Titan Cherry Tree


The Titan Cherry Tree

Overview

The Titan Cherry tree is one of Rockport’s most remarkable natural treasures. Found primarily along the fertile southern banks of Willowmere Lake, these towering cherry trees thrive in the mineral-rich soils fed by the underground springs and caverns that connect Rockport’s three lakes. Their blossoms paint the landscape with brilliant hues of pink every spring, drawing both locals and travelers to witness the spectacle.

While similar in form to common cherry trees, Titan Cherries grow to staggering proportions, bear extraordinary fruit, and live on timescales more akin to mountains than to plants.


Growth & Lifespan

  • Growth Cycle: Titan Cherry trees increase their height steadily through their lifespan:

    • +1 foot each year until they surpass 10 feet tall.

    • +1 foot each decade until reaching 100 feet.

    • +1 foot each century beyond that, until natural death.

  • Longevity: These trees endure for millennia, with ancient specimens rumored to be older than recorded village history.

  • Environment: Thrives only in mineral-dense soil with medium to high ambient magical energy. Rockport’s lakes provide both—the water carries dissolved basalt and copper from the mines and trace greenstone crystals (mana-infused stones) from underground deposits.


Blossoms & Bees

The Titan Cherry’s blossoms are larger and longer-lasting than ordinary cherries. Bees feeding on their nectar produce honey with a distinct floral-mineral sweetness, prized by villagers and traders alike. Some claim Titan Honey soothes fevers, calms nightmares, or sharpens memory, though such properties remain folkloric.


The Fruit

Titan Cherries come in three size classes, determined by conditions of soil, water, and magical flow:

  • Common Fruits (most frequent): About the size of a large apple.

  • Greater Fruits (uncommon): Comparable in bulk to an avocado (~7 lb flesh).

  • Rare Titans (legendary harvests): Reaching nearly the size of a small watermelon (~20 lb flesh).

The fruit flesh is sweet, dense, and rich, with a natural preservative effect that allows Titan Cherries to last ten times longer than ordinary cherries before spoiling. Whole families or taverns may feast on a single fruit, and festivals are often timed around rare harvests.


Wood & Bark

  • Wood: Dense yet light, Titan Cherry timber rivals white oak in strength while weighing only slightly more than pine. It resists flame and weathering, making it prized for beams, bridges, and vessels. However, it burns poorly, limiting its use as firewood.

  • Bark & Leaves: When dried, they release a sweet, resinous aroma. Locals use them for meat smoking and occasionally in infusions or teas, though some folk insist it is best suited to nonhuman palates.


Cultural Significance

  • Festivals: Spring blossom festivals center around Willowmere’s southern orchards, where villagers decorate homes with fresh boughs and share Titan Honey pastries.

  • Economy: Titan Cherry wood and fruit are valuable trade goods, though harvesting is carefully controlled by Rockport’s elders.

  • Legends: Some say the trees are semi-sentient, growing tallest where the earth’s mana currents flow most strongly. Others whisper that the rarest Titan Cherries appear only once per generation, a sign of either blessing or impending change.


Adventure Hooks

  • The Missing Harvest: A rare Titan Cherry of legendary size has been stolen before the festival. The culprit’s trail leads into Rockport’s basalt mines.

  • The Sickened Grove: A cluster of trees along Willowmere shows signs of blight. To save them, adventurers must trace the underground river to its source.

  • Ancient Titan: Rumors spread of a Titan Cherry towering over 200 feet tall deep within the forests north of Deepstone Lake. Elders debate whether it should be revered, harvested, or protected.


Titan Cherry Items & Materials

Titan Cherry Fruit

Rare Consumable

  • Common Fruit (Apple-sized): Restores 1d6+2 hit points when eaten as an action. Spoils in 30 days unless preserved.

  • Greater Fruit (Avocado-sized, ~7 lb flesh): Can be divided into 6 servings. Each serving restores 2d4+2 hit points and grants advantage on saving throws against exhaustion for the next hour. Spoils in 100 days.

  • Rare Titan (Watermelon-sized, ~20 lb flesh): Can be divided into 12 servings. Each serving restores 2d6+2 hit points and grants resistance to one type of fatigue or environmental effect (chosen by the GM: extreme cold, extreme heat, forced march, etc.) for the next 24 hours. Spoils in 1 year.

