Contents


This is a reproduction of the "vanilla" Knave ruleset in an html format, for the benefit of people who are visually impaired and/or reading the ruleset on a smartphone or other small device. Apart from some minor organisational changes to reduce scrolling back and forth, the rules text is unaltered. Please support the official release.

https://questingbeast.itch.io/knave

This version of Knave uses Lato for body text and Sebaldus Gotisch for header text.

v1.0, March 2020

Introduction

KNAVE is a rules toolkit created by Ben Milton for running old school fantasy RPGs without classes. Adding, subtracting and modifying rules is both expected and encouraged. Knave's features include:

Character Creation

Abilities

PCs have six abilities: Strength, Dexterity, Constitution, Intelligence, Wisdom, and Charisma. Each ability has two related values: a defense and a bonus. When creating a PC, roll 3d6 for each of their abilities, in order. The lowest of the three dice on each roll is that abilitys bonus. Add 10 to find its defense.

After you've finished rolling, you may optionally swap the scores of two abilities.

Example: You roll a 2, 2, and 6 for Strength. The lowest die is a 2, so your PCs Strength has a bonus of +2 and a defense of 12. Repeat this process for the rest of the abilities.

Designer's Note: "Ability defense" is my term for what is normally called ability scores. I refer to them this way to make it clearer how they work during opposed saves, explained later.

The rolling mechanic will make most abilities start at 11/+1. The bonus and defense of three abilities will rise by 1 point each time the PC gains a level, up to a maximum of 20/+10 by level 10. This puts everything on an intuitive ten point scale, and is intended to mirror the way that attack bonuses, hit dice, and saving throws in most OSR games increase by about one point per level.

Equipment

PCs start with 2 days of rations and one weapon of their players choice. Roll on the Starting Gear tables on the following page to determine starting armor and equipment.

Designer's Note: Rolling for starting equipment dramatically speeds up the character creation process, which is important if you're playing a high-lethality game like Knave. If you want to permit shopping for equipment, however, have players roll 3d6×20 to find their starting copper pieces. Note that spell books are not normally available to new PCs, but you could always add "random spellbook" to the Dungeoneering Gear table, or simply allow new PCs to roll a random spell in exchange for not starting with any armor.

PCs have a number of item slots equal to their Constitution defense, and items they carry must fit into available slots. Most items take up one slot, but some take up more. Some small items can be bundled together into a single slot. Ask the referee if you are unsure.

Designer's Note: Item slots make tracking encumbrance very fast and easy, which is important since resource management is an important aspect of the game. They also represent character customization slots, since what a Knave is carrying goes a long way towards determining their playstyle and role in the party.

Armor comes with an armor defense value. Note that value on your character sheet with its corresponding Armor bonus (always 10 less than the defense). If the PC is not wearing any armor, their armor defense is 11 and their armor bonus is +1.

Designer's Note: "Armor defense" is essentially the same concept as armor class in most OSR games. Its been renamed to emphasize the connection between the way it and ability defenses work. The armor bonus exists in order to allow combat to be run entirely player-facing, as explained in the combat section.

Other Stats

Roll 1d8 to determine your PC's starting and maximum hit points. A PC's healing rate is 1d8 + Constitution bonus. Their exploration speed is 120ft per exploration turn, and their combat speed is 40ft per round.

Designer's Note: All hit dice are assumed to be d8s in Knave, for PCs, NPCs, and monsters. This simplifies the game and keeps things compatible with the stats in most OSR books. Note that a PCs Constitution bonus is not added to their hit point rolls. Referees who don't want starting PCs to be quite as fragile might want to allow starting HP to be rerolled if it is below 5.

Traits

Invent or roll the rest of your PC's traits, such as their physique, face, skin, hair, clothing, virtue, vice, speech, background, and alignment, using the random tables on the following page. Choose a gender and a name for your PC, but don't get too attached. Its a dangerous world out there.

Designer's Note: Randomizing most of a PCs traits speeds up character creation, but it also has the effect of creating surprising, unique characters that most players wouldn't think to invent or play.

