The power of the ages is yours to claim with this treasury of mystical items. Among these riches wait all the rarest relics and most mysterious magic items of the Shattered Star Adventure Path. This 54-card set of beautifully illustrated, full-color item cards allows you to track the riches you recover in vibrant detail.
GameMastery Item Cards allow heroes to keep track of their equipment in style. Each full-color card features a beautiful portrait of an item on one side with blank space on the back to keep notes. GameMastery Item Cards are compatible with any fantasy roleplaying game.
45 Stone (Rose)
46 Stone (Red)
47 Stone (Blue)
48 Stone (Light Blue)
49 Stone (Pink)
50 Stone (Pink and Green)
51 Stone (Red and Blue)
52 Talisman
53 Wayfinder
54 Wings
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Short Version: Physical reminders for artifacts in a campaign about artifacts.
Every campaign has items, but Shattered Star really revolves around them. It's by far the best place for an aid like this, but still isn't really vital.
The biggest problem is that the shards, like most items, end up sitting in one players inventory. In our game, that literally took that form of the cards riding around in player folio's pockets. Which is actually kind of cool, but "kind of cool" only gets you so far.
If I were rerunning Shattered Star, I would actually buy a fresh deck of these. But I'd also probably add some mechanics to reward moving around the shards. The more dynamic items are and the more personality they have, the more useful these cards will be.
To say that I was disappointed with this product is putting it mildly. Call me naïve, but I expected that this deck would contain cards for some of the medium/major magic items contained within this adventure path. Instead, it contains pictures of mostly generic items with a blank space on the back to write notes on.
What's the point of 7 cards with pictures of shards on the front and nothing written on the back? Why not print the stats for the items instead?
How about linking the Ioun Stones to the correct shard and also incorporating its particular powers on the back?
are the blank sides usable with dry or wet erase markers and pens?
I just checked, and the dry erase works well (though I wouldn't recommend writing over pencil marks, as the dry erase ink settles in the indentation, and I wouldn't leave it on over an extended period of time in case the dry erase stains). Pencilling lightly on the cards works well, and as weird as this sounds, I couldn't find a wet erase marker here at work to test it out. Since the edges of the card aren't sealed, I would be hesitant about using a wet erase marker on the cards.
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As a GM who plays almost exclusively via Virtual Table Top, I'd be all over these if there was a .pdf version so that I could give each weapon in my campaign a unique picture.
It's not really associated with a deity, it's more associated with ancient Thassilon, though I'm guessing if you wanted to tie it to a deity Lissala would be a safe bet.
It's not really associated with a deity, it's more associated with ancient Thassilon, though I'm guessing if you wanted to tie it to a deity Lissala would be a safe bet.