Friday, January 30, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 30, Iggwilv Witch Queen of the Demonic Tradition

Iggwilv Witch Queen of the Demonic Tradition
 I rather love Iggwilv. 

There is a quote attributed to her that I think is spot on. "I can't remember the number of times I have burned everything to the ground and started over." It captures her well I think. From the girl Natasha to Natasha the Dark, to Tasha, to Tashanna, to Hura, Iggwilv, and now? Zyblina. I see no contradictions here. Witches are fluid, liminal creatures, and witch queens more so. 

Iggwilv has never been a creature of stasis, either in her world or ours. She does not cling to names, crowns, or even worlds. She sheds them. Each incarnation is not a disguise so much as a molting, a deliberate abandonment of what no longer serves her. Where other archmages obsess over legacy and continuity, Iggwilv embraces rupture. Reinvention is not a failure state for her, it is a strategy.

This is what separates her from the traditional wizard archetype and places her squarely in the lineage of witch queens. Wizards accumulate. Witches transform. Iggwilv understands that power calcifies if it is not periodically broken down and reforged. When she burns everything to the ground, it is not an act of petulance or nihilism. It is pruning. It is alchemy. 

There is also a deeply witchy pragmatism to her infamous dealings with demons. Iggwilv is not a supplicant, nor is she a true believer. She does not worship, and she does not kneel. Demons are tools, dangers, lovers, rivals, and sometimes mirrors, but never masters. Her greatest victories over fiends were not won through brute force or righteous opposition, but through understanding their nature better than they understood themselves. 

Iggwilv Witch Queen of the Demonic Tradition

The Demonic Tradition she embodies is not about corruption for its own sake, but about sovereignty. To bind a demon is to assert that no cosmic hierarchy is absolute, that even Hell has rules that can be learned, exploited, and rewritten. She is part of the Demonic Tradition because she knows demons, she can gain power from them, and not let it harm herself. Well. Most times.

If Baba Yaga is the archetypal Witch Mother, eternal and terrible, then Iggwilv is the Witch Daughter who refused to remain in her shadow. She learned everything she could, then walked away.

Iggwilv Witch Queen of the Demonic Tradition
Iggwilv

30th level Human Arch Witch/Witch Queen (20/10), Chaotic Neutral (Evil)
Tradition: Demonic (formerly Daughters of Baba Yaga)

Secondary Skill: Scribe

S: 10
I: 20
W: 17
D: 21
C: 19
Ch: 22

Paralysis/Poison: 3
Petrify/Polymorph: 3  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 4
Breath Weapon: 6
Spells: 5

AC: -10 (leather armor +4, Bracers of Defense +3, Ring of Protection +5, Dex 21 -4, Tastchti's Mark -2)
HP: 66
THAC0: 10

Weapon
Dagger +1 1d4/1d3

Familiar: Quasit, "Black Comet"

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Touch of Evil

Archwitch Powers: Mastery of the Veil (gained at level 7), Arcane Communion (gained at level 9), Unbound by Circles (gained at level 11). 

Witch Queen Powers: Awesome Presence, Occult Eminece (Polymorph Other), A Thousand Faces, Timeless Body, Ninth Level Spells (5)

Spells
Cantrips: Alarm Ward, Arcane Mark, Chill, Daze, Ghost Sound, Summon Vermin
First level: Bad Luck, Cause Fear, Charm Person, Darkness, Fey Sight, Ghostly Slashing, Glamour, Protection from Spirits, Silver Tongue
Second level: Agony, Biting Blade, Discord, Enthrall, Evil Eye, Invisibility, Mind Obscure, Phantasmal Spirit, Tasha's Hideous Laughter (Ritual)
Third level: Astral Sense, Bestow Curse, Dispel Magic, Feral Spirit, Ghost Ward, Toad Mind, Witch Writing
Fourth level: Analyze Magic, Divination, Intangible Cloak of Shadows, Phantom Lacerations, Spiritual Dagger, Tears of the Banshee, Withering Touch
Fifth level:  Break Enchantment, Enslave, Greater Command, Magic Jar, Witch Box
Sixth level: Anchoring Rite, Anti-Magic Shell, Break the Spirit, Dismissal (Ritual)
Seventh level: Banishment, Draw Forth the Soul, Forbidding
Eighth level: Astral Projection, Gate, Trap the Soul
Ninth level: Bind Soul, Foresight, Imprisonment, Seal the Gate, Power Word Kill,

Theme Song: I Hate Myself for Loving You

What makes Iggwilv compelling is not that she is powerful, but that she is unfinished. Or more to the point, ever-changing and ever-growing. Even now, even under yet another name like Zybilna, she is still becoming. A Witch Queen is not a static end-state like lichdom or apotheosis. It is a road, and Iggwilv has walked it forward, backward, and sideways across multiple realities.

For a campaign, Iggwilv should never be a simple antagonist. She is an event. An inflection point. Crossing paths with her should permanently alter the trajectory of a story, even if swords are never drawn and spells are never exchanged. She might teach, betray, ignore, manipulate, or save the party, but she will never do so for their sake alone. There is always a larger calculus at work.

And yet, for all her monstrous reputation, there remains something profoundly mortal at her core. She still loves, still hates, still remembers. Her many names are not masks to hide emptiness, but scars that prove she has survived herself over and over again.

That may be her greatest magic of all.

Character Creation Challenge


Thursday, January 29, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 29, Kersy Witch Queen of the Atlantean Tradition

Kersy Witch Queen of the Atlantean Tradition
Kersy is a wonderful character. Bruce Heard, her creator, admits she is basically a Circe stand-in, but I saw her as something else. I have to admit, when I saw Vanessa Williams in ads for the 1997 TV mini-series "The Odyssey," I thought, "Now that is great casting for Circe!" Sadly, I got it wrong: she was cast as Calypso, and Bernadette Peters as Circe. But it stuck with me. So when I came back to D&D in the 2000s and encountered Kersy, I already knew what she looked like. She looked like 1990s Vanessa Williams

Kersy has an interesting character beyond her origins as a Circe stand-in. She is introduced in the D&D Masters-level module M1 Into the Maelstrom. She is using her human guise as a 30th-level Magic-user, and she is the ruler of the Island of Turkeys.  If you are thinking she sounds a lot like Circe and her Island of Pigs then you are correct. Doing some deeper research into Kersy gives me a stranger tale. Over at the Vaults of Pandius, they have expanded on her background a bit more. 

She is described as the distillation of Koryis' own unwanted thoughts, urges, and feelings.  

Koryis is the Immortal Patron of Peace.  While he was on his epic quest, he sought to purge himself of evil in impure thoughts. He was successful, and that "impurity" manifested itself as Kersy. If Kersey looks like Vanessa Williams from The Odyssey, then Koris looks like Armand Assante.

