Pandemonium deck: Difference between revisions

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''This is a magic item for [[system::Pathfinder]] based on P.D. Magnus' [http://www.decktet.com/ Decktet]. Though inspired by the  ''[[pfsrd:magic-items/artifacts/minor-artifacts/deck-of-many-things-harrow|harrow deck of many things]]'' (in turn inspired by the ''[[pfsrd:magic-items/artifacts/minor-artifacts/deck-of-many-things|deck of many things]]''), it alters the whole concept of the deck (roughly) following the model used by ''[http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0786958723/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0786958723&linkCode=as2&tag=div05a-20 Madness at Gardmore Abbey]'' to make the deck a less destabilizing force, at least at first.''
''This is a magic item for [[system::Pathfinder]] based on P.D. Magnus' [http://www.decktet.com/ Decktet]. Though inspired by the  ''[[pfsrd:magic-items/artifacts/minor-artifacts/deck-of-many-things|deck of many things]]'', it alters the whole concept of the deck, partially following the model used by ''[http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0786958723/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0786958723&linkCode=as2&tag=div05a-20 Madness at Gardmore Abbey]'' to make the deck a less destabilizing force, at least at first.''


'''Aura''' strong (all schools; chaotic); '''CL''' 20th; '''Slot''' none; '''Weight''' —
'''Aura''' strong (all schools; chaotic); '''CL''' 20th; '''Slot''' none; '''Weight''' —


This worn fortune-teller's (and gambler's) deck bears an evocative image upon each of its forty-five cards. The deck contains six suits (in order: moons, suns, waves, leaves, wyrms and knots) with a [http://wiki.decktet.com/structure complex structure]. For each suit, there is an Ace and a Crown. Ranked between them are other cards numbered 2 through 9, each with two suits. Four Courts each have three suits and are ranked beneath Crowns. Four Pawns each have three suits as well, ranked below Courts. The Excuse has no suit or rank. Suit combinations do not occur with equal frequency. All cards also have a theme or meaning, written on the face of the card (one third represent people, one third represent places and one third represent events). Some cards appear the same when upside down, some do not.
This worn fortune-teller's (and gambler's) deck bears an evocative image upon each of its forty-five cards. The deck contains six suits (in order: moons, suns, waves, leaves, wyrms and knots) with a [http://wiki.decktet.com/structure complex structure]. For each suit, there is an Ace and a Crown. Ranked between them are other cards numbered 2 through 9, each with two suits. Four Courts each have three suits and are ranked beneath Crowns. Four Pawns each have three suits as well, ranked below Courts. The Excuse has no suit or rank. Suit combinations do not occur with equal frequency. All cards also have a theme or meaning, written on the face of the card (one third represent people, one third represent places and one third represent events). Some cards appear the same when upside down, some do not.
== Using the Deck ==
The ''deck of many things'' has long been considered "campaign breaking", where drawing even one card might derail the whole campaign into a different direction. While many [[pfsrd:magic-items/artifacts/minor-artifacts/deck-of-many-things-harrow|variations]] of the ''deck'' have tried to correct this by reducing the impact of card effects, this design goes the other way, making the drawing of the card even more monumental and campaign changing; however, drawing requires a fully assembled ''deck'' and the ''pandemonium deck'' is never found intact. Instead, focus is put on individual cards. When (and if) players choose to fully assemble the ''deck'', everyone will be ''expecting'' (even demanding) a draw from it to radically alter the campaign.
By focussing on the individual cards as more minor magic items, it allows groups to "dabble" in using the deck without having to jump in the deep end. Further, it puts the decision to upend the campaign solidly in the hands of the players. A GM might introduce a card or two into the game. If the players seem motivated to find other cards, then the ''deck'' can become a more major force in the campaign. If not, then the players have gained some interesting trinkets and life goes on. Should a campaign go full bore into assembling the deck, however, the point at which the ritual is completed and someone draws a card should be an obvious turning point to all involved. It's also possible for something in between, assembling groups of cards to gain their cumulative effects, but never finding the last card, or refusing to use the full ''deck'' even if fully assembled.
To support this, the mechanics help accelerate the search for the cards as more are accumulated. At first, cards are likely to be found one at a time, but as the campaign becomes more serious about assembling the deck, the mechanics should help to foster clashes between groups trying to assemble the ''deck'', at which point the victor will gain all the cards of the loser.


== Individual Cards ==
== Individual Cards ==


Cards of this deck are almost never found assembled, as the deck has the ability to scatter itself under certain circumstances. Most who come across cards find them singly. Individual cards are no more or less durable than mundane cards; however, should a card be seriously damaged, it turns to dust and reforms itself whole at some other random location in the world.  
Cards of this deck are never found fully assembled, as the deck has the ability to scatter itself under certain circumstances. Most who come across cards find them singly. Individual cards are no more or less durable than mundane cards; however, should a card be seriously damaged, it turns to dust and reforms itself whole at some other random location in the world.  


Individual cards make their presence known when combat begins. Whenever an initiative check is made, the GM randomly selects one of the cards possessed by the participants in the combat. This card then exerts an influence on the battle. A spectral icon representing the card appears on the ground in a random square adjacent to the character who owns the selected card. Anyone standing in the square containing the icon gains the influence effect listed for that card, so long as they remain in the same square as the icon. If the character moves out of the square (or the icon moves out from under the character) the influence effect ends immediately.  
Individual cards make their presence known when combat begins. Whenever an initiative check is made, the GM randomly selects one of the cards possessed by the participants in the combat. This card then exerts an influence on the battle. A spectral icon representing the card appears on the ground in a random square adjacent to the character who owns the selected card. Anyone standing in the square containing the icon gains the influence effect listed for that card, so long as they remain in the same square as the icon. If the character moves out of the square (or the icon moves out from under the character) the influence effect ends immediately.  
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== Design Notes ==
== Design Notes ==
The ''deck of many things'' has long been considered "campaign breaking", where drawing even one card might derail the whole campaign into a different direction. While many variations of the ''deck'' have tried to correct this by reducing the impact card effects, this design goes the other way. It ''encourages'' the major effects to change the whole direction of the campaign, but uses mechanics to pace the drawing of cards such that everyone will be ''expecting'' the campaign to change radically when a card is drawn. At the same time, by focussing on the individual cards as more minor magic items, it allows groups to "dabble" in using the deck without having to jump in the deep end. A GM might introduce a card or two into the game. If the players seem motivated to find other cards, then the ''deck'' can become a more major force in the campaign. If not, then the players have gained some interesting trinkets and life goes on. Should a campaign go full bore into assembling the deck, however, the point at which the ritual is completed and someone draws a card should be monumental, and an obvious turning point to all involved.
To support this, an attempt was made to have the mechanics help accelerate the search for the cards as cards are accumulated. At first, cards are likely to be found one at a time, but as the campaign becomes more serious about assembling the deck, the mechanics should help to foster clashes between groups trying to assemble the ''deck'', at which point the victor will gain all the cards of the loser.


