
DnD 5e SRD
Adventuring Gear Common
A backpack is a leather pack carried on the back, typically with straps to secure it. A backpack can hold 1 cubic foot/ 30 pounds of gear. You can also strap items, such as a bedroll or a coil of rope, to the outside of a backpack.
Cost: 2gp Weight: 5lb
DnD 5e SRD
Adventuring Gear Common
This tin box contains a cup and simple cutlery. The box clamps together, and one side can be used as a cooking pan and the other as a plate or shallow bowl.
Cost: 2sp Weight: 1lb
DnD 5e SRD
Adventuring Gear Common
This small container holds flint, fire steel, and tinder (usually dry cloth soaked in light oil) used to kindle a fire. Using it to light a torch -- or anything else with abundant, exposed fuel -- takes an action. Lighting any other fire takes 1 minute.
Cost: 5sp Weight: 1lb
DnD 5e SRD
Adventuring Gear Common
A torch burns for 1 hour, providing bright light in a 20-foot radius and dim light for an additional 20 feet. If you make a melee attack with a burning torch and hit, it deals 1 fire damage.
Cost: 1cp Weight: 1lb
Adventuring Gear Common
Rations are a type of food that helps keep people alive and running. Ration consumption can only be done once between rests, but in that moment, up to 2 rations can be consumed.
Junk Rations: These rations are unhealthy and will do little more than keep the hunger off. It takes 2 Junk Rations to relieve -1 Hunger.
Luxury Rations: These are healthy, dried rations that do not need prep to keep you going. 1 Ration relieves -1 Hunger.
Fresh Rations: Fresh or Raw food that needs to be cooked. If properly cooked, they relieve -1 Hunger, but an exceptionally well cook meal can relieve -2 Hunger.
*Cooking: Cooking requires a heat source and a skill check. Critically succeeding at cooking can only be done during a long rest, but allows a -2 Hunger benefit and potential stress relief.
PHB, page 153. Available in the SRD.
Adventuring Gear Varies
Rope, whether made of hemp or silk, has 2 hit points and can be burst with a DC 17 Strength check.
Cost: 1 gp Weight: 10 lbs
Spellcasting Focus Common
A holy symbol is a representation of a god or pantheon. A cleric or paladin can use a holy symbol as a spellcasting focus, as described in the Spellcasting section. To use the symbol in this way, the caster must hold it in hand, wear it visibly, or bear it on a shield.
DnD 5e SRD
Adventuring Gear Common
This set of clothes is designed specifically to be expensive and to show it, including fancy, tailored clothes in whatever fashion happens to be the current style in the courts of the nobles. Precious metals and gems could be worked into the clothing.
Cost: 15gp Weight: 6lb
D
Adventuring Gear Common
Each signet ring has a distinctive design carved into it. When you press this ring into warm sealing wax, you leave an identifying mark.
Cost: 5gp Weight: --
PHB 127
Scroll Varies
A scroll of pedigree proves a character's noble lineage.
The statblocks of your class features
you start with the following equipment in addition to the equipment granted by your background (a) a mace or (b) a warhammer (if proficient) (a) scale mail, (b) leather armour, or or (c) chainmail (if proficient) (a) a light crossbow and 20 bolts or (b) any simple weapon (a) a preists pack or (b) an explorers pack A shield and holy symbol
As a conduit for divine power, you can cast cleric spells.
Statblocks for your familiars, mounts etc.
Statblocks for race/species of the character.
Darkvision. Accustomed to twilit forests and the night sky, you have superior vision in dark and dim conditions. You can see to dim light within 60 feet of you as if it were bright light, and in darkness as if it were dim light. You can't discern color in darkness, only shades of gray. Keen Senses.You have proficiency in the Perception skill. Fey Ancestry. You have advantage on saving throws against being charmed, and magic can't put you to sleep. Trance. Elves don't need to sleep. Instead, they meditate deeply, remaining semiconscious, for 4 hours a day. (The common word for such meditation is "trance.") While meditatiog, you can dream after a fashion; such dreams are actually mental exercises that have become reflexive through years of practice. After resting in this way, you gain the same benefit that a human does from 8 hours of sleep. Elf Weapon Training. You have proficiency with the longsword, shortsword, longbow, and shortbow. Cantrip. You know one Cantrip of your choice from the wizard spell list. Intelligence is your spellcasting ability for it.
Languages. Reikspeil (Common), Eltharin (Elven), one extra language of your choice.
You understand wealth, power, and privilege. You carry a noble title, and your family owns land, collects taxes, and wields significant political influence. You might be a pampered aristocrat unfamiliar with work or discomfort, a former merchant just elevated to the nobility, or a disinherited scoundrel with a disproportionate sense of entitlement. Or you could be an honest, hard-working landowner who cares deeply about the people who live and work on your land, keenly aware of your responsibility to them. Work with your DM to come up with an appropriate title and determine how much authority that title carries. A noble title doesn’t stand on its own—it’s connected to an entire family, and whatever title you hold, you will pass it down to your own children. Not only do you need to determine your noble title, but you should also work with the DM to describe your family and their influence on you. Is your family old and established, or was your title only recently bestowed? How much influence do they wield, and over what area? What kind of reputation does your family have among the other aristocrats of the region? How do the common people regard them? What’s your position in the family? Are you the heir to the head of the family? Have you already inherited the title? How do you feel about that responsibility? Or are you so far down the line of inheritance that no one cares what you do, as long as you don’t embarrass the family? How does the head of your family feel about your adventuring career? Are you in your family’s good graces, or shunned by the rest of your family? Does your family have a coat of arms? An insignia you might wear on a signet ring? Particular colors you wear all the time? An animal you regard as a symbol of your line or even a spiritual member of the family? These details help establish your family and your title as features of the world of the campaign.