At least that is what his mythology says. 

We learn from M1 that she is a "beautiful maiden" and a "30th-level magic-user." But other details are scant. From the Vaults of Pandius, we learn that she is beautiful, with long raven-black hair and amber-colored eyes.  She is the Patroness of Witchcraft and Charms.  

What can we gather from all of this? Kersy is Koryis' "dark anima" in Jungian psychology.  The description of Koryis' quest to rid himself of these dark, impure impulses sounds exactly like a quest to confront his Anima, who is Kersy. However, Koryis failed to integrate his "shadow self" and is less than he was. 

Now, if this is what happened, then according to Jung, Koyris is now forever incomplete.  Reading over the history of VoP, it would seem that Kersy knows this. If we extend this to other Jungian archetypes, then Kersy fits one perfectly. The Witch.  She is powerful, connected to the Earth, and a source of wisdom.  Koyris, in his quest to rid himself of Kersy, only weakened himself and gave his power away.

Kersy might wish to reunite with the now forever incomplete Koryis, or not. She has grown since then. 

In my Occult D&D, they would forever be circling each other, each seeking what the other has and never feeling quite complete. An Anima and Animus, or a Yin and Yang. 

And given her history, she is also perfect for my Atlantean Tradition.

Kersy Witch Queen of the Atlantean Tradition
Kersy

29th level Human Witch/ Witch Queen (20/9), Neutral (Chaoic Neutral)
Tradition: Atlantean 

Secondary Skill: Astrologer

S: 12
I: 18
W: 18
D: 16
C: 14
Ch: 18

Paralysis/Poison: 3
Petrify/Polymorph: 3 
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 4
Breath Weapon: 6
Spells: 5

AC: -2 (leather armor +3, Bracers of Protection +3, Cord of Protection +2, Ring of Protection +3, Dex 16 -1)
HP: 66
THAC0: 12

Weapon
None

Familiar: Rainbow Warbler (Song Bird) "Victoria"

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Speak to Animals
13th level: Drawing Down the Moon
19th level: Witch's Blessing

Witch Queen Powers:
Awesome Presence, Occult Eminece (Polymorph Other), A Thousand Faces, Timeless Body, Ninth Level Spells (4)

Spells

Cantrips: Daze, Guiding Star*, Mote of Light, Object Reading, Open
First level: Allure, Bar the Way, Bewitch I, Burning Hands, Call Spirits of the Land, Charm Person, Comprehend Languages, Glamour
Second level: Alter Self, Beckon, Blight of Loneliness, Burning Gaze, Detect Charm, ESP, Evil Eye, Mind Obscure
Third level: Astral Sense, Bestow Curse, Calm Animals, Clairsentience, Control Winds, Danger Sense
Fourth level: Ball Lightning, Confusion, Divination, Masque, Polymorph Others, Threshold
Fifth level: Break Enchantment, Commune with Nature, Maelstrom, Song of Night
Sixth level: Bones of Earth, Cloak of Dreams, Greater Scry, Mislead
Seventh level: Astral Spell, Breath of the Goddess, Veneration
Eighth level: Adoration (Overwhelming), Eye of the Storm, Storm of Vengeance
Ninth level: Foresight, Mass Polymorph, Seal the Gate, Sovereign Geas, Time Stop

Theme Song: Veil of Isis

My Kersy has outgrown the original Kersy much as she outgrew the original Circe. She is my witch queen of the Jungian archetype of the Anima. So, in a way, it makes some sense to me to make her an Atlantean Witch. She also brings up something.

Baba Yaga is not a member of the Daughters of Baba Yaga tradition; she is Classical. Aradia is not a member of the Followers of Aradia tradition; she is a Pagan. Likewise, Kersy is the Queen of the Atlantean Tradition and founded the Aquarian Tradition. The Aquarians, in their own way, honor her as their Witch Queen, but they aptly refuse to have a witch queen of their own. 

Kersey Sheets

I have done quite a lot with Kersy over the last five or so years, and she has been great. Truly one of the most powerful Witch Queens I use. 

Character Creation Challenge


Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 28, Areelu Vorlesh Witch Queen of the Malefic Tradition

Areelu Vorlesh Witch Queen of the Malefic Tradition
 Areelu Vorlesh is another witch queen I adopted, this time from the Pathfinder game. She is a half-succubus witch and a whole lot of fun. In the Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous video game, she is described as something like a mad scientist and mother of monsters. So for this reason, I gave her the Alchemist secondary skill. Since a lot of her magic seems based on her occult devotion, I also decided that she would be a witch priestess, more akin to an occultist than anything. I considered archwitch, but felt this worked better. She sought to claim the authority of the gods in my games. 

The human who would become the witch Areelu Vorlesh has been lost to time. It was known that she was a witch in Deskari’s cult.  She was researching the nature of the separation of the worlds and planes.  It was her success at opening the Worldwound that caused her Patron to transform her into a half-fiend.

After her defeat at the World Wound, Areelu Vorlesh sought other allies. The ones she found became The Coven of the Shattered Crowns. Vorlesh is going after the Gods themselves. 

Witch Queen Areelu Vorlesh

Areelu’s elevation to Witch Queen came not through lineage, coven recognition, or patron blessing, but through apotheosis by catastrophe.

The creation of the Worldwound was not an accident, nor a summoning gone awry. It was a calculated experiment: to pierce planar reality and hold it open long enough to observe what crawled through. That demons followed was expected. That the wound endured was the true triumph.

In this moment, Areelu crossed the threshold from Malefic Witch Priestess to Witch Queen, for she no longer merely wielded magic, she altered the cosmological order.

This act places her above regional sovereigns and elemental queens, but below those who embody primal myth. She is not inevitable. She is possible, and that is far more dangerous.

