Necromancy is both a Discipline and a school of blood magic devoted to the command of the souls of the dead. It’s similar to Thaumaturgy in that it has several “paths” and accompanying “rituals” rather than a strict linear progression of powers. The study of Necromancy is not widespread among the Kindred, and its practitioners — primarily the Giovanni — are shunned and despised for their foul practices (until those practices become useful, of course).
Over the centuries, the various schools of vampiric Necromancy have evolved and diversified from an earlier form of death magic, leaving several distinct paths of Necromantic magic available to Cainites. Nearly all modern Necromancers learn the Sepulchre Path first before extending their studies to other paths. The primary Necromancy path increases automatically as the character increases zir overall Necromancy rating. Other paths must be bought separately, using the experience costs for secondary paths.
A Cainite Necromancer must learn at least 3 levels in zir primary path before learning zir first level in a secondary Necromancy path. Ze must then master the primary path (all 5 levels) before acquiring any knowledge of a 3rd path.
As with Thaumaturgy, advancement in the primary path costs the normal experience amount, while study of additional Necromantic paths incurs an additional experience-point cost. Because Necromancy is not quite so rigid a study as Thaumaturgy is, the rolls required to use Necromantic powers can vary from path to path and even within individual paths. The commonly-learned Sepulchre Path is presented first, with the remaining paths presented in alphabetical order.
The following table outlines which Paths and rituals are commonly accessible to different Necromancers from across the globe. This is not an exclusive list prohibiting one Necromancer from learning the arts of another, but rather an identification of those arts most commonly associated with each clan and bloodline.
Whither Mortis?
Lost clans and bloodlines, such as the Cappadocians and the Lamia, had access to an ancient Discipline known as Mortis. Some Kindred scholars claim that Mortis and Necromancy are distinct Disciplines, but for ease the three Mortis paths presented below are listed as Necromancy paths. The Cappadocians specialized in either the Corpse in the Monster or The Grave’s Decay, while the Lamia generally took the Path of the Four Humors as their primary path. Rumors are that the Harbingers of Skulls in the Sabbat have relearned the Corpse in the Monster and The Grave’s Decay, claiming them collectively as the “Mortuus Path,” but they still tend to follow most modern Necromancers and choose the Sepulchre Path as their primary path before learning The Grave’s Decay or Corpse in the Monster.
Source: V20 Core
Through the Sepulchre Path, the vampire can witness, summon, and command the spirits of the dead. At higher levels, the Necromancer can force the ghost to remain in a particular place or object, or even damage wraiths directly. Since many other areas of Necromancy involve dealing with ghosts, this is the most common path for Necromancers to start with.
Note: If a Kindred uses a Sepulchre Path power in the presence of something of great importance to the ghost the power affects, the chances for success in the summoning increase dramatically (reduce the Difficulty by 2). This might be the bathtub in which the ghost’s mortal body was drowned, the rusted-out wreck of the car where the ghost’s physical body was trapped alive, or something unrelated to the ghost’s demise, such as a favorite book or a child-ghost’s beloved nursery.
Before it is possible to control the dead, one must perceive them. This power allows just that, attuning a vampire’s unliving senses to the presence of the incorporeal.
Under its effects, a Necromancer sees ghosts as translucent phantoms gliding among the living and hears their whispers and moans. Ze feels the spectral cold of their touch and smells their musty hint of decay. Yet one cannot mistake the dead for the living, as they lack true substance, and appear dimmer and less real than creatures of flesh and blood. When a vampire uses this power, zir eyes flicker with pale blue fire that only the dead can see.
Ghosts resent being spied upon, and more powerful shades may use their own powers to inflict their displeasure on the incautious.
System: The player rolls Perception + Awareness (Difficulty 5). Success allows the vampire to perceive ghosts as described for the rest of the scene (in the mortal world — seeing ghosts in the land of the dead requires Shroudsight.) Failure has no special effect, but a botch means the vampire can see only the dead for the scene; everything else appears as shapeless, dim shadows. While the vampire’s other senses remain attuned to the living, ze is all but blind in this state and suffer a +3 Difficulty to most vision-based Perception rolls and attacks. Ghosts notice the glowing eyes of a vampire using this power only with a successful Perception + Alertness roll (Difficulty 7).
The power of Summon Soul allows a Necromancer to call a ghost back from the Underworld, for conversational purposes only. In order to perform this feat (and indeed, most of the feats in this path), the vampire must meet certain conditions:
Certain types of ghosts cannot be summoned with this power. Vampires who achieved Golconda before their Final Deaths, or who were diablerized, are beyond the reach of this summons. Likewise, many ghosts of the dead cannot be called — they are destroyed, unable to return to the mortal plane, or lost in the eternal storm of the Underworld.
System: The player spends 1 blood point and rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty equal to 7 or the ghost’s Willpower, whichever is higher). The vampire must know the name of the ghost and have on hand an object the ghost had contact with in life. Provided that the target has died and become a ghost, success means the shade appears before the Necromancer as described above. Not everyone becomes a ghost — it requires a strong will to persevere in the face of death, and souls that have found peace pass on to their eternal rewards. Moreover, it is possible for the dead to suffer spiritual dissolution and destruction after they become ghosts. The Storyteller should consider all these factors when deciding whether a particular ghost exists for a vampire to summon.
Vampires know if their summons should have succeeded by a feeling of sudden, terrifying descent as they reach too far into the great Beyond, so this power can be used to determine whether a soul has endured beyond death. While a failure means the vampire wastes blood, a botch calls a spirit other than the one sought — usually a malevolent ghost known as a Spectre. Such a fiend torments the one who summoned it with every wicked power at its disposal.
Once a ghost is summoned, it may not deliberately move out of sight of the vampire, though it can take any other actions, including direct attack. The vampire’s player may spend a Willpower point to dismiss the ghost at any time (unless they rolled a botch). Otherwise, at the end of the scene, shadows engulf the spirit once more and return it to its original location.
With this power, a vampire can command a ghost to do zir bidding for a while. Compulsion of the soul is a perilous undertaking and, when used improperly, can endanger vampire and wraith alike.
System: The vampire locates and approaches the intended ghost or calls it to zir presence with Summon Soul. As with the previous power, ze must have the ghost’s name and an object it handled in life. Zir player then spends 1 blood point and rolls Manipulation + Occult in a resisted roll against the ghost’s Willpower (Difficulty 6 for both rolls).
