Grimm Fears
Goblin Fruits
Slumberberries:
Small, dark green berries grow sparsely on parasitic vines.
Grimm Fears, p.20
Bloodbane:
Pale yellow lichen tends to grow in moist areas.
Grimm Fears, p.20
Fuguespores:
Brown spores come from a type of fungus that grows on the briars of the Hedge.
Grimm Fears, p.20
Kith:
Minstrel
Blessing: Perfect Pitch: A Minstrel changeling can spend a point of Glamour
to re-roll any failed dice on one Expression roll (so if, for example, a Minstrel
who rolls six dice and gets 2, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 can spend a point of Glamour
to re-roll the 2, 5, 6 and 7).
They also excel at soaking up the adulation of a crowd when performing,
enjoying the benefit of the 8-again rule for any attempt to harvest Glamour
from the emotions of the spectators during their own performance.
Grimm Fears, p.43
Romancer
Blessing: Narcissus’s Blessing: Others viewing her are subject to a subtle
illusion that emphasizes those aspects of the changeling that the subject
find most appealing, sometimes going so far as to convince the subject that
small aspects of the changeling are utterly different than they really are. This
manifests as a –3 to all characters’ subsequent attempts to accurately describe
her to others, including characters attempting to create police sketches. The
blessing applies to clothing as well, but a sufficiently extraordinary trinket might
grant a bonus to the roll. This is not a disguise, however, and unless the subject’s
standard of beauty has changed significantly between one meeting of the Romancer
and the next, he recognizes her without any difficulty. Recording devices, which
have no preconceived notions of beauty and no expectations, are affected by the
Wyrd’s magic as well, recording the individual as remarkably average. The –3 penalty
applies to attempts to identify the character based on recorded footage or
photographs as well.
Grimm Fears, p.46
Token:
Book of Revelations (•••)
No one save Everett himself knows precisely how he came into possession of his Book
of Revelations. What is known is that it is some manner of powerful token, a book,
bound in (what at least appears to be) scuffed, dark leather, which provides Everett
with some knowledge of things to come. Or so he claims. The cover of the book bears
numerous deeply scratched occult symbols, and the thin pages are graced with an
illegible script written in what appears to be blood, with mad, shifting illustrations colored
in the juices of goblin fruits. Of course, Everett loathes allowing anyone save himself
access to the book. It became his burden when he found it in the Hedge, but it also
serves as guide and shield.
Once per story, Everett knows something he otherwise couldn’t, though what he has
gleaned from the book is always heavily couched in metaphor. (This likely brings him to
the characters.) As a result of what he has read in the text of his own future, Everett
may reroll three failed rolls per story. The action doesn’t fail, then miraculously succeed;
instead Everett recognizes the appropriate actions to take for success from one of the
book’s revelatory lines
Grimm Fears, p.46
.......... usw .............
Weitere Quellen:
Dancers in the Dusk
Swords at Dawn
Goblin Markets
The Fearmakers Promise
The Rose Brides Plight