The influence effects are not intended to be balanced with each other; some are clearly better than others. Cards with numeric ranks tend to be on par with second level spell effects. Pawns, Courts and Crowns tend to match third level spell effects. Aces are a bit stronger. Since these effects abandon you when the icon moves, their design choices tend to err on the side of being stronger. Unlike the major effects, influence effects are always constructed as a benefit; however, since the icon will move at random, this does not necessarily translate into a benefit for the card's owner or her allies.
The influence effects are not intended to be balanced with each other; some are clearly better than others. Cards with numeric ranks tend to be on par with second level spell effects. Pawns, Courts and Crowns tend to match third level spell effects. Aces are a bit stronger. Since these effects abandon you when the icon moves, their design choices tend to err on the side of being stronger. Unlike the major effects, influence effects are always constructed as a benefit; however, since the icon will move at random, this does not necessarily translate into a benefit for the card's owner or her allies.

Revision as of 00:08, 15 February 2013

This is a magic item for Pathfinder based on P.D. Magnus' Decktet. Though inspired by the deck of many things, it alters the whole concept of the deck, partially following the model used by Madness at Gardmore Abbey to make the deck a less destabilizing force, at least at first.

Aura strong (all schools; chaotic); CL 20th; Slot none; Weight

This worn fortune-teller's (and gambler's) deck bears an evocative image upon each of its forty-five cards. The deck contains six suits (in order: moons, suns, waves, leaves, wyrms and knots) with a complex structure. For each suit, there is an Ace and a Crown. Ranked between them are other cards numbered 2 through 9, each with two suits. Four Courts each have three suits and are ranked beneath Crowns. Four Pawns each have three suits as well, ranked below Courts. The Excuse has no suit or rank. Suit combinations do not occur with equal frequency. All cards also have a theme or meaning, written on the face of the card (one third represent people, one third represent places and one third represent events). Some cards appear the same when upside down, some do not.

Using the Deck

The deck of many things has long been considered "campaign breaking", where drawing even one card might derail the whole campaign into a different direction. While many variations of the deck have tried to correct this by reducing the impact of card effects, this design goes the other way, making the drawing of the card even more monumental and campaign changing; however, drawing requires a fully assembled deck and the pandemonium deck is never found intact. Instead, focus is put on individual cards. When (and if) players choose to fully assemble the deck, everyone will be expecting (even demanding) a draw from it to radically alter the campaign.

By focussing on the individual cards as more minor magic items, it allows groups to "dabble" in using the deck without having to jump in the deep end. Further, it puts the decision to upend the campaign solidly in the hands of the players. A GM might introduce a card or two into the game. If the players seem motivated to find other cards, then the deck can become a more major force in the campaign. If not, then the players have gained some interesting trinkets and life goes on. Should a campaign go full bore into assembling the deck, however, the point at which the ritual is completed and someone draws a card should be an obvious turning point to all involved. It's also possible for something in between, assembling groups of cards to gain their cumulative effects, but never finding the last card, or refusing to use the full deck even if fully assembled.

To support this, the mechanics help accelerate the search for the cards as more are accumulated. At first, cards are likely to be found one at a time, but as the campaign becomes more serious about assembling the deck, the mechanics should help to foster clashes between groups trying to assemble the deck, at which point the victor will gain all the cards of the loser.

Individual Cards

Cards of this deck are never found fully assembled, as the deck has the ability to scatter itself under certain circumstances. Most who come across cards find them singly. Individual cards are no more or less durable than mundane cards; however, should a card be seriously damaged, it turns to dust and reforms itself whole at some other random location in the world.

Individual cards make their presence known when combat begins. Whenever an initiative check is made, the GM randomly selects one of the cards possessed by the participants in the combat. This card then exerts an influence on the battle. A spectral icon representing the card appears on the ground in a random square adjacent to the character who owns the selected card. Anyone standing in the square containing the icon gains the influence effect listed for that card, so long as they remain in the same square as the icon. If the character moves out of the square (or the icon moves out from under the character) the influence effect ends immediately.

Any spell-like abilities granted by cards function with a caster level equal to your level. When an influence that grants a spell-like ability leaves a character, the character can no longer use the spell-like ability, but any instances of the spell cast while the character was under the influence remain running as per their normal duration. (In contrast, characters under an influence that gives them an ability "as if" under the effects of a spell lose that ability immediately when the influence leaves them.)

At the start of each round, the icon moves 1d4-1 squares in a random direction (roll 1d8, with 1 indicating north and the other numbers indicating compass going clockwise). If the icon would move into an obstacle (e.g. wall, the edge of a cliff, etc.), it instead just stops. Any creatures standing in final destination of the icon immediately gain the influence effect of the card.

Characters who own cards may spend a standard action attempting to force a card they own to become the influencing card. Success on a Use Magic Item check (DC 18) causes any existing influence to vanish, and a new influence icon to appear at a random square adjacent to the card owner. Any character in that square immediately gains the influence effect of the new card. Characters under the major effect of a card (see below) may attempt to manifest the influence of that card even if they don't own it. If they do possess it, they add +10 to the check.

The character who owns the influencing card may spend a move action attempting to move its icon. Success on a Use Magic Item check (DC 20) allows the character to move the icon up to 15'. Any creatures standing in the destination square immediately gain the influence effect of the card.