Nobles are born and raised to a very different lifestyle that most people never experience, and their personalities reflect that upbringing. A noble title comes with a plethora of bonds—responsibilities to family, to other nobles (including the sovereign), to the people entrusted to the family’s care, or even to the title itself. But this responsibility is often a good way to undermine a noble.
1d8 | Personality Trait |
---|---|
1 | My eloquent flattery makes everyone I talk to feel like the most wonderful and important person in the world. |
2 | The common folk love me for my kindness and generosity. |
3 | No one could doubt by looking at my regal bearing that I am a cut above the unwashed masses. |
4 | I take great pains to always look my best and follow the latest fashions. |
5 | I don’t like to get my hands dirty, and I won’t be caught dead in unsuitable accommodations. |
6 | Despite my noble birth, I do not place myself above other folk. We all have the same blood. |
7 | My favor, once lost, is lost forever. |
8 | If you do me an injury, I will crush you, ruin your name, and salt your fields. |
1d6 | Ideal |
---|---|
1 | Respect. Respect is due to me because of my position, but all people regardless of station deserve to be treated with dignity. (Good) |
2 | Responsibility. It is my duty to respect the authority of those above me, just as those below me must respect mine. (Lawful) |
3 | Independence. I must prove that I can handle myself without the coddling of my family. (Chaotic) |
4 | Power. If I can attain more power, no one will tell me what to do. (Evil) |
5 | Family. Blood runs thicker than water. (Any) |
6 | Noble Obligation. It is my duty to protect and care for the people beneath me. (Good) |
1d6 | Bond |
---|---|
1 | I will face any challenge to win the approval of my family. |
2 | My house’s alliance with another noble family must be sustained at all costs. |
3 | Nothing is more important than the other members of my family. |
4 | I am in love with the heir of a family that my family despises. |
5 | My loyalty to my sovereign is unwavering. |
6 | The common folk must see me as a hero of the people. |
1d6 | Flaw |
---|---|
1 | I secretly believe that everyone is beneath me. |
2 | I hide a truly scandalous secret that could ruin my family forever. |
3 | I too often hear veiled insults and threats in every word addressed to me, and I’m quick to anger. |
4 | I have an insatiable desire for carnal pleasures. |
5 | In fact, the world does revolve around me. |
6 | By my words and actions, I often bring shame to my family. |
Statblocks for companions, followers and other allies.
Medium Elf, Retainer, Lawful Neutral
Sula has gray hair and green eyes. He wears well-made clothing and an iron amulet. He is a retainer to the house of Grimaldi and has been assigned to follow priestess Amelia Grimaldi Renaldo. He acts as a paternal figure for Amelia but never crosses the line between authority and subject. He often will provide his advice, mostly unrequited, but always follows and supports Amelia in her choices.
Responsibility. It is my duty to respect the ity of those above me, just as those below me must respect mine. (Lawful)
My loyalty to my sovereign is unwavering.
By my words and actions, I often bring shame to my family.
Follows Amelia except into danger.
1d12
Statblocks for your spells.
0-level (Cantrip) Abjuration
You touch one willing creature. Once before the spell ends, the target can roll a d4 and add the number rolled to one saving throw of its choice. It can roll the die before or after making the saving throw. The spell then ends. * - (a miniature cloak)
Basic Rules , pg. 230
0-level (Cantrip) Evocation
Basic Rules, pg. 277
0-level (Cantrip) Necromancy
Player's Handbook, pg. 223
1-level Enchantment
1-level Divination (ritual)
You choose one object that you must touch throughout the casting of the spell. If it is a magic item or some other magic-imbued object, you learn its properties and how to use them, whether it requires attunement to use, and how many charges it has, if any. You learn whether any spells are affecting the item and what they are. If the item was created by a spell, you learn which spell created it. If you instead touch a creature throughout the casting, you learn what spells, if any, are currently affecting it. Can be cast as a ritual.
Statblocks for your Trinkets, businesses, building, castles, empires.
1d20 | Name |
---|---|
1 | Bold explorers |
2 | Cunning merchants |
3 | Daring scoundrels |
4 | Desperate rebels |
5 | Devoted servants |
6 | Driven peacemakers |
7 | Embattled survivors |
8 | Exalted heroes |
9 | Famed entertainers |
10 | Hard-bitten mercenaries |
11 | Intrepid adventurers |
12 | Loyal soldiers |
13 | Murderous gangsters |
14 | Noble entourage |
15 | Oathsworn avengers |
16 | Occult investigators |
17 | Righteous pilgrims |
18 | Slaves to darkness |
19 | Sworn defenders |
20 | Trusted agents |