"You find a scroll." is equally bad - at least in ASE, magic practitioners are an eclectic bunch, not the result of a regimented system of schooling and will keep their spells in a variety of eclectic fashions. Below is a list of some of those ways of recording spells - either as a spell book or scroll. Some are mundane, most are bizarre.
Bronze Armillary - Peking Observatory, 1875 by Thomas Child |
1D20
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Spellbook or Scroll
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1
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A tome of thin onionskin pages, bound
together in a strapped black leather folio with no distinguishing marks
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2
|
Crabbed
writing in a grease pencil on the margins of stained menus from a selection
of cheap inns and restaurants. Loosely bundled together with an elastic band
|
3
|
A
set of disks on a leather cord. Each
disk is a different material (leather, gold, wood, iron,) and contains one
spell stamped, carved or scratched on it.
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4
|
A
small thick book made of engraved copper sheets sandwiched between two pieces
of waxed hardwood and held together by large copper wing-nuts.
|
5
|
A
massive tome containing the illustrated and illuminated history of the long
sunken city state, spells are concealed as decorative flourishes and hard to
notice without close examination.
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6
|
Carved
skull or skulls carefully preserved with various pigments rubbed into the
carvings. Each Skull has been carved
with 1d4 spells. Roll 1D6 for type of each
skull (1-Human, 2- Demi-Human, 3-Goblin, 4-Moktar, 5 - Animal, 6- Monster of
the strange variety).
|
7
|
Battered
journal of thick parchment, oversized boiled leather covers and steel
reinforced corners protect the pages from hard travel. The entire book is likely to be wrapped in a
custom oilskin envelope. Spells are
scattered among reminiscences and sketches of distant lands.
|
8
|
A
collection of love letters, all in the same hand. Spells have been written in magical ink
between the lines of the letters and will appear under moonlight.
|
9
|
Spiral
bound lined composition book of cheap pulp paper with marbled cardboard
covers.
|
10
|
Large
scroll wound on two heavy wooden rods and clasped with an iron chain, the
item can be used as a weapon by anyone with a strength on 8 or better. The spells written on the scroll are
annotated copiously, and while this has no real effect it makes the scroll
bigger.
|
11
|
A
Jeweler’s Loupe made of opaque glass.
When each lens is held up to the sun it will project the words of a different
spell.
|
12
|
Aluminum
hinged case, when opened it contains several sheets of plastic card, each
with a spell punched into it in the form of a numeric code (can only be read via
read magic – or possibly an ancient punch-card reading machine).
|
13
|
A
flat metal bowl with various arcane symbols inlaid in semi-precious
stones. When filled with pure water,
written spells appears on the water’s surface as if reflected from another
source.
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14
|
A
series of beaded leather straps or belts. The intricate designs in several
colors of tiny glass beads make up the texts of the spell(s).
|
15
|
A
tightly rolled bundle of thin leather bound with a braid of hair, when
unrolled it is revealed to be a tanned human skin, spells have been tattooed
onto the surface, seemingly over many years of life. (Alternately a living
person tattooed with spells – slave, imbecile or wizard are all
possibilities).
|
16
|
A
knotted tangle of various brightly colored strings in the manner of moktar
shaman’s spell fetish. Can be
researched and read by a moktar holy tom normally. All others must use “read magic” with only
a 20% + 15% per level of caster chance of success.
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17
|
A
collection of jewel colored insects in a carved wooden tube and a tiny flute
like instrument. The beetles will move
to form the characters of spells when specific notes are played on the flute
and subsist on small amounts of honey or other sweets. Each note on the flute produces a different
pattern, and different spell.
|
18
|
A
pitted bronze armillary sphere that will display the mystical characters of specific
spells in blue glowing runes when set to display the specific astrological
states
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19
|
Bundled
bamboo slats held together by ribbon, spells have been neatly burned into the
bamboo and can be read vertically from top to bottom.
|
20
|
A
savage wooden statute or fetish (or collection of them), carved in intricate spirals. The carving can be read by touch, brail
like, and spell out the words of a spell.
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