Cumulative Effects

As more of the cards come together, the deck gains potency. If a single character holds multiple cards, they bestow additional effects, depending on the number of cards and their suit combinations. All applicable effects from the following table apply if you owns cards that qualify. All spell-like abilities granted by the deck function with a caster level equal to your level.

card combination effect
any 6 cards You emit an aura of chaos as if you were a cleric of a chaotic deity.
any 12 cards You are constantly protected from law.
any 18 cards Your alignment shifts one step toward chaotic. You may cast magic circle of protection from law 3 times/day as a spell-like ability.
any 24 cards You may cast dispel law once per day as a spell-like ability.
any 30 cards You may cast discern location once per day as a spell-like ability, but only to locate other cards from the deck; however, see the Notoriety section, below.
any 36 cards Your alignment shifts one step toward chaotic. You may cast word of chaos once per day as a spell-like ability.
any 42 cards You may cast cloak of chaos once per day as a spell-like ability.
three moons + three suns You may cast quickened flare burst at will as a spell-like ability.
three waves + three leaves You may cast endure elements at will as a spell-like ability, which reaches to medium range.
three wyrms + three knots You may pfsrd:feats/metamagic-feats/quicken-spell-metamagic---final quickened detect chaos at will as a spell-like ability.
three moons + three wyrms You may cast quickened deathwatch at will as a spell-like ability.
three suns + three leaves You may cast defoliate at will as a spell-like ability.
three waves + three knots You may quickened detect law at will as a spell-like ability.
four pawns You may cast suggestion at will as a spell-like ability.
four courts You may cast prayer at will as a spell-like ability.
six aces You may cast true seeing on yourself at will as a spell-like ability.
six crowns You may cast scrying at will as a spell-like ability.
one card of each rank + the excuse Once per day, you may broadcast a sending which is heard by any creature who owns six or more cards. Any responses are also heard by all who heard the original sending.
moons of each rank You may cast beast shape iv twice per day as a spell-like ability.
suns of each rank You may cast sunbeam twice per day as a spell-like ability.
waves of each rank You may cast seamantle twice per day as a spell-like ability.
leaves of each rank You may cast plant shape iii twice per day as a spell-like ability.
wyrms of each rank You may cast form of the dragon ii twice per day as a spell-like ability.
knots of each rank You may cast maze once per day as a spell-like ability.

Completing the deck

Should one character assemble the complete deck, the true power of the deck reveals itself. The owner of the deck may perform an hour long ritual culminating in the owner (or someone she designates) drawing one or more cards from the deck. If the one drawing is lawful, they may draw only one card. If the one drawing is chaotic, they may draw up to three cards. Otherwise the one drawing may draw up to two cards. Regardless of who draws, the owner of the deck chooses one of the drawn cards, and the major effect listed for that card activates (targeting the one who drew it). Major effects are permanent and cannot be eliminated without powerful magic, such as a wish or miracle.

Afterwards, each card drawn disintegrates and reforms at a random location (as mentioned above). The owner of the deck immediately becomes aware of the location of the card that was activated (but not the other cards drawn, if any). No longer in possession of a complete deck, the owner must track down the lost cards in order to complete the deck and draw again. Note that, since the new cards are not technically the same object as the cards that were drawn, the deck's owner has never handled the new cards, which prevents divination spells that require such handling from locating the new cards.

Some major effects also cause additional cards from the deck to vanish and reappear elsewhere. This may happen in one of three ways. If the deck divides, undrawn cards are placed at random into four separate piles, as evenly as possible. One pile, chosen at random, remains where it is. The other piles teleport to random locations within 100 miles. If the deck is distributed to a specific group, the cards are randomly allocated to the creatures in the group mentioned in the test, as evenly as possible. If the deck scatters, all undrawn cards teleport to random locations within 2,000 miles.

Consciousness

Created to spread chaos, the deck possesses a rudimentary consciousness which helps further that aim. This consciousness wants the cards to be found and used, so whenever cards transfer to new locations, they will never wind up anywhere too obscure or unaccessible (e.g. surrounded by solid rock, the bottom of unclimbable ravine, etc.). Instead, they tend to appear in places where they might get found eventually (e.g. the bottom of a chest in an attic, the pocket of a rarely used coat, tucked into a library book, a family crypt, etc.). The deck is most content when its presence sows discord or upsets the status quo, and favors getting cards into the hands of destabilizing forces (like your average group of PCs).

When adjudicating matters related to the deck, keep the desires of this consciousness in mind. Take the Windfall card, for example, which makes a character an heir to a noble title. While this might result in a character taking up the reins of power peacefully, the deck would much prefer that a full on civil war broke out instead. Along the same lines, the deck wants people to fight over its cards when trying to unify the deck.

The Notoriety

The deck uses a subtle ability (called the Notoriety) to spread information to further its own ends. This ability is under the control of the GM and works in four ways:

  • Any time a card's major effect is activated, the GM should read and apply the listed Notoriety section for that card when planning the future of the campaign. The Notoriety will usually inform some third parties about what has happened, though perhaps not in a totally truthful manner. It may, occasionally, provide effects of its own. Generally, the parties gaining this information will be the most motivated to act on it, either threatened by the results of the major effect or sensing a new opportunity for themselves. GMs should carefully consider what those contacted by the Notoriety do with the information they receive and how their reactions will cross paths with the PCs. The GM should feel free to alter how the deck uses the Notoriety to fit her own campaign, keeping its goals in mind.
  • When a single character gains control of 15 or more cards (one third of the deck), everyone who sees that character will know, at least subconsciously, that the character owns a sizable portion of the pandemonium deck. GMs should carefully consider how people react to this knowledge, taking their alignment and other motivations into a account. Some may want to steal it. Some may want it as far away as possible. Some may not care at all.
  • Although it prefers to rely on luck and happenstance, the deck may rarely help expose a card that has been hidden for too long by placing an unconscious suggestion in the mind of someone nearby that might result in the card being found—something like "maybe I'll get around to cleaning the attic today" or "that jacket I haven't worn in years is back in style" or "ransacking the old man's wine cellar will be profitable".
  • As mentioned above, anyone gathering two thirds of the deck can use discern location to find other cards. Any time this ability is used, the Notoriety informs anyone who owns six or more cards of the result. Other types of divination (including discern location spells from other sources) do not trigger the Notoriety in this way.

The Notoriety works in very subtle ways, creating rumors, dreams, gossip, speculation reported as fact, gut reactions or even minor shifts in memory. Often, creatures who gain information from the Notoriety wouldn't even be able to tell you how they came by the information. They just know. Maybe they've always known. The Notoriety is the proverbial "they" when people start tall tales with "they say that…". No one confirms it, but people believe it anyway, at least enough to act on it.

Card Effects

Author

Author
Author

Rank/Suits Two (moons, knots)

Influence Effect You can read, speak and understand any language, as if under the influence of a tongues spell. You also may cast command at will as a spell-like ability.

Major Effect (Neutral) On the first new moon of each season, you may make a wish on behalf of someone you hadn't met before drawing the card or since you made your last wish. The person for whom you are wishing must have articulated a desire for the wish to you in some way.

