May 07, 2012 Effect - one hundred potion effects. Includes all the classics, plus a bunch more from which you can improvise. Miscibility - a potion miscibility table with a hundred different results. Significantly greater chance of things going wrong as compared to the classic table - might want to save this for the yahoo that drinks four potions at once. Potion Miscibility is apparently something out of DnD first edition. Now I wouldn't know, I didn't play em, but I love the concept. Basically whenever you chug multiple potions, there's a chance for alternate hazardous (or helpful) effects to occur because the two potions you drank are mixing in your belly. A store that had every type of magical sword and potion available might run into reasons to roll, say, on the 1e DMG's potion miscibility table, or problems when two intelligent swords decide they don't like each other. Of course, you can solve all of that by just saying 'no' when players want to do buying and selling of magic items. Nov 22, 2014 On multiple occasions throughout the years my friends and I have discussed how to best insert alchemy into D&D. Across each edition, alchemy has taken different forms. Sometimes it’s presented as a skill. The (awesome) potion miscibility table in AD&D was a form of alchemy in its own right. And in fourth edition, various alchemical.
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Weighting the potion experience point values and costs by frequency, the average potion in the DMG is 367 xp, with an average gp value/sale price of 924 gp. Producing that average potion will cost 367 gp (materials) + 100 gp (alchemist, 4 days), for a net average profit of 457 gp, or 49%! Jul 13, 2018 It is a rule to give a potion to someone and force feed it to them as a standard action. Its only a bonus action if you already have the potion yourself and drink it yourself. You can drink a few liters of liquid a day. So you can drink that amount of the same type of potion as well. However the last, or most potent, effect is active.
Oil of Etherealness
Potion, rare
Beads of this cloudy gray oil form on the outside of its container and quickly evaporate. The oil can cover a Medium or smaller creature, along with the equipment it’s wearing and carrying (one additional vial is required for each size category above Medium). Applying the oil takes 10 minutes. The affected creature then gains the effect of the etherealness spell for 1 hour.
Oil of Sharpness
Potion, very rare
This clear, gelatinous oil sparkles with tiny, ultrathin silver shards. The oil can coat one slashing or piercing weapon or up to 5 pieces of slashing or piercing ammunition. Applying the oil takes 1 minute. For 1 hour, the coated item is magical and has a +3 bonus to attack and damage rolls.
Oil of Slipperiness
Potion, uncommon
This sticky black unguent is thick and heavy in the container, but it flows quickly when poured. The oil can cover a Medium or smaller creature, along with the equipment it’s wearing and carrying (one additional vial is required for each size category above Medium). Applying the oil takes 10 minutes. The affected creature then gains the effect of a freedom of movement spell for 8 hours.
Alternatively, the oil can be poured on the ground as an action, where it covers a 10-foot square, duplicating the effect of the grease spell in that area for 8 hours.
Philter of Love
Potion, uncommon
The next time you see a creature within 10 minutes after drinking this philter, you become charmed by that creature for 1 hour. If the creature is of a species and gender you are normally attracted to, you regard it as your true love while you are charmed.
This potion’s rose-hued, effervescent liquid contains one easy-to-miss bubble shaped like a heart.
Potion of Animal Friendship
Potion, uncommon
When you drink this potion, you can cast the animal friendship spell (save DC 13) for 1 hour at will.
Agitating this muddy liquid brings little bits into view: a fish scale, a hummingbird tongue, a cat claw, or a squirrel hair.
Potion of Clairvoyance
Potion, rare
When you drink this potion, you gain the effect of the clairvoyance spell. An eyeball bobs in this yellowish liquid but vanishes when the potion is opened.
Potion of Climbing
Potion, common
When you drink this potion, you gain a climbing speed equal to your walking speed for 1 hour. During this time, you have advantage on Strength (Athletics) checks you make to climb. The potion is separated into brown, silver, and gray layers resembling bands of stone. Shaking the bottle fails to mix the colors.
Potion of Diminution
Potion, rare
When you drink this potion, you gain the “reduce” effect of the enlarge/reduce spell for 1d4 hours (no concentration required). The red in the potion’s liquid continuously contracts to a tiny bead and then expands to color the clear liquid around it. Shaking the bottle fails to interrupt this process.
Potion of Flying
Potion, very rare
When you drink this potion, you gain a flying speed equal to your walking speed for 1 hour and can hover. If you’re in the air when the potion wears off, you fall unless you have some other means of staying aloft. This potion’s clear liquid floats at the top of its container and has cloudy white impurities drifting in it.
Potion of Gaseous Form
Potion, rare
When you drink this potion, you gain the effect of the gaseous form spell for 1 hour (no concentration required) or until you end the effect as a bonus action. This potion’s container seems to hold fog that moves and pours like water.
Potion of Giant Strength
Potion, rarity varies
When you drink this potion, your Strength score changes for 1 hour. The type of giant determines the score (see the table below). The potion has no effect on you if your Strength is equal to or greater than that score.
This potion’s transparent liquid has floating in it a sliver of fingernail from a giant of the appropriate type. The potion of frost giant strength and the potion of stone giant strength have the same effect.
