Crafter Level ; Crafting Proficiency Rank ; Crafting Feat
Formula Price
Tools You have an appropriate set of tools and, in many cases, a workshop; Crafting Materials You must supply raw materials worth
Extra Requirements
Crafter Level ; Crafting Proficiency Rank ; Crafting Feat
Formula Price
Tools You have an appropriate set of tools and, in many cases, a workshop; Crafting Materials You must supply raw materials worth
Extra Requirements
This setup time is the base number of days it takes to create the item. If you decide to take the slow and methodical approach (Core Rulebook 244), you spend that number of days of Regular Setup in Table 1, and then attempt the Crafting check to determine your success. You can instead rush the process (Treasure Vault 158), taking days off the time needed to setup the item while introducing a greater risk of failure.
Below, you may change your Crafting Proficiency Rank and your Crafter Level.
Take the DC from Table 1. When you take Rush Crafting, you have to decide on your approach to the job, from Trained to Legendary, which is limited by your proficiency. That choice sets the Setup Time and the Crafting DC.
Critical Success Your attempt is successful. Each additional day spent Crafting reduces the materials needed to complete the item by an amount based on your level + 1 and your proficiency rank in Crafting.
Success Your attempt is successful. Each additional day spent Crafting reduces the materials needed to complete the item by an amount based on your level and your proficiency rank.
Failure You fail to complete the item. You can salvage the raw materials you supplied for their full value. If you want to try again, you must start over.
Critical Failure You fail to complete the item. You ruin 10% of the raw materials you supplied, but you can salvage the rest (30 gp). If you want to try again, you must start over.
If your Crafting check is a success, you expend the raw materials and can complete the item immediately by paying the remaining portion of the item’s Price in materials. Alternatively, you can spend additional downtime days working on the item. Above, you may change your Proficiency Rank and your Crafter Level. Below you can choose your Crafting Check Result from Step 3 and you may select the Additional Days of Work. This webtool calculates the Remaining Balance.
If you are at least an Expert in Crafting, you can rush the finishing process (toggle the Rush the Finish), reducing the value of the materials you must expend to complete the item. Doing so comes at a risk; at the end of the creation process, once the item is finished, you must attempt a DC flat check.
Success the item is complete and works perfectly.
Failure the item is still completed, but it gains a quirk.
Critical Failure the item is ruined or might become a cursed item attached to you.
To use one of the NPCs in this section to represent an NPC of a different ancestry, apply the adjustments below for the desired ancestry. These provide the basic features from that ancestry, like darkvision, altered Speed, and unique abilities like a halfling’s keen eyes. For other ancestries, you can create similar templates following the same format. In addition to these base changes, you can add the effects of a specific heritage: you might apply the snow goblin heritage if your NPC is a Frostfur goblin and you want them to have cold resistance. You can also give them an ancestry feat, or even adjust their ability scores and skills to reflect the new ancestry’s strengths and weaknesses. For a half-elf, half-orc, or any other heritage essential to the character, you should always apply the heritage effect.
| Ancestry | New Trait | Senses | New Languages | Speed Change | Special |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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ANADI | — | Anadi, Mwangi | — | Fangs |
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ANADI | — | Anadi, Mwangi | — | Fangs |
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ANDROID | — | Androffan | — | — |
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AUTOMATON | — | Utopian, the language of the plane of, Axis | — | — |
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AUTOMATON | — | Utopian, the language of the plane of, Axis | — | — |
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AZARKETI | — | Alghollthu | -5 feet | — |
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CATFOLK | Low-Light Vision | Amurrun | — | Land on your Feet |
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CONRASU | — | Mwangi, Rasu | — | Sunlight Healing |
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CONRASU | — | Mwangi, Rasu | — | Sunlight Healing |
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DOPPELGANGER | — | — | — | — |
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DOPPELGANGER | — | — | — | — |
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DRAGON | — | Draconic | — | — |
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DWARF | Darkvision | Dwarven | -5 feet | — |
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ELF | Low-Light Vision | Elven | +5 feet | — |
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FETCHLING | Darkvision | Shadowtongue | — | — |
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GHORAN | Low-Light Vision | Sylvan | — | — |
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GNOLL | — | Gnoll | — | Bite |
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GNOLL | — | Gnoll | — | Bite |
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GNOME SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Gnomish, Sylvan | — | — |
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GOBLIN SMALL | Darkvision | Goblin | — | — |
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GOLOMA | — | Goloma, Mwangi | +5 feet | Eyes in Back |
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GOLOMA | — | Goloma, Mwangi | +5 feet | Eyes in Back |
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GRIPPLI SMALL | — | Grippli | — | — |
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GRIPPLI SMALL | — | Grippli | — | — |
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HALFLING SMALL | Keen Eyes | Halfling | — | — |
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GOBLIN | Darkvision | Goblin | — | — |