Areelu Vorlesh Witch Queen of the Malefic Tradition
Areelu Vorlesh

28th level Half-Succubus Witch Priestess/Witch Queen 28 (20/8), Chaotic Evil
Tradition: Malefic 

Secondary Skill: Alchemist

S: 14
I: 18
W: 18
D: 18
C: 18
Ch: 19

Paralysis/Poison: 3
Petrify/Polymorph: 3  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 4
Breath Weapon: 6
Spells: 5

AC: 0 (Bracers of Defense, +3 Amulet of Protection)
HP: 73
THAC0: 10

Weapon
Dagger of venom +4 1d4/1d3

Familiar: "Gimcrak" (Quasit, Enhanced)

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Evil's Touch
13th level: Devil's Tongue
19th level: Curse

Witch Queen Powers:
Awesome Presence, Occult Eminece (Polymorph Other), A Thousand Faces, Timeless Body, Ninth Level Spells (4)

Spells
Cantrips: Arcane Mark, Detect Curse, Message, Summon Vermin
First level: Bewitch I, Cause Fear, Charm Person, Command, Increase Sex Appeal, Quicken Healing, Shattering the Hourglass, Silver Tongue
Second level: Ecstasy, Enthrall, Evil Eye, Hold Person, Invisibility, Phantasmal Spirit, Rite of Remote Seeing, Scare
Third level: Bestow Curse, Clairaudience/Clairvoyance, Dispel Magic, Feral Spirit, Fly, Tongues, Witch Wail
Fourth level: Abomination, Charm Monster, Confusion, Divine Power, Spiritual Dagger, Withering Touch
Fifth level: Baleful Polymorph, Feeblemind, Greater Command, Nightmare 
Sixth level: Break the Spirit, Mass Suggestion, Repulsion, True Seeing
Seventh level: Draw Forth the Soul, Eternal Charm Monster, Gate (Ritual)
Eighth level: Bewitch VIII, Damming Stare, Destroy Life, Wail of the Banshee
Ninth level: Bind the Soul, Imprisonment, Power Word Kill, Shapechange

Theme Song: Hexenhammer & Queen of the Infernal Pantheon

Areelu Vorlesh Witch Queen of the Malefic Tradition

Areelu Vorlesh ultimately earns her place among the Witch Queens not because she commands lesser demons, but because she refused to accept the limits imposed by gods, planes, or tradition. Where other witches bargain, rule, or endure, Areelu experiments. She treats the cosmos as a problem to be solved and suffering as an acceptable reagent. In this, she represents a uniquely modern horror, not the ancient terror of Baba Yaga or the cold inevitability of Koliada, but the relentless conviction that reality itself is flawed and must be corrected, no matter the cost.

Character Creation Challenge


Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Mail Call Tuesday: Tales of the Valiant Player's Guide 2

 Tales of the Valiant Player's Guide 2 was delivered to my door this week! 

Tales of the Valiant Player's Guide 2

I backed this on Kickstarter a while back and I am happy to see it. 

The box was packed with the Player's Guide 2 and three character journals.

Of course, what I am most excited about is their new witch class.

Tales of the Valiant Player's Guide 2

Tales of the Valiant Player's Guide 2

It looks like it is a lot of fun and I can't wait to create a new character for it.

I think I do want a brand new character. One I can try in this, Pathfinder 2.1, and for the hell of it, something for my current AD&D game. It could be a lot of fun. 

Just need a concept that would fit all three games!

This witch has three subclasses, which are roughly equivalent to my ideas of traditions. The Crimson Cord, the Night Song, and the Twilight Soul. Pathfinder is more Patron-focused.  Somewhere is a witch I can slot into all three.

Character Creation Challenge: Day 27, Koliada Witch Queen of the Winter Witch Tradition

Koliada Witch Queen of the Winter Witch Tradition
Back in June of 2009 D&D 4th edition was still on the shelves and Dungeon #162 was available for download.  Inside was an Epic level adventure by Stephen Radney-MacFarland called "Winter of the Witch". It featured the machinations of the so-called Winter Witch, the minor Archfey Koliada and her plans to freeze the world. From the adventure:

"In this epic adventure, the Winter Witch—a legendary archfey—has launched a campaign to send eternal winter cascading over large portions of the world. After a summons to Winterhaven, the characters find a land locked in ice, and an old ally in need of aid. A trek to find a artifact known as the Sun’s Sliver ensues, the only force potent enough to defeat the Winter Witch and banish her from the mortal world once more. An adventure for 22nd-level PCs."

While not totally an original plot, it was still fun, well executed and had a lot things going for it.  But mostly it had Koliada, who grabbed my attention from the start.  It also started me thinking about the witches of winter.  In particular, why are there so many? Louhi, Elsa, and the Snow Queen, Jadis, all the Jadwiga winter witches from Pathfinder, and so on.  Notably, almost all of these are also royalty, if not outright queens.

I went on to add her as a Witch Queen of my own with both Basic-era Witch and D&D 5e stats. Granted, I am not likely to run out of winter witches anytime soon, but she is still a great character. 

I think fo this new version of her I'll use my Twilight Elf species. Since this is nominally part of the "Blackmoor: Land of a Thousand Witches," I am going to say she is from my Blackmoor and the Land of the Black Ice. The area of my world where Blackmoor was destroyed.

Koliada Witch Queen of the Winter Witch Tradition
Koliada

27th level Twilight Elf Witch Queen (Archwith 20, Witch Queen 7), Chaotic Evil
Tradition: Winter Witch

Secondary Skill: Initiate

S: 16
I: 17
W: 15
D: 15
C: 19
Ch: 20

Paralysis/Poison: 3
Petrify/Polymorph: 3  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 4
Breath Weapon: 6
Spells: 5

AC: 0 (Leather +4, dex, Ring of Protection)
HP: 66
THAC0: 10

Weapon
Sword** +3 1d8+3 (athame enchanted with Spiritual Sword, Biting Blade, Death Blade, Conjure Pact Blade)

Familiar: Iceling (Ice Sprite)

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Fae Shape
13th level: Curse
19th level: Shape Change

Witch Queen Powers: Awesome Presence, Occult Eminece (Conjure Pact Blade), A Thousand Faces, Ninth Level Spells (4)

Spells
Bonus Cantrips (Twilight Elf): Blur, Dancing Lights, Minor Charm
Cantrips: Chill, Daze, Alarm Ward, Ghost Sound, Inflict Minor Wounds, Spark
First level:  Bewitch I, Black Fire, Cause Fear, Charm Person, Chill Touch, Endure Elements, Glamour, Minor Fighting Prowess, Silver Tongue
Second level: Defoliate, Discord, Enthrall, Freezing Gaze, Hold Person, Invisibility, Phantasmal Spirit, Whispering Wind
Third level: Arctic Grasp, Bestow Curse, Bewitch III, Dispel Magic, Feral Spirit, Spirit of Hyperborea, Witch Wail
Fourth level: Analyze Magic, Charm Monster, Elemental Armor (Ice), Intangible Cloak of Shadows, Phantom Lacerations, Spiritual Sword, Withering Touch
Fifth level: Blade Dance, Death Curse, Dreadful Bloodletting, Nightmare
Sixth level: Death Blade, Eye Bite, Mass Agony, True Seeing
Seventh level: Death Aura, Greater Blindness, Insanity, Wave of Mutilation
Eighth level:  Destroy Life, Mystic Barrier, Wail of the Banshee
Ninth level: Foresight, Imprisonment, Power Word Kill, Shape Change

Theme Song: The Witch of the North

I rather like this version, to be honest. She compares well to both her Basic-era version and her D&D 4e one.