Notoriety Rumors spread that the character who drew the card grants wishes, but most of them are coupled with untruthful riders about what the character wants (or must have) in order to grant one. For example, a story starts to circulate in the village the character just entered that the first person who presents her with a cup filled with the blood of a sacrificed virgin will be granted a wish. Or that wishes are only granted to those who truly hate the character's race. Or that whoever sleeps with the character under a full moon automatically gets their wish.

Bard

Bard
Bard

Rank/Suit Crown (suns)

Influence Effect You gain a +4 luck bonus to charisma.

Major Effect (Good) You gain an alter ego as a notorious bard. Create a character with different gender and race than your main character, but with the same number of character levels (all taken in bard levels). You (with input from the GM) may outfit the bard with 40,000gp worth of equipment. Three times per day, you may spend one minute transforming from your main character to the bard, or vice-versa. The two characters are aware of each other, but maintain separate personalities, motivations and memories. Personal possessions are tracked separately, and disappear when the other character takes over. Experience gained by either character is applied to both. If you are already a bard, this new bard is a rival and you cannot stand each other.

If the new moon rises and you have not switched since the rise of the last new moon, you automatically transform into your other self, and may not switch back until the next new moon.

Notoriety Whenever the character who drew the card arrives in a new town or other major area (either as herself or the bard), the Notoriety plants memories in key residents of the location of some past trouble or scandal the bard caused. Perhaps the bard seduced a local noble, or performed a song that insulted the local religion or stole from the local blacksmith guild.

Battle

Battle
Battle

Rank/Suits Four (wyrms, knots)

Influence Effect You may cleave as if you had the feat. If you already have cleave, you may great cleave as if you had the feat. If you have that feat as well, you no longer take the -2 AC penalty when you use it.

Major Effect (Bad) The deck divides. Whenever you, or a faction to which you have sworn allegiance, is involved in open conflict involving more than 100 people, your side always loses (though you may survive). A "faction" refers to some group, organization, army, nation or other body that might enter into conflict with similar factions. If you somehow manage to swear allegiance to more than one conflicting faction, all of them loose (either through mutual destruction or by one gaining a victory that costs it more than it gains). Any time you swear allegiance to a faction, the deck places a geas on you (as a level 20 caster) to honor your pledge until you are released from it. When your faction loses a battle, they may release you from your pledge, but are under no obligation to do so.

Notoriety A prophesy surfaces that any military force which claims the allegiance of the "chosen one" (who bears an uncanny resemblance to the character who drew the card) cannot be defeated. Those who learn of this prophesy may make tempting offers or apply terrible leverage to gain the character's allegiance.

Betrayal

Betrayal
Betrayal

Rank/Suits Eight (wyrms, knots)

Influence Effect You may cast confess at will as a spell-like ability. If cast on an ally, add +4 to the save DC.

Major Effect (Bad) If you die, all allied player characters in your party gain 10,000xp each. If the lethal blow was dealt by an ally (not necessarily the other PCs), this award increases to enough experience to advance each PC in your party to the next level, or 25,000xp, whichever is higher. Should you be raised or otherwise brought back from the dead, this xp is lost. If you own the deck when you die, it is distributed to your main allies (the largest is given to the ally who delivered the killing strike, if any).

Notoriety If the character who drew the card does anything counter to the interests of another PC, the Notoriety sees to it that that PC finds out about it. Also, animal companions, familiars and the like of all the PCs become convinced that if they arrange the death of their master, they will be set free.

Borderland

Borderland
Borderland

Rank/Suits Pawn (waves, leaves, wyrms)

Influence Effect You flicker back and forth between the Material Plane and the Ethereal Plane, as if under the effects of a blink spell.

Major Effect (Neutral) You become a native of the Ethereal Plane, gaining the Ethereal special ability. You can shift from the Ethereal Plane to the Material Plane as a free action, and shift back again as a move action (or as part of a move action), but you may remain in the Material Plane no more a number of consecutive rounds equal to your Constitution score. You may take a single willing or helpless creature with you when switching planes. You also gain the ability to control phase spiders, casting dominate monster once per day as a spell-like ability, provided the target is a phase spider.

Notoriety Rumors circulate among natives to the Ethereal Plane (such as xill) regarding the character who drew the card. The nature of these rumors is up the the GM but might include things like: "the character intends to conquer the ethereal plane", "the character will save us from our enemies", "the character is destined to lead us in war against the Material Plane", etc. In addition, ethereal natives within three miles of the character are filled with an odd restlessness which encourages them to visit the Material Plane. It doesn't take long for those who travel with the character to gain a reputation for attracting ethereal mischief.

Calamity

Calamity
Calamity

Rank/Suit Crown (wyrms)

Influence Effect You gain a +4 luck bonus to strength.

Major Effect (Bad) In 1d4 days, you will witness a massive natural catastrophe which threatens to wipe out all life on your world. Perhaps a great rock falls from the sky, igniting massive fires and kicking up dust that blots out the sun. Maybe volcanoes erupt, flooding the land with molten rock and poisonous air. Maybe quakes drop the earth, allowing the ocean to rush over the land. Maybe fire ejected from the sun scorches the half the surface. Maybe a rift to another plane starts swallowing the world. Whatever occurs, you and all present at the drawing ceremony will miraculously survive the initial effects, left to make your way in the broken world.

Notoriety Any survivor who invests any sort of trust in the character who drew the card will, sooner or later, discover that the character was responsible for the calamity.

Castle

Castle
Castle

Rank/Suits Seven (suns, knots)

Influence Effect You gain a +5 luck bonus to AC, but cannot voluntarily move from your current square.

Major Effect (Good) You gain a personal demiplane, as per a permanent create greater demiplane spell cast by a level 20 caster. This plane has the following features, which cannot be changed (though other features can be):

  • Alignment: the plane is mildly chaotic.
  • Structure: the plane is a castle (total size 400 10-ft. cubes) surrounded by a moat, itself surrounded by a ring of grey grassland. A drawbridge connects the castle and the grassland, spanning the moat. The grassland fades into the mists of astral space.
  • Portal: A gate connects the location where the card was drawn to somewhere inside the castle.

Notoriety Displaced refugees of the outer planes hear stories of this new plane, convinced it will welcome them with open arms. Displaced refugees of the Material Plane hear legends of a magic gate that will take them to paradise.

