This ebony staff is topped with a lifelike hand carved from shimmering translucent crystal.
It has 10 charges and regains 1d10 expended charges each day at dawn. While attuned to this item you are able to cast
Shimmering Shield
As a reaction to you or a creature you can see being targeted by a ranged weapon or ranged spell attack, you can expend a charge to create a 10-foot wide 15-foot tall crystal hand between the targeted creature and the attack. Each time a hand is created, it appears in a brilliant flash of dazzling lights and each creature within 15 feet of it must make a DC 14 Constitution saving throw or be Blinded until the beginning of it’s next turn.
This crystal hand has 12 AC and 30 hit points and is vulnerable to Force damage. It lasts until it is destroyed or until you use this feature again.
This helmet is very notably missing any way to see out of it as its visor is completely solid, but it is overlaid with a multitude of artistically crafted eyes.
While wearing this helmet you have blindsight out to 60 feet and are blind beyond that radius. Blindsight allows you to see through obscured areas, magical and nonmagical darkness, and you can not be Blinded by most effects, but it does not allow you to see through walls or objects. This particular blindsight allows you to see creatures and objects easily, but things such as words on a page, or colors, are impossible. Creature’s basic emotions and health are expressed via color.
Additionally, creatures trying to determine your thoughts or mood via mundane means, such as an Insight check, have disadvantage while you are wearing this helmet.
Curse. If you doff this helmet after wearing it for an hour or longer, you are Blinded for 1 minute for each hour you were wearing it, up to 1 hour total. This effect can not be removed by
This large 1-foot diameter orb holds a diorama of a wattle and daub cottage in the woods. This diorama changes with the seasons and is intricately detailed.
In the diorama you can see a gnomish word chiseled into the side of the cottage. If you speak this command word while holding the orb and standing on a reasonably flat area with at least a 20-foot cube of space you suddenly find yourself inside the cottage. The cottage instantly transports from the orb into the space you are standing, and any creatures in the space the cottage now occupies are placed in a free space within the cottage if they fit, or outside if they do not.
This 20-foot square cottage is furnished with 3 bunk beds, a large table with 6 chairs, a fireplace, and several empty bookshelves and chests along the wall.
If you speak the command word again while touching both the cottage and orb, the cottage and any objects in the shelves or chests return to the orb. Any creatures in the cottage remain where they were.
The cottage can only be taken from and returned to the orb once per day.
This looming grandfather clock has 5 faces arranged whimsically along its chestnut trunk. The primary face of this clock is a typical mundane mechanism, but the 4 smaller faces are magically aligned with different locations or planes.
You can cast a spell that allows vision or transport to another location, such as
If the target location does not have a concept of day and night, or the day/night cycle is longer than 48 hours, the clock face becomes blank, and will remain blank until aligned with a new location.
This fan has a beautifully engraved case of brass and each time you open it has a different vibrant design on its face.
As a bonus action you can open this fan, which stays open for the next minute or until you close it again. When you open the fan its design, which corresponds to an element, is chosen randomly by rolling a d6. The elements are as follows: Acid, Cold, Lightning, Necrotic, Poison, and Radiant.
After opening this fan if you use it as a spellcasting focus to cast a spell of 1st level or higher that deals Fire damage, you can replace half of the spell’s damage dice (rounded down) with the damage type chosen by the fan.
This black hooded cape has a mantle of iridescent raven feathers on its shoulders and is trimmed with a similarly iridescent ribbon. This item has 4 charges and regains 1 expended charge each day at sunset, or 1 charge for each raven sacrificed.
As an action you can expend a charge to activate the cloak and a billowing plume of phantom ravens erupts from the mantle. The ravens spread into a 60-foot radius sphere centered on you and move with you for the next minute before disappearing. This area is considered lightly obscured and spreads around corners.
While these ravens surround you, you gain the following benefits:
You always know how many small or larger creatures are within the cloud of ravens, but not what creatures, or where they are.
Additionally, you do not provoke attacks of opportunity.
Finally, as an action you can command these ravens to attack a creature within the radius. The target creature must make a Wisdom saving throw DC 14. On a failure they take 4d4 Psychic damage and are Blinded until the beginning of their next turn. On a success they take half as much damage and are not Blinded.
This ancient staff carved from stout oak is without any ornamentation beyond its natural gnarls and twists, and a small inscription. If you are able to read Elven you can gather that it was created for a crusade to heal the forests and restore balance that was lost. This staff has 8 charges and regains 1d8 expended charges each day at dawn.
