Sidhe and Unsidhe Descriptions
Defining Sylvans and Fairyfolk
From the
Grimoire Sylvanus,
Sylvan Clan - Sidhe,
Sylvan Clan - Unsidhe, and
Creature_List /
The Creature List
'Fey Feature, Part I' from
http://www.wizards.com/dnd/
The Seelie Court's Turning of the Seasons
Celebrations
(for the Sidhe, pr. "shee")
By Gwendolyn F. M. Kestrel and Faith M. Price
The fey thrive on parties and galas, seeing them as a chance not just to break up the monotony that can come with a near-eternal lifespan, but as a tool in their endless quest for social status. Celebrations offer opportunities to flaunt connections and curry the favor of those in power. Hence, the fey celebrate a myriad of festivals throughout the year.
Much of the fey's power and longevity derives from the living energy found within nature on the Faerie Plane that serves as their home. Because of this, festivals often serve as a reminder of their dependence upon the flora and fauna in which they dwell, as well as upon the heavenly bodies that control life cycles. While many festivals are newly created and draw mainly local fey, celebrating the Turning of the Seasons is a Seelie Court tradition from millennia past. These festivals draw fey from every plane and region.
Summer Solstice
While an occasional absence from the lesser solstice and equinox celebrations is vaguely frowned upon, no fey of any good standing in the court would wish to miss the spectacle of the Summer Solstice, a month-long celebration that begins on the longest day of the year. It commences with an elaborately choreographed dance that tells the history of the Seelie queens, starting with the most ancient of queens, the Queen of Original Illumination. This opening ceremony can take up to five days, and is held on the grounds surrounding the court of
the present Seelie Queen.
Following the dance, fey sponsors bring forth their protégés to perform for the court. Stories are told, poems recited, and ballads of great beauty sung, all honoring either the queen or nature. After the queen has listened and seen all the players, she bestows a prize on her favorite. The artist may receive a blessed pen or voiceenhancing bauble, but the fey sponsor receives the true honor and her prize is far greater. To her, the queen gives a garland of starfire. Each flower on the garland is made from the essence of the stars.
Garland of Starfire: This beautiful garland has eternally fresh flowers. Plucking a flower from the garland
activates the spell associated with it. When created, it has between two and five blossoms (1d4+1). A tiny violet creates dancing lights. A purple carnation conjures glitterdust. A multi-hued dahlia produces a prismatic spray. A yellow rose brings forth a sunburst. The garland occupies the headband, necklace, or amulet space.
Caster Level: 15th; Prerequisites: Craft Wondrous Item, prismatic spray; Market Price: 375 gp per violet, 1,500 gp per carnation, 5,250 gp per dahlia, 6,000 gp per yellow rose; Weight: --.
During the Summer Solstice festival, the queen also chooses a new Master of Gatherings. He takes responsibility until the next Summer Solstice for ensuring that the court is suitably amused with entertainment at all court gatherings. Winning this office is an extremely prestigious honor, but dangerous as well, since the queen does not tolerate failure or mistakes.
The celebration ends with the giving of gifts to the queen. Each noble knows that her gift will be judged by the queen and all the fey in attendance, and that social status may be gained or lost based on her choice. Gifts are often prepared months in advance, resulting in elaborate offerings, each more unique than the last.
Members of the court are not the only ones who use this occasion to gain favor. Any of the common fey can petition the queen's steward to have his gift opened personally by the queen. If she finds the offering amusing, the giver may receive a small token of the queen's appreciation. If the gift is judged ordinary, the fey may find himself an object of ridicule or much worse.
Fall Equinox
The Fall Equinox is celebrated in the oldest forest, the Oaks of Beginning Earth. This five-day celebration begins with the Feast of Bounty. Rich food and wine are brought forth, and toasts of thanks are proposed for the provisions of the year. The feast can last for several days, as each fey in attendance is expected to make a toast.
While the Queen attends the festival, she is not the central focus. The hunt, held on the day of the equinox, is the premier gala event. Each year a new quarry is chosen and armed with certain magical charms and disguises. Hunting parties of all sizes ride in pursuit. The queen presents a horn of bounty to the fey who captures and returns the prey.