If the vampire wins, the number of net successes determines the degree of control ze has over the ghost (as described below). Moreover, the vampire’s control keeps ghosts that have been called with Summon Soul from returning to their original locations at the end of the scene. If the ghost wins, the vampire loses a number of Willpower points equal to the ghost’s net successes. On a tie, the roll becomes an extended contest that continues each turn until one side wins. If the vampire botches at any point, the ghost is immune to any use of the vampire’s Necromancy for the rest of the scene. If the ghost botches, it must obey as if the vampire’s player had rolled 5 net successes.
Successes | Result |
---|---|
1 | The ghost must perform 1 simple task for the vampire that does not place it in certain danger. It must attend to this task immediately, although it can delay the compulsion and pursue its own business at a cost of 1 Willpower point per scene. The ghost may not attack the vampire until this task is complete. It is possible to issue the task of answering 1 question, in which case the ghost must answer truthfully and to the best of its knowledge. |
2 | The vampire may issue 2 orders or ask 2 questions as outlined for 1 success. Alternatively, the vampire may demand a simple task with a real possibility of danger, as long as the danger is not certain. The ghost may delay this compulsion with Willpower. |
3 | The vampire may issue 3 orders as outlined for 1 success. Alternatively, ze may demand the ghost fulfill 1 difficult and dangerous task or a simple assignment that has an extended duration of up to 1 month. The ghost may delay such orders with Willpower. |
4 | The vampire may issue 4 orders, as outlined for 1 success, or assign 2 tasks, as for 2 successes. Alternatively, the vampire may command the ghost to perform 1 complex assignment that puts the ghost at extreme risk, or perform any number of non-threatening tasks as the vampire’s slave for up to 1 month (or, if the Necromancer spends a permanent point of Willpower, for a year and a day). It is possible for ghosts to delay individual tasks, but not put off enslavement. |
5+ | The vampire may issue multiple orders that have a sum complexity or danger of 5 successes’ worth. The vampire may instead order the ghost to perform any 1 action that it is capable of executing within 1 month. Such a task can place the ghost in immediate peril of destruction, or even force it to betray and assault loved ones. It is not possible for ghosts to delay a task of this magnitude with Willpower — they must obey. |
Haunting binds a summoned ghost to a particular location or, in extreme cases, an object. The wraith cannot leave the area to which the Necromancer binds it without risking destruction.
System: The player spends 1 blood point while standing at the location for the haunting or touching the intended prison. Ze then has the ghost brought to zir by whatever means ze desires, though Summon Soul is quickest and most reliable. Zir player then rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty is equal to the target’s current Willpower points if resisted, to a minimum of 4; otherwise it is 4). The Difficulty rises by 1 if the vampire wishes to place the ghost in an object. As usual, the Difficulty decreases by 1 if the Necromancer has a part of the spirit’s corpse in addition to knowing its name (minimum Difficulty 3).
Each success binds the ghost within the location or object for 1 night. This duration extends to 1 week if the player spends a Willpower point or a year and a day for a dot of permanent Willpower. A wraith attempting to leave the area of a Haunting must make an extended Willpower roll (Difficulty 9, 4 cumulative successes necessary in a single scene) or take a level of Aggravated damage for each roll. If the wraith runs out of health levels, it is hurled deep into the Underworld to face destruction.
It is through the use of this power that powerful Necromancers convince bound ghosts to behave — or else. Torment allows the vampire to strike a wraith as if ze was in the lands of the dead zirself, inflicting damage on the wraith’s ectoplasmic form. The vampire remains in the real world, however, so ze cannot be struck in return.
System: The player rolls Stamina + Empathy (Difficulty equal to the wraith’s current Willpower points), and the vampire reaches out to strike the wraith. Each success inflicts a level of Lethal damage on the wraith. Should the wraith lose all health levels, it immediately vanishes into what appears to be a doorway to some hideous nightmare realm. Ghosts “destroyed” thus cannot reappear in or near the real world for a month.
Source: V20 Core
The Ash Path allows Necromancers to peer into the lands of the dead, and even affect things there. Of the Paths of Necromancy, the Ash Path is the most perilous to learn, because many of the Path’s uses increase a Necromancer’s vulnerability to wraiths.
Shroudsight allows a Necromancer to see through the Shroud, the mystical barrier that separates the living world from the Underworld. By using this power, the vampire can spot ghostly buildings and items, the landscape of the so-called Shadowlands, and even wraiths themselves. However, an observant wraith may notice when a vampire suddenly starts staring at xem, which can lead to unpleasant consequences.
System: A simple roll of Perception + Awareness (Difficulty 7) allows a Necromancer to utilize Shroudsight. The effects last for a scene.
Where Shroudsight allows a Necromancer to see ghosts, Lifeless Tongues allows zir to converse with them effortlessly. Once Lifeless Tongues is employed, the vampire can carry on a conversation with the denizens of the ghostly Underworld without spending blood or causing the wraiths to expend any effort.
System: To use Lifeless Tongues requires a roll of Perception + Occult (Difficulty 6) and the expenditure of a Willpower point.
Similar to the Sepulchre Path power Torment, Dead Hand allows a Necromancer to reach across the Shroud and affect a ghostly object as if it were in the real world. Ghosts are solid to Necromancers using this power, and can be attacked. Furthermore, the Necromancer can pick up ghostly items, scale ghostly architecture (giving real-world bystanders the impression that ze’s climbing on air!), and generally exist in 2 worlds. On the other hand, a Necromancer using Dead Hand is quite solid to the residents of the Underworld — and to whatever hostilities they might have.
System: The player spends a point of Willpower and makes a successful Wits + Occult roll (Difficulty 7) to activate Dead Hand for 1 scene. For each additional scene the vampire wishes to remain in contact with the Underworld, ze must spend a point of blood.
Ex Nihilo allows a Necromancer to enter the Underworld physically. While in the lands of the dead, the vampire is essentially a particularly solid ghost. Ze maintains zir normal number of health levels, but can be hurt only by things that inflict Aggravated damage on ghosts (weapons forged from souls, certain ghostly powers, etc.). A vampire physically in the Underworld can pass through solid objects in the real world (at the cost of 1 health level) and remain “incorporeal” for a number of turns equal to zir Stamina rating. On the other hand, vampires present in the Underworld are subject to all of the Underworld’s perils, including ultimate destruction. A vampire killed in the realm of the dead is gone forever, beyond even the reach of other Necromancers.
System: Using Ex Nihilo takes a tremendous toll on the Necromancer. To activate this power, the vampire must first draw a doorway with chalk or blood on any available surface. (The vampire may draw doors ahead of time for exactly this purpose.) The player must then expend 2 points of Willpower and 2 points of blood before making a Stamina + Occult roll (Difficulty 8) as the vampire attempts to open the chalk door physically. If the roll succeeds, the door opens and the vampire steps through into the Underworld.
