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Druid Printable version

Description


The fury of a storm, the gentle strength of the morning sun, the cunning of the fox, the power of the bear - all these and more are at the druid's command. The druid however, claims no mastery over nature. That claim, they say, is the empty boast of a city dweller. The druid gains their power not by ruling nature but by being at one with it. To trespassers in a druid's sacred grove, and to those who feel their wrath, the distinction is overly fine.

Druids adventure to gain knowledge (especially about animals and plants unfamiliar to them) and power. Sometimes, their superiors call on their services. Druids may also bring their power to bear against those who threaten what they love, which more often includes ancient stands of trees or trackless mountains than people. While druids accept that which is horrific or cruel in nature, they hate that which is unnatural, including aberrations (such as ettercaps and carrion crawlers) and undead (such as zombies and vampires). Druids sometimes lead raids against such creatures, especially when they encroach on the druids' territory.

Druids cast divine spells much the same way clerics do, through the acceptance of a nature deity. The worship of an appropriate deity is required and they're expected to follow a deity's alignment restrictions. Their spells are oriented toward nature and animals. In addition to spells, druids gain an increasing array of magical powers, including the ability to take the shapes of animals, both mundane and special, as they advance in level.

The armour of a druid is restricted by traditional oaths to the items noted in Weapon and Armor proficiency(below), All other armor is prohibited. Though a druid could learn to wear full plate, putting it on would violate their oath and suppress their druidic powers. Druids avoid carrying much worked-metal with them because it interferes with the pure and primal nature that they attempt to embody.

Druids, in keeping with nature's ultimate indifference, must maintain at least some measure of dispassion. As such, they must be neutral on at least one alignment axis (chaotic-lawful or good-evil), if not both. Just as nature encompasses such dichotomies as life and death, beauty and horror, and peace and violence, so two druids can manifest different or even opposite alignments (neutral good and neutral evil, for instance) and still be part of the druidic tradition.

Though their organization is invisible to most outsiders, who consider druids to be loners, many druids are actually part of a society that spans the land, ignoring political borders. A prospective druid is inducted into this society through secret rituals, including tests that not all survive. Only after achieving some level of competence is the druid allowed to strike out on their own.

Most druids are nominally members of this druidic society, though some individuals are so isolated that they have never seen any high ranking members of the society or participated in druidic gatherings. Many druids recognize each other as brothers and sisters. Like true creatures of the wilderness, however, druids sometimes compete with or even prey on each other.

A druid may be expected to perform services for higher-ranking druids, though proper payment is tendered for such assignments. Likewise, a lower-ranking druid may appeal for aid from her higher-ranking comrades in exchange for a fair price in coin or service.

Druids may live in small towns, but they always spend a good portion of their time in wild areas. Even large cities surrounded by cultivated land as far as the eye can see often have druid groves nearby - small, wild refuges where druids live and which they protect fiercely. Near coastal cities, such refuges may be nearby islands, where the druids can find the isolation they need.

Elves and gnomes have an affinity for natural lands and often become druids. Humans and half-elves also frequently adopt this path, and druids are particularly common among savage humans. Dwarves, halflings, and half-orcs are rarely druids.

Few from among the brutal humanoids are inducted into druidic society, though gnolls have a fair contingent of evil druids among them. Gnoll druids are accepted, though perhaps not welcomed, by druids of other races.

The druid shares with rangers and many barbarians a reverence for nature and a familiarity with natural lands. They often don't much understand the urban mannerism typical of a rogue, and they may find arcane magic disruptive and slightly distasteful. The typical druid also dislikes the paladin's devotion to abstract ideals instead of "the real world." Druids, however, are nothing if not accepting of diversity, and they take little offense at other characters, even those very different from them.

The druid enjoys extraordinary versatility. Though they lack the sheer healing power of the cleric, they make up for it with additional offensive power, thanks to their spell selection and wild shape ability. A druid back up by another secondary healer (such as a paladin) can prove extremely valuable to a group of adventurers. Their animal companion also provides valuable melee combat support.

(For setting and server-specific animal companion guidelines, please review: https://www.dragonsneck.com/wiki/Companions-and-Summons)

Druid Patrons

Druidic Oath
Druidic spiritual oaths prohibit them from using weapons other than the following: club, dagger, dart, long spear, quarterstaff, scimitar, sling, sickle, shortspear, shortsword, shortbow & longbow. They are proficient with light and medium armors but are prohibited from wearing metal/heavy armors (thus, they may only wear padded, leather, or hide armor). They may only use wooden shields.