Traits

Physique

  1. Athletic
  2. Brawny
  3. Corpulent
  4. Delicate
  5. Gaunt
  6. Hulking
  7. Lanky
  8. Ripped
  9. Rugged
  10. Scrawny
  11. Short
  12. Sinewy
  13. Slender
  14. Flabby
  15. Statuesque
  16. Stout
  17. Tiny
  18. Towering
  19. Willowy
  20. Wiry

Face

  1. Bloated
  2. Blunt
  3. Bony
  4. Chiseled
  5. Delicate
  6. Elongated
  7. Patrician
  8. Pinched
  9. Hawkish
  10. Broken
  11. Impish
  12. Narrow
  13. Ratlike
  14. Round
  15. Sunken
  16. Sharp
  17. Soft
  18. Square
  19. Wide
  20. Wolfish

Skin

  1. Battle Scar
  2. Birthmark
  3. Burn Scar
  4. Dark
  5. Makeup
  6. Oily
  7. Pale
  8. Perfect
  9. Pierced
  10. Pockmarked
  11. Reeking
  12. Tattooed
  13. Rosy
  14. Rough
  15. Sallow
  16. Sunburned
  17. Tanned
  18. War Paint
  19. Weathered
  20. Whip Scar

Hair

  1. Bald
  2. Braided
  3. Bristly
  4. Cropped
  5. Curly
  6. Disheveled
  7. Dreadlocks
  8. Filthy
  9. Frizzy
  10. Greased
  11. Limp
  12. Long
  13. Luxurious
  14. Mohawk
  15. Oily
  16. Ponytail
  17. Silky
  18. Topknot
  19. Wavy
  20. Wispy

Clothing

  1. Antique
  2. Bloody
  3. Ceremonial
  4. Decorated
  5. Eccentric
  6. Elegant
  7. Fashionable
  8. Filthy
  9. Flamboyant
  10. Stained
  11. Foreign
  12. Frayed
  13. Frumpy
  14. Livery
  15. Oversized
  16. Patched
  17. Perfumed
  18. Rancid
  19. Torn
  20. Undersized

Virtue

  1. Ambitious
  2. Cautious
  3. Courageous
  4. Courteous
  5. Curious
  6. Disciplined
  7. Focused
  8. Generous
  9. Gregarious
  10. Honest
  11. Honorable
  12. Humble
  13. Idealistic
  14. Just
  15. Loyal
  16. Merciful
  17. Righteous
  18. Serene
  19. Stoic
  20. Tolerant

Vice

  1. Aggressive
  2. Arrogant
  3. Bitter
  4. Cowardly
  5. Cruel
  6. Deceitful
  7. Flippant
  8. Gluttonous
  9. Greedy
  10. Irascible
  11. Lazy
  12. Nervous
  13. Prejudiced
  14. Reckless
  15. Rude
  16. Suspicious
  17. Vain
  18. Vengeful
  19. Wasteful
  20. Whiny

Speech

  1. Blunt
  2. Booming
  3. Breathy
  4. Cryptic
  5. Drawling
  6. Droning
  7. Flowery
  8. Formal
  9. Gravelly
  10. Hoarse
  11. Mumbling
  12. Precise
  13. Quaint
  14. Rambling
  15. Rapid-fire
  16. Dialect
  17. Slow
  18. Squeaky
  19. Stuttering
  20. Whispery

Background

  1. Alchemist
  2. Beggar
  3. Butcher
  4. Burglar
  5. Charlatan
  6. Cleric
  7. Cook
  8. Cultist
  9. Gambler
  10. Herbalist
  11. Magician
  12. Mariner
  13. Mercenary
  14. Merchant
  15. Outlaw
  16. Performer
  17. Pickpocket
  18. Smuggler
  19. Student
  20. Tracker

Misfortune

  1. Abandoned
  2. Addicted
  3. Blackmailed
  4. Condemned
  5. Cursed
  6. Defrauded
  7. Demoted
  8. Discredited
  9. Disowned
  10. Exiled
  11. Framed
  12. Haunted
  13. Kidnapped
  14. Mutilated
  15. Poor
  16. Pursued
  17. Rejected
  18. Replaced
  19. Robbed
  20. Suspected

Alignment

1-5: 6-15: 16-20:
Law Neutrality Chaos

Starting Gear

Weapons

Category Example Damage Stats
Light Melee Dagger d6 1 slot, 1 hand, 3 quality
Medium Melee Spear d8 2 slots, 1 hand, 3 quality
Heavy Melee Halberd d10 3 slots, 2 hands, 3 quality
Light Ranged Sling d4 1 slot, 1 hand, 3 quality
Medium Ranged Bow d6 2 slots, 2 hands, 3 quality
Heavy Ranged Crossbow d8 3 slots, 2 hands, 3 quality