When the vampire wishes to return to the real world, ze merely needs to concentrate (and the player spends another Willpower point and rolls Stamina + Occult, Difficulty 6). At the Storyteller’s discretion, a vampire who is too deeply immersed in the Underworld may need to journey to a place close to the lands of the living in order to cross over. Vampires who wander too far into the lands of the dead may be trapped there forever.
Vampires in the Underworld cannot feed upon ghosts without the use of another power; their only sustenance is the blood they bring with them.
Shroud Mastery offers the Kindred the ability to manipulate the veil between the worlds of the living and the dead. By doing so, a Necromancer can make it easier for bound wraiths in zir service to function, or make it nearly impossible for ghosts to contact the material world.
System: To exercise Shroud Mastery, the Necromancer expends 2 points of Willpower, then states whether ze is attempting to raise or lower the Shroud. The player then makes a Willpower roll (Difficulty 9). Each success on the roll raises or lowers the Difficulties of all nearby wraiths’ attempts to cross the Shroud in any way by 1, to a maximum of 9 or a minimum of 2. The Shroud reverts to its normal strength at a rate of 1 point per hour thereafter.
Source: V20 Core
The Bone Path is concerned primarily with corpses and the methods by which dead souls can be restored to the living world — temporarily or otherwise.
Zombie Statistics
Corpses animated by a Necromancer of the Bone Path have Strength 3, Dexterity 2, Stamina 4, Brawl 2, and always act last in a turn (unless there are mitigating circumstances). They have 0 Willpower points to spend, but resist attacks as if they have Willpower ratings of 10. All Mental and Social ratings are 0 for a reanimated corpse, and zombies never attempt to dodge. Zombies’ dice pools are not affected by damage, except that caused by fire or the claws and teeth of supernatural creatures. Most zombies have 10 health levels, but they are incapable of healing any damage they suffer. They have no minds or personalities to affect, so they are immune to uses of powers such as Dominate and Presence. Unless otherwise noted, they likewise cannot be usurped from the control of the Necromancer invoking them.
Tremens allows a Necromancer to make the flesh of a corpse shift once. An arm might suddenly flop forward, a cadaver might sit up, or dead eyes might abruptly open. This sort of thing tends to have an impressive impact on people who aren’t expecting a departed relative to roll over in their coffin.
System: To use Tremens, the Necromancer spends a single blood point, and the player must succeed on a Dexterity + Occult roll (Difficulty 6). The more successes that are achieved, the more complicated an action can be effected in the corpse. 1 success allows for an instantaneous movement, such as a twitch, while 5 allows the vampire to set up specific conditions under which the body animates (“The next time someone enters the room, I want the corpse to sit up and open its eyes.”). Under no circumstances can Tremens cause a dead body to attack or cause damage.
With Apprentice’s Brooms, the Necromancer can make a dead body rise and perform a simple function. For example, the corpse could be set to carrying heavy objects, digging, or just shambling from place to place. The cadavers thus animated do not attack or defend themselves if interfered with, but instead attempt to carry out their given instructions until such time as they’ve been rendered inanimate. Generally it takes dismemberment, flame, or something similar to destroy a corpse animated in this way.
System: A roll of Wits + Occult (Difficulty 7) and the expenditure of a point of both blood and Willpower are all that is necessary to animate corpses with Apprentice’s Brooms. The number of corpses animated is equal to the number of successes achieved. The Necromancer must then state the task to which ze is setting zir zombies. The cadavers turn themselves to their work until they finish the job (at which point they collapse) or something (including time) destroys them.
Corpses animated in this way have no initiative of their own, and are unable to make value judgments. They respond to very literal instructions. Thus, a zombie could be told “sweep this room every day until all the dust and cobwebs are gone” or “transcribe this manuscript” with an expectation of reasonable results, while a more open-ended command such as “fix this motorcycle” or “research this Necromantic ritual and write down the results” would be doomed to failure.
Bodies energized by this power continue to decay, albeit at a much slower rate than normal.
Shambling Hordes creates obvious results: reanimated corpses with the ability to attack, albeit neither very well nor very quickly. Once primed by this power, the corpses wait — for years, if necessary — to fulfill the command given them. The orders might be to protect a certain site or simply to attack immediately, but they will be carried out until every last one of the decomposing monsters is destroyed.
System: The player spends a point of Willpower. The player then must succeed on a Wits + Occult roll (Difficulty 8). Each success allows the vampire to raise another corpse from the grave, and costs 1 blood point. If the player cannot or chooses not to pay the blood point cost of additional zombies past a certain number, the extra successes are simply lost. Each zombie can follow 1 simple instruction, such as “Stay here and guard this graveyard against any intruders,” or “Kill them!”
Note: Zombies created by Shambling Hordes will wait forever if need be to fulfill their functions. Long after the flesh has rotted off their mystically animated bones, the zombies will wait and wait and wait, still able to perform their duties.
This power affects the living, not the dead. It does, however, temporarily turn a living soul into a sort of wraith, as it allows a Necromancer to strip a soul from a living body. A mortal exiled from xyr body by this power becomes a wraith with a single tie to the real world: xyr now-empty body.
System: The player spends a point of Willpower and then makes a contested Willpower roll against the intended victim (Difficulty 6). Successes indicate the number of hours during which the original soul is forced out of its housing. The body itself remains autonomically alive but catatonic.
This power can be used to create suitable hosts for Daemonic Possession. It has no effect on Kindred or other supernatural creatures (except ghouls) until such creatures are dead – in the case of vampires, this means Final Death.
Daemonic Possession lets a vampire insert a soul into a freshly dead body. This does not turn the reanimated corpse into anything other than a reanimated corpse, one that will irrevocably decay after a week, but it does give either a wraith or a free-floating soul (say, that of a vampire using Psychic Projection) a temporary home in the physical world.
System: The body in question must be no more than 30 minutes dead, and the new tenant must agree to inhabit it — a ghost or astral form cannot be forced into a new shell. However, most ghosts would gladly seize the opportunity. Should the vampire, for whatever reason, wish to insert a soul into another vampire’s corpse (before it crumbles to ash), the Necromancer must achieve 5 successes on a resisted Willpower roll against the original owner of the body. Otherwise, the interloper is denied entrance.
Note: The soul can use whatever physical abilities (Athletics, Brawl, Potence) xyr new fleshy home possesses, and whatever mental abilities (Computer, Law, Presence) xe already possessed. Xe cannot use the physical abilities of xyr old form, or the mental abilities of xyr new one.