Cave

Cave
Cave

Rank/Suits Seven (waves, wyrms)

Influence Effect You become isolated from the rest of the combat. Targeting you with an attack or spell requires a successful Will save (DC 18). Likewise, you must make a similar save to target an opponent with an attack or spell. Untargeted effects are not affected.

Major Effect (Bad) You, and all present at the drawing ritual, are teleported to random locations within a cavern somewhere in the middle a megadungeon (probably, but not necessarily, on your home world or plane). You arrive naked, with your possessions scattered at random into the megadungeon. Others retain anything they were holding and any armor, clothing or jewelry, but other possessions (bags, packs, sheathed weapons, etc.) are similarly scattered. The deck divides, but all four stacks appear at random in the megadungeon. For the next two days, any intelligent creature in the megadungeon may cast locate object at will as a spell-like ability.

Notoriety Intelligent denizens of the megadungeon become vaguely aware that the group's possessions have newly arrived in the dungeon. Some inherit intimate knowledge of the details of some of the items, as if having firsthand observation of them.

Chance Meeting

Chance Meeting
Chance Meeting

Rank/Suits Seven (moons, leaves)

Influence Effect You may always make an attack of opportunity when the chance presents itself, regardless of how many other opportunity attacks you have made already in the round.

Major Effect (Good) You suddenly and vividly remember a seemingly innocuous encounter with a typical stranger (for example, a merchant who sold you something or a serving girl), with the realization that the stranger wasn't mortal at all, but a deity (or other powerful being of similar alignment to you) in disguise. Something transpired during that encounter which caused the deity to taking a shining to you. You and your GM will determine when this occurred and who the deity is (if necessary, make up a new scene and insert it in some logical place in the past). Now revealed, the deity will make a point to visit you once a month for a quick chat.

Notoriety Priests of the deity instantly recognize the character who drew the card as favored by their god. Rumors may circulate about the regular meetings and may result in surveillance or worse, as the faithful try to see divinity in the flesh. Enemies of the deity eventually become aware that the character is favored.

Consul

Consul
Consul

Rank/Suits Court (moons, waves, knots)

Influence Effect You may spend a standard action to heal all ability damage to your Wisdom, Dexterity and Intelligence. You may spend a standard action to heal all ability drain to either your Wisdom, Dexterity or Intelligence.

Major Effect (Neutral) A powerful outsider appears and introduces itself to you. It claims to be an emissary from its home plane, sent to study the Material Plane, and has chosen to focus its study on you. It will remain by your side, watching all you do, asking questions about events and people around it. It is friendly and will gladly assist you, if asked, but will be largely oblivious to any collateral damage or effects its presence causes. No amount of argument will persuade the outsider from leaving you alone, not even banishment (which automatically fails, though wish or miracle will work). If killed, a replacement is sent within 1d6 days (either the original resurrected or a new outsider sent to carry on the original's work). The type outsider depends on your alignment. If you are good, the emissary is a :bestiary/monster-listings/outsiders/azata/azata-brijidine|brijidine]]. If you are evil, the emissary is a marilith. Otherwise, it is a keketar.

Notoriety Given the nature of the outsiders which may appear, the Notoriety need not spend any effort spreading news that the character who drew the card now has the emissary attached to her him: the outsider's behavior will likely do that on its own. Should the character or her allies kill the emissary, however, other (possibly stronger) outsiders of the same type will hear of it.

Darkness

Darkness
Darkness

Rank/Suits Nine (waves, wyrms)

Influence Effect You gain darkvision to 60'. If you already have darkvision, its range extends by 60'.

Major Effect (Bad) You become cursed, loosing any darkvision she might have had and constantly surrounded by darkness, as if the center of a deeper darkness spell. As with all major effects, only powerful magic such wish or miracle can lift this curse; remove curse and break enchantment have no effect.


Utterdark, expanding outward

Notoriety

Desert

Desert
Desert

Rank/Suits Two (suns, wyrms)

Influence Effect You gain a +3 luck bonus to Will saves.

Major Effect (Bad) You begin to dehydrate, even if you do not normally require water. No amount of drinking can counter this effect. If you reach zero hit points, you immediately gain the dread mummy template and the dehydration effect stops.

Notoriety

Diplomat

Diplomat
Diplomat

Rank/Suits Eight (moons, suns)

Influence Effect You gain the ability to cast charm person at will, adding a +4 bonus to the save DC.

Major Effect (Good) The deck scatters. You gain the one-time ability to issue a single command to any creature in the multiverse and have the order obeyed. The target is affected as if by the spell dominate monster, and even orders for the target to kill itself are followed. Any creature targeted by this effect knows that it is acting against its will, and knows the identity and location of you. Immortal creatures cannot effectively kill themselves, and the act only causes them considerable but fleeting pain. Additionally, creatures with the ability to grant such boons typically also possess the power to revoke them, and do so as soon as the command releases them. The GM ultimately decides what this command can accomplish. You may use this card's effect whenever you wish, but may only use it once.

Notoriety Whenever

Discovery

Discovery
Discovery

Rank/Suits Five (suns, waves)

Influence Effect You know the exact identity and location of all cards from the pandemonium deck within 300', even if contained within extra-dimensional spaces or protected from divination.

Major Effect (Good) This card grants you the one-time ability to call upon an omniscient spirit to fully answer any question or solve any single puzzle. Whether the information revealed can be effectively acted upon is another question entirely. You may use this card's effect whenever you wish, but only once.

Notoriety

End

End
End

Rank/Suit Crown (leaves)

Influence Effect You gain a +4 luck bonus to constitution.

Major Effect (Bad) Your body disintegrates. All that remains are your items and a glowing gem containing your soul. This gem is worth an amount of gp equal to 2,500 × your level. A resurrection or stronger spell is required to restore you, and doing so destroys the gem.

Notoriety

Excuse

Excuse
Excuse

Rank/Suits None (none)

Influence Effect Immediately after you make any die roll and the result is revealed, you may "accidentally" jostle the die and use that as an excuse make the roll over again. The rerolled result must be accepted, even if it is worse than the original.

Major Effect (Neutral) The deck scatters if this card is drawn as part of the ritual, even if a different card is selected to take effect. The selected card does function, but the deck still scatters. If the Excuse is selected to take effect, it grants you the one-time ability to undo one past choice or regrettable action (but not the drawing of the Excuse). The fabric of reality is unraveled and respun, potentially restoring creatures to life or altering the course of history, depending on how you acted and how you wish he would have acted. The player chooses what situation he would have acted differently in and the GM determines how reality changes to reflect that act. The change primarily affects you, affecting others as little as possible. You may use this card's effect whenever you wish, but only once.

