| theeaterofshades |
Hello all. It has been ages since I played a wizard in 3rd edition, but I have decided to return to the class for my group's pathfinder beta campaign. I will be playing an elven evoker with opposed schools of necromancy and enchantment. What I am looking for is two fold:
1) A spell book generator with descriptions so that we can find the basics of the spells without having to constantly flip through the beta's magic section.
2) A "memorized/prepared spell" sheet to find which spells are prepared for the day and takes into account the new cantrip/orizon at will rules and Arcane bond with an item
Is there something out there that does this?
Thanks!
| Johnny Angel |
I'm working on my own spell list manager spreadsheet, which was already not ready for public release even before Beta. I'm working on the needed changes even now, but basically it uses the forms (and even some of the tables) from SpellForge. The advantage it has over SpellForge is mostly that first of all it will be Pathfinder compatible, and second it'll be more customizable.
Setting it to allow you to select and list the bonus spells for Sorcerers and Wizards as well as for the Clerics (whose spell-like abilities are now being listed as actual bonus spells) will be straightforward enough, but updating the page references and going through the grind of checking to see if these spells are changed in a way that needs to be noted on the sheet will be quite a grind in itself.
| Johnny Angel |
| Ken Marable |
Personally, I swear by SpellGen and have used it for years. Although last I heard someone was still working on the Pathfinder dataset, so I don't know how far along that is.
But I'll also have to give yours a look, Johnny. Thanks!
| Johnny Angel |
I debated just modifying Spell Forge, but currently it's not set up for the alternate rules that Pathfinder requires, and for all the effort it would have taken to make the adjustments for compatible I could instead build a spreadsheet from scratch, which I was going to want to do anyway because the idea is to create a modular, modifiable spreadsheet for managing a spell list in a Vancian magic system. Spell Forge, on the other hand, is admirably exhaustive in covering D&D 3.5, but you couldn't easily make it a d20 Modern spell list manager, for example.