Source: V20 Core
Practitioners of the Cenotaph Path are primarily concerned with discovering or forging links between the living world and the Shadowlands. It functions on the principle that a Kindred, already a corpse, is an unnatural bridge between the living and the dead, and the Necromancer can use this to find other, similar linkages. The basic rudiments of the Cenotaph Path function easily enough once the Kindred learns to attune zirself to these connections. Advanced mastery of the Path usually entails some brief ritual to forge artificial connections, either through focusing unsavory passions or commanding this world and the Shadowlands together.
Just as a Necromancer may exert mastery over the Shadowlands, so too can some ghosts exert themselves in the mortal world. Whereas obvious displays of ghostly power such as bleeding walls or disembodied moans certainly won’t be mistaken, some ghostly abilities exert subtle effects that aren’t easily recognized. A Necromancer sensitized to the residue of the dead, though, can feel whether an object has been touched by a ghost or sense the recent passage of a wraith.
System: The Necromancer simply touches a person or object that ze suspects is a victim of ghostly influence. The player rolls Perception + Awareness (Difficulty 6). If successful, the Necromancer can determine whether a ghost has exerted any sort of power on the subject, or even crossed nearby, to the duration detailed below.
Successes | Result |
---|---|
1 | Last turn; detect use of ghostly powers |
2 | Last 3 turns; detect use of ghostly powers |
3 | Last hour; detect ghost’s touch and use of ghostly powers |
4 | Last day; detect ghost’s touch and use of ghostly powers |
5+ | Last week; detect nearby passage of ghost, ghost’s touch, and use of ghostly powers |
On a failure, the Necromancer receives no impressions. A botch reveals a misleading answer (an object may seem tinged with ghostly power when it’s not, or vice versa). Should the Necromancer succeed in detection while touching an object or person that a ghost is possessing, ze immediately becomes aware that the ghost is still inside. The impression gained in such a case is sufficient to count as an image of the spirit for purposes of the Sepulchre Path’s powers, so the Kindred may be able to (for example) immediately command a ghost to exit a person whom it possesses.
Necromantic compulsions function much more effectively when the caster uses an object of significance to the ghost in question. Such fetters tie the dead to the living lands through their remembered importance — a favored recliner for relaxing, a reviled piece of art foisted off by hated relatives, or some object of similarly intense emotion. Many Necromancers can detect such catene through the use of rituals (see Ritual of the Unearthed Fetter). With this power, though, the Necromancer can determine a fetter with just a few moments of handling. The Kindred simply runs zir hands over the object and concentrates on it. Ze quickly receives an impression of the item’s (or person’s) importance to wraiths, if any; should the wraith be one known to the Necromancer, ze immediately recognizes the object as a fetter to that (or those) ghost(s). Successful identification of a connected ghost is not exclusive; that is, if the vampire determines that the object is important to a given wraith, ze can also determine if there are other ghosts tied to the item, though ze must use the power again to gain zir identities.
Many Necromancers use this power on objects already identified with A Touch of Death, in order to determine whether the ghost is trying to attune a given fetter or simply toying with the world of the living.
System: The Necromancer holds and examines the object for at least 3 turns — if it’s an item, this means turning it over in zir hands, running zir fingers along it, or otherwise giving it a critical eye; with a person, this may require a more... invasive... examination. The player then spends a blood point and rolls Perception + Occult (Difficulty 7). If successful, the Kindred determines whether the object holds any significance to any ghost and, with 3 or more successes, the identity of at least 1 such ghost (which allows the Kindred to use the Sepulchre Path on that wraith, if desired). If the Necromancer already knows any of the ghosts involved, zir ties are revealed with zir identity — so, if the Necromancer already knows a wraith well enough to summon and compel it with other powers, successful identification of a fetter tells whether the object is tied to that ghost, in addition to any other impressions gained.
If a botch is scored, the Necromancer can never successfully use this power on the item being examined.
The extended awareness granted with the Cenotaph Path allows the Necromancer to find locations where the Shadowlands and the living world come close. Often, the Necromancer experiences a chill or shiver when stepping into an area where the Underworld lies near the living one. With practice, the vampire can tell exactly where such locations are.
Experienced Necromancers learn that certain locations are susceptible to ghostly influence; these haunted areas often become homes of a sort for ghosts. A knowledgeable vampire can thus discover places where the dead are likely to congregate, the better to snare them with other Necromancy powers.
System: The player simply declares intent to sense the Shroud in an area and makes a Willpower roll (Difficulty 8). Success reveals whether the location is highly attuned to the Shadowlands, about average (not particularly close to the world of the dead), or far removed from the realm of death. A failing attempt at using the power has no adverse effect, though it may be attempted only once per scene (so the Necromancer must either wait for a time or move to a different area before attempting Tread Upon the Grave once more).
A botch stuns the Necromancer into inaction for a full turn and costs zir a temporary Willpower point, as ze is overcome by shivers and a sense of overwhelming despair.
With 3 or more successes, the Necromancer can determine whether the Shroud’s strength has been artificially altered in the area.
Not all who die go on to become ghosts — many lack the drive to hang on after death or simply have no overwhelming needs that compel them to stick around. Normally, even Necromancers have no way to sort those who might become ghosts from the masses who go on to whatever rewards await. Over time, though, a Necromancer can become sensitized to the pull that occurs when a soul escapes from a body only to hover in wait, enslaved by its desires. The weight of desperation becomes like a tangible tug, and some Necromancers savor this emotion even as they follow the sensation to find the new ghost.
Of course, actually discovering the new ghost can be problematic. The Kindred may need some means to see through the Shroud or may have to send other wraiths to look for the new unfortunate, especially if a large accident or massacre leaves too many corpses for the Necromancer to easily discern and test names.
System: Whenever someone dies and becomes a ghost within a half-mile or kilometer of the Necromancer, ze automatically senses the demise (though many choose to ignore this “always-on” power unless actively seeking someone). This power does not automatically pinpoint the location of the new ghost or identify it, but the player may spend 1 Willpower point and roll Perception + Occult (Difficulty 7) for the Necromancer to gain a vague sense of the distance and direction to the new wraith. With 1 success, the Kindred may sense a vague pull in a general direction; with 3 successes, the Necromancer can sense the direction and guess distance to within a quarter-mile or half a kilometer. With 5 successes, the Necromancer immediately senses the location of the new ghost to within 1 foot or 30 cm. A failure carries no penalty but a botched attempt sends the Necromancer scurrying off in the wrong direction.
The Storyteller may rule that disturbances in the Underworld, intervening magic, or other similar phenomena cloud this sensation, simply to prevent overburdening a chronicle with constant ghost-hunting and dice rolling.