In 4e she can only be killed by something called the Sun's Sliver. Which is a piece of the sun. Sounds like the Sun Sword from Ravenloft. In my other games this would be a "Unique Kill" Quality.  I have debated about using something similar for all witch queens, but that would imply they are there to be killed, instead of my point of view, as near mythic-level characters who can aid or hinder characters as needed. You don't bring in a witch queen unless you plan on using her for something epic.

Character Creation Challenge


Monday, January 26, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 26, Sagarassi Witch Queen of the Sea Witch Tradition

Today, I want to talk more about the Witch Queen Advanced Class. This updates my previous version

Tea with the Witch Queens by Brian Brinlee
Tea with the Witch Queens by Brian Brinlee
L-R Sagarassi, Iggwilv, The Simbul, Larina, Feiya

WITCH QUEEN / WITCH KING

Advanced Class for Witches

When a Witch has reached the height of mortal power, there yet remains one step further upon the Path, the ascension to the mantle of the Witch Queen (or Witch King). This being is the supreme vessel of a Patron’s will, the living nexus of a Tradition’s power, and the spiritual sovereign of all witches within her realm. Like the Hierophant Druid of the Old Faith, she is both pontiff and prophet, counselor and conduit, a figure whose very presence can bend the ley and alter the seasons' turning.

Whether crowned by fate, prophecy, deed, or divine lineage, this witch has ascended beyond the coven to become a legendary figure. 

Only one Witch Queen (or King) may reign for each Tradition at any given time, making them as rare as they are powerful.

Requirements

To become a Witch Queen (or Witch King), a character must:

  • Be a Witch (including Archwitch and Witch Priestess) of at least 18th level, but no more than 23rd level. Still thinking about this.
  • Possess Charisma 17 or higher. Additionally, the witch must have an Intelligence or Wisdom score of 15 or higher.
  • Be a member in good standing of a coven
  • Have been chosen through omen, divine sign, or a coven-wide rite as the next Queen or King

Restrictions

  • Only one Witch Queen or King may exist per Tradition at a time (GM’s discretion)
  • To become a Witch Queen or King, the previous sovereign must abandon or relinquish their rulership.  This is often upon the death of the previous sovereign, but not required. 
  • Occult Powers are gained differently (see below).

Spellcasting

  • The Witch Queen gains access to limited ninth-level spells.
  • Spell casting progression ends in favor of powers and ninth-level spells.
  • May forego the use of Material Components. 


Level Title XP hp Powers
20* Witch* 1,640,000 - 1,759,999 10d4+10
1 Spring Court Witch 0 - 199,999 +2 Ninth-level spell*
2 Summer Court Witch 200,000 - 399,999 +3 Awesome Presence
3 Autumn Court Witch 400,000 - 599,999 +4 Ninth-level spell
4 Winter Court Witch 600,000 - 799,999 +5 Occult Eminence
5 Baroness of Witches 800,000 - 999,999 +6 Ninth-level spell
6 Countess of Witches 1,000,000 - 1,199,999 +7 A Thousand Faces
7 Marquise of Witches 1,200,000 - 1,399,999 +8 Ninth-level spell
8 Duches of Witches 1,400,000 - 1,599,999 +9 Timeless Body
9 Princess of Witches 1,600,000 - 1,799,999 +10 Ninth-level spell
10 Queen of Witches 1,800,000 - 1,999,999 +11 Mantle of Sovereignty

Witch Queen Abilities

Ninth-level Spells: The Witch Queen gains a ninth-level spell at alternate levels. These spells are drawn from the Witch Queen Spell list.

Awesome Presence: Witches perceive the Witch Queen as a radiant beacon of power. Allies within 60 feet receive +1 to morale checks and saving throws vs. fear; enemies must save vs. spells or suffer -1 to morale. All witches instinctively recognize her status and will defer unless magically compelled otherwise.

Occult Eminence: The Witch Queen gains one chosen Occult Power of her Tradition.

A Thousand Faces: The Witch Queen may alter her appearance at will, as per the disguise self spell, though the effect is real, not illusory. This change does not affect clothing or equipment and may be maintained indefinitely.

Timeless Body: The Witch Queen ceases to age. She gains immunity to magical aging and no longer suffers ability penalties due to age. Natural bonuses to Intelligence and Wisdom still accrue. Her lifespan is extended to 120 years, and she will still die of old age unless further extended by other magical means. 

Mantle of Sovereignty: The Witch Queen may perform a rite, calling upon her Tradition’s power. Effects may include summoning a spirit host, causing omens to appear across the land, or sealing a region against extra-planar intrusion for 1d4 days.

Rulership and Influence

The Witch Queen or King is not merely a title, but a mantle of magical authority. All witches of her Tradition know of her. At the GM’s discretion, she may gain the right to command covens, invoke her Patron’s will across vast distances, or declare magical edicts that affect ley lines or seasonal flows. Along with this power and influence comes the wisdom and responsibility of how to use such power. 

Experience Progression and Saving Throws

Continues to use the Witch class tables for all attack and saving throw purposes.

Multi-Class and Dual-Class Use

Only single-classed Witches may become Witch Queens (Archwitches and Witch-Priestess are considered single-class witches). The transformation requires undivided devotion to the Patron and Tradition. Other characters may assist or serve such a queen, but may never claim her title.

The Witch Queen is both symbol and sovereign, oracle and enforcer. Her path is not taken lightly, for once crowned, her soul is forever marked by the gaze of the gods.

Witch Queen Spell list

Ninth Level Spells

  • Bind Soul
  • Command the Coven
  • Eternal Curse
  • Foresight
  • Imprisonment
  • Mass Polymorph
  • Power Word Kill
  • Raise the Barrow-Lord
  • Rewrite the Name
  • Seal the Gate
  • Shapechange
  • Sovereign Geas
  • Time Stop

--

Sagarassi Witch Queen of the Sea Witch Tradition
Sagarassi, The Sea Witch

My next Witch Queen is from the world of Krynn, home to the Dragonlance Saga.

Not much is known about Sagarassi.  So little, in fact, it has taken me a while to collect this information. But here is what I have pieced together. The best (ok only) primary source for my information is the AD&D 2nd Edition product Otherlands. The rest comes from the Dragonlance Fandom wiki. 

She was a Silvanesti Elf, but was changed into a sea creature by the Sea Goddess Zeboim, whom she worships.  Both Sagarassi and Zeboim are known as the "Sea Witch." Sagarassi also serves Takhisis, the mother of Zebiom. 

She is not fond of humans. Nor is she fond of her own sister, Daydra Stonecipher.  This relationship parallels that between Zebiom and her twin brother, Nuitarithe god of Evil Magic in Kyrnn. It is not much of a stretch of the imagination that Zebiom would want her magic-using disciple to go against the established rules of magic. Especially since Nuitari is regarded as Lawful Evil and Zebiom is Chaotic Evil. 