Armor

d20 Armor Defense Stats
1-3 None 11
4-14 Gambeson 12 1 slot,
3 quality
15-19 Brigandine 13 2 slots,
4 quality
20 Chain 14 3 slots,
5 quality

Helmets and Shields

d20 Items Defense Stats
1-13 None
14-16 Helmet +1 1 slot,
1 quality
17-19 Shield +1 1 slot,
1 quality
20 Helmet & Shield +2 (total) 1 slot,
1 quality
(each)

Dungeoneering Gear

  1. Rope, 50ft
  2. Pulleys
  3. Candles, 5
  4. Chain, 10ft
  5. Chalk, 10
  6. Crowbar
  7. Tinderbox
  8. Grappling hook
  9. Hammer
  10. Waterskin
  11. Lantern
  12. Lamp oil
  13. Padlock
  14. Manacles
  15. Mirror
  16. Pole, 10ft
  17. Sack
  18. Tent
  19. Spikes, 5
  20. Torches, 5

General Gear 1

  1. Air bladder
  2. Bear trap
  3. Shovel
  4. Bellows
  5. Grease
  6. Saw
  7. Bucket
  8. Caltrops
  9. Chisel
  10. Drill
  11. Fishing rod
  12. Marbles
  13. Glue
  14. Pick
  15. Hourglass
  16. Net
  17. Tongs
  18. Lockpicks
  19. Metal file
  20. Nails

General Gear 2

  1. Incense
  2. Sponge
  3. Lens
  4. Perfume
  5. Horn
  6. Bottle
  7. Soap
  8. Spyglass
  9. Tar pot
  10. Twine
  11. Fake jewels
  12. Blank book
  13. Card deck
  14. Dice set
  15. Cook pots
  16. Face paint
  17. Whistle
  18. Instrument
  19. Quill & Ink
  20. Small bell

Playing the Game

Abilities

Each of the six abilities is used in different circumstances.

Designer's Note: In a system that relies so heavily on the six abilities, it's important for each of them to play an important role, to discourage dump stats. Non-magical characters tend to dump the mental abilities, for example, so I increased their usefulness.

Item Slots

PCs have a number of item slots equal to their Constitution defense. Most items, including spellbooks, potions, a days rations, light weapons, tools and so on take up 1 slot, but particularly heavy or bulky items like armor or medium to heavy weapons may take up more slots. Groups of small, identical items may be bundled into the same slot, at the referee's discretion. 100 coins can fit in a slot. As a general guideline, a slot holds around 5 pounds of weight.

Designer's Note: Using item slots makes encumbrance simple enough that players will be willing to track it. Slots are also the key to character customization, as a PCs gear helps determine who they are. Raising Constitution, therefore, will probably be a priority for most characters.

Saving Throws

If a character attempts something where the outcome is uncertain and failure has consequences, they make a saving throw, or "save". To make a save, add the bonus of the relevant ability to a d20 roll. If the total is greater than 15, the character succeeds. If not, they fail.

Designer's Note: Requiring saves to exceed 15 means that new PCs have around a 25% chance of success, while level 10 characters have around a 75% chance of success, since ability bonuses can get up to +10 by level 10. This reflects the general pattern found in the save mechanics of early D&D.

If the save is opposed by another character, then instead of aiming to exceed 15, the side doing the rolling must get a total greater than the opposing characters relevant defense score in order to succeed. If they fail, the opposing side succeeds. This type of save is called an opposed save. Note that it doesnt matter which side does the rolling, since the odds of success remain the same.

Example: A wizard casts a fireball spell at a goblin, who gets a saving throw to avoid. This is resolved as an opposed save using the wizard's Intelligence versus the goblin's Dexterity. The goblin may roll plus their Dexterity bonus, hoping to exceed the wizard's Intelligence defense or the wizard may roll plus their Intelligence bonus, hoping to exceed the goblin's Dexterity defense.

Designer's Note: An ability's defense score is essentially its average roll. Requiring the rolling side to beat the opposing defense allows contests to be settled more quickly, eliminates the possibility of ties, and allows the game to be run with players doing all of the rolling if they so choose, since the odds of success are the same no matter which side rolls.

Advantage and Disadvantage

If there are situational factors that make a save significantly easier or harder, the referee may grant the roll advantage or disadvantage. If a roll has advantage, roll 2d20 and use the better of the two dice. If it has disadvantage, roll 2d20 and use the worse of the two dice.