The most puissant Necromancers learn not only to sense the ties between living and dead, but to forge such ties themselves. The master of Ephemeral Binding turns an otherwise mundane object or person into a depository for zir own Necromantic energy. The undying Curse transforms the subject into a sort of linkage between the living and dead. The Necromancer smears zir blood on the item in question, which mystically absorbs the vitae and, in doing so, becomes a vessel to anchor a spirit.
System: The Necromancer must coat an object with zir blood (a full blood point’s worth); if the subject is a person, then that individual must ingest the vitae. The player marks off the blood point, spends a point of Willpower, and rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty 8). If successful, the item temporarily becomes a fetter to 1 wraith. If the Kindred already knows the name of the wraith or has a strong psychic impression, then the object can become a fetter at any range, even to a ghost who normally does not come near the living world (so long as the ghost still exists). Otherwise, the Necromancer must be able to see or sense the ghost (with Witness of Death, Shroudsight, or other such means).
A fetter artificially created in this fashion functions for all Necromantic and ghostly purposes as a normal fetter: It can be detected with other Necromancy powers, the vampire gains a bonus to Necromancy against the wraith attuned to it, and the ghost similarly finds exertion of its powers easier upon the subject (so the vampire might turn an unwitting ghoul into a consort for a wraith familiar with possession...). The ghost can sink into the fetter to heal; conversely, if the fetter is destroyed, the wraith is banished to some inaccessible region of the Underworld, perhaps never to return.
A fetter created with Ephemeral Binding lasts for 1 night per success scored. The expenditure of an additional point of Willpower increases this duration to a week per success, whereas spending a permanent dot of Willpower extends the duration to a year and a day.
Botching with this power not only causes failure but also makes the ghost immediately aware of what the Necromancer was trying to do. Most ghosts do not take kindly to meddling Kindred trying to make artificial chains for them.
Source: V20 Core
This Path enhances the Necromantic understanding of the unliving form and allows the user to fully experience the corpse as a gateway between life and death. The Path lets the vampire apply some of a corpse’s traits to a vampire, and ze can enhance or reduce these traits at various levels of the power.
The character with this ability can assume a visage of death or inflict that shape on another vampire. The victim’s flesh becomes pallid and thin (if it is not already), and skin pulls tight against bone. This ability can be very useful, as it allows one to hide in plain sight in a tomb or crypt at any time (though the character remains as vulnerable to sunlight and fire as ever). When a Necromancer uses this power on another Kindred, the victim gains the same corpselike demeanor. In this sense, the ability works as something of a minor curse.
System: The player spends 1 blood point for the character to gain the form described. Those afflicted with the Masque of Death lose 2 points of Dexterity and Appearance (minimum of 1 in Dexterity and 0 in Appearance) for the duration of the power. The player also gets 2 extra dice to zir Intimidation dice pool, should ze wish to terrify any onlookers. Further, if the character remains perfectly still, observers must roll 5 successes on a Perception + Medicine roll (Difficulty 7) to distinguish the character from a normal corpse. The player doesn’t need to roll anything to have the character stop moving — vampires have no autonomic functions.
If the user inflicts Masque of Death on another vampire, ze must spend a blood point, touch the target, and then make a Stamina + Medicine roll (Difficulty equal to the target’s [Stamina + 3]). The Masque of Death lasts until the next sunset, unless the character who created the Masque wishes to extinguish its effects earlier.
The dead feel no pain, though most undead do. With this ability, the character can temporarily take on the unfeeling semblance of the dead, in order to protect zirself from physical and emotional harm. When assuming the Cold of the Grave, the vampire’s skin becomes unusually cold. When ze speaks, zir breath mists even in warm air — those with exceptional senses might even see a slight red tinge to the breath.
The power brings a sense of lethargy over the character, as a mortal might feel under the influence of a mildly unpleasant disease. It becomes difficult to rouse oneself to action, and very little seems important enough to really worry about. A corpse has no worries, after all.
System: The player spends 1 Willpower point. For the remainder of the scene, the character takes no wound penalties, and the player gains an additional die to all dice pools that involve resisting emotional manipulation, such as Intimidation or Empathy. However, the player also loses a die from dice pools to emotionally manipulate others. The character is a cold fish to those ze interacts with, and they do not respond readily to zir. The Cold of the Grave does not protect the character against the depredations of the Beast. Ze may be emotionally cold on the surface, but if others taunt and anger zir sufficiently, zir is still subject to frenzy as normal.
The Curse of Life inflicts some of the undesirable traits of the living upon the undead, removing xyr corpselike nature and creating a false life to remind xem of the worst things about being alive. Targets of this power regain only the unpleasant aspects of life, as culled from the memory of the Discipline’s user. This may include mundane hunger and thirst, sweat and other excretions, the need to urinate and defecate, a decrease in sensory acuity, and a particular vulnerability to attacks that the character might normally shrug off.
System: The player spends 1 Willpower and rolls Intelligence + Medicine (Difficulty 8) to affect a target within line of sight and no farther than 20 yards or meters from the character. If the roll succeeds, the target suffers the weaknesses of the living without gaining any benefit from that state. Xe does not become immune to sunlight or holy artifacts, for instance. However, xe does become badly distracted by mundane needs, with the net result that xyr player suffers a +2 Difficulty penalty to all rolls. Xe can ignore these distractions at the cost of 1 Willpower point per scene. Additionally, the victim cannot use blood to raise their Physical Attributes while this power is in effect, and Willpower cannot eliminate this penalty. The power remains in effect until the next sunset.
This power, one of the most potent on the Corpse in the Monster Path, enables a Necromancer to ignore most of zir race’s inherent weaknesses for a short time. A dead body is not particularly vulnerable to sunlight, holy artifacts, frenzy, or being staked through the heart, after all, and so it is with a vampire using the Gift of the Corpse. As with the Cold of the Grave, above, the character using this power takes on an even more deathlike mien. It lasts for less than a minute, typically, but that time may be enough to enable a character to charge through a burning building without fearing frenzy or instant death.
System: The player spends 1 Willpower and rolls Stamina + Occult (Difficulty 8). For every success, the character can spend 1 turn in a state in which ze is more akin to an animated corpse than a vampire. Holy artifacts and sanctified ground have no effect, and the character is immune to frenzy and Rötschreck. Sunlight does only Bashing damage, and then only if bare skin is exposed on a clear day. Being staked through the heart is only as much of a danger as getting stabbed through zir dead spleen would be. Fire harms zir only as it would a mortal — causing Lethal damage instead of Aggravated.
Should the character end the power’s duration while exposed to any of the aforementioned harmful things, ze immediately takes their full effect. If ze is staked, ze becomes immobilized; if ze is on or near fire, ze begins to take the damage a Cainite should take, and ze must immediately roll against Rötschreck.
