Midnight Basics

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Setting[edit]

The setting of Midnight is that of the fantasy world of Aryth 100 years after the dark god Izrador wins his war of domination. The game world centers on on Eredane, a large continent with varied geography and inhabitants. It is generally an evil-dominant world, with the Church of the Shadow and its Orc minions controlling the lives of the downtrodden Humans. The Elves and Dwarves are hunted mercilessly, while the Gnomes toil for the Shadow and Halflings are often enslaved.

Rules[edit]

Based on the D&D 3.5 rules, and using the Player's Handbook as a basis, Midnight alters the standard rules in some fundamental ways. Magic is more difficult to cast and harder to learn, the magic system has been replaced for a feat and spell point based system. As a result, many of the standard classes have been removed, with alternates in their place.

Heroic Paths[edit]

One major factor that separates the Midnight d20 game system from other fantasy games is the choice of a heroic path as a major determining factor in the creation of a character. As magic is proscribed, these paths which must be chosen at 1st level give spell-like abilities to players. As the characters advance in levels, they might get new spell-like abilities, skills, or feats.

Magic[edit]

Three types of magic are found in the Midnight d20 world: "divine", which generally is connected with Izrador; innate magic sourced from within, generally found in elves and other fey creatures; and channelled. The latter is using the energy of Aryth to powerful effect. This is a feat-based system, and thus all character classes can cast some spells at appropriate levels. Only the Channeler character class truly specializes in it, however. Due to the magic changes in the game, Midnight does not have the monk, ranger, or paladin character classes.

Magic Items[edit]

Midnight is different from normal D&D crawls in that there are NO simple +1 swords, etc... All magic in the world is tracked and watched. So items are not as blase as they are in normal D&D worlds. They still function similar but the meaning and rarity are different. There are two magic item types. Covenant Items & Charms.

  • Coventant Items are the true magic items of D&D with a big difference, they grow with the user. Only those with the touch of Heroic Path (villains can also have this) can activate their power and their powers unlock as the weilder grows in level. These can be weapons, armor, cloaks, etc... similar to normal D&D items. They are also subject to detection from the Legates and the Shadow in the North when they are activated. (think of the one ring when Frodo puts it on and the bad guys all turn to it!) There are Covenant items that span from the first age through recent times, growing more powerful as they are more ancient. PCs will tend to get only 2-3 maximum covenant items at any one time. These are more in-tune with being "destined" to fall into your hands.
  • Charms are magic items of less power. All but True Charms are one shot items. True Charms can last longer but may fade in time. Charms usually have small bonuses given them. Charms are NOT detectable by the enemy and actually only empowered normal items and trinkets. Characters may have several charms at any given time and are sometimes used in trade for goods.


MIDNIGHT MATERIALS[edit]

The setting is fairly well developed now. There is no meta-plot, Fury and Hammer both provide one to two pages on possible outcomes of the war, but no book goes beyond the year 99 Last Age. There's another regional book coming out later this year, Destiny of Shadow, dealing with the heartlands of the old Kingdom of Erenland.

Setting Books[edit]

  • Fury of Shadow (boxed) dealing with the offensive against the elves
  • Forge of Shadow - the city of Steel Hill, the Shadow's armory
  • Under the Shadow - the "free" city of Baden's Bluff
  • Hammer and Shadow - the besieged dwarven realms
  • Star and Shadow - the Sarcosan south
  • Heart and Shadow - the depths of darkness, Izrador's realm
  • City of Shadow - the home of the Dark Tower (worst book in the setting series imho)

Crunch[edit]

  • Sorcery and Shadow - interesting rules on magic intertwined with very good fluff
  • Steel and Shadow - combat oriented book
  • Hand of Shadow - playing as the dark side

Others[edit]

  • Midnight 2nd edition - a revision of the game, absorbs the first supplement Against the Shadow and adds another 40,000 words
  • Crown of Shadow - an adventure arc





Midnight: North & South Portal