Special: Titan Cherry flesh is naturally infused with preservative magic. Cooked or brewed Titan Cherry products (pies, syrups, brandies) retain their potency for half the raw fruit’s spoilage time.


Titan Honey

Uncommon Consumable
Bees feeding on Titan Cherry blossoms produce honey that is faintly infused with mana.

  • A spoonful calms nerves: advantage on saving throws against fear for 1 hour.

  • A full jar (1 lb) contains 10 servings.


Titan Cherry Wood

Rare Crafting Material

  • Properties:

    • As strong as oak but nearly as light as pine.

    • Naturally flame resistant (halves fire damage taken by items made from it).

    • Durable: Structures built from Titan Cherry wood last twice as long as normal.

  • Uses:

    • Weapons fashioned from Titan Cherry count as magically resilient; they do not break on critical failures and can be enchanted at half the usual cost.

    • Shields, staves, and bows crafted from Titan Cherry wood weigh 25% less and grant +1 to saving throws against fire damage while wielded.

    • Building beams or ships made with Titan Cherry timber are immune to rot, requiring no magical preservation.


Titan Cherry Bark & Leaf

Uncommon Trade Good
When dried and burned, Titan Cherry bark and leaves produce fragrant smoke.

  • Smoking meat: Preserves food twice as long.

  • Infusions/teas: Provide a 1d4 temporary hit point buffer lasting 1 hour.

  • Alchemy use: A handful of bark can replace rare herbs in recipes that require a smoke or ash component.


GM Tips

  • Treat Titan Cherry fruit like treasure parcels rather than standard rations. Their rarity makes them perfect as rewards, quest hooks, or bargaining chips.

  • Titan Cherry wood can justify why Rockport’s structures outlast other villages’, or serve as a high-value trade resource.

  • Titan Honey and bark products can slip into your game world’s economy as minor luxuries, encouraging roleplay around merchants, festivals, and trade caravans.


Titan Cherry Tree

Huge Plant, unaligned


Armor Class: 15 (mineral-hardened bark)
Hit Points: 250 (ancient trees may reach 500+)
Speed: 0 ft.


STR 22 (+6) | DEX 3 (−4) | CON 20 (+5) | INT 1 (−5) | WIS 10 (+0) | CHA 5 (−3)


Saving Throws: Con +9
Damage Resistances: bludgeoning, piercing, and slashing from nonmagical weapons; fire (half damage)
Damage Immunities: poison
Condition Immunities: blinded, charmed, deafened, frightened, paralyzed, petrified, poisoned, prone
Senses: blindsight 60 ft. (roots), passive Perception 10
Languages: — (understands none; if awakened, understands Sylvan)


Traits

  • Mineralized Wood: Titan Cherry bark and wood are saturated with copper, basalt, and trace greenstone. The tree is naturally flame-resistant, halving fire damage and requiring twice as long to burn.

  • Rooted: The tree cannot be moved without magical means. If the ground it grows from is destroyed (e.g., collapsing cavern), it dies.

  • Magical Fertility: Once per year, during the spring bloom, the Titan Cherry Tree produces fruit of extraordinary size. Roll 1d20:

    • 1–12: Common fruit (apple-sized)

    • 13–18: Greater fruit (avocado-sized)

    • 19–20: Rare Titan (watermelon-sized)


Actions

The Titan Cherry Tree is not hostile, but it may defend itself if threatened or awakened.

  • Branch Slam (Awakened Only). Melee Weapon Attack: +8 to hit, reach 15 ft., one target. Hit: 18 (3d8+6) bludgeoning damage.

  • Root Grasp (Awakened Only). The Titan Cherry animates its roots in a 20-ft. radius. Each creature in that area must succeed on a DC 16 Strength saving throw or be restrained until the end of its next turn.


Legendary Traits (Optional for Ancient Trees)

An elder Titan Cherry (over 100 ft. tall, thousands of years old) might possess legendary qualities:

  • Legendary Resistance (1/Day): If the tree fails a saving throw, it can choose to succeed instead.

  • Living Nexus: The tree subtly channels magical energy. Once per long rest, it can grant advantage on all saving throws vs. poison or disease to creatures resting under its canopy.

  • Seasonal Aura: In spring, creatures that begin a rest beneath the tree regain 1 additional Hit Die worth of healing.


Use in Play

  • Harvesting: Cutting into a Titan Cherry requires tools as strong as adamantine or equivalent magic. Unskilled attempts may ruin fruit or wood.