Notoriety Rumors circulate of someone who cheated gods of Fate. Gods of Fate not amused.

Forest

Forest
Forest

Rank/Suits Five (moons, leaves)

Influence Effect Only shifting vertical sections of your body can be seen at any one time, as if under the effects of blur.

Major Effect (Neutral) You receive two visions and the knowledge that one vision is true and the other false, though you do not know which is which. The GM determines the specifics of these visions. The visions may be views of the past, present, or future; cryptic omens; or total fantasies.

Notoriety

Harvest

Harvest
Harvest

Rank/Suits Pawn (moons, suns, leaves)

Influence Effect You can sift through the surface thoughts of those around you, as if under the effects of a seek thoughts spell.

Major Effect (Good) You gain the one-time ability to steal permanent hit points from any targets you can see. When activated, you gain a number of permanent hit points sufficient to set your hit point total as if you had rolled the maximum value on every hit dice. One or more targets you can see permanently lose this many hit points, distributed as you choose, so long as any given target does not drop below their minimum possible hit points (as if rolling the minimum value on all hit dice). This transfer has as little impact on the target's temporary hit point total as possible (meaning that "spent" hit points—damage points taken—are transferred first).

Notoriety

Huntress

Huntress
Huntress

Rank/Suit Crown (moons)

Influence Effect You gain a +4 luck bonus to wisdom.

Major Effect (Neutral) All attacks you make that threaten a critical hit are automatically confirmed. Likewise, all attacks made against you that threaten a critical hit are also automatically confirmed.

Notoriety

Island

Island
Island

Rank/Suits Court (suns, waves, wyrms)

Influence Effect You may spend a standard action to heal all ability damage to your Charisma, Dexterity and Strength. You may spend a standard action to heal all ability drain to either your Charisma, Dexterity or Strength.

Major Effect (Neutral) Your Charisma score becomes your new Dexterity score. Your old Dexterity score becomes your new Strength score. Your old Strength score becomes your new Charisma score. You then add +2 to two of these ability scores.

Notoriety

Journey

Journey
Journey

Rank/Suits Three (moons, waves)

Influence Effect You may spend a full action to instantly relocate to an unoccupied square within 100'. This works like dimension door, except you may not take passengers.

Major Effect (Good) Your favorite item—preferably a magic weapon—becomes intelligent. Use the rules for intelligent items to randomly generate the item's abilities. If you have no items, an intelligent item soon falls into your possession.

Notoriety

Knot

Knot
Knot

Rank/Suit Ace (knots)

Influence Effect You receive a +6 luck bonus on all skill checks.

Major Effect (Bad) The deck divides. You are taken captive as if by an imprisonment spell with no saving throw. You retain all possessions on your person, except the pandemonium deck. All beings in the world become magically aware that a) you are imprisoned and b) anyone who frees you will be able to place a geas on you and be granted a limited wish.

Notoriety

Leaves

Leaves
Leaves

Rank/Suit Ace (leaves)

Influence Effect You gain immunity to bleed, paralysis, poison and sleep effects.

Major Effect (Good) You are granted a single miracle by either a deity you favor or a god of luck or fortune. This miracle functions similarly to the spell miracle when it comes to affecting rules and statistics, but can also change reality in ways outside the bounds of the spell's effects—such as rerouting a river or ending a war. The GM decides what the miracle can and cannot accomplish, as well as how much of an interest the deity takes in you afterward.

Notoriety

Light Keeper

Light Keeper
Light Keeper

Rank/Suits Pawn (suns, waves, knots)

Influence Effect You can see magical auras, as if under the effects of arcane sight.

Major Effect (Neutral) You gain a reputation as a prophet. At least once a day, when your conversation can be overheard in public, at least one eavesdropper will be filled with the conviction that one of your comments, however innocuous, is the key to some great life-changing truth. If you engage in any sort of public oratory, 1d10 people in the crowd will be similarly affected. Unfortunately, you have no control over which statements will be latched onto by the listeners. Affected listeners will largely rearrange their life in order to pursue this truth. Some will try to follow you anywhere you goes. Others will openly worship you and do anything you ask (other than stop following you). As the number of followers increases, debates will likely arise among the faithful, as most of them will be reacting to different, possibly contradictory, statements made by you, which may even give rise to violence and schisms. Religious and political leaders may also react to a growing cult in their midst.

Notoriety

Lunatic

Lunatic
Lunatic

Rank/Suits Six (moons, waves)

Influence Effect You become enraged, as if under the effects of a rage spell.

Major Effect (Bad) You gain the lycanthrope template, using a dire animal as the template's base animal. As with all major effects, typical remedies, such as remove disease or heal in this case, have no affect on this affliction.

Notoriety

Market

Market
Market

Rank/Suits Six (leaves, knots)

Influence Effect You may increase one combat score at the expense of another, as if you had the power attack, combat expertise or deadly aim feats. If you make use of a feat you already have, you may calculate the penalty and bonus provided by the feat (but not the attack roll itself) as if your base attack bonus was eight points higher.

Major Effect (Neutral) Any time you dream, you may choose to enter the Dream Market, a place where all non-unique magic items are bought and sold at a 10% discount. You may access all of your real world wealth and possessions to buy and sell in the Dream Market and any transactions made translate into the real world once you wake. Any time you enters the market, ten random sleeping people within 50 miles of the you have vivid dreams where they see and hear everything you do in the market. These people will remember the dreams, and may seek out you because of them.

Notoriety

Merchant

Merchant
Merchant

Rank/Suits Nine (leaves, knots)

Influence Effect You may throw a gem at a target as a ranged touch attack. If the gem hits, it disappears in a flash of light. For every 50gp of value the gem had, you may adjust the rolled initiative score of the target up or down by one.

Major Effect (Neutral) A mysterious entity known as the Generation Merchant appears, offering you any treasure you wish in return for years of your life. You have up to four choices:

  • You accept. You choose to age a number of age categories, taking all the ability score penalties for the new age, but gaining none of the benefits. For each age category you advance, however, you gains 20,000gp worth of credit with the Generation Merchant, which can be spent on any non-unique magic items. Any credit you do not spend is lost. Years taken by the merchant cannot be restored by any means. Characters who are immortal or cannot die of old age are not offered this choice.
  • You transfer the offer to someone you knows (either out of good will or as the result of some side bargain). The recipient must then make one of the four choices himself.
  • You counteroffer magic items in exchange for life. You chooses to regress a number of age categories, taking all the ability score benefits for the new age, but gaining none of the penalties. For each age category you retrogrades, however, you must pay 30,000 gp worth of magic items to the Generation Merchant (who keeps any excess value). Characters who are immortal or cannot die of old age are not offered this choice.
  • You decline. The Generation Merchant berates you for wasting his time, steals a year of your life and disappears in a puff of acrid yellow smoke.

