- One slightly crushed silver snuff box, missing the lid.
- Bundle of 22 bungs. The cord they've been bound with is frayed and about to give way.
- Saddle blanket.
- Four small animal traps on a single rusty chain. The third one doesn't work quite right.
- One box of 3 dozen candles. They've all melted into one dense brick, but with some patience each candle can be chipped out of the waxy block in 1d4 minutes.
- 122 feet of stout cordage wrapped willy-nilly around a rough stick.
- Simple lead plumb bob or plummet in a velvet draw-string bag.
- Lodestone, snapped in half.
- Cobbler's needle-punch. Can be used as a weapon inflicting 1d2 damage.
- 2d4 assorted files in a leather sack. The ones that aren't chipped or cracked are rusty.
- Three heavy pig-iron wedges used in splitting stumps, etc.
- A draw-knife that has a wobbly handle.
- Bronze tripod meant to support a ceremonial incense brazier.
- 1 seriously nicked-up Peavey-hook.
- Heavy wooden cutting board removed from a near-by tavern.
- 32 feet of thin cord rolled-up in a sack of powdered chalk.
- One heavy, left-handed glove crafted from extra-thick leather, scorched along the edges and pitted across backside.
- Wooden bucket. Expertly repaired bottom. No handle.
- 20 pounds of rendered fat in a covered pail.
- Small wooden box containing 43 horse-shoe nails.
- Poorly repaired war hammer, used as a meat-tenderizer.
- Rug-beater.
- 12 pounds of borax packed into a small barrel.
- 43 grooved lead runners carefully stored in a flat, wide wooden box with a side compartment for various tools used in repairing stained glass.
- A single 104-pound block of rock salt.
- 6 pounds of vivid blue limojes-style vitreous enamel in a sealed wooden canister.
- 1d4 chisels. No hammer.
- 3 bottles of clear fluid. One is denatured alcohol. The second is distilled water. The third is Prussic acid.
- A dwarf or child-sized auger.
- 3 pair of mis-matched metal-working tongs.
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Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Low-End Loot, Table V
Low-End Loot: Table V (D30)
Number 21 is a hoot.
ReplyDeleteOnce again, something I can and will use in my game. Thanks!
ReplyDelete@John Till: Thanks! Those little details can spark entire side-treks and adventures in their own right. Like when the cook from a certain local tavern starts chasing after one of the player characters who happens to be carrying around the cook's favorite, family heirloom cutting board...
ReplyDelete@Michael Moscrip: Cool--we'd love to hear from folks who've used our stuff in their games. We're compiling the Low-End Loot series into a stand-alone PDF so those tables can be used with Labyrinth Lord, Swords & Wizardry, Dungeon Crawl Classics, or just about any RPG out there...so long as you are okay with random tables.