BUILD YOUR OWN WORLD Like what you see? Become the Master of your own Universe!

Arnon's Thirst

Hill giants would use this rudimentary blade to butcher any creatures that had wandered into their traps. These brutes consume anything from ogres to gnomes. This blade was taken by Thrall Putrid after he killed an entire camp of hill giants. After his transformation, through the "Feast of Flesh," Thrall Putrid and his weapon were infused with evil magics causing them both to take on unnatural side effects. This large meat chopper has a curved quartz blade that emanates a dull green glow, making it looks like green glass. The jagged edges of the blade provide a cerated like effect from years of chopping bone and sinew. The hilt of the sword has a small round metal circlet that allows the user to hang it on their belt. The grip of this cleaver is wrapped in leather straps made from orc skin. The edge of the blade constantly drips a viscous, poisonous resin.   A user of this weapon will enjoy the following benefits:   1d6 poison damage per strike (DC 10 Con Save = poison effect) 1d6 necrotic damage per strike 25% of total damage heals player on first strike, per turn. Due to the violent history of this weapon, anyone attuned to this weapon has their alignment altered from lawful or neutral to chaotic. The wielder must also slay one humanoid, fey or celestial per day or suffer one level of poison. These levels of poison stack with each successive day without a kill, much like exhaustion. Each level of poison must be individually dealt with and can be removed by a lesser restoration spell, protection from poison spell, a paladin's lay on hands, or a greater restoration spell. The side effects of stacked poison are as follows:   Disadvantage on Attack Rolls and Ability Checks 1d8 poison damage every hour Speed halved During combat a player may only take either an action, or bonus action, or movement per turn. (Must chose only one) Player becomes petrified as their body and items they are wearing are turned into quartz, taking on the same fragility as glass. If a player wishes to unattune from this weapon they must suffer 10d10 poison damage. If a player dies from the damage suffered from unattuning, they are turned into a glass statue that cries a viscous, poisonous resin.   Proficiency with a longsword allows you to add your proficiency bonus to the attack roll for any attack you make with it.

Comments

Please Login in order to comment!