We know she is old. She waged a war undersea around 1320 PC (Prior to the Cataclysm), the Dragonlance books take place in 348 AC, making her over 1670 years old. Good thing she is an elf. 

She lives in an underwater tower called Khegar, also known as the Death Tower. It is in the seas near Taladas.

Sagarassi, Witch Queen of the Sea Witch Tradition
Sagarassi, Witch Queen of the Sea Witch Tradition
26th level Elf Witch, Neutral Evil
Tradition: Sea Witch

Secondary Skill: Alchemist

S: 13
I: 20
W: 18
D: 15
C: 17
Ch: 20

Paralysis/Poison: 3
Petrify/Polymorph: 3  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 4
Breath Weapon: 6
Spells: 5

AC: 1 (ring AC 1)
HP: 75
THAC0: 10

Weapon
Narwhal horn +3 1d4/1d3

Familiar: Demonic eel

Sagarassi, Witch Queen of the Sea Witch Tradition
Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar (Demonic eel)
7th level: Speak to plants/animals
13th level: Goddess Blessing
19th level: Control Weather

Witch Queen Powers
Awesome Presence, Occult Eminece (Shape Change), A Thousand Faces, Ninth Level Spells (3)

Spells
Cantrips: Alarm Ward, Arcane Mark, Chill, Daze, Message
First level: Bad Luck, Cause Fear, Charm Person, Darkness, Endure Elements, Far Sight,  Moonstone, Minor Fighting Prowess 
Second level: Agony, Alter Self, Discord, Enthrall, Evil Eye, Hold Person, Mind Obscure, Suggestion
Third level: Bestow Curse, Dispel Magic, Feral Spirit, Lifeblood, Toad Mind, Tongues, Witch Wail
Fourth level: Analyze Magic, Animal Growth, Arcane Eye, Charm Monster, Phantom Lacerations, Polymorph
Fifth level: Death Curse, Dreadful Bloodletting, Greater Command, Waves of Fatigue
Sixth level: Anti-magic Shell, Break the Spirit, Mass Agony, Mass Suggestion
Seventh level: Death Aura, Greater Blindness, Wave of Mutilation
Eighth level: Damming Stare, Destroy Life, Pit
Ninth level: Imprisonment, Power Word Kill, Time Stop

Theme Song: Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Soul Cages

I am not sure where I am going level cap elves, but I am going to make an exception here like I did with Elvyra.

Sagarassi is one main Witch Queens I still use in my games. She has been great.

Character Creation Challenge


Sunday, January 25, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 25, Elvyra Witch Queen of the Faerie Tradition

Elvyra Witch Queen of the Faerie Tradition
 I admit, no discussion of AD&D and Witch Queens is complete without Witch Queen Elvyra from Quests of the Ancients. I already featured Sarana from the same game a while back so I figure I should also do Elvyra.

I'll present my revised rules for Witch Queens tomorrow, but today's test is what a Witch Priestess, turned Witch Queen, would look like. Elvyra is the high priestess of her coven and the queen of her tradition. 

Elvyra

25th level Elf Witch Priestess 20/Witch Queen 5, Neutral Good
Tradition: Faerie

Secondary Skill: Astrology

S: 12
I: 18
W: 18
D: 18
C: 14
Ch: 18

Paralysis/Poison: 5
Petrify/Polymorph: 5 
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 6
Breath Weapon: 8
Spells: 7

AC: 1 (Bracers of Defense)
HP: 55
THAC0: 12

Elvyra Witch Queen of the Faerie Tradition
Weapon
Unicorn horn Dagger +3 1d4/1d3
Staff of the Witch Queen

Familiar: White Dragon Tiger

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Speak to Plants/Animals

Witch Priestess Powers:
Blessing of the Grove, Nature’s Wrath, Invoke the Ancients

Witch Queen Powers:
Awesome Presence, Occult Eminece, Ninth Level Spells (3)

Spells
Cantrips: Alarm Ward, Daze, Detect Curse, Object Reading, Warm
First level: Bewitch I, Cause Fear, Command, Faerie Fire, Far Sight, Minor Fighting Prowess, Sleep, Spirit Dart
Second level: Alter Self, Biting Blade, Blast Shield, Chant, Enthrall, Evil Eye, Hold Person, Phantasmal Spirit
Third level: Astral Sense, Bestow Curse, Continual Fire, Feral Spirit, Fly, Improved Faerie Fire
Fourth level: Air Walk, Betwitch IV, Neutralize Poison, Spiritual Dagger, Withering Touch
Fifth level: Blade Dance, Dream, Primal Scream, Song of Discord
Sixth level: Control Weather, Find the Path, Moonbow, True Seeing
Seventh level: Breath of the Goddess, Etherealness, Serpent Garden
Eighth level: Astral Projection, Mystic Barrier, Wail of the Banshee
Ninth level: Meteor Storm, Prismatic Sphere, Time Stop

Theme Song: Sisters of the Moon

I like how she compares to her Basic Witch version. Not the same to be sure, but very close as you would expect Basic and Advanced to be.  

I am not 100% sure where elves get a limit cap on witch levels. I am inclined not to give them one, or if I do still allow them to take levels of witch queen past that.

I also like these new changes to my Witch Queen Advanced class. 

Character Creation Challenge


Saturday, January 24, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 24, Elena the Fair Witch Queen of the Daughters of Baba Yaga

Elena the Fair, Witch Queen of Summer, Daughter of Baba Yaga
We are getting to the part of the Challenge where my high-level characters come out, and in this case, that means Witch Queens! Since it is the weekend, I am not going to detail what a Witch Queen is in the context of AD&D and Occult D&D, but I'll do so on Monday. So, for today, I have one of the most misunderstood Witch Queens. Elena the Fair.

Elena the Fair, Witch Queen of Summer, Daughter of Baba Yaga

Among the daughters of Baba Yaga, Elena the Fair is the most misunderstood. Tales name her "the beautiful one," "the gentle sister," or "the bride who never was," and from these epithets, many assume she is merely ornamental, a soft contrast to her dread mother and her infamous sister. This is a grave error.

Elena is not gentle because she is weak. She is gentle because she understands the terrible cost of power.

In the oldest Russian tales, Elena appears as a radiant princess, bound by enchantment, wagered in impossible trials, or held captive by sorcerers, dragons, or deathless kings. Yet in every telling, she survives not through brute magic, but through patience, kindness, clever bargains, and the quiet certainty that summer always returns. These stories are not disguises. They are masks worn by a Witch Queen who learned early that overt rulership invites hunters, heroes, and gods alike.

Where her sister Natasha, later known as Iggwilv, turned away from Baba Yaga in hunger for mastery, Elena remained.