Druids must select a nature deity. Failure to abide by the dogma of said deity may result in limitations of spell-casting and other deity-granted abilities.

Violation of the Druidic Oaths results in 4 RL Hours of lost Spellcasting. Repeated offenses may result in falling altogether at the discretion of the DM team.

Note on Mielikki Exception: Mielikki Druids receive no exception for Druidic oath violations on TDN. In narrative, the exception existed up until The Longest Year, at the conclusion of that year, the oaths were universal across all Druids.

Alignment Restriction: Any Neutral

Hit Die: d8

Proficiencies: Armor (light), Shields (small, large), Weapons (druid)

Skill Points: 4 + INT Modifier

Class Skills: All Knowledges, Animal Empathy, Barter, Bluff, Concentration, Craft Trap, Diplomacy, Heal, Intimidate, Perform, Sense Motive, Spellcraft, Taunt

Primary Saving Throws: Fortitude, Will

Base Attack Bonus: +3/4 Levels

Spellcasting: Divine (spell failure from armor is ignored), wisdom-based (a base wisdom score of 10 + the spell's level is required to cast a spell, bonus spells are based on modified wisdom, and the wisdom modifier affects spell DCs).

Level Progression / Spells per Day

LevelHit DiceBABFortReflexWillFeat0123456789
1st1d8+0+2+0+2
Animal Companion, Nature Sense, Animal Shape 1use/Day
54--------
2nd2d8+1+3+0+3
Woodland Stride
55--------
3rd3d8+2+3+1+3
Trackless Step, Great Fortitude
552-------
4th4d8+3+4+1+4
Resist Nature's Lure, Wild Shape I
553-------
5th5d8+3+4+1+4
6532------
6th6d8+4+5+2+5
Wild Shape II
6633------
7th7d8+5+5+2+5
66332-----
8th8d8+6/+1+6+2+6
Wild Shape III
66433-----
9th9d8+6/+1+6+3+6
Venom Immunity
764332----
10th10d8+7/+2+7+3+7
Wild Shape IV
774433----
11th11d8+8/+3+7+3+7
7744332---
12th11d8+9/+4+8+4+8
Wild Shape V
7754433---
13th11d8+9/+4+8+4+8
87544331--
14th11d8+9/+4+9+4+9
Wild Shape VI
88554431--
15th11d8+9/+4+9+5+9
885544311-
16th11d8+9/+4+10+5+10
Wild Shape VII
886554411-
17th11d8+9/+4+10+5+10
9865544211
18th11d8+9/+4+11+6+11
Wild Shape VIII, Greater Wildshape
9866554211

Druids receive unlimited damage-dealing cantrips.

Animal Companions: Animal Companions have been completely reworked.

Animal Shape: Once a day, The druid transforms into a mundane animal, temporarily losing access to their equipment and the ability to speak (other than emotes) while the effect persists. These forms are intended to be non-combat and used for roleplay (use the !animalshape command to open a dialogue menu to choose a form, then the Animal Shape ability to assume the chosen form):
  • Cat: Black Cat, Bobtail, Cougar
  • Dog: Mastiff, Wolf 1, Wolf 2
  • Bird: Raven, Owl, Hawk, Sparrow
  • Grazing: Goat, Deer, Boar, Moose
  • Other: Rat, Black Cobra, Spider, Fox
Wild Shape: The druid transforms into a wild animal, temporarily losing access to their equipment and the ability to speak (other than emotes) while the effect persists. This ability may be used once every 18 minutes, and its cooldown decreases by 1 minute for each rank in this feat. Duration is 5 minutes per class level.


Wildshapes
FormStrengthDexterityConstitutionNatural ACTemp HPSpeedAdditional
Bear181216510+10%Cleave, Massive Criticals +1d6, Discipline
Boar161416415+10%Power Attack, +2 AB, Intimidate
Cougar12181445+20%Weapon Finesse, Sneak Attack +1d6, Keen, Stealth
Stag10201065+30%Mobility, Improved Evasion, Search
Wolf14161665+20%Weapon Finesse, +1 AB, +2 EB vs Undead, Perception
Bear (Greater)181218616+10%Cleave, Massive Criticals +2d6, Discipline
Boar (Greater)181416621+10%Power Attack, +4 AB, Intimidate
Cougar (Greater)14181458+20%Weapon Finesse, Sneak Attack +2d6, Keen, Stealth
Stag (Greater)10221078+30%Mobility, Improved Evasion, Search
Wolf (Greater)16161678+20%Weapon Finesse, +2 AB, +3 EB vs Undead, Perception

Spells