Designer's Note: The referee is of course free to impose positive or negative modifiers rather than use the advantage system, but most players seem to enjoy it and it simplifies the math.

Reactions

When the PCs encounter an NPC whose reaction to the party is not obvious, the referee may roll 2d6 and consult the following table.

2 3-5 6-8 9-11 12
Hostile Unfriendly Unsure Talkative Helpful

Combat

At the start of each combat round, determine initiative by rolling a d6. On a 1-3, all of the enemies will act first. On a 4-6 all of the PCs will act first. Reroll initiative each round.

Designer's Note: Using simple group initiative speeds up combat, keeps all of the players engaged, and avoids bookkeeping. Rerolling initiative every round makes combat more dangerous, since its possible for one side to go twice in a row.

On their turn, a character may move their speed (usually 40 ft) and take up to one combat action. This action may be casting a spell, making a second move, making an attack, attempting a stunt, or any other action deemed reasonable by the referee.

Melee weapons can strike adjacent foes, but ranged weapons cannot be used if the shooting character is engaged in melee combat. To make an attack, roll a d20 and add the characters Strength or Wisdom bonus, depending on whether they are using a melee or ranged weapon, respectively. If the attack total is greater than the defenders armor defense, the attack hits. If not, the attack misses.

Alternatively, an attack roll can also be resolved by the defender rolling a d20 and adding their armor bonus, hoping to roll a total greater than the defense of the ability the attacker is using. If they succeed, the attack misses. If they fail, the attack hits.

Designer's Note: In other words, attacks are resolved the same way as opposed saves, just using Armor in place of an ability.

On a hit, the attacker rolls their weapon's damage die to determine how many Hit Points (HP) the defender loses. A bonus damage die of the weapons type may be added to the roll if the ideal weapon was used against an enemy type (for example, using a blunt weapon vs. a skeleton).

When a character reaches 0 HP, they are unconscious. When they reach -1 HP or less, they are dead. Players should roll up a new level 1 PC when their old one dies, and should rejoin the party as soon as possible.

Stunts

Stunts are combat maneuvers such as stunning, shoving, disarming, tripping, sundering armor, and so on. They are resolved with a versus save. They may not cause damage directly, but may do so indirectly (for example, pushing an enemy off of a ledge). The referee is the final arbiter as to what stunts can be attempted in a given situation.

Advantage in Combat

Characters can gain advantage in combat by attacking a target that is unaware, on lower ground, off balance, disarmed, distracted, or tactically disadvantaged in any significant way. The referee, as usual, has the final say.

When a character has advantage against an opponent on their combat turn, they may either A.) Apply advantage to their attack roll or stunt against that opponent or B.) Make an attack and a stunt attempt in the same round against that opponent, without advantage.

Critical Hits and Quality

During an attack roll, if the attacker rolls a natural 20 or the defender rolls a natural 1, the defender's armor loses 1 point of quality and they take an additional die of damage (of the weapon's type). If the attacker rolls a natural 1 or the defender rolls a natural 20, the attacker's weapon loses 1 point of quality. At 0 quality, the item is destroyed. Each point of quality costs 10% of the items cost to repair.

Designer's Note: The slow degradation of their gear is another resource clock ticking down during long dungeon raids alongside hit points, spells, torches, and so on.

Morale

Monsters and NPCs all have a morale rating, usually between 5 and 9. When they face more danger than they were expecting, the referee will make a morale roll by rolling 2d6 and comparing the result to the NPC's morale rating. If the roll is higher than the rating, the NPC will attempt to flee, retreat, or parley. Morale rolls can be triggered by defeating half of an enemy group, defeating a group's leader, or reducing a lone enemy to half HP. Other effects may trigger a morale roll at the referee's discretion.

Hirelings also make morale rolls when they aren't paid, their employer dies, or they face extraordinary danger. Morale may also be improved by paying hirelings more and treating them well.

Healing

After a meal and a full night's rest, PCs regain lost hit points equal to a d8 plus their Constitution bonus. Resting at a safe haven restores all lost HP.

Designer's Note: Designer's Note: Constitution bonuses do not affect maximum hit points like in most OSR games, but it is a big help when it comes to healing.

Monsters

All monsters from OSR bestiaries should work as-is in Knave with no major conversion needed. Here are some guidelines.