Not out of fear. Out of love.

Elena is the Witch Queen of Summer, but she does not sit upon a court of marble or command a realm bound by banners and borders. Her dominion is seasonal, wandering, and alive.

Summer, as Elena embodies it, is not conquest or fire alone. It is growth that must one day wither. It is beauty that exists because it cannot last. Elena does not demand fealty. Those who serve her often do not realize they have done so until years later, when they look back and recognize the invisible hand that guided them safely home.

Elena and Natasha

If Natasha is Baba Yaga’s ambition, Elena is her memory.

The sisters represent a fork in the witch’s road. Natasha sought dominion over demons, kings, and gods. Elena sought harmony with cycles older than all three.

Elena does not hate her sister. She mourns her.

In some legends, Elena foresaw what Natasha would become and tried to stop her. In others, she stepped aside, knowing that fate cannot be unmade, only endured. What remains constant is this: Elena never joined Iggwilv’s wars, nor did she oppose her openly. Summer does not challenge winter head-on. It waits.

There are whispers that Elena alone can still speak to Natasha without drawing blades or binding circles, though such meetings are rare and leave scars on the land.

In darker places still it is whispered something even rarer. Natasha, who is Iggwilv, who is Zybilna, also wishes she could reconcile with her sister, but fears that someone as good as Elena could never forgive her over what she has done.

Elena the Fair
Elena the Fair

24th level Human Witch (Witch 20/ Witch Queen 4), Lawful Good
Tradition: Daughters of Baba Yaga

Secondary Skill: Herbalist

S: 11
I: 16
W: 10
D: 17
C: 17
Ch: 18

Paralysis/Poison: 5
Petrify/Polymorph: 5  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 6
Breath Weapon: 8
Spells: 7

AC: 1 (Ring of Protection, Garter of Defence, Dex)
HP: 77
THAC0: 12

Weapon
Dagger +1 1d4/1d3

Familiar: Mouse, "Myshi"

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Kitchen Witchery
13th level: Detect Bloodline
19th level: Boon (instead of Curse)

Witch Queen Powers
Awesome Presence, Occult Eminece, Ninth Level Spells (2)

Spells
Cantrips: Alarm Ward, Detect Curse, Object Reading, Warm
First: Bewitch I, Burning Hands, Command, Drowsy, Faerie Fire, Far Sight, Sleep, Handfasting (Ritual)
Second: Alter Self, Blast Shield, Ecstasy, Enthrall, Fever, Hold Person, Phantasmal Spirit, Rose Garden
Third: Astral Sense, Bestow Curse, Continual Fire, Feral Spirit, Fly, Imbue Witch Ball (Ritual)
Fourth: Air Walk, Elemental Armor, Grandmother's Shawl, Moonlit Way, Neutralize Poison, Spiritual Dagger
Fifth: Anti-Magic Candle, Dream, Primal Scream, Song of Discord
Sixth: Control Weather, Find the Path, Heroes' Feast, True Seeing
Seventh:  Ball of Sunshine, Breath of the Goddess, Etherealness, Serpent Garden
Eighth: Astral Projection, Greater Mislead, Mystic Barrier 
Ninth: Imprisonment, Time Stop

Theme Song: The Mystic’s Dream

As the Queen of Summer, one of Elena's duties is to guard the gates of the Summerlands.  This is the afterlife of the Witches, and where their spirits go for rest prior to being reincarnated to their next life.

She is also the Protector of Midsummer and sees to it that all witches are protected on the night of Midsummer's Eve. Elena has both the smallest and largest courts. Small in that there is no formal court that she holds, but also the largest since all witches pay her at least some homage.

Character Creation Challenge


Friday, January 23, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 23, Celeste & Cassandra

 Celeste and Cassandra are a duo of witches I have been playing around with for a few years. They are witches, yes, but something else as well.  Like some of the witches here, I have featured them in a previous challenge, in this case, back in 2021, along with Aviva's younger brother, Áedán Aamadu.

Celeste and Cassandra

At the time I knew they were going to be witches of sorts, but I was using the language of D&D 5th edition (2014). So, Celeste Holmes was a Human Wizard (Sage) and Cassandra Killian was a Human Sorcerer (Divine Soul). Of the two, Celeste was a regular character of mine for a while, even getting a Holmes (her namesake) Basic version at one point. She was my occult scholar character whose background was purely learned. That is to say, in AD&D terms, she was a magic-user and not a witch. For me then, she makes for a perfect Magus.

Cassandra was a bit more difficult. In my mind, she was a character whose religion was science. She approached math with the same reverence that a cleric approaches a holy text. I tried her out as a Divine Soul Sorcerer, and that worked, to a degree, but it was never the right fit. I tried other things, including various mystic classes, including the one from Dungeoneer #16 by Jon Mattson. That one was one of the closest ones, but still not exactly what I had in mind for her. I have been playing her as a Wicce for a little bit. I am not 100% happy with that either, really, but it is the closest I have come. I think I need to make my own mystic class someday.

Both casters are part of the West Haven coven. For reasons that make sense in my games, Celeste, Cassandra, and Katrina have all worked together often. I would call them all friends to be honest. Mechanically, I see them as three aspects of different sorts of witchcraft. So Katrina "sees" the Magus and Wicce as being part of the larger collection of what is "Witchcraft" in the game. And by that I do mean, *I* see them as being part of the larger set of Witchcraft.

Together, Celeste Holmes and Cassandra Killian represent two different approaches to understanding the world: the Magus who believes truth can be rendered repeatable, and the Wicce who believes truth must be approached with devotion. Both are witches in the cultural sense, but neither practices witchcraft in the same way, nor in the same way as say Katrina or Larina.

I gave both cantrips based on Intelligence and Wisdom, respectively. I'm not sure whether there are differences in cantrips by class (like in D&D 5e) or if there are just a bunch of basic cantrips that teach the basics of spellcasting. Still thinking about that one.