With the Gift of Life, the character can experience the best and most positive things about being alive. The overwhelming hunger for blood temporarily abates, allowing the character to consume and enjoy food and drink. Ze can also enjoy sex as ze wishes, and the sun does not burn zir. The Gift of Life comes with a dark, terrible cost, however. Its use is almost sure to result in the death of a mortal, as the vampire must expend an enormous quantity of vitae in order to initiate it. The Discipline’s effects last until the midnight after the character uses the power, so it is in zir best interests to use it just after midnight.
System: The player spends 12 blood points, burning as much blood as possible each turn until ze meets that level. Ze then rolls Stamina + Occult (Difficulty 6) and needs only 1 success for the power to work. A botch has catastrophic effects. The character might be instantly killed or might inadvertently Embrace zir victim, for example. If it takes longer than 1 turn to spend the necessary blood to enact this ability, it does not take effect until all 12 points have been spent. However, the blood must be spent continuously — the vampire cannot burn 5, run off and feed, then burn 7 more an hour later. On the other hand, ze may feed as ze activates the power — in 1 turn ze might burn 1 blood point while drinking 3. Since few Kindred above the 7th Generation can easily expend such an amount of blood, the most efficient way to activate this power is to have a human nearby who can be sacrificed to power the transformation.
After zir transformation, the character gains many traits of an ordinary human. Ze is largely immune to the scorching effects of the sun (Fortitude Difficulties to soak damage from direct sunlight are halved, and ze takes no damage if ze is sufficiently covered), and ze can experience and enjoy many of the fine things about human life. Ze retains a few of zir vampiric benefits, however. Fortitude and Auspex abilities remain in place if ze has either of those Disciplines, and the Storyteller may allow zir to retain other Disciplines as well if they deem them dramatically appropriate. Ze also retains a vampire’s benefits when it comes to handling Bashing damage. However, ze is still vulnerable to holy artifacts, human faith, and being staked. Zir blood remains vitae, not human blood. Use of this ability — which creates a mockery of human life — may interfere with a character’s Path advancement, at the Storyteller’s discretion.
The vampire is no more vulnerable to fire than any other mortal while in this half-alive state, but ze still suffers somewhat from the Beast. Frenzy and Rötschreck Difficulties are halved (round up). Ze can remain active during the day without Humanity or Path-based dice pool caps, although ze is certainly tired during the day, since that is not zir usual time of activity.
Their Beast exacts a dangerous retribution when zir day of “life” is done. Although its influence is greatly suppressed during this power’s duration, the Beast has its way with the vampire for the next 6 nights, as all Difficulties to resist frenzy increase by 3. The wise Necromancer hides zirself away somewhere during that period, but, depending on morality and temperament, enforced isolation might drive zir to frenzy on its own.
Source: V20 Core
This Path is derived from the observation of the working of time on all things mortal. Stone crumbles and the corpse rots away to nothing, a process of endless fascination to the lost Cainites known as Cappadocians. Indeed, for the undying, the process of decay is a fascinating disease that afflicts everyone and everything save them. Under this Path, a practitioner of Necromancy channels that force.
Cainites who kill their victims, rather than just feeding upon them, frequently find themselves in need of a quick way to dispose of a corpse. While there are many ways to make sure that a corpse is not found — feed it to a pack of hounds or weigh it down and throw it in a river — many of these methods do involve risk to the vampire and are not guaranteed to succeed. Destroy the Husk, by contrast, is foolproof. Use of this power simply turns 1 human corpse to a pile of about 30 pounds (13 kilograms) of unremarkable dust, roughly the size and shape of that body.
System: The player spends 1 blood point as the vampire drips zir vitae onto the corpse. The player then rolls Intelligence + Medicine (Difficulty 6). 1 success is all that is needed to render the corpse into dust, although the process takes a number of turns equal to [5 - the successes].
One of the first changes that comes over a dead body is rigidity; the corpse becomes stiff as a board, frozen in a single pose. The Cainite who wields Rigor Mortis is able to push a living or undead body to that frozen point using only zir will and understanding of the forces of decay. Ze forces zir target to become rigid and unable to move without enormous effort of will, as xyr very muscles betray xem.
System: The player spends a point of Willpower and rolls Intelligence + Medicine (Difficulty 7). Each additional success freezes the target in place for an extra turn. A failure simply indicates the loss of the Willpower point, while a botch renders the target immune to powers in the Grave’s Decay Path for the next 24 hours. The target must be visible and within about 25 yards or meters for this ability to take effect. A frozen target is treated as though xe has been staked. With a Willpower roll (also Difficulty 7) and 2 successes, the target can break out of the rigor on xyr turn. Failure causes xem a level of Bashing damage and means another turn wasted and frozen.
Reminiscent of some of the powers of Vicissitude, Wither allows a vampire to cripple an opponent’s limb. Whether the foe is living or undead, muscle shrivels away, skin peels, and bone becomes brittle. The target is unable to exert any noteworthy strength in the crippled limb. This injury lasts for far longer than most injuries trouble vampires, and in mortals it simply does not heal.
Wither doesn’t have to be used on a limb, although that is its usual purpose. It can also be used simply to affect the target’s face and hair, making xem appear far older than xyr years. It could also be applied to a target’s eye or ear, killing the sense in that organ (and thus requiring 2 uses to permanently blind or deafen). Wither cannot be used as an “instant-kill” power — Necromancers cannot Wither internal organs — but it can inflict a wide variety of injuries on a foe.
System: The player spends a Willpower point. The character chooses a limb on the target and then touches that limb. If the target is trying to avoid contact, the invoker’s player rolls Dexterity + Brawl to hit as normal. If the character succeeds in touching the intended limb, the target suffers 2 Aggravated wounds. Unless the target soaks both wounds (such as with Fortitude), the struck limb is crippled and unusable until both of those wounds have healed. Kindred heal the wounds as they would any other Aggravated wound. Mortals are incapable of healing Aggravated wounds, so they suffer throughout their lives unless they are healed through supernatural means. A Withered limb does not degenerate further, even on a mortal. The character may be crippled for life, but the limb won’t become infected or gangrenous.
The effects of the Withering depend on the affected limb. A crippled arm has a Strength of 0, cannot benefit from Potence, and cannot carry anything heavier than about half a pound (200 grams). A crippled leg prevents the character from moving faster than a stuttering hop or dragging limp. The character suffers the effects of the Lame Flaw. A single withered eye or ear imposes a +1 Difficulty to relevant Perception rolls. Losing both eyes or both ears imposes the effects of the Blind or Deaf Flaws. A withered tongue imposes the effects of the Mute Flaw, while a Withered face reduces the target’s Appearance by 1 for each Aggravated wound suffered.
