Recently, David McGrogan asked for our favorite treasure tables on Google+. I said that I didn’t care for any particular one. I just use the official ones. For me, the most important aspect of using treasure tables is that there is no choice involved. Just roll. It’s like discovering the world by rolling on the table, it’s about being surprised even if you’re the referee of the game, it helps me suspend disbelief. The mechanics make sure that I’m not thinking of it as a figment of my imagination. It feels like a real thing. It’s like learning about object permanence as a toddler. You close your eyes, and you open them again, and the objects are still there. No amount of wishing, crying, pulling, pushing or punching changes this. Rolling the dice makes sure that my wishing has no effect on the outcome. I might embelish this or that, but if a *deck of many things* comes up, then that’s what you’ll find. If something boring comes up, I might change it. A *sword* +1 might get changed to an elven sword of a particular elven house. Or it might belong to a set. Or it might have a minor magic effects.
Treasure tables act a bit like random encounter tables. They are also part of the *implied setting*. You’ll find a lot of potions, scrolls and magic swords because that’s what this is all about.
This also explains why I hate treasure schemes that pull away the curtain and say things like *you choose* or *you should always place* or anything else that implies that the treasure found might be simply a figment of my imagination.
This initial impression grows stronger as the dice rolling slowly turns into a *ritual*. I do it *every* time when I prepare a session.
I still dole out quests involving particular items which are not rolled on the random treasure charts, of course. But these adventure seeds, these plot relevant items, they are a different thing.
Anyway. Random treasure. No choosing.
#RPG #Treasure
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An example for the embellishment of simple magic weapons from recent treasure hauls in my campaigns:
1. a magic *sword +2* turns into this: a magic sword +1 of dwarven make, imbued with old brass magic, engraved with the following, “I, Ebverberdzhel, ** have forged this blade instead of a third son”
2. a simple *mace +1* from the cold dead hands of an evil priest in a temple to a god of madness turns in this: a black magic mace +1 where the weight is in fact a demonic horned head that starts calling for death and mayhem as soon as it sees any light; at night its murmurs of bloodshed and madness can be heard by the sleepless