Celeste Holmes
Celeste Holmes

23rd level Human Magus, Chaotic Good

Secondary Skill: Scribe

S: 12
I: 19
W: 15
D: 13
C: 16
Ch: 16

Paralysis/Poison: 8
Petrify/Polymorph: 5  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 3
Breath Weapon: 7
Spells: 4

AC: 1 (Bracers AC 1)
HP: 76
THAC0: 11

Weapon
Dagger +1 1d4/1d3

Powers
Occult Literacy, Esoteric Focus (athamé), Shared Ritual Craft (2nd Level), Ritual Theory, Ley Line Sense, True Name Hypothesis

Spells
Cantrips: Spark*, Clean, Warm, Lift, Freshen
First level: Read Magic*, Charm Person, Hold Portal, Protection from Evil, Shocking Grasp, Wizard Mark
Second level: Audible Glammer, Bind, ESP, Levitate, Flaming Sphere 
Third level: Lightning Bolt, Haste, Hold Person, Tongues, Fly
Fourth level: Confusion, Charm Monster, Fire Trap, Magic Mirror, Remove Curse, 
Fifth level: Conjure Elemental, Dolor, Contact Other Plane, Magic Jar, Telekensis
Sixth level: Chain Lightning, Enchant an Item, Legend Lore, Repulsion, Spiritwrack
Seventh level: Banishment, Cacodemon, Forcage, Power Word Stun, Simularcum
Eighth level: Antipathy/Sympathy, Binding, Mass Charm, Otto's Irresistible Dance, Trap the Soul

Theme Song: Walking on Sunshine (She is one of my most upbeat characters)

So who is Celeste? She is magus, so she sees magic as a science more or less, a high science, mabey akin to religion but not a religion. Celeste is deeply uneasy around magic that cannot be diagrammed, reproduced, or verified, a discomfort that often puts her at odds with mystics and visionary witches. She gets along with Cassandra due to shared experiences and a shared past. They are actually quite good for each other. 

Cassandra Killian
Cassandra Killian

23rd level Human Wicce, Chaotic Good

Secondary Skill: Scribe

S: 11
I: 16
W: 18 
D: 10
C: 15
Ch: 17

Paralysis/Poison: 2
Petrify/Polymorph: 3  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 4
Breath Weapon: 6
Spells: 5

AC: 1 (Bracers AC 1)
HP: 74
THAC0: 8

Weapon
Dagger +1 1d4/1d3

Powers
Moon-Blessed Magicks, Shared Ritual Craft (2nd Level), Sacred Circle (3rd Level), Blessed Be, Coven Bond. 

Spells
Cantrips: Flare*, Spark, Open, Clean, Warm
First level: Bless, Chill Touch, Command, Cure Light Wounds, Detect Evil, Faerie Fire, Glamour, Invisibility to Undead, Light, Purify Food & Drink, Remove Fear
Second level: Augury, Barkskin, Burning Gaze, Calm Emotions, Chant, Cure Moderate Wounds, Levitate, Resist Fire, Slow Poison, Speak with Animals, Spiritual Weapon
Third level: Astral Sense, Create Food and Water, Cure Disease, Dispel Magic, Locate Object, Meld into Stone, Prayer, Protection from Fire, Remove Curse, Scry
Fourth level: Analyze Magic, Cure Serious Wounds, Divination, Divine Power, Lower Water, Neutralize Poison, Protection from Evil 10' Radius, Remove Curse, Speak with Plants, Spell Immunity
Fifth level: Anti-magic Shell, Commune with Nature, Cure Critical Wounds, Dispel Evil, Flame Strike, Magic Jar, Plane Shift, Quest, Wall of Fire
Sixth level: Aerial Servant, Forbiddance, Find the Path, Heal, Speak with Monsters, Weather Summoning, Word of Recall
Seventh level: Astral Spell, Holy Word, Regenerate

Theme Song: Shadows of the Night

Cassandra Killian approaches magic, math, and religion as one and the same. For her, it is devotion. An equation is a benediction. Mathematical proofs are a homily.  

Cassandra does not know a lot about her family, save that somewhere in the past, she is a relative of the great mage Killian Mazior. 

Magus vs. Archwitch and Wicce vs. Witch Priestess

Both the Magus and Archwitch are combined occult and arcane spellcasters. The Wicce and Witch Priestess are spellcasters that tap into divine and occult forces. But how do they differ?

The Archwitch and the Witch Priestess must begin as witches. At 8th level (now, was 7th) a witch takes on new training to better serve their needs or the needs of their covens. 

The Magus is a subclass of the Magic-user. It is, in my mind, what the "witch" was going to be as "promised" by Holmes Basic. For this reason (among many) Celeste is my iconic Magus. Maybe even more so, Esmé. Celeste helped me define the Magus, and Esmé helped me show that the Magus is a viable class. The magus gains some witch spells, the archwitch gets some magic-user spells. I have to make sure these lists are not identical. 

Likewise, the Wicce is a subclass of Cleric. It blends ideas of cleric, witch, druid, and, with Cassandra's input, the mystic. Both are divine-influenced spellcasters. This lets me go and use a bunch of ideas I have had about "divine" witchcraft. Again, the wicce gets some witch spells and maybe even a couple of druid spells. The witch priestess also gets some cleric spells. Like the magus/archwitch above, I want to make sure that these two classes do not outshine the cleric as the group's healer. One thing I think is important is the cleric be the only one to turn undead even if a case can be made for the wicce. 

Honestly, given this, I should come up with a Divine-Arcane class, the Theurge. Magic as religion. Sounds like a problem for another day.

Character Creation Challenge

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 22, Katrina

Katrina, Photo by Tayla Walsh: https://www.pexels.com/photo/a-woman-wearing-a-pointy-hat-in-the-woods-5765355/
Photo by Tayla Walsh,
Photoshopped by me
 It is no understatement that I have thousands of characters lying around in my game room. Between mine, the ones I have inherited, and my kids, there are folders, binders, and boxes full. Katrina is one of the many, many witches I have lying around here. 

Katrina started with a very simple, now-familiar premise: "What would Larina look like if she were evil?" She morphed a bit, as my witches often do, based on what I am reading or watching at the time. This witch didn't even have a name (though I think I was partial to "Eve" from the band "Eve's Plum") until the series "Sleepy Hollow" came on and I saw Katia Winter's "Katrina Crane." I always liked Katia Winter, and she had a very "Larina" look about her. As the character embraced more evil in the show, likewise my version of her in my games.

MY Katrina is not 100% evil. She is xenophobic and thinks the world would be a better place if it were run by witches. If that means subgating or wiping out all non-witches, well then so be it. This began to happen around the time Vin Diesel's "I want to put my D&D character on the big screen," The Last Witch Hunter came out. 

Over the years, she has evolved, but one thing has remained constant: her rivalry with my witch, Larina. Katrina simply thinks she can do a better job in West Haven than Larina does. She certainly has ideas. 

Larina is the witch who believes in balance, Katrina is the witch who believes in order through supremacy. Katrina has little patience for chaotic witches, hedge-practitioners, or lone crones who refuse oversight. Katrina believes that unregulated magic is as dangerous as unregulated power.

Katrina does not see herself as evil. She sees herself as honest. In her worldview, witches are objectively superior. They see the deeper patterns, feel the older currents, and shoulder the burden of knowledge that others cannot or will not. To Katrina, allowing non-witches to govern, vote, preach, or shape destiny is not immoral because it is cruel. It is immoral because it is inefficient. 