  • Protection: Villagers may request adventurers guard the Titan Cherry groves from bandits or rival kingdoms.

  • Awakening: A druid’s ritual or surge of mana from the greenstone deposits might awaken a Titan Cherry, turning it into a benevolent or wrathful guardian.


Harvesting the Titan Cherry Tree

Harvest Guidelines

  • Season: Harvesting is only possible during spring to late summer, when fruit and blossoms are viable. Bark and wood can be harvested any time, but over-harvesting may weaken the tree.

  • Skill Checks: A GM may call for Nature, Survival, or Tool checks (such as woodcarver’s tools, brewer’s tools, etc.) to safely gather without loss. Failure by 5 or more wastes 1d4 units of the harvest.

  • Limits: Harvesting too much in one season may stunt or kill the tree (GM discretion).


Fruit Harvest (Spring–Summer)

Roll 1d20 at the start of the harvest season for each mature Titan Cherry tree.

d20 Harvest Result Yield
1–12 Common Fruit 2d6 apple-sized cherries. Each = 1 serving (restores 1d6+2 HP).
13–18 Greater Fruit 1d4 avocado-sized cherries. Each = 6 servings (2d4+2 HP each).
19–20 Rare Titan 1 watermelon-sized cherry. Provides 12 servings (2d6+2 HP each).

Note: Fruit remains fresh for 10× normal cherry shelf life (≈300 days for common, 1,000 days for greater, 10 years for rare).


Honey Harvest (Mid-Summer)

If a Titan Cherry grove hosts bee colonies:

Check Result
No check 1d4 jars of Titan Honey (10 servings per jar).
With beekeeper skill/tools 2d4 jars safely. Each spoonful = advantage vs. fear (1 hr).

Bark & Leaf Harvest (Any Season)

Method Yield
Careful pruning 1d6 handfuls of dried bark or leaves without harming the tree.
Aggressive stripping 2d6 handfuls, but the tree suffers 1d4 years of stunted growth.

Uses:

  • Smoking meats: doubles preservation time.

  • Infusions: 1 serving grants 1d4 temporary HP for 1 hour.

  • Alchemy: replaces rare herbs in recipes requiring smoke/ash.


Wood Harvest (Only if felled or major limb removed)

Source Yield Notes
Fallen branch (naturally or storm-broken) Enough for 1d4 crafted items (bows, staves, shields). Wood is flame-resistant.
Felled young tree (10–30 ft.) Enough timber for a small cottage or 10+ crafted items. Killing one is a crime in Rockport.
Felled ancient tree (50+ ft.) Ship-grade lumber: hull of a longship, or beams for an entire hall. Considered sacred; felling may draw divine or druidic ire.

GM Notes

  • Treat fruit harvests like treasure—not guaranteed every year.

  • Honey and bark are low-tier trade goods, ideal for flavor, barter, or minor healing.

  • Wood is rare and culturally significant—use it as a story hook, not casual loot.


Titan Cherry Resource Values (Rockport Trade)

All values assume Rockport’s local market; prices double or triple when exported to distant cities due to rarity and transport risk.


Fruit

Type Local Value Notes
Common Titan Cherry (apple-sized) 5–10 gp each A single fruit is a family’s luxury feast. Considered a delicacy in nearby towns.
Greater Titan Cherry (avocado-sized, ~7 lb flesh) 50–75 gp Yield of 6 servings; taverns prize them for festival pies and cordials.
Rare Titan Cherry (watermelon-sized, ~20 lb flesh) 500–750 gp Rare enough to spark festivals, or serve as tribute to nobles. Traders may pay fortunes to export one intact.

Honey

Type Local Value Notes
Titan Honey (1 jar / 1 lb) 20–30 gp Contains 10 servings; each spoonful prized for flavor and rumored calming properties.
Festival Comb (entire hive section) 100 gp Used in ceremonial meads or as offerings to spirits.

Bark & Leaf

Type Local Value Notes
Handful (for teas/infusions) 1 gp Minor luxury; affordable even to commoners during harvest.
Smoking Bundle (enough for 1 feast’s worth of meat) 5 gp Butchers and taverns compete for supply.
Alchemical Pouch (rare herbs substitute) 15 gp Can replace exotic ingredients in some recipes.