Notoriety

Mill

Mill
Mill

Rank/Suits Eight (waves, leaves)

Influence Effect You may use the disarm, steal or sunder combat maneuvers without provoking an attack of opportunity, as if you had the Improved Disarm, Improved Steal or Improved Sunder feat. If you already have the feat for the maneuver you use, instead add +4 on the combat maneuver roll.

Major Effect (Neutral) You gain one-time ability to open any one door, lock, set of bindings, or other locked barrier. This includes magical gates or portals that have specific requirements to activate, no matter how epic. You may use this card's effect whenever you wish, but only once.

Notoriety

Moon

Moon
Moon

Rank/Suit Ace (moons)

Influence Effect If you cast a spell of up to 4th level, it does not consume one of your spells per day.

Major Effect (Good) You are granted a single wish. This wish functions similarly to the spell wish when it comes to affecting rules and statistics, but can also change reality in ways outside the bounds of the spell's effects—such as rerouting a river or ending a war. The GM decides what the wish can and cannot accomplish.

Notoriety

Mountain

Mountain
Mountain

Rank/Suits Four (moons, suns)

Influence Effect You gain a +3 luck bonus to Fortitude saves.

Major Effect (Neutral) The next time you are reduced to –10 hit points, you are instantly restored to full hit points. If your are killed by an effect that slays you without dealing hit point damage (such as by disintegrate), the effect fails to kill you and you are restored to full hit points. If you are killed by a hostile environment (such as a lava flow or when teleporting to a dangerous plane), you are transported to your last safe location and restored to full hit points. This card does not save you from effects that would permanently disable you, like petrification.

Notoriety

Origin

Origin
Origin

Rank/Suits Two (waves, leaves)

Influence Effect You gain a +3 luck bonus to Reflex saves.

Major Effect (Good) The GM chooses one of your enemies. This enemy has a complete change of heart and now favors you.

Notoriety

Pact

Pact
Pact

Rank/Suits Nine (moons, suns)

Influence Effect Any spells you cast gain a +1 enhancement bonus to the DC of any saving throws against the spell, and can be cast as if a particular metamagic feat was applied to it (without increasing the spell level or casting time). The metamagic available changes randomly each time the icon moves, but is one of: Enlarge Spell, Extend Spell, Intensified Spell, Piercing Spell, Silent Spell or Still Spell.

Major Effect (Good) You gain the ability to summon an outsider of your alignment once per day. This outsider must be of a CR equal to or less than your level and serves for a number of rounds equal to your level.

ABILITY TO BRAND PEOPLE, granting them eternal health (or something), but add ways to exploit the brand.

Notoriety

Painter

Painter
Painter

Rank/Suits Three (suns, knots)

Influence Effect Each time this card gains influence over you, its icon bathes you in light of a random color (roll 1d8), providing you with a specific ability:

  • White: Fast Healing 2
  • Red: Fire Resistance/20
  • Orange: Acid Resistance/20
  • Yellow: Electricity Resistance/20
  • Green: Damage Resistance 5/-
  • Blue: Cold Resistance/20
  • Indigo: Immunity to mind-affecting attacks
  • Violet: Sonic Resistance/30

Major Effect (Good) You become immune to one energy type of your choice, but gains vulnerability to another energy type of the GM's choice.

Notoriety

Penitent

Penitent
Penitent

Rank/Suits Six (suns, wyrms)

Influence Effect You may cast paladin's sacrifice at will as a spell-like ability.

Major Effect (Bad) Your most powerful, most valuable, or favorite magic item (GM's choice) manifests a curse. Roll on Table: Common Item Curses to generate this effect, rerolling results for specific items.

Notoriety

Rite

Rite
Rite

Rank/Suits Court (moons, leaves, wyrms)

Influence Effect You may spend a standard action to heal all ability damage to your Wisdom, Constitution and Strength. You may spend a standard action to heal all ability drain to either your Wisdom, Constitution or Strength.

Major Effect (Neutral) Your Wisdom score becomes your new Constitution score. Your old Constitution score becomes your new Strength score. Your old Strength score becomes your new Wisdom score. You then add +2 to two of these ability scores.

Notoriety

Sailor

Sailor
Sailor

Rank/Suits Four (waves, leaves)

Influence Effect You may cast gust of wind at will as a spell-like ability.

Major Effect (Good) You become a voyager on the inner and outer planes, gaining the following spell-like abilities, usable at will: ethereal jaunt, astral projection, plane shift. When using the plane shift ability to reach a location outside the Prime Material Plane you have seen before, she may make a Knowledge (Planes) skill check (DC 25) to arrive 0-300 feet of the desired spot.

Notoriety

Savage

Savage
Savage

Rank/Suits Three (leaves, wyrms)

Influence Effect You grow a pair of claws, which provide two primary natural attacks that deal 1d4 points of damage (1d3 if you are Small). These claws disappear the instant you are no longer under the influence of this card. If you already have claws, instead you may attack with them as if you were the target of a natural rhythm spell.

Major Effect (Bad) A powerful evil outsider takes notice of you and sets plans in motion to destroy you. Hot anger, jealousy, and envy are but a few of the possible motivational forces for the enmity. The enmity of the outsider can't be ended until one of the parties has been slain. Determine the outsider randomly, and assume that it attacks you (or plagues your life in some way).

Notoriety

Sea

Sea
Sea

Rank/Suit Crown (waves)

Influence Effect You gain a +4 luck bonus to dexterity.

Major Effect (Neutral) You gain the amphibious special quality. Twice per day, if you are totally submerged in salt water, you may transfer yourself and others to any other point in that same continuous body of water. This is a supernatural ability that behaves similar to a dimension door spell, but replacing the range and allowing you to bring the equivalent of one Medium creature per character level.

Notoriety

Soldier

Soldier
Soldier

Rank/Suits Five (wyrms, knots)

Influence Effect You gain a +2 morale bonus on attack rolls, saves, and skill checks, as if under a heroism spell.