Example: A typical 4 HD monster would have a bonus of +4 and a defense of 14 in all of its abilities by default, unless modified by the referee.

Designer's Note: Due to the unified 1-to-10 scale of Knave, monsters and NPCs essentially add their hit dice or level to any attacks or saves they make. Obviously this should be adjusted by the referee when it doesnt make sense.

Advancement

Whenever a PC accumulates 1000 XP, they gain a level. As a guideline, PCs receive 50 XP for low-risk accomplishments, 100 XP for moderate-risk accomplishments, and 200 XP for high-risk accomplishments. The referee should freely notify the PCs of how much XP different objectives are worth when asked.

Designer's Note: This is the way I run advancement because its simple and easy to understand. Of course, swapping in milestone advancement, session advancement, or an XP-for-coin system works perfectly well. If using XP-for-gold or silver, note that a gold piece is 100 copper, and a silver piece is 10 copper.

When a PC gains a level, they roll a number of d8s equal to their new level to find their new HP maximum. If the result is less than their previous maximum, their maximum HP increases by 1. They also raise the defense and bonus scores of 3 different abilities of their choice by 1 point. Abilities may never be raised higher than 20/+10.

Designer's Note: You can also raise abilities randomly if you want. My preferred method is to roll a d20 for each ability, in any order, raising that ability by 1 if the roll is less than that abilitys defense. Keep cycling through the abilities, stopping when three abilities have advanced, and skipping any abilities that have maxed out. In this method, natural talents will tend to advance faster than weaknesses, which makes PCs more varied and specialized.

Magic

The spell lists from any old-school RPG will work perfectly well in Knave, provided that they go up to 9th level. There are many free lists of classic spells available online.

In Knave, PCs may only cast spells of their level or less, so a level 3 PC could only cast spells of level 0 to 3. Spells are cast out of spell books, which must be held in both hands and read aloud. Each spell book can only be used once per day. Importantly, each spell book only holds a single spell, and each spell book takes up an item slot, so if a PC wants to be able to cast a wide variety of spells, they'll have to fill most of their inventory with spell books.

Designer's Note: It's always seemed odd to me that spell levels don't correspond to PC level in most OSR games. Well, now they do. I also took the abstract notion of spell slots and turned them into something concrete; PCs can cast as many spells as they can physically carry. Boost Constitution if you want your PC to carry around that mobile library.

PCs are unable to create, copy or transcribe spell books. In order to gain new spell books, PCs must adventure for them, by either recovering them from dungeons or looting them from other magicians. The higher the level of the spell book, the rarer and more valuable it is. PCs openly carrying high level spell books are likely to be hounded by bandits and wizards looking to "acquire" them.

When a spell allows for a save, make an opposed Intelligence save against the defender's relevant ability, usually Dexterity for ranged attack spells, Constitution for lifedraining spells, Intelligence for mind-altering spells, or Wisdom for Illusions.

Designer's Note: Note that spell books can be easily re-skinned as rune stones, clay tablets, potions, scrolls, or whatever else fits your campaign. If you wanted a more dangerous, low-magic setting for example, you could make spell books potions or scrolls that are only used once and then lost forever. The random spell generator found in my other game, Maze Rats, can be useful for generating ideas for new spells.

100 Level-Less Spells

If you prefer spells that are level-less and scale up as the caster becomes more powerful, use the list below. In the following spells, "L" is a number equal to the caster's level, an item is an object able to be lifted with one hand, and an object is anything up to human size. Unless otherwise noted, all spells with ongoing effects last up to L×10 minutes, and have a range of up to 40 feet. If a spell directly affects another creature, the creature may make a save to avoid it (as described previously). Success reduces or negates the spells effects.