Horn of Bounty: A horn of bounty greatly resembles a cornucopia. Once per day, the user can endeavor to play the horn for 10 minutes and make a Perform (trumpet) check DC 15. If successful, the horn produces the effects of the heroes' feast spell.
Caster Level: 11th; Prerequisites: Craft Wondrous Item, heroes' feast; Market Price: 26,400 gp; Weight: 1 lb.
Winter Solstice
The 10-day Festival of the Winter Solstice celebrates endings and rest. It begins on shortest day of the year, and is traditionally held among the ruins of the ancient Stonehart Giants. These ruins remind the fey that, as they replaced the giants, at some point they too will be replaced by a newer species.
During this gala, the fey are uncharacterist
ically tender towards each other. While jockeying for position still occurs among the nobles, many small slights that would normally cause elaborate displays of offense are overlooked. Even the Seelie Queen has been known to (very occasionally) overlook a small breach of etiquette.
Gifts are exchanged among the fey, primarily to show affection and appreciation of friendship. Many fey bring extra gifts as a precaution; to be caught without a reciprocal gift for an acquaintance is considered a grave insult.
The festival ends with a masquerade ball. Glowing balls of lights glitter in the night, casting a rainbow of colors on the snowy ballroom. Outrageous costumes of feather, flora, and fauna cast the fey in an even more otherworldly light. In this moment, an outsider would see the intrinsic elegance and pathos of the faerie kingdom.
During the last moments of the ball, the queen bestows a final gift on the subject whose costume most pleased her. The gift, a cloak of sheltering, protects the wearer from the hazards that mark the winter months.
Cloak of Sheltering: This beautiful gray velvet cloak is lined with silver fox fur. It continually provides the wearer with life-sustaining nourishment. The cloak also refreshes the body and mind, so that its wearer need sleep only 2 hours per day to gain the benefit of 8 hours of sleep. In addition, the cloak continually protects the wearer from
cold. When the wearer would normally take cold damage, subtract 15 points of damage per round from the total to account for the cloak's effect. Lastly, once per day, the wearer can speak a command word to produce a comfortable place to stay per Leomund's secure shelter spell. The cloak must be worn for a full day before it works.
Caster Level: 5th; Prerequisites: Craft Wondrous Item, create food and water, Leomund's secure shelter,
protection from elements; Market Price: 40,800 gp; Weight: --.
Spring Equinox
The celebration of the Spring Equinox marks new beginnings. After the long dark of winter, a breeze of youth blows across the plane. Even the eldest of the fey experience renewed vitality.
This five day festival ends on the equinox, and focuses on birth and play. It is traditionally held in a meadow near the court of the Seelie Queen. Many fey come dressed in garments consisting solely of leaves or spring flowers, and wear garlands of white or yellow on their heads.
Riddles are told and plays produced for the amusement of the queen and her court. It is at this time that any new births, on the rare occasion that they occur, are announced. The period of celebration ends with a scavenger hunt. Impossible clues send seekers across many planes in pursuit of imaginary items. The winner of the hunt receives a treefriend pouch of liveoak acorns.
Treefriend Pouch: This simple pouch made of thin, finely crafted doe skin contains 1d6 acorns. On command,
an acorn grows into a Huge oak tree that comes to life per the liveoak spell.
Caster Level: 11th; Prerequisites: Craft Wondrous Item, liveoak, plant growth; Market Price: 4,125 gp per acorn;
Weight: --.
'Fey Feature, Part II'
Seelie and Unseelie Courts
By Gwendolyn F. M. Kestrel and Faith M. Pricef
(Sidhe & Unsidhe, pr. "shee" & "un-shee")
"They are two sides of the same coin, or let us say . . . the same side of two coins."
-- Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
The Seelie Court
" . . . the single assumption which makes our existence viable -- that somebody is watching . . ."
-- Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
People tend to think of fey as lovely creatures of almost unearthly beauty and grace. This image epitomizes the fey of the Seelie Court. Many artists and bards, both fey and other, have striven to capture the beauty of the Seelie Court. Most have gone mad; none have truly succeeded. Pure manifestations of nature and beauty, the members of the Seelie Court view themselves as the pinnacle of perfection. This elitist attitude restricts status in the court to only pure-blood fey. A court fey can trace his or her lineage back several millennia, showing nothing but true fey (no templates, no transformations such as from the monk class or various prestige classes, and no other creature types by blood or breeding).
Fey high society and the fey realms, be they on the Plane of Faerie (Faea'iir) or fey high-society enclaves on the Material Plane, contain the only creatures whose opinions matter. Politics thrive in this elitist environment. Seelie fey form cliques and factionalize amongst themselves. In the endlessly politicking and gossiping world of the Seelie Court,
status can be won by hosting guests (willing or unwilling) or attracting followers with great skill in a craft or performance art.
Seelie Court fey occasionally tolerate the company of beautiful or gifted creatures, preferring those of fey, elven, or celestial blood. These "court friends" may provide companionship and amusements, but only those with pure lineage may hold positions of importance.
Admittance to the Seelie Court for outsiders is extremely rare, even more so if the outsiders are not of pure fey blood. Upon entrance to the court, visitors must be prepared with valuable and unusual gifts for the Queen of Light, or they might find themselves lost in an endless hedge maze. Suitable gifts for the Queen include figurines of wondrous power, gems of brightness, and magical jewelry.
The physical appearance of the Seelie Court mirrors nature, to which the fey are intrinsically linked. White ash trees, strong and stately, with their branches intertwining to create a living ceiling, line the throne hall like marble columns. Gossamer streamers of iridescent blues, pinks and purples wind their way through the boughs.
Phosphorescent flowers gleam like lanterns amidst the treetops. Semi-precious jewels of amethysts, tiger's eyes and topaz decorate flowers that float down the waterways lining the path to the throne. Statues carved of gold and adorned with gems further attest to the wealth and beauty of the current ruler, as each queen must display more splendor than the previous one or risk the gossip and scorn of her subjects. The throne itself, a and queen who sits on it, are the focal points of the room. The throne of the Seelie Court is shaped like a large ice dragon, as brilliantly cold and glittery as the fey nobility.
Queen Tatiana and King Oberon are the current rulers of the Seelie Court. An undisputed beauty, Tatiana looks unfavorably upon female courtier or visitors whose appearance rivals hers. This attitude is caused, in part, by the occasional wanderings of King Oberon's affection.
The Seelie Court fey find the Unseelie Court fey absolutely repellent.
The Unseelie Court
"Blood is compulsory."
-- Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
Unlike the selective, restrictive Seelie Court, the Unseelie Court welcomes anyone and everything with even a drop of ancestral fey blood. Fey can and do breed with anything, creating odd, mixed creatures. Most species consider the offspring grotesque monsters. The mutant creatures gravitate towards the Unseelie Court, which welcomes them and gives them an environment where peculiar physiologies and abilities are the norm.
The Unseelie Court is a more hospitable place for non-fey as well. Court nobles eagerly provide patronage for creatures who are extremely strong, dexterous, clever, beautiful, or talented. Obtaining the sponsorship of a court noble is not without its rewards, nor without its dangers. For instance, a gifted bard whose playing impresses a fey nobleman might be invited to his castle as a guest. Once there, the bard will be feted and asked to play every night -- and never be permitted to leave.
Ruling over all these oddities is the Queen of Air and Darkness: a fey of unsurpassed beauty and grace. The Queen of Air and Darkness has no current consort and no surviving children. The court is rife with gossip and political maneuvering as each noble curries the queen's favor in the hopes of being named the royal heir. Outsiders not of fey blood are rarely admitted to the Unseelie Court. Visitors must be prepared with unusual and powerful gifts for the Queen, or they might find themselves the quarry of a nightmarish hunt. Suitable gifts for the Queen include figurines of horrific power, gems of darkness, and cursed jewelry. (Details on the figurines of horrific power and gems of darkness will appear in a future fey column on the Wizards website.)