Larina believes power must be tempered by restraint. Katrina believes restraint is a luxury the world can no longer afford. 

Katrina’s xenophobia is not born of fear. It is born of disappointment. She has watched councils dither, towns rot, and mortals make the same mistakes generation after generation. Where Larina sees people worth protecting, Katrina sees patterns that should have been corrected centuries ago.

Katrina does not burn villages or summon demons for spectacle. She prefers infrastructure. She corrupts systems quietly. Katrina is the witch who asks: "Why do we still pretend restraint protects us?"

Katrina character sheet
Katrina

22nd level Human Witch, Lawful Neutral (Evil)

Secondary Skill: Alchemist

S: 11
I: 16
W: 14 
D: 12
C: 12 
Ch: 17

Paralysis/Poison: 5
Petrify/Polymorph: 5  
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 6
Breath Weapon: 8
Spells: 7

AC:  1 (Bracers AC 1)
HP: 63
THAC0: 14

Weapon
Dagger +1 1d4/1d3

Familiar: Raven

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Temporary Magic
13th level: Permanent Magic
19th level: Witch's Blessing

Spells
Cantrips: Sound, Sobriety, Clean
First level: Command, Comprehend Languages, Chill Touch, Glamour, Detect Spirits, Hecate's Spiritual Dog, Hold Winds, Minor Curse, Sour Stomach
Second level: Agony, Detect Thoughts, Delay Poison, ESP, Evil Eye, Ghost Touch, Nausea, Suggestion
Third level: Bestow Curse, Mind Rash, Dispel Magic, Fly, Lifeblood, Scry, Locate Thief
Fourth level: Air Walk, Analyze Magic, Intangible Cloak of Shadows, Remove Curse, Withering Touch
Fifth level: Blade Resistance, Death Curse, Dreadful Bloodletting, Feeblemind,
Sixth level: Greater Scrying, Control Weather, Restore Youth (Healing), Eye Bite
Seventh level: Call the Restless Soul, Serpent Garden, Widdershins Dance
Eighth level: Destroy Life, Clone (Manikin) (Ritual), Trap the Soul

Theme Song: I Want it All (Eve's Plum)

Katrina has the spell "Clone" to reflect the idea that she was once considered an "evil clone" of Larina, much as Madelyne Pryor (Goblin Queen) is a clone of Jean Grey (Marvel Girl/Phoenix) in the Marvel comics X-Men. So Clone (Manikin) is an 8th-level witch ritual open only to High Witches. 

Katrina’s rivalry with Larina works best when framed as a policy and philosophical disagreement rather than a personal vendetta. She does not want Larina dead. She wants Larina to be proven wrong.

In Katrina’s mind, West Haven under Larina is a missed opportunity. A place of incredible power is being wasted on compromise, secrecy, and sentimental mercy. Katrina believes that if she were in charge, West Haven would be:

  • A true witch-city
  • A sanctuary for magical bloodlines
  • A quiet empire hidden in plain sight

Larina governs West Haven by trust. Katrina would govern by control. 

I toyed with the idea of making them long-lost sisters or half-sisters, but that felt way too clichéd to me. So their common physical traits are red hair and blue eyes, but they are not related by blood. 

So she began as "evil Larina," but she has matured into something more dangerous: a plausible alternative. She is not wrong in the abstract. She is wrong in the particulars. 

If Larina is the witch who guards the crossroads, Katrina is the witch who wants to pave them.

Really. She is just so much fun.

Character Creation Challenge


Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Character Creation Challenge: Day 21, Aviva Aamadu

 Today's character is another child of my two OSE characters, Asabalom and Maryah. Aviva is the oldest and named after a witch they both knew. Aviva's current quest is to find the witch she was named after. The first Aviva is bit of a legend in my games, more "cautionary tale" than actual character. She was another "good witch" who slipped into demonology and diabolical magic. In truth she only exsists as a name in a history I wrote about the Warduchess. This Aviva is good, and she is seeking out the other Aviva to discover what went wrong. She has been travelling the world ever since.

<a href="https://www.vecteezy.com/free-photos/woman">Woman Stock photos by Vecteezy</a>
Woman Stock photos by Adam Zubek-Nizol - Vecteezy

She began life as the daughter of a druid (Asabalom) and a ranger (Maryah), and her magic is very much "Green Witch"-style, but as she progressed, she became more distinct from both a Green Witch and Pagan witchcraft. 

Looking for her namesake has taken a while. Mostly because I am not 100% sure who the first Aviva actually is myself! But until then, this Aviva will keep looking for her.

Aviva Aamadu
Aviva Aamadu

21st level Human Witch, Neutral Good

Secondary Skill: Herbalist

S: 10
I: 15
W: 17
D: 12
C: 12
Ch: 17

Paralysis/Poison: 5
Petrify/Polymorph: 5
Rod, Staff, or Wand: 6
Breath Weapon: 8
Spells: 7

AC: 6 (leather armor +3)
HP: 46
THAC0: 12

Weapon
Dagger +3 1d4/1d3

Familiar: Hawk "N'dege"

Occult Powers
1st level: Familiar
7th level: Speak to Plants & Animals
13th level: Pass without Trace
19th level: Immunity of the Fae

Spells
Cantrips: Spark, Chill, Mend
First level: Call Spirits of the Land, Cure Light Wounds, Glamour, Elf Arrow, Message, Sharp Ear, Witch's Watchman, Night Vision
Second level: Animal Messenger, Chameleon, Aqualung, Clear Eyes, Fumble, Raven Spy, Ward of Harm, Evil Eye
Third level: Fly, Hold Person, Ash Storm, Dance of Frog, Nondetection, Spit Venom
Fourth level: Confusion, Charm Monster, Dispel Magic, Moonstruck, Witch Laugh
Fifth level:  Hold Monster, Witch Jar, Call the Swarm, Teleport
Sixth level: Eye Bite, Horror, Claws of the Eldest Crone, Wall of Thorns
Seventh level: Breath of the Goddess, Dreadful Sleep, Creeping Doom
Eighth level: Frightful Aspect, Storm of Vengenance, Storm Bolts

Theme Song: Edge of Midnight (it's a younger witch singing a song with an older witch, like my two Avivas.)

I love the ideas of both of my Avivas and want to do more with them. I just need to figure out who the older Aviva was and what her importance was to Asabalom and Maryah. Enough to name their oldest child after her. AND what happened to the first Aviva?

This Aviva is (unknown to her) on the same journey that Phygor was on in my deep history. So right now, she is in line to become one of my more powerful witches. Not intentionally, but her own personal journey is taking her there all the same. For this I have been taking powers and spells for her from all my books.

Honestly. I find that more interesting than how many orcs she has killed or dungeons she has explored.

Character Creation Challenge