Major Effect (Bad) Upon drawing this card, 1d6 exact duplicates of you appear within a 20-mile radius. These duplicates have an alignment opposite to yours and oppose your goals.

Notoriety

Sun

Sun
Sun

Rank/Suit Ace (suns)

Influence Effect When you cast divine spells your effective caster level is increased by three.

Major Effect (Good) You gain exactly enough experience to advance to the next level, or 50,000xp, whichever is higher.

Notoriety

Watchman

Watchman
Watchman

Rank/Suits Pawn (moons, wyrms, knots)

Influence Effect You can see any objects or beings that are invisible within your range of vision, as if under the effects of see invisibility.

Major Effect (Bad) The deck divides. You immediately gain the ghost template (with the Fatal Fate variation), becoming incorporeal and losing possession of all physical items (including the deck), tasked with defending and assisting the "card leader": whoever controls the most cards in the deck. If one individual gains more cards than anyone else, you immediately know the identity and location of that individual and must travel to them at best possible speed. Every day that passes without the card leader finding a new card inflicts one hit point of damage on you, which cannot be healed until the card leader finds a new card. This damage remains even if you are rejuvinated, but is healed automatically once a card is found. If all of your hit points are taken in this way, you are destroyed permanently. If the card leader controls the entire deck, no more hit points are lost.

If the card leader owns the Watchman card, any mind-affecting attacks you makes on the card leader gain a +4 bonus to their save DC.

Should the Watchman card be selected in the drawing ritual, you lose the ghost template become corporeal again, while the individual drawing the card becomes the new ghostly watchman.

GM's should be aware that the existence of this card makes it possible (but not guaranteed) that one ghostly watchman already exists before this card is ever drawn in play. Such a ghost can be used to introduce plot elements, or in other ways, during campaigns involving the deck.

Notoriety

Wave

Wave
Wave

Rank/Suit Ace (waves)

Influence Effect You gain evasion, as per the rogue class ability. If you already have evasion, instead gain improved evasion, as per the rogue talent or monk ability. If you already have improved evasion, you automatically succeed on Reflex saves against an attacks that normally deal half damage on a successful save.

Major Effect (Bad) A wave of pure chaos engulfs both you and the deck. The deck is scattered. You and everything you carry are destroyed (artifacts excepted). Your mind and soul are grafted into the body of an elder kraken in the largest body of water on your world. All of your stats and abilities are replaced with the kraken's stat block, but you are in control of the kraken's body and actions. While you inhabit the kraken, you gain regeneration 20 (sonic) and the spell-like abilities to cast tsunami three times per day and transmute rock to mud at will.

Apart from somehow getting others to cast a wish or miracle to restore you, the only escape from inhabiting the kraken is to destroy. If you manage to make five coastal cities uninhabitable, the effect ends: the kraken dissolves, leaving your original form behind, naked, but otherwise the same as when the effect started.

Notoriety

Windfall

Windfall
Windfall

Rank/Suit Crown (knots)

Influence Effect You gain a +4 luck bonus to intelligence.

Major Effect (Good) You gain 20,000 gp worth of gems and jewelry. Within 1d8 weeks, evidence is made public proving you have the most legitimate claim to a specific noble title. The GM will determine the nature of the title, including who might currently hold it.

Notoriety

Window

Window
Window

Rank/Suits Court (suns, leaves, knots)

Influence Effect You may spend a standard action to heal all ability damage to your Charisma, Constitution and Intelligence. You may spend a standard action to heal all ability drain to either your Charisma, Constitution or Intelligence.

Major Effect (Neutral) Your Charisma score becomes your new Constitution score. Your old Constitution score becomes your new Intelligence score. Your old Intelligence score becomes your new Charisma score. You then add +2 to two of these ability scores.

Notoriety

Wyrm

Wyrm
Wyrm

Rank/Suit Ace (wyrms)

Influence Effect When you cast arcane spells your effective caster level is increased by three.

Major Effect (Bad) You transform into a true dragon of your same alignment, replacing its stats and abilities for your own. Your dragon age is determined by finding the lowest CR rating for that type of dragon that is higher than your character level. (For example, a 15th level CN character might become a old cloud dragon or an very old magma dragon, which are both CR 16). You retain your possessions, but if your new body cannot make use of them, they fall to the ground beside you. At the same time, an amulet bearing the likeness of your new draconic form materializes around the next of someone else present at the drawing ritual (determined randomly, though any with an amulet slot already filled are skipped). Whoever wears this amulet gains the ability to command your actions, as if by dominate monster, without any possibility for a saving throw, ever. Should the amulet be destroyed, you are no longer dominated, but revert back to your original form. Other than a wish or miracle, destroying the amulet requires breath from three dragons, who must each have different types of breath weapon, none of which is shared with your type of breath weapon. Should you die as a dragon, the amulet turns to dust.

Notoriety Any true dragons who see either the amulet or the character who drew the card in dragon form become instantly aware of the connection between the two and how they were created. While many dragons will react with the same sort of vitriol they feel towards Orbs of Dragon Mastery, some will feel that the character is not a "real" dragon and have no compunction about using the amulet themselves.

Destruction

If the entire deck is assembled and then the cards ordered (first by rank, then by the first suit on the card), a dispel chaos spell will cause the deck to disintegrate forever.

Design Notes

The influence effects are not intended to be balanced with each other; some are clearly better than others. Cards with numeric ranks tend to be on par with second level spell effects. Pawns, Courts and Crowns tend to match third level spell effects. Aces are a bit stronger. Since these effects abandon you when the icon moves, their design choices tend to err on the side of being stronger. Unlike the major effects, influence effects are always constructed as a benefit; however, since the icon will move at random, this does not necessarily translate into a benefit for the card's owner or her allies.

In some cases, suits are linked to abilities (moons=wis, suns=cha, waves=dex, leaves=con, wyrms=str, knots=int).

Major effects were designed to have an even mix of "good", "bad" and "neutral" for the character, 15 effects of each kind. This is somewhat subjective, however, so your mileage may vary, particularly since even the good effects come with some Notoriety. Wyrms are almost always bad. Cards with what the author of Decktet calls "sympathetic combinations" are almost always good. Generally, "neutral" effects mix things that are good and bad for you, but are almost always more good than bad. The "bad" in some effects (particularly the drawbacks of the neutral effects) involve reactions of others to the effect and/or providing knowledge about the effect to others. This is completely intentional. The main design idea is that life for you might get better or it might worse, but it will always get more complicated, often by pointing the agendas of other people at you.