After a millennia of indiscriminate breeding, the physical appearance of the Unseelie Court mirrors the macabre. Twisted columns, trees forced into unnatural growth by royal gardeners, are scattered haphazardly through the hall. Curtains of shadows hide blood-soaked alcoves. Drawn back for times of celebration, the gaping crevasses reveal uninvited guests captured for the amusement of the court. Riotous blooms of nightshades and blood warts glow red in the evening, providing a maddening light to the misshapen court. The throne of the Unseelie Court is shaped like a great shadow dragon, a creature of midnight and darkness, like the queen herself.
The Thrones
Both the Queen of Air and Darkness and Titania, Queen of Light, hold court from ornately carved, dragonshaped thrones. Commonly thought to be magical, the thrones' abilities are a matter of much speculation among the Courts. None but the queens know the truth.
Both courts are matriarchal monarchies. Sometimes males endeavor to take the throne, but none have survived the Rites of Succession. Each prospective ruler undergoes a lengthy rite of passage. Not every candidate survives these secret tests and rituals. The heir undertakes the trial when the former queen dies or expresses a willingness to abdicate her throne. In the final Rite of Succession, the aspiring queen ascends to sit on the throne. Sometimes a candidate dies at this point, rejected in some fashion by the throne. If the prospective
queen lives through this final ceremony, the court acknowledges her as its rightful ruler.
Throne Guardian
Huge Construct
Hit Dice: 30d10 (165)
Initiative: +5 (Dex)
Speed: 60 ft., fly 90 ft. (perfect)
AC: 23 (-2 size, +5 Dex, +10 natural), touch 13, flat-footed 18
Attacks: 2 slams +26 melee
Damage: Slam 2d8+7
Face/Reach: 10 ft. by 20 ft./10 ft.
Special Qualities: Construct traits, detect thoughts, etherealness, fast healing 10, guard, plane shift, shield other, spell storing, telepathy, true seeing
Saves: Fort +10, Ref +15, Will +10
Abilities: Str 25, Dex 20, Con --, Int 11, Wis 10, Cha 1
Climate/Terrain: Any land
Organization: Solitary
Challenge Rating: 15
Treasure: None
Alignment: Always neutral
Advancement: None
Throne guardians are rare and powerful creatures. The Huge constructs can be made in almost any shape with a throne-like seat as a central focus. The two most spectacular are shaped like dragons and serve as the queen's throne in the Seelie and Unseelie Courts. The throne guardian in the Seelie Court appears as a stately carved dragon made entirely of ice. The Unseelie Court's throne looks like a grand dragon made of shadow and darkness.
Combat: A throne guardian exists for one purpose: to protect its master. It pursues this goal to the best of its ability, usually aware of the threat of combat (by using detect thoughts and true seeing to scan creatures in the vicinity) even before the first action is taken. It telepathically communicates all information to its controller. Construct Traits: A throne guardian is immune to mind-affecting effects, poison, sleep, paralysis, stunning, disease, death effects, necromantic effects, and any effect that requires a Fortitude save unless it also works on objects. The creature is not subject to critical hits, subdual damage, ability damage, ability drain, energy drain, or death from massive damage. It cannot heal itself but can be healed through repair. It cannot be raised or resurrected. A throne guardian has darkvision (60-foot range).
Detect Thoughts (Su): A throne guardian can continuously detect thoughts as the spell (caster level 20th; save DC 25). It can suppress or resume this ability as a free action.
Etherealness (Su): This ability functions just like the spell of the same name (caster level 20th).
Fast Healing (Ex): A throne construct regains lost hit points at the rate of 10- per round. Fast healing does not restore hit points lost from starvation, thirst, or suffocation, and it does not allow the throne construct to regrow or reattach lost body parts.
Guard (Ex): The throne guardian moves swiftly to interpose parts of itself to protect its seated master by blocking blows and disrupting foes. Each attack against the seated controller takes a -2 penalty.
Plane Shift (Su): This ability functions just like the spell of the same name (caster level 20th).
Shield Other (Sp): The designated controller of the throne can activate this defensive ability if within 100 feet of the throne guardian. If the controller is seated in the throne, the ability is always active. Just as the spell of the same name, this ability transfers to the guardian half the damage that would otherwise be dealt to the master.