Wood

Type Local Value Notes
Fallen Branch (1d4 items’ worth) 25 gp per crafted item Bows, staves, or shields fetch premium prices.
Young Tree Timber (10–30 ft.) 500 gp Enough for a cottage frame or multiple weapons. Cutting one is taboo; rare in markets.
Ancient Titan Timber (50+ ft.) 5,000 gp+ Priceless for ships or halls; usually gifted, not sold. Felling an elder tree may be treated as a capital crime.

Trade & Cultural Impact

  • Local Economy: Titan Cherries account for Rockport’s most coveted seasonal export. Festivals around Willowmere Lake often see foreign merchants making bids months in advance.

  • Rarity: Only a few dozen mature Titan Cherry trees grow near Rockport. The Elder’s Council strictly controls harvests, often reserving the largest fruits for festivals or diplomacy.

  • Value Hooks for Adventures:

    • A single Rare Titan Cherry could pay an adventuring party’s expenses for months.

    • Smugglers might attempt to steal saplings or greenwood cuttings.

    • Nobles might commission protection for caravans transporting Titan Honey or timber.


⚖️ GM Tip: Price flexibility is key—if your campaign leans “gritty,” halve all prices. If it leans “high fantasy prosperity,” increase by ×2–3 to emphasize the Titan Cherry’s near-mythic reputation.


