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Invisibility magic items seem overvalued
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<blockquote data-quote="DEFCON 1" data-source="post: 7610742" data-attributes="member: 7006"><p>Another thing to note is that the rarity of items are not necessarily based on how easy or hard the spells are to get normally... they are based upon what the designers decided were genuinely how rare they thing the items should be in a default campaign.</p><p></p><p>A Ring of Invisibility is such an iconic magic item (in literature if not D&D) that I suspect they didn't want to make them commonplace in your average D&D campaign. They wanted it to maintain its legendary status, a la the 'One Ring'. It's as much story as it is mechanics, which is why many rarities are given as they are.</p><p></p><p>Now granted when you couple it with the magic item prices in the DMG it does make for some illogical situations (where a Potion of Invisibility could "cost more" than many much more useful continuous magic items per their chart)... but that's where you as a DM have to decide whether your campaign is defaulting to the default or if you are going to make your own choices. So if you think a Ring of Invisibility shouldn't be that big a deal, then you can easily ignore or change its rarity to fit your campaign.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DEFCON 1, post: 7610742, member: 7006"] Another thing to note is that the rarity of items are not necessarily based on how easy or hard the spells are to get normally... they are based upon what the designers decided were genuinely how rare they thing the items should be in a default campaign. A Ring of Invisibility is such an iconic magic item (in literature if not D&D) that I suspect they didn't want to make them commonplace in your average D&D campaign. They wanted it to maintain its legendary status, a la the 'One Ring'. It's as much story as it is mechanics, which is why many rarities are given as they are. Now granted when you couple it with the magic item prices in the DMG it does make for some illogical situations (where a Potion of Invisibility could "cost more" than many much more useful continuous magic items per their chart)... but that's where you as a DM have to decide whether your campaign is defaulting to the default or if you are going to make your own choices. So if you think a Ring of Invisibility shouldn't be that big a deal, then you can easily ignore or change its rarity to fit your campaign. [/QUOTE]
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Invisibility magic items seem overvalued
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