Spell Storing (Sp): The throne guardian can store one spell of 9th level or lower that is cast into it by another creature. It "casts" this spell when commanded by its master or when a predetermined situation arises. If seated in the throne, the master can opt to have the spell affect her as well. Once the spell is used, it can store another spell (or the same spell). The fey queens usually have time stop stored in their throne guardians.
Telepathy (Su): A throne guardian can communicate telepathically with its master.
True Seeing (Su): Throne guardians continuously use true seeing as the divine spell (caster level 12th).
Construction
A throne guardian's body must be sculpted from a single block of material weighing at least 5,000 pounds. The throne guardian costs 500,000 gp to create. This includes 50,000 gp for the body. The first task is creating the body, a figure made from a large block of any one substance. Fashioning the body requires a successful Craft (sculpting) check (DC 25).
The second requirement is establishing the ritual or item required to designate ownership and control of the throne. The creator must labor for at least 8 hours each day in a specially prepared laboratory or workroom. The chamber resembles an alchemist's laboratory and a smithy, and costs 1,000 gp to establish. When not working on the ritual, the character must rest and can perform no other activities except eating, sleeping, or talking. If personally constructing the creature's body, the creator can perform the building and ritual together. If the creator misses a day of the ritual, the process fails and must be started again. Money spent is
lost, but XP spent are not. The throne guardian's body can be reused, as can the chamber.
Completing the ritual drains 10,000 XP from the creator and requires detect thoughts, etherealness, limited wish, locate object, make whole,plane shift, shield other, and true seeing, all of which must be cast on the final day of the ritual. The creator must cast the spells personally, but they can come from outside sources such as scrolls.
Prerequisites: Craft Wondrous Item feats, 20th level and able to cast arcane or divine spells.
Ritual or Amulet
The creator establishes a mechanism to designate dominion over the throne guardian. It may be a ritual or an item. Only one person at a time may be the throne guardian's master. In the case of a ritual, such control lasts until death or until the master uses a limited wish, miracle, or wish to remove ownership. If an amulet (or other item) is created as the control mechanism, the wearer has control. If the keyed amulet is destroyed, the guardian ceases to function until a new one is created. If the wearer dies but the amulet remains intact, the throne guardian carries out the last command given.
Throne Guardian Ritual, Seelie and Unseelie Courts
The creator of the court thrones preferred Lawful Neutral rulers upon the Seelie throne and Chaotic Neutral rulers upon the Unseelie throne. To take control of the throne is a simple matter: when the old queen dies or willingly abdicates, the candidate mounts the throne clad only in a simple gown without any magic equipment. (Though many suspect that candidates have cheated, no one has any proof.) When the supplicant is seated for the first time, a saving throw against a finger of death spell is made. If successful, the throne accepts her; if the save fails, the person dies.
Seelie Court Throne - Unseelie Court Throne
Alignment - DC Alignment - DC
Lawful Good - 30 Lawful Good 40
Neutral Good - 35 Neutral Good 35
Chaotic Good - 40 Chaotic Good 30
Lawful Neutral - 20 Lawful Neutral 30
True Neutral - 25 True Neutral 25
Chaotic Neutral - 30 Chaotic Neutral 20
Lawful Evil - 30 Lawful Evil 40
Neutral Evil - 35 Neutral Evil 35
Chaotic Evil - 40 Chaotic Evil 30
About the Authors
Gwendolyn F. M. Kestrelis an editor for Wizards of the Coast's Roleplaying Games R&D department. Recent
credits include editing Faiths and Pantheons, Oriental Adventures, and Magic of Faerûn, and designing part of
the Book of Challenges. She's a frequent contributor to the Wizards of the Coast website. Also, check out the
website she created for her fiancé, Andy Collins, at www.andycollins.net.
Faith M. Price accidentally fell into the adventure game industry nine years ago. Since then she has worked for
two game manufacturers, and has written for numerous magazines. She currently lives in Washington with two
RPG designers and two cats, all of whom require regular feeding and attention.
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