  1. Adhere: Object is covered in extremely sticky slime.
  2. Animate Object: Object obeys your commands as best it can. It can walk 15ft per round.
  3. Anthropomorphize: A touched animal either gains human intelligence or human appearance for L days.
  4. Arcane Eye: You can see through a magical floating eyeball that flies around at your command.
  5. Astral Prison: An object is frozen in time and space within an invulnerable crystal shell.
  6. Attract: L+1 objects are strongly magnetically attracted to each other if they come within 10 feet.
  7. Auditory Illusion: You create illusory sounds that seem to come from a direction of your choice.
  8. Babble: A creature must loudly and clearly repeat everything you think. It is otherwise mute.
  9. Beast Form: You and your possessions transform into a mundane animal.
  10. Befuddle: L creatures of your choice are unable to form new short-term memories for the duration of the spell.
  11. Bend Fate: Roll L+1 d20s. Whenever you must roll a d20 after casting the spell, you must choose and then discard one of the rolled results until they are all gone.
  12. Bird Person: Your arms turn into huge bird wings.
  13. Body Swap: You switch bodies with a creature you touch. If one body dies, the other dies as well.
  14. Catherine: A woman wearing a blue dress appears until end of spell. She will obey polite, safe requests.
  15. Charm: L creatures treat you like a friend.
  16. Command: A creature obeys a single, three-word command that does not harm it.
  17. Comprehend: You become fluent in all languages.
  18. Control Plants: Nearby plants and trees obey you and gain the ability to move at 5 feet per round.
  19. Control Weather: You may alter the type of weather at will, but you do not otherwise control it.
  20. Counterspell: Make an opposed Intelligence save against the Intelligence of the caster of a nearby spell. You may do this out of turn as a reaction, or against an ongoing magical effect. On a success, you may cancel the spell.
  21. Deafen: All nearby creatures are deafened.
  22. Detect Magic: You hear nearby magical auras singing. Volume and harmony signify the aura's power and refinement.
  23. Disassemble: Any of your body parts may be detached and reattached at will, without causing pain or damage. You can still control them.
  24. Disguise: You may alter the appearance of L characters at will as long as they remain humanoid. Attempts to duplicate other characters will seem uncanny.
  25. Displace: An object appears to be up to L×10ft from its actual position.
  26. Earthquake: The ground begins shaking violently. Structures may be damaged or collapse.
  27. Elasticity: Your body can stretch up to L×10ft.
  28. Elemental Wall: A straight wall of ice or fire L×40ft long and 10ft high rises from the ground.
  29. Filch: L visible items teleport to your hands.
  30. Fog Cloud: Dense fog spreads out from you.
  31. Frenzy: L creatures erupt in a frenzy of violence.
  32. Gate: A portal to a random plane opens.
  33. Gravity Shift: You can change the direction of gravity (for yourself only) up to once per round.
  34. Greed: L creatures develop an overwhelming urge to possess a visible item of your choice.
  35. Haste: Your movement speed is tripled.
  36. Hatred: L creatures develop a deep hatred of another creature or group of creatures and wish to destroy it.
  37. Hear Whispers: You can hear faint sounds clearly.
  38. Hover: An object hovers, frictionless, 2ft above the ground. It can hold up to L humanoids.
  39. Hypnotize: A creature enters a trance and will truthfully answer L yes or no questions you ask it.
  40. Icy Touch: A thick ice layer spreads across a touched surface, up to L×10ft in radius.
  41. Illuminate: A floating light moves as you command.
  42. Increase Gravity: The gravity in an area triples.
  43. Invisible Tether: Two objects within 10ft of each other cannot be moved more than 10ft apart.
  44. Knock: L nearby mundane or magical locks unlock.
  45. Leap: You can jump up to L×10ft in the air.
  46. Liquid Air: The air around you becomes swimmable.
  47. Magic Dampener: All nearby magical effects have their effectiveness halved.
  48. Manse: A sturdy, furnished cottage appears for L×12 hours. You can permit and forbid entry to it at will.
  49. Marble Madness: Your pockets are full of marbles,and will refill every round.
  50. Masquerade: L characters' appearances and voices become identical to a touched character.
  51. Miniaturize: You and L other touched creatures are reduced to the size of a mouse.
  52. Mirror Image: L illusory duplicates of yourself appear under your control.
  53. Mirrorwalk: A mirror becomes a gateway to another mirror that you looked into today.
  54. Multiarm: You gain L extra arms.
  55. Night Sphere: An L×40ft wide sphere of darkness displaying the night sky appears.
  56. Objectify: You become any inanimate object between the size of a grand piano and an apple.
  57. Ooze Form: You become a living jelly.
  58. Pacify: L creatures have an aversion to violence.
  59. Phantom Coach: A ghostly coach appears until end of spell. It moves unnaturally fast over any terrain, including water.
  60. Phobia: L creatures become terrified of an object of your choice.
  61. Pit: A pit 10ft wide and L×5ft deep opens in the ground.
  62. Primeval Surge: An object grows to the size of an elephant. If it is an animal, it is enraged.
  63. Psychometry: The referee answers L yes or no questions about a touched object.
  64. Pull: An object of any size is pulled directly towards you with the strength of L men for one round.
  65. Push: An object of any size is pushed directly away from you with the strength of L men for one round.
  66. Raise Dead: L skeletons rise from the ground to serve you. They are incredibly stupid and can only obey simple orders.
  67. Raise Spirit: The spirit of a dead body manifests and will answer L questions.
  68. Read Mind: You can hear the surface thoughts of nearby creatures.
  69. Repel: L+1 objects are strongly magnetically repelled from each other if they come within 10 feet.
  70. Scry: You can see through the eyes of a creature you touched earlier today.
  71. Sculpt Elements: All inanimate material behaves like clay in your hands.
  72. Shroud: L creatures are invisible until they move.
  73. Shuffle: L creatures instantly switch places. Determine where they end up randomly.
  74. Sleep: L creatures fall into a light sleep.
  75. Smoke Form: Your body becomes living smoke.
  76. Snail Knight: 10 minutes after casting, a knight sitting astride a giant snail rides into view. He is able to answer most questions related to quests and chivalry, and may aid you if he finds you worthy.
  77. Sniff: You can smell even the faintest traces of scents.
  78. Sort: Inanimate items sort themselves according to categories you set. The categories must be visually verifiable.
  79. Spectacle: A clearly unreal but impressive illusion of your choice appears, under your control. It may be up to the size of a palace and has full motion and sound.
  80. Spellseize: Cast this as a reaction to another spell going off to make a temporary copy of it that you can cast at any time before this spell ends.
  81. Spider Climb: You can climb surfaces like a spider.
  82. Summon Cube: Once per second, (6 times per round) you may summon or banish a 3-foot-wide cube of earth. New cubes must be affixed to the earth or to other cubes.
  83. Swarm: You become a swarm of crows, rats, or piranhas. You only take damage from area effects.
  84. Telekinesis: You may mentally move L items.
  85. Telepathy: L+1 creatures can hear each others thoughts, no matter how far apart they move.
  86. Teleport: An object disappears and reappears on the ground in a visible, clear area up to L×40ft away.
  87. Thaumaturgic Anchor: Object becomes the target of every spell cast near it.
  88. Thicket: A thicket of trees and dense brush up to L×40ft wide suddenly sprouts up.
  89. Time Jump: An object disappears as it jumps L×10 minutes into the future. When it returns, it appears in the unoccupied area nearest to where it left.
  90. Summon Idol: A carved stone statue the size of a four poster bed rises from the ground.
  91. Time Rush: Time in a 40ft bubble starts moving 10 times faster.
  92. Time Slow: Time in a 40ft bubble slows to 10%.
  93. True Sight: You see through all nearby illusions.
  94. Upwell: A spring of seawater appears.
  95. Vision: You completely control what a creature sees.
  96. Visual Illusion: A silent, immobile, illusion of your choice appears, up to the size of a bedroom.
  97. Ward: A silver circle 40ft across appears on the ground. Choose one thing that cannot cross it: Living creatures, dead creatures, projectiles or metal.
  98. Web: Your wrists can shoot thick webbing.
  99. Wizard Mark: Your finger can shoot a stream of ulfire-colored paint. This paint is only visible to you, and can be seen at any distance, even through solid objects.
  100. X-Ray Vision: You gain X-Ray vision.

