Gear (5A)

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Rules for equipment and gear, magical or not.

Item Price Limits by Level

The cost of items that PCs can buy or craft are rather arbitrarily limited by level. This is a balance and ease-of-play issue, not a simulation. Rather than using the very rough price guidelines and levels of the DMG, this table is to be used. This gives the lowest level at which a character can purchase items of the listed price. This is also the highest value item a character can craft. A character is somehow able to find an item of this cost or lower on the market. At the DMs discretion, more expensive items might be available depending on circumstance.

Level This is the level of the character and restricts what items the character can make. You can buy or craft anything up to the price listed for your level. This is also a limit on what items you can purchase. It reflects that your prestige gives you access to new markets. This is somewhat artificial, but an easy way to maintain game balance.

Consumables This is the maximum cost of each consumable item you can make or buy. Items like wands, that have charges and a small chance to fail when overused, are not considered consumables. This number is inflated so that it is possible to pack more omph into a single-use item. Watch out for overspending in this category, which can make a character powerful at lower levels and then poor at higher levels.

Permanent This is the cost limit for all items that are not consumables.

Resale Prices All items that are in a condition to sell at all can be sold at half purchase price.

Maximum Price By Level
Level Consumables Permanent
1 30 160
2 50 250
3 80 400
4 120 600
5 200 1,000
6 320 1,600
7 500 2,500
8 800 4,000
9 1,200 6,000
10 2,000 10,000
11 3,200 16,000
12 5,000 25,000
13 8,000 40,000
14 10,000 60,000
15 20,000 100,000
16 32,000 160,000
17 50,000 250,000
18 80,000 400,000
19 100,000 600,000
20 200,000 1,000,000

Item Prices and Levels

We will be using the values for magic items given in 5A Magic Item Prices. For items not on this list, the GM will set the prices.

Crafting

These rules apply to any crafting project, with a focus on magic item creation. The monetary cost of crafting magic items is the same as the purchase price. People making a living crafting magic items might charge a higher price on commission have developed cheaper means to create certain specific items.

Prerequisites

In order to perform a crafting project, you must fulfill some requirements.

  • The item must have a cost permitted at your level by the Maximum Price By Level table.
  • You must have the right tools and possibly access to a workshop.
  • If the item is to cast spells, each such spell must be cast once per day of work on the item. Ignore any costly components of spells cast in item creation, those are a part of the item creation cost.
  • The DM may require special materials, such as gems, adamantine, or mithral. You can use the value of any such components to offset the cost of the crafting project.
  • If you want to enchant a specific item of value, such as a robe granted by the emir, you can count the value of such items against the cost of the crafting project.
  • Other possible materials include monster parts, such as the heart of a dragon or the horn of a unicorn, as negotiated with the DM. Creatures with legendary or lair actions are more likely to provide components this way. Such components can serve as adventure hooks and also reduce the cost of the project. The value of such a component is that of a consumable item of the monster's level. Gathering components might require proficiencies and/or die rolls or an entire adventure. See also Gather Components.

Material Components, Armor, and Weapons

These are special cases in that only part of the cost is in the magic itself, with the remainder being in the material component, armor, or weapon. This might apply in similar cases not foreseen, but is not the general trend.

  • Scrolls and fetishes of spells with costly material components are a special case. To create a scroll of a spell with a costly material component, you must provide that component. This adds the cost of the component to the value of the final scroll.
  • Another special case is armor and weapons. To create magic arms and armor, you must provide the armor or weapon itself before you can make it a magic item.
  • The cost of the armor, weapon, or material component is not included in the cost of the magic, the original item and the enchantment on it are considered separately against the maximum cost of items you can create. Such special parts can be provided as finished objects or crafted separately in their own projects.

Crafting Speed

You have to calculate a Crafting Speed used to measure the progress of your crafting projects. Your Crafting Speed will be different for different projects, depending on your level, ability scores, and proficiencies. In cooperation with the DM, select a tool proficiency that will govern the project. DMs are encouraged to be liberal in the selection of ability choices and tool proficiencies, fairly flimsy argument about a different proficencies are acceptable.

Multiply the sum of the ability bonus and proficiency modifier with your level and them multiply the result by 5 gp, the result is your crafting speed measured in gp per day.

Rate of Production
Value Crafted Per Day
(Ability Bonus +Tool Proficiency Modifier) * Level x 5 gp

Each day you consume materials and produce work equal to your crafting speed. When your accumulated crafting value matches the cost of the item it is finished. The cost of crafting is the list price of the item.

Mundane Projects

When crafting non-magical items, including alchemical items, the cost is 50% of the list price of the item.

Assistants

You can have assistants that help you by contributing their Crafting Speed to the project, but having more creatures participate incurs additional risks. Assistants need not fulfill any prerequisites and add their Crafting Speed to your effective Crafting Speed. Expect to have to pay each assistant 20% of their Crafting Speed each day. This includes room, board, taxes, and fees (the assistant then pays half this amount in taxes and guild fees) but not security arrangements. Finding willing workers is a separate task. Contacts, guild memberships, and other social perks offer great advantage when looking for reliable assistants.

Upgrading Items

An existing magic item can be upgraded as long as the finished item is approved by the DM and includes all the item's current abilities. The cost of the upgrade is the difference in cost between the old and new item.

Crafting Examples

There are no hard and fast rules for what tool and ability to use in each project, only general guidelines. DMs are encouraged to be liberal in the selection of ability score and tool proficiencies, the table gives the ideal ability score, but fairly flimsy argument about a different ability score is acceptable.

Examples of what items use what abilities.

Crafting Ability
Ability Approach Items
Strength Power Melee weapons (non-finesse), heavy armor, rigid objects
Dexterity Finesse Melee weapons (finesse), medium armor, flexible objects
Constitution Infusion Light armor, alchemy, potions, leather, toxins
Intelligence Reason Firebrands, scrolls, wands, clockwork
Wisdom Intuition Wooden objects, plants, crystals, healing
Charisma Acclaim Clothes, banners, finery, accessories

Examples of what you can create using various crafting tools.

Crafting Tool
Tool Set Example items
Alchemist’s supplies Alchemical substances, potions
Brewer’s supplies Potions
Calligrapher’s supplies Scrolls, books
Carpenter’s tools Wooden weapons, bows, vehicles
Cartographer’s tools Maps, teleportation effects
Cobbler’s tools Bags, gloves, shoes
Cook’s utensils Potions, waybread
Glassblower’s tools Glass items
Herbalism Kit Potions, salves, antidotes, medicine
Jeweler’s tools Crystals, rings, spell gems
Leatherworker’s tools Accessories, bags, bracers, light armor
Mason’s tools Buildings, wards, stone sculptures
Musical instruments Musical instruments
Painter’s supplies Pigments, images, tattoos
Poisoner’s Kit Poisons, antidotes
Potter’s tools Ceramic items, sculptures
Smith’s tools Medium and heavy armor, metal weapons, metal utensils
Tinker’s tools Clockwork, traps, gadgets
Weaver’s tools Clothes, bags, banners, cloaks
Woodcarver’s tools Spell foci, wood sculpture, fetishes, wands

External Links