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HUMAN | — | — | — | — |
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KASHRISHI SMALL | — | Kashrishi | — | — |
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KASHRISHI SMALL | — | Kashrishi | — | — |
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KITSUNE | — | — | — | — |
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KOBOLD SMALL | Darkvision | Draconic | — | Draconic Exemplar |
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LESHY SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Sylvan | — | Plant Nourishment |
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LIZARDFOLK | — | Iruxi | — | Aquatic Adaptation |
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NAGAJI | Low-Light Vision | Nagaji | — | — |
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NAGAJI | Low-Light Vision | Nagaji | — | — |
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ORC | Darkvision | Orcish | — | — |
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RATFOLK SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Ysoki | — | — |
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SHISK | — | Mwangi, Shisk | — | — |
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SHISK | — | Mwangi, Shisk | — | — |
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SHOONY SMALL | Low-Light Vision | Shoony | — | Blunt Snout |
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SKELETON | — | Necril | — | — |
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SKELETON | — | Necril | — | — |
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SLIME | — | — | -5 feet | — |
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SPRITE | — | Sylvan | -5 feet | — |
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STHENO | — | — | — | — |
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STHENO | — | — | — | — |
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STRIX | — | Strix | — | — |
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TENGU | Low-Light Vision | Tengu | — | Sharp Beak |
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VANARA | — | Vanaran | — | — |
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VANARA | — | Vanaran | — | — |
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VISHKANYA | — | Vishkanya | — | — |
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VISHKANYA | — | Vishkanya | — | — |
To use one of the creature adjustments in this section, just click the adjustment and the changes will be present in the card.
| - | 0 | No adjustment will be applied. | |
| Book of the Dead | Target Creature | Level | Description |
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Any creature | 0 | The ephemeral form of a ghostly creature lets it pass through solid objects and float in the air. |
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Any creature | 0 | Ghoul creatures are typically hairless and gaunt with blue or purple skin and pointed ears. |
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Any creature | 0 | Most skeletons are mindless and follow either the basic instincts they had in life or orders given by their creator. |
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Any creature | 0 | This creature is a reanimated mindless corpse. |
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Any creature | 0 | All types of creatures can have their corpses preserved and rise as mummies. |
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Any creature | 0 | A shadow creature is little more than a sentient shadow powered by negative energy. |
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Any creature | 0 | Most skeletons are mindless and follow either the basic instincts they had in life or orders given by their creator. |
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Any creature | 0 | This creature is a reanimated corpse. |
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Any creature | 0 | A vampiric creature consumes the blood of the living for sustenance. |
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Any creature | 0 | All wights can drain life through their unarmed attacks, but some can draw life force through weapons as well. |
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Any creature | 0 | A zombified creature is a mindless, rotting corpse that attacks everything it perceives. |
| Dark Archive | Target Creature | Level | Description |
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An existing creature | +1 | An experimental cryptid has been purposefully altered through alchemy, engineering, magic, or ritual to contain some degree of construct components. Although powerful, the process is volatile and imperfect. |
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An existing, living creature | +1 | Some strange creatures defy what’s expected from others of their kind due to a peculiar mutation. A mutation can come from a wide variety of sources: a quirk in their lineage, effects from their environment, radiation from bizarre crystals, or exposure to uncontrolled magic. |
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An existing, living creature | +1 | Scholars dream of discovering primeval creatures: remnants of an older age, long thought extinct. Primeval cryptids are resilient survivors of their kind or particularly clever individuals. |
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An existing creature | +1 | As stories spread about a rumored cryptid, the weight of collective belief transforms the creature to match the tales. The limits of its physical body no longer confine it. |
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An existing creature | +1 | A secret society member is an NPC or creature that belongs to a covert organization with influence and connections throughout its local setting and perhaps beyond. |
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The DiceRoller allows you to roll dices from Creatures description and typing an easy formula.
Each creature has some skills or saves with a bonus or penalty to roll. If you click on those modifiers the Diceroller will give you the roll as a popup! Furthermore, you can also click on all the attacks and damages dice descriptors and you'll have the roll has a popup.