Reach of Infinite Branches
When you cast
Tangled Canopy
You know the cantrip
Roots of The Great Oak
If you expend a charge and spend 1 minute concentrating you can cast
Branches’ Blessing
As an action you can expend a charge while touching a Large tree or plant in a swamp or dead forest to stimulate it to grow so long as it is still standing. Within one hour you can notice it’s bark being restored, and buds beginning to form. You regain any charges you expended to heal a plant in this way after your next long or short rest.
This blade is a mottled black and blue, with speckles of white throughout it. It’s hilt slowly shifts shape even as you hold it, and when you attack, the weapon leaves a shimmering trail in it’s wake.
Return To Nothing
As an action you can cast
Once used this property of the sword can not be used again until the next dawn.
Wall of Emptiness
As an action you can swing this sword through the air while clearing your mind and focusing on the infinite nothingness of the void. When you do so a rift of stars and darkness appears where your blade was. This rift forms a 20-foot tall and 60-foot long jagged wall extending from you that remains for the next minute. If the wall cuts through a creature’s space when it appears, the creature is pushed to one side of the wall (your choice which side).
Anything that passes through this wall disappears into the void for the duration. When the wall dissipates with a roar any creatures or objects that disappeared into it are ejected into the nearest unoccupied space.
Once used this property of the sword can not be used again until the next dawn.
This thin flexible rod has a sturdy string attached to the end, and a mechanism to release and reel back in the string as needed. Tied to the end of this 50-foot long string is a small hook. When either the hook or string is broken it quickly grows back as the detached hook and string disintegrate. As an action, you can make a ranged attack using this rod against a Large or smaller creature within 30 feet if you. You may add proficiency to this attack if you are proficient in Dexterity (Sleight of Hand). On a hit, the creature becomes tangled in the string and is grappled (escape DC 16). While a creature is grappled in this way you may pull them 10 feet towards you as an action. The grapple ends if they end their turn farther than 30 feet away, you drop the fishing line, or another creature detangles them as an action. Additionally, when trying to catch fish with this item you may make any related checks with advantage.
This glass jar holds a preserved eye suspended in a putrid liquid. It has 6 charges and regains 1d3 + 3 expended charges daily at dawn.
As an action you can expend one or more of the item’s charges to cast one of the following spells, using your spellcasting ability for the attack roll or spell save DC:
In addition, you can use this eye as an arcane focus. When casting any of the aforementioned spells while using the eye as your focus, you can expend 1 additional charge to amplify the spell’s effect in the following ways:
- Blindness/Deafness. If the creature fails its initial saving throw it has disadvantage on saving throws to end the spell’s effect on itself.
- Ray of Enfeeblement. If a creature fails its initial saving throw, it automatically fails all saving throws against the spell to end the effect on itself. Additionally, it has disadvantage on all Strength checks and saving throws for the duration.
- Contagion. If the target creature fails its saving throw, it is afflicted with Flesh Rot in addition to whichever disease you choose.
This amulet made for the Golden One is a circle, shined to a mirror finish, with horns of a cow on either side and a large turquoise set in its base. It has 7 charges and regains all expended charges each day at dawn. While wearing it you are resistant to Radiant damage and have advantage on saving throws against being Blinded.
Eye of Ra
As an action you can expend a charge, making both the amulet and your eyes flicker with an orange light. Choose one point within 60 feet and as you stare at it a 30-foot-radius 120-foot-height cylinder of orange sunlight shoots from the heavens centered on that point. Each creature in the cylinder when it appears must make a Constitution saving throw, taking 5d10 Radiant damage on a failed save, or half as much damage on a successful one. This cylinder leaves light scorch marks on the ground when it fades.
Mistress of the stars
As an action you can expend one or more charges, pulling a blue mote of light from the heavens for each charge spent as the turquoise twinkles. These motes of light settle from the sky to orbit around your head for the next hour, shedding a dim light in a 30-foot radius. You can use a bonus action to send one of these starlight motes streaking towards one creature or object within 120 feet of you. When you do so, make a ranged spell attack. On a hit the target takes 3d12 Radiant damage. Hit or miss if the target is a creature it must succeed a Constitution saving throw or be Blinded until the beginning of your next turn as the mote expires in a flash of light.