Corrupt the Undead Flesh blurs the line between life and undeath, turning an undead creature into something just living enough to carry and suffer from disease. The disease inflicts the target, causing lethargy, dizziness, loss of strength, clumsiness, and the inability to keep blood in xyr system. This pernicious influence is extremely virulent among mortals. They pick the disease up simply by spending a few hours near the victim. Other vampires have a harder time acquiring the disease. They must consume the victim’s blood to do so, but afterward, they suffer just as much as the original target — including passing the affliction on to others.
The disease fades after roughly a week.
System: The player chooses a target within their character’s line of sight and no more than 20 yards or meters away. They roll Intelligence + Medicine (Difficulty 6) and spend a point of Willpower. The victim’s player must roll Stamina (+ Fortitude, if appropriate) against a Difficulty equal to the attacker’s Willpower. If the player scores more successes than the victim, xe acquires a virulent disease immediately. The disease has the following effects:
Every evening at sunset, the victim has a chance to throw off the plague. The victim’s player rolls Stamina, with a Difficulty equal to [10 - the number of sunsets] since acquiring the plague. On a successful roll, the character fights the disease to a standstill and begins to recover. Xe instantly regains their ability to manage blood, and xe heals back 1 lost Attribute point per hour until all have returned.
This ability brings the Grave’s Decay Path full circle, as it causes Destroy the Husk to apply to vampires. Dissolve the Flesh allows a Necromancer to attempt to turn vampiric flesh to dust or ash, as though the target had been burned or left out in the sun.
System: The player spends 2 blood points and a Willpower point as the vampire extracts a quantity of zir vitae charged with the power of the grave. If ze drips it onto a single Kindred victim anytime within the next few turns (most of the blood must reach the victim, so flinging a few drops is ineffective), it causes whole chunks of the victim’s body to crumble to ash. The player rolls Willpower against a Difficulty of the victim’s [Stamina + 3]. For every success, the target takes 1 Aggravated wound.
The undead flesh damaged by this power turns to dust (gone for the time being), and it must be regenerated painstakingly by the victim, should xe survive. That dust doubtlessly has mystical properties that various sorcerers might be able to take advantage of. Every wound inflicted by this ability represents the loss of about 1/8 of the target’s weight; the Storyteller chooses where the loss comes from. (It might also be shed from all over, leaving the victim a bit gaunter or missing chunks of flesh.)
Regenerating body parts occurs naturally while healing Aggravated wounds at the normal rate.
Source: V20 Core
Philosophically, the four humors represent different qualities, split along two axes: hot and cold, and wet and dry. Blood is hot and wet; phlegm is cold and wet; yellow bile is hot and dry; and black bile is cold and dry. Historically, when a mortal was out of sorts or ill, it was said that their humors were out of balance, and a philosopher or physician would try to heal them by bringing their humors back into balance. Ancient Necromancers believed that in their undead forms, all four humors were held in a mystical stasis, and that they could tap into all four of them instead of merely tapping into blood in the form of vitae as other vampires did.
This antiquated path was primarily considered the knowledge of the Lamia bloodline, and certainly very few Necromancers have learned this path without tutoring from a Lamia. Since the loss of the Lamia, elder Necromancers have searched everywhere (both in this world and the next) for clues to its existence.
The Necromancer with this ability can let slip a little of zir own undead bilious humor as ze speaks to another being (whether mortal or Kindred). The wicked vapor slips into the target’s ear and whispers nightmares to the target throughout the day and night. The target has a harder time sleeping, and becomes irritable and distracted during xyr waking hours.
System: The character must whisper the target’s name (as ze knows it) into xyr ear. The victim rolls Willpower (Difficulty 8). If the roll fails, the victim suffers from nightmares and hears mad, wicked mutterings while awake, for a number of full days equal to the Necromancer’s Manipulation. The victim loses 1 die from all dice pools while thus afflicted, and at the Storyteller’s discretion, the Difficulty to resist Rötschreck may be increased by 1 at the same time.
Kiss of the Dark Mother allows the Necromancer who uses it to mix zir vitae with black bile, turning it into a noxious poison. The Necromancer forces it into zir mouth as saliva might once have come; the vitae tastes acrid and bitter, as though it had been scorched. Once the Necromancer coats zir teeth and lips with it, ze can inflict terrible damage with zir bite.
System: The player spends 1 blood point; activating this power is a reflexive action, but it must be done before making a bite attack. If the bite hits, the Aggravated damage inflicted by a single bite is doubled before soak is calculated. This power does not affect the character’s ability to drain blood from the target, nor does it increase the amount of damage done by blood loss. The Necromancer’s bite remains potent until this ability is discharged by a successful hit or ze spends 1 turn cleansing the dark blood from zir mouth.
The vampire can exude a coat of a particular humor onto zir skin, causing all that touch it to experience the most intense form of that humor. After a Necromancer has used this power, xe generally feels the opposite of the sensation the humor usually conveys: Using blood leaves xem depressed and pessimistic; using yellow bile renders xem calm and placid; using black bile leaves xem optimistic; and using phlegm makes xem aroused and angry.
System: The player spends 2 blood points. The Necromancer chooses which humor ze wishes to excrete. The humor can simply coat the skin — in which case touching the victim’s skin lets the humor take effect — or it can act as a poison if placed in a beverage (or in vitae). The victim must make a Stamina roll (Difficulty 8) to resist the effects of the humor:
Blood, the sanguine humor, was regarded by philosophers as being both hot and wet. Blood from a cold corpse has been transubstantiated into a dead form — a cold incarnation of a hot, wet element. This transformation of the living into death holds great power; the Necromancer knows how to infuse zir own being with the blood of a cold corpse and transform zirself into something not wholly vampiric. Instead, the Necromancer edges closer to being an animated corpse in fact as well as name. Ze grows distant and chill, as though possessed by the spirit of Death itself; ze has to work to push zir attention into the physical world.
System: The character must drink, and then spend, 5 blood points from a cold corpse (one dead for 24 hours or more, but generally less than 3 days). It will generally take at least 2 turns to consume that blood, and the power is not activated until the character can spend all of it. For example, if the character is 12th Generation, Clutching the Shroud takes at least 7 turns total to activate (2 to consume the blood and 5 to spend it).