These rolls are logged in the diceroller window and you can check them after and repeat them clicking on the pencil at the end of each roll row.
If you want to type the roll, I give you some examples:
1d20+52d20kh Keeps Higher result (fortune)2d20kl Keeps Lower result (misfortune)2d8 bludgeoning + 1d6 fire
When the group overcomes an encounter with a hazard or creature, each character gains XP equal to the XP of the hazard or creature in the encounter. Match the Party level in the following table to know the XP awarded:
See Experience Points.
Here there is a list of the various monster parts you can gather from this creature. After defeating the monster, players can determine how to best use the parts to refine and imbue items.
You can find rules for refining and imbuing items from a monster at Battlezoo Bestiary.
I update a lot of data from all the Rulebooks and adventure books. I'm developing new features each week. You can collaborate and make suggestions in our Discord Server where we plan and iron out all the webtools. You can access to the Discord Server once you become a Patron. My work updating all data and adding new features to this webtool is only possible to the generous actions of this people:
Visit my patreon webpage and be aware of all the stuff I'm working on.
Help keep running this webtool and become a patron!
Table 10–9: Party Treasure by Level on the next page shows how much treasure you should give out over the course of a level for a group of four PCs. The Total Value column gives an approximate total value of all the treasure, in case you want to spend it like a budget. The next several columns provide suggestions for breaking down that total into permanent items, which the PCs keep and use for a long time; consumables, which are destroyed after being used once; and currency, which includes coins, gems, and other valuables primarily spent to acquire items or services. The final column gives the amount of currency to add for each PC beyond four in the group; use this only if you have more than four characters in the game. (Different Party Sizes on page 510 provides more guidance on this.)
| Permanent Items | Consumables | Currency per | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level | Total Value | (By Item Level) | (By Item Level) | Party Currency | Additional PC |
| 1 | 175 gp | 2nd: 2, 1st: 2* | 2nd: 2, 1st: 3 | 40 gp | 10 gp |
| 2 | 300 gp | 3rd: 2, 2nd: 2 | 3rd: 2, 2nd: 2, 1st: 2 | 70 gp | 18 gp |
| 3 | 500 gp | 4th: 2, 3rd: 2 | 4th: 2, 3rd: 2, 2nd: 2 | 120 gp | 30 gp |
| 4 | 850 gp | 5th: 2, 4th: 2 | 5th: 2, 4th: 2, 3rd: 2 | 200 gp | 50 gp |
| 5 | 1,350 gp | 6th: 2, 5th: 2 | 6th: 2, 5th: 2, 4th: 2 | 320 gp | 80 gp |
| 6 | 2,000 gp | 7th: 2, 6th: 2 | 7th: 2, 6th: 2, 5th: 2 | 500 gp | 125 gp |
| 7 | 2,900 gp | 8th: 2, 7th: 2 | 8th: 2, 7th: 2, 6th: 2 | 720 gp | 180 gp |
| 8 | 4,000 gp | 9th: 2, 8th: 2 | 9th: 2, 8th: 2, 7th: 2 | 1,000 gp | 250 gp |
| 9 | 5,700 gp | 10th: 2, 9th: 2 | 10th: 2, 9th: 2, 8th: 2 | 1,400 gp | 350 gp |
| 10 | 8,000 gp | 11th: 2, 10th: 2 | 11th: 2, 10th: 2, 9th: 2 | 2,000 gp | 500 gp |
| 11 | 11,500 gp | 12th: 2, 11th: 2 | 12th: 2, 11th: 2, 10th: 2 | 2,800 gp | 700 gp |
| 12 | 16,500 gp | 13th: 2, 12th: 2 | 13th: 2, 12th: 2, 11th: 2 | 4,000 gp | 1,000 gp |
| 13 | 25,000 gp | 14th: 2, 13th: 2 | 14th: 2, 13th: 2, 12th: 2 | 6,000 gp | 1,500 gp |
| 14 | 36,500 gp | 15th: 2, 14th: 2 | 15th: 2, 14th: 2, 13th: 2 | 9,000 gp | 2,250 gp |
| 15 | 54,500 gp | 16th: 2, 15th: 2 | 16th: 2, 15th: 2, 14th: 2 | 13,000 gp | 3,250 gp |
| 16 | 82,500 gp | 17th: 2, 16th: 2 | 17th: 2, 16th: 2, 15th: 2 | 20,000 gp | 5,000 gp |
| 17 | 128,000 gp | 18th: 2, 17th: 2 | 18th: 2, 17th: 2, 16th: 2 | 30,000 gp | 7,500 gp |
| 18 | 208,000 gp | 19th: 2, 18th: 2 | 19th: 2, 18th: 2, 17th: 2 | 48,000 gp | 12,000 gp |
| 19 | 355,000 gp | 20th: 2, 19th: 2 | 20th: 2, 19th: 2, 18th: 2 | 80,000 gp | 20,000 gp |
| 20 | 490,000 gp | 20th: 4 | 20th: 4, 19th: 2 | 140,000 gp | 35,000 gp |
| * Many 1st-level permanent items should be items from Chapter 6 instead of magic items. | |||||
For instance, between the time your PCs reach 3rd level and the time they reach 4th level, you should give them the treasure listed in the table for 3rd level, worth approximately 500 gp: two 4th-level permanent items, two 3rd-level permanent items, two 4th-level consumables, two 3rd-level consumables, two 2nd-level consumables, and 120 gp worth of currency.