Item Costs

All prices are given in copper pennies. Payment for things like ships, real estate, and so on usually takes the form of trade goods, favors, or oaths of fealty rather than coins.

Armor

Item Cost
Shield
(Defense +1, 1 slot, 1 quality)
40
Helmet
(Defense +1, 1 slot, 1 quality)
40
Gambeson
(Defense 12, 1 slot, 3 quality)
60
Brigandine
(Defense 13, 2 slots, 4 quality)
500
Chain
(Defense 14, 3 slots, 5 quality)
1200
Half Plate
(Defense 15, 4 slots, 6 quality)
4000
Full Plate
(Defense 16, 5 slots, 7 quality)
8000

Weapons

Item Cost
Dagger, Cudgel, Sickle, Staff, etc.
(d6 damage, 1 slot, 1 hand, 3 quality)
5
Spear, Sword, Mace, Axe, Flail, etc.
(d8 damage, 2 slots, 1 hand, 3 quality)
10
Halberd, War Hammer, Long Sword, Battle Axe, etc.
(d10 damage, 3 slots, 2 hands, 3 quality)
20
Sling (d4 damage, 1 slot, 1 hand, 3 quality) 5
Bow (d6 damage, 2 slots, 2 hands, 3 quality) 15
Crossbow (d8 damage, 3 slots, 2 hands, 3 quality) 60
Arrows (20) 5
Quiver (capacity 20) 10

