![]() ![]() They’re not perfect – I’d adjust the frequency of many items, especially pesky common items like potions of giant strength and dust of dryness – but they’re usable, unlike the monetary charts. ![]() On the whole, these charts are pretty good. The DMG has 6 pages of tables to roll on to figure out what magic item you find. Random monetary treasure is well and good, but what about random magic items? As I’m working, I’m starting to feel that I’m leaving the job half-done. If you read my blog, though, you know that there’s one thing I love above all else, and that’s uncontrolled scope creep. I’ve been talking about building a D&D 5e random treasure generator on one page (sort of a companion to 5e Monster Manual on one page): a better, more granular version of the DMG treasure tables that assign coins, gems, and so on. ![]()
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