d100 Rumors & Legends of the Titan Cherry Trees

1–20: Everyday Gossip

  1. Eating a Titan Cherry pit whole will curse you with a century of bad luck.

  2. Titan Honey never spoils, even if sealed in clay jars for generations.

  3. Titan Cherry wood is so flame-resistant that a torch pressed against it goes out.

  4. The blossoms are so fragrant they lure dream-spirits to dance around the lakes.

  5. Children who sleep beneath a Titan Cherry blossom bough never suffer nightmares.

  6. If you carve your lover’s name into the bark, your romance lasts a lifetime.

  7. Locals believe the trees lean slightly south because they drink more sunlight that way.

  8. Bees that feed on Titan blossoms glow faintly under moonlight.

  9. The largest Titan Cherry harvest ever was carted away by twelve oxen.

  10. The roots of all Titan Cherries in Rockport are secretly connected.

  11. The trees sigh audibly when storms pass overhead.

  12. Titan Cherries are said to taste different depending on the phase of the moon.

  13. It is bad luck to cut a branch during blossom season.

  14. A Titan Cherry orchard always grows on land where a battle was once fought.

  15. Titan Cherry leaves whistle like flutes when the wind is strong.

  16. Owls refuse to perch in Titan Cherry branches—they say the wood remembers.

  17. The honey from Titan Cherries glows faintly when stirred with silver.

  18. Blossom petals carried on the river are omens of coming change.

  19. A single Rare Titan Cherry once paid for the rebuilding of half the village.

  20. Drinking tea from Titan bark keeps your hair from going gray.


21–40: Merchant & Traveler Tales

  1. Nobles from two rival kingdoms nearly went to war over a single Titan Cherry harvest.

  2. A Titan Cherry crate once traveled intact across the sea—its arrival started a cult.

  3. Foreign alchemists pay more for Titan bark than for gold dust.

  4. A wizard once brewed Titan Cherries into a potion of giant strength.

  5. It is said Titan Honey is worth thrice the same weight in sapphires.

  6. Smugglers once hollowed out barrels of wheat to hide Titan Honey jars.

  7. Merchants swear Titan Cherries grow largest when watered with spring wine.

  8. A drunken trader once claimed Titan Honey revived his friend from death.

  9. Sailors believe Titan Cherry timber guarantees safe passage across storms.

  10. Some caravans carry Titan Cherries in ironbound wagons, guarded like relics.

  11. Eating a Rare Titan Cherry grants you the strength of ten men for a day.

  12. The Elder’s Council secretly auctions the largest fruits to hidden bidders.

  13. Titan Cherry saplings transplanted elsewhere always wither and die.

  14. A caravan of Titan Cherries vanished on the road—locals whisper about bandits with dragon-blood.

  15. Rockport’s prosperity is owed entirely to Titan Cherries; the mine is just a cover.

  16. A rare Titan Cherry seed once sprouted inside a noble’s garden fountain.

  17. Eating Titan Honey every morning cures seasickness.

  18. A warlord offered to trade a regiment of soldiers for a Rare Titan Cherry.

  19. Titan Cherries bruise if carried by horses, but not by oxen.

  20. In one city, Titan Cherries are worth more than emeralds.


41–60: Folklore & Superstition

  1. The first Titan Cherry tree grew from a drop of the moon’s blood.

  2. Fairies bless the blossoms every spring, ensuring the trees live forever.

  3. The trees hum softly at night, but only children can hear them.

  4. Titan Cherries never grow near graveyards; spirits drive them away.

  5. The trees are guardians, drinking up evil from the underground river.

  6. A Titan Cherry sapling sprouts wherever a hero’s ashes are scattered.

  7. A rare Titan Cherry appears once every 99 years, heralding great upheaval.

  8. The Elder’s Council claims to “listen” to the trees before making decisions.

  9. It is said that if the three lakes ever run dry, the trees will walk away.

  10. Druidic circles call Titan Cherries the “Heart of the Valley.”

  11. A blossom crown woven from Titan petals grants visions of the future.

  12. If a Titan Cherry is cut down unjustly, storms plague the land for a year.

  13. A Titan Cherry root once grew through the bones of a giant, giving the fruit its size.

  14. The wood is infused with the laughter of children, which keeps it strong.

  15. Titan Cherries glow faintly under starlight when danger is near.

  16. The three lakes were carved out by ancient Titan Cherries walking across the land.

  17. Some claim the trees speak to each other using wind and pollen.

  18. If you bury a Titan pit in blood, the tree that grows will bear cursed fruit.

  19. A fallen blossom landing on your shoulder is a blessing of long life.

  20. Villagers say the largest Titan Cherries are “chosen” to appear only when the world is ready.


61–80: Strange Happenings

  1. One year, Titan blossoms rained for three days straight—then the crops doubled in yield.

  2. A Titan Cherry once grew entirely hollow inside, like a wine barrel.

  3. A local fisherman swore he caught a trout that spat out a cherry blossom.

  4. One tree near Willowmere has bark shaped like a human face.

  5. A Titan Cherry fruit once burst open, releasing hundreds of glowing fireflies.

  6. A Rare Titan Cherry was found with three pits instead of one.

  7. Bees from one orchard sting with a mild numbing venom.

  8. Lightning has struck the same Titan Cherry three times without harming it.

  9. A grove once grew in perfect formation, forming a rune visible from the air.

  10. A farmer swears a Titan Cherry pit once sprouted in a single night.

  11. A wandering bard sang to a Titan Cherry and swears it bent its branches in applause.

  12. A Titan Cherry fruit was once carved into a drum that never loses its resonance.

  13. A traveling mage claimed Titan Cherries contain “pockets of condensed starlight.”

  14. A rare blossom fell into Willowmere and floated for weeks without wilting.

  15. A branch cut from a Titan Cherry continued to sprout blossoms for years.

  16. A Titan Cherry pit once split open and revealed a crystal instead of a seed.

  17. Miners claim the roots tangle around greenstone deposits on purpose.

  18. A Titan Cherry tree once grew upside down, roots to the sky.

  19. A Titan Cherry orchard supposedly “migrated” a dozen feet overnight.

  20. A Rare Titan Cherry pit, when cracked, revealed a tiny stone idol.


81–100: Legends & Prophecies

  1. The first Titan Cherry tree was planted by a goddess fleeing death.

  2. The roots of the trees drink from a river of magic deep underground.

  3. Titan Cherries bloom brightest before times of war.

  4. The trees will never fall while Rockport stands.

  5. One ancient Titan Cherry is said to house the soul of a sleeping dragon.

  6. A prophecy says the largest Titan Cherry ever grown will herald a new age.

  7. If a Titan Cherry reaches 200 feet tall, the world will change forever.

  8. Titan Honey is the blood of the land, condensed by bees.

  9. The Titan Cherries once grew across the world, but fled here to survive.

  10. The blossoms are tears of the dead, carried upward each spring.

  11. A Titan Cherry seed planted on a battlefield grows into a tree with red blossoms.

  12. A Titan Cherry orchard near Willowmere hides a gateway to the Feywild.

  13. Some druids say the Titan Cherries are the offspring of Yggdrasil itself.

  14. The Elder’s Council secretly worships the Titan Cherries as living gods.

  15. When the last Titan Cherry dies, Rockport will fall with it.

  16. The rarest fruit can heal any wound—but only once in history.

  17. A Titan Cherry wood staff carried by a hero will never break in battle.

  18. A Titan Cherry blossom carried in a soldier’s pocket guarantees safe return.

  19. A Titan Cherry grove was once destroyed by orcs—those orcs all vanished without trace.

  20. The Titan Cherries are said to watch over Rockport, and their blossoms are the village’s blessings given form.


👉 About half of these are intended to be true or partially true, while the rest are false, exaggerations, or myths—you decide which in play. The next section covers possible adventure seeds based on some of the rumors above.