Clothing

Item Cost
Poor 10
Standard 50
Noble 3000
Furs 5000
Winter 100

Light

Item Cost
Candle, 4 hours 5
Lantern 5
Lamp Oil, 4 hours 5
Tinderbox 5
Torch, 1 hour 5

Tools & Gear

Item Cost
Air Bladder 5
Bear Trap 20
Bedroll 10
Bellows 10
Black Grease 1
Block and Tackle 30
Book (Blank) 300
Book (Reading) 600
Bottle/Vial 1
Bucket 5
Caltrops (bag) 10
Cards with an extra Ace 5
Chain (10 ft) 10
Chalk (10 pieces) 1
Chisel 5
Cookpots 10
Crowbar 10
Drill 10
Face Paint/Makeup 10
Fake Jewels 50
Fishing Rod/Tackle 10
Glass Marbles (bag) 5
Glue (bottle) 1
Grappling Hook 10
Hammer 10
Holy Water 25
Horn 10
Hourglass 300
Incense (packet) 10
Iron Tongs 10
Ladder (10 ft) 10
Large Sponge 5
Lens 100
Lockpicks 100
Manacles 10
Metal File 5
Mirror (small, silver) 200
Musical Instrument 200
Nails (12) 5
Net 10
Oilskin Bag 5
Oilskin Trousers 10
Padlock and Key 20
Perfume 50
Pick 10
Pole (10ft) 5
Quill and Ink 1
Rope (50ft) 10
Sack 1
Saw 10
Set of Loaded Dice 5
Shovel 10
Small Bell 20
Soap 1
Spike (iron) 5
Spike (wood) 1
Spiked boots 5
Spyglass 1000
Tar (Pot) 10
Tent (3 man) 100
Tent (personal) 50
Twine (300 ft) 5
Waterskin 5
Whistle 5

Food

Item Cost
Travel rations (1 day) 5
Animal Feed (1 day) 2
Bacon, side of 10
Bread, 1 loaf 1
Cheese, 1 lb 2
Cider, 4 gallons 1
Cod, whole 20
Eggs, 24 1
Flour, 5 lb 1
Fruit, 1 lb 1
Garlic, bunch 1
Grain, 1 bushel (8 gallons) 4
Herbs, 1 bunch 1
Lard, 5 lbs 1
Onions, 1 bushel 8
Salt, 1 bushel 3
Spices, 1 lb 100
Sugar, 1 lb 12
Wine/ale, bottle 1

Animals

Item Cost
Chicken 1
Cow 100
Dog, hunting 50
Dog, small but vicious 20
Donkey/Pack Horse 300
Goat 10
Hawk 1000
Horse, riding 1000
Horse, war 10,000
Ox 300
Pig 30
Sheep 15

Lodging

Item Cost
Bed, per night 1
Private room, per night 2
Meal 2
Hot bath 2
Stabling and fodder 2

Ships

Item Cost
Ship, high quality 720/ton
Ship, good quality 480/ton
Ship, used quality 240/ton
Ship, poor quality 120/ton
Raft 50
Fishing boat 500
Sloop 5000
Caravel 25,000
Galleon 125,000

Transport

Item Cost
Carriage 320
Cart 50
Wagon 120

Henchmen

Wages are per day, not including food, supplies, shelter, etc.

Item Cost
Laborer 1
Scribe 2
Archer 3
Mason 4
Man-at-arms, on foot 6
Armorer or Blacksmith 8
Man-at-arms, mounted 12
Master Builder 15
Barber-Surgeon 25
Knight 25

Buildings

Item Cost
Hovel 120
Row House 1200
Craftsman’s House 2400
Merchant’s House 7200
House with Courtyard 21,600
Guildhall 32,600
Stone Tower 48,000
Temple 75,000
Stronghold 100,000
Cathedral 500,000
Imperial Palace 2,500,000

Thanks

Knave was made possible due to the encouragement, feedback and assistance of my Patreon supporters. https://www.patreon.com/questingbeast

A special thanks is due to everyone from the DIY DND community on Google+.

Knave Generator