Type of Giant | Strength | Rarity |
---|---|---|
Hill giant | 21 | Uncommon |
Frost/stone giant | 23 | Rare |
Fire giant | 25 | Rare |
Cloud giant | 27 | Very rare |
Storm giant | 29 | Legendary |
Potion of Growth
Potion, uncommon
Critical dnd 5e. When you drink this potion, you gain the “enlarge” effect of the enlarge/reduce spell for 1d4 hours (no concentration required). The red in the potion’s liquid continuously expands from a tiny bead to color the clear liquid around it and then contracts. Shaking the bottle fails to interrupt this process.
Dmg Potion Miscibility Guide
Potion of Healing
Potion, rarity varies
You regain hit points when you drink this potion. The number of hit points depends on the potion’s rarity, as shown in the Potions of Healing table. Whatever its potency, the potion’s red liquid glimmers when agitated.
Potion of | Rarity | HP Regained |
---|---|---|
Healing | Common | 2d4 + 2 |
Greater healing | Uncommon | 4d4 + 4 |
Superior healing | Rare | 8d4 + 8 |
Supreme healing | Very rare | 10d4 + 20 |
Potion of Heroism
Potion, rare
For 1 hour after drinking it, you gain 10 temporary hit points that last for 1 hour. For the same duration, you are under the effect of the bless spell (no concentration required). This blue potion bubbles and steams as if boiling.
Potion of Invisibility
Potion, very rare
This potion’s container looks empty but feels as though it holds liquid. When you drink it, you become invisible for 1 hour. Anything you wear or carry is invisible with you. The effect ends early if you attack or cast a spell.
Potion of Mind Reading
Potion, rare
When you drink this potion, you gain the effect of the detect thoughts spell (save DC 13). The potion’s dense, purple liquid has an ovoid cloud of pink floating in it.
Potion of Poison
Potion, uncommon
This concoction looks, smells, and tastes like a potion of healing or other beneficial potion. However, it is actually poison masked by illusion magic. An identify spell reveals its true nature.
If you drink it, you take 3d6 poison damage, and you must succeed on a DC 13 Constitution saving throw or be poisoned. At the start of each of your turns while you are poisoned in this way, you take 3d6 poison damage. At the end of each of your turns, you can repeat the saving throw. On a successful save, the poison damage you take on your subsequent turns decreases by 1d6. The poison ends when the damage decreases to 0.
Potion of Resistance
Potion, uncommon
When you drink this potion, you gain resistance to one type of damage for 1 hour. The GM chooses the type or determines it randomly from the options below.
d10 | Damage Type |
---|---|
1 | Acid |
2 | Cold |
3 | Fire |
4 | Force |
5 | Lightning |
6 | Necrotic |
7 | Poison |
8 | Psychic |
9 | Radiant |
10 | Thunder |
Potion of Speed
How to remove mac cleaner popup. Potion, very rare
When you drink this potion, you gain the effect of the haste spell for 1 minute (no concentration required). The potion’s yellow fluid is streaked with black and swirls on its own.
Potion of Water Breathing
Potion, uncommon
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You can breathe underwater for 1 hour after drinking this potion. Its cloudy green fluid smells of the sea and has a jellyfish-like bubble floating in it.
Sprinkling a cartridge worth of gunpowder into a potion, or mixing it with magical dusts or powders, forces a roll on the Potion Miscibility table (DMG 140).
If you have proficiency in the Arcana skill, you can spend a minute and a cartridge worth of gunpowder to detect the presence of magic within 30 feet. Any barrier blocks this effect, but visible creatures or objects that bear magic allow an Intelligence (Arcana) check against DC 13 to determine the school of magic. Doing this does not cause issues with either scrolls or potions.
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If we want to add gunpowder to a fantasy world we have to start somewhere. As I said at the outset, most people start from the idea of adding guns to their world and try to work out ways to jam that wholly formed into place. My tack has always been more to worldbuilding. How does the thing fit into the larger structure? How does it distort that larger structure or, and this is the important one for this case, how has the larger structure distorted the development of the thing?
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It's well within the realm of reasonable to suggest that gunpowder significantly changed the world. Even beyond the ways in which it remade the face of warfare, the use of gunpowder in blasting and mining and the advances it drove in chemistry are almost incalculable.. So, why would it not revolutionize a fantasy world in a similar manner? I started by assuming that gunpowder and magic don't play particularly well together. If magic has already assumed a place of primacy, politically, economically, and functionally (which is true in most modern versions of medieval based fantasy) then it marginalizes the use and interest in gunpowder. However, like virtually any tool, it doesn't foreclose it, as there will always be those who want or need an alternate way.
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So, here we have a couple rules which set the tone that magic and gunpowder don't mix well. Based on that, it seemed reasonable that someone (probably some rogue) would figure out how to use that reaction to find magical effects even (especially) without magic of their own. It plays to both the 'magic vs gunpowder' theme and starts to build the 'alternative but not overwhelming' theme. (These rules are a strictly inferior version of casting Detect Magic as a ritual.)