Titan Cherry Rumors → Adventure Seeds

Everyday Gossip (Rumors 1–20)

  • Rumor 2 (Titan Honey never spoils): A merchant claims to have found a jar sealed 200 years ago. PCs are hired to authenticate—or thieves want to steal it.

  • Rumor 5 (children sleeping under blossoms don’t have nightmares): Recently, children in Rockport have been plagued by nightmares despite the blossoms. Is the grove failing, or is something else haunting them?

  • Rumor 10 (roots connected): A miner strikes an enormous underground root. Is it one tree… or the networked heart of the grove?

  • Rumor 19 (a Titan Cherry rebuilt half the village): The Council wants another such harvest. PCs may be tasked with magically nurturing a tree—or defending it from rival claimants.


Merchant & Traveler Tales (Rumors 21–40)

  • Rumor 22 (Titan Cherry crate cult): A distant port town now worships Titan Cherries. A caravan of cultists arrives in Rockport seeking more fruit.

  • Rumor 24 (potion of giant strength): An alchemist offers to pay handsomely for fruit to recreate the formula—or rival alchemists want it destroyed.

  • Rumor 34 (vanished caravan): The Council hires the party to investigate. Bandits? Fey? A rival kingdom?

  • Rumor 38 (warlord’s trade): A neighboring warlord really has made the offer: a regiment of soldiers for one Rare Titan Cherry. Should Rockport accept?


Folklore & Superstition (Rumors 41–60)

  • Rumor 45 (trees drink up evil): Locals believe the trees keep corruption at bay. When one starts to sicken, fiendish creatures stir near Willowmere. PCs must act fast.

  • Rumor 47 (rare fruit every 99 years): The year is said to be the one—and rival factions descend on Rockport to claim the legendary fruit.

  • Rumor 52 (cutting causes storms): A lumber crew fells a tree illegally; violent storms sweep the region. PCs must undo the curse.

  • Rumor 58 (bury a pit in blood): Someone has done exactly this, and a twisted Titan Cherry sapling is spreading blight.


Strange Happenings (Rumors 61–80)

  • Rumor 64 (tree bark face): One Titan Cherry bears a humanoid visage. A druid insists it’s a sleeping spirit that must be awakened. Others want it destroyed.

  • Rumor 66 (fruit with three pits): A rare harvest yields a fruit with three strange, glowing pits. They might be seeds… or something more sinister.

  • Rumor 73 (pockets of starlight): A mage insists Titan Cherries are falling star fragments, and hires the PCs to collect samples during a meteor shower.

  • Rumor 77 (roots tangle around greenstone): A mine collapses when workers cut into roots bound to crystal deposits. PCs must rescue survivors—and decide whether to sever or protect the magical roots.


Legends & Prophecies (Rumors 81–100)

  • Rumor 83 (bloom before war): The Titan Cherries are blooming brighter than ever this year. Prophecy-minded villagers fear imminent war. PCs may be caught between politics and omens.

  • Rumor 85 (soul of a sleeping dragon): A druidic sect claims one massive tree holds a dragon’s spirit. Enemy forces seek to cut it down and claim the “dragon’s heartwood.”

  • Rumor 92 (Feywild gateway): An orchard south of Willowmere ripens overnight. Travelers vanish among the trees, emerging weeks later speaking of faerie courts. PCs must venture in.

  • Rumor 95 (last tree = fall of Rockport): Someone is actively trying to destroy the oldest Titan Cherry, believing Rockport’s fall will open opportunity for conquest. PCs must stop them.


GM Use Notes

  • Rumors as Hooks: Introduce rumors casually in taverns, markets, or campfire stories. When players chase them, use these seeds.

  • Truth Level: About half the rumors can be true—decide based on campaign tone. Alternatively, roll secretly: 1–10 true, 11–15 half-true, 16–20 false.

  • Scaling: Each seed can be scaled from a low-level mystery (bees with odd venom) to a high-level crisis (the Feywild orchard gateway).