When assigning 1st-level permanent items, your best options are armor, weapons, and other gear from Chapter 6 worth between 10 and 20 gp. The treasure listed in the row for 20th level represents a full level’s worth of adventures, even though there is no way to reach 21st level.
Some creature entries in the Pathfinder Bestiary list treasure that can be gained by defeating an individual creature; this counts toward the treasure for any given level. Published adventures include a suitable amount of treasure throughout the adventure, though you should still monitor the party’s capabilities as the PCs progress through the adventure to make sure they don’t end up behind.
A party will find money and other treasure that isn’t useful on its own but that can be sold or spent on other things. The gp values in the Party Currency column don’t refer only to coins. Gems, art objects, crafting materials (including precious materials), jewelry, and even items of much lower level than the party’s level can all be more interesting than a pile of gold.
If you include a lower-level permanent item as part of a currency reward, count only half the item’s Price toward the gp amount, assuming the party will sell the item or use it as crafting material. But lower-level consumables might still be useful, particularly scrolls, and if you think your party will use them, count those items at their full Price.
Not all treasure has to be items or currency. Crafters can use the Crafting skill to turn raw materials directly into items instead of buying those items with coins. Knowledge can expand a character’s abilities, and formulas make good treasure for item-crafting characters. A spellcaster might get access to new spells from an enemy’s spellbook or an ancient scholar, while a monk might retrain techniques with rarer ones learned from a master on a remote mountaintop.
Giving out uncommon and rare items and formulas can get players more interested in treasure. It’s best to introduce uncommon items as a reward fairly regularly but rare items only occasionally. These rewards are especially compelling when the adventurers get the item by defeating or outsmarting an enemy who carries an item that fits their backstory or theme.
Uncommon and rare formulas make great treasure for a character who Crafts items. Note that if an uncommon or rare formula is broadly disseminated, it eventually becomes more common. This can take months or years, but the item might start showing up in shops all around the world.
The levels listed for items on Table 10–9: Party Treasure by Level aren’t set in stone. You can provide items of slightly higher or lower level as long as you take into account the value of the items you hand out. For instance, suppose you were considering giving a party of 11th-level PCs a runestone with a fortification rune (with a Price of 2,000 gp) as one of their 12th-level items, but you realize they’ve had trouble finding armor in their recent adventures, so you instead decide to give them a suit of 11th-level +2 resilient armor (1,400 gp) instead. Since the armor has a lower Price than the rune, you might also add a 9th-level shadow rune (650 gp) to make up the difference. The total isn’t exactly the same, but that’s all right.
However, if you wanted to place a 13th-level permanent item in a treasure hoard, you could remove two 11thlevel permanent items to make a roughly equivalent exchange. When you make an exchange upward like this, be cautious: not only might you introduce an item with effects that are disruptive at the party’s current level of play, but you also might give an amazing item to one PC while other characters don’t gain any new items at all!
If you’re playing in a long-term campaign, you can spread out the treasure over time. A major milestone can give extra treasure at one level, followed by a tougher dungeon with fewer new items at the next level. Check back occasionally to see whether each PC’s treasure is comparable to the amount they’d get if they created a new character at their current level, as described under Treasure for New Characters below. They should be a bit higher. but if there’s a significant discrepancy, adjust the adventure’s upcoming treasure rewards accordingly.