After the power is active and for the rest of the scene, the Necromancer gains several benefits. First, ze receives 2 additional soak dice, which may be used to soak any sort of damage, even if the character does not possess Fortitude. Second, ze gains a mystic sense of how far those in the area are from death — whether they are healthy or infirm, suffer from diseases, or are undead, ghouls, or mortals. Finally, a Manipulation + Occult roll lets zir speak with ghosts freely. The Difficulty for this roll depends on how attuned to death a locale is; a cemetery would be Difficulty 5, while a cozy apartment might be Difficulty 7. However, this ability makes the Necromancer much more susceptible to the effects of powers used by ghosts, which means that ze must act carefully.
TRIGGER WARNING: SUICIDE MENTION
A Necromancer who has mastered this path can harness the undead black bile that festers at the core of zir being; ze pulls that melancholy to zir lungs and lets it mingle with zir outgoing breath. Ze then exhales the dark mist, letting it engulf those nearby. The Necromancer feels curiously lightheaded and optimistic after using this power, as ze has forced some of zir most depressed nature out into the world; those caught in the black vapors grow despairing and hopeless.
System: The player spends 1 Willpower and 1 blood point, and rolls Stamina + Athletics (Difficulty 7). Black Breath allows the character to exhale a dark cloud of vapor that is 5 yards or meters in diameter per success rolled. Those caught in the mists may attempt a Dexterity + Athletics roll to escape it if they have an available action; otherwise, they may be overwhelmed by depression to the point of suicide. Those who cannot escape the mists must immediately roll Willpower (Difficulty 8 for mortals, 7 for supernatural beings) and achieve more successes than the invoker did. Mortals who fail in this actively attempt to kill themselves on their next turn. They do not attempt such ludicrous suicides as praying for a lightning bolt or holding their breath; they use the most effective means at hand to end their own lives. If prevented from suicide, they attempt it again as soon as an opportunity presents itself. This impulse lasts for the rest of the scene, and the Storyteller may impose flare-ups over the next day or so at their discretion. Those who succeed on the Willpower roll still become enchanted with the prospect of death, whether mortal or Kindred, and lose 2 dice from all dice pools for the rest of the scene.
Kindred who fail the Willpower roll do not attempt suicide; as they are already dead, the malign influences of undead humors do not have as strong an effect on them. Instead, the affected vampire sinks into torpor. The duration of this torpor is based on the vampire’s Humanity/Path rating, just as if Lethal wounds had forced them into it.
Source: V20 The Black Hand: A Guide to the Tal’Mahe’Ra
As the Maeghar fell farther away from the world and into darkness, their powers of illusion and trickery were warped by the shadows of Oblivion. Slowly they kindled within themselves the dark spark that would grow into the Path of Haunting. Other Necromancers may also learn Path of Haunting and, indeed, Clan Giovanni has created it on its own.
TRIGGER WARNING: SUICIDE MENTION
The Necromancer weaves death and silence into a haunting song that instills an obsession with death in zir listener. The victim becomes sure that death stalks xem and sees ill omens everywhere. This constant threat can eventually lead a mortal to suicide or drive a vampire into torpor.
System: The vampire chants to the victim while zir player spends 1 blood point and rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty of the target’s current Willpower). A botch indicates the vampire affects zirself as though ze had gained successes equal to the number of 1s rolled.
For a number of nights equal to the successes rolled, the target suffers depression and morbid anxiety. This fixation adds +2 to the Difficulty of Social rolls (except those involving Intimidation) and +1 to the Difficulty of all other non-reflexive rolls. If a target suffers the effects of this power for more continuous nights than xyr permanent Willpower, xe loses a dot of permanent Willpower. This cycle continues after an interval of the new rating in days, with the victim losing a dot of permanent Willpower after each such iteration. Once a character drops to 0 permanent Willpower, xe commits suicide (if living) or falls into torpor (if a vampire). If the power is interrupted for at least 1 night, the victim recovers xyr permanent Willpower at the rate of 1 dot per week. A vampire who falls into torpor from reaching 0 Willpower awakens with xyr original rating.
Straddling two worlds, the Necromancer does not truly exist. Ze is here, yet ze is not. Reaching into zirself, ze infuses a spark of zir own ephemeral nature with dark, Necromantic energy. The result is a dancing light, which is as hypnotic as it is treacherous.
System: The player spends 1 blood point and rolls Charisma + Occult (Difficulty 5) to conjure an orb of pale light that lasts 1 scene. The wisp can take any color the vampire chooses and has no substance or weight. It may fly as fast as the vampire can run, casting cold illumination as bright as a candle. Mortals who behold the wisp must roll Willpower (Difficulty 4) and achieve more successes than the caster or fall into a mild trance, which adds +1 to the Difficulty of all actions due to distraction. If the vampire’s successes are double the mortal’s, xe follows the light without regard for any but the most obvious obstacles. Xe walks around trees and rocks, but falls prey to quicksand or a high parapet. Any loud noise or other distraction immediately breaks the reverie.
If the vampire’s player botches the conjuration roll, the wisp appears and acts with its own malevolent agenda. Such a creature is only a nuisance, but can display remarkable cunning in luring enemies to the vampire’s haven or giving away zir position.
Even dreams offer no respite to the enemies of the Necromancer. Restful sleep becomes pure terror as Song of the Dead continues to haunt the sleeper through nightmares.
System: The vampire makes eye contact with the victim, while zir player spends 1 blood point and rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty of the target’s permanent Willpower). If successful, the victim feels a slight sense of unease. When xe next sleeps, xe suffers horrible nightmares about xyr own demise. Even though xe cannot fully remember the content of xyr visions after he wakes, the emotional trauma prevents xem from regaining Willpower. In addition, xyr twisted déjà vu and unnatural paranoia give xem the Nightmares and Eerie Presence Flaws for the day. A botch in casting this power inflicts the same terrible dreams on the vampire when ze slumbers.
The Necromancer recognizes the passion of the dead as an illusion. Drawing upon zir insight, ze may turn these illusions to haunt the living.
System: The vampire envisions the desired apparition, while the player spends 1 blood point and rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty 7). These creations have no substance and cannot speak or perform complicated actions, though they emit a surreal cold. Each success allows the vampire to create 1 phenomenon, or add 1 characteristic or condition to another phantom. For example, 3 successes could animate shadows to shuffle and writhe (1 success) and create an illusion of dripping gore that bursts into a spray of flies when someone draws close (1 success for the gore and 1 success for the condition). This power may create apparitions anywhere in the caster’s line of sight. The Storyteller remains the final arbiter of what is or is not possible with this power.
A botch calls the attention of a malefic ghost, giving the vampire the Haunted Flaw for a number of nights equal to the 1s rolled.
The distinction between life and death means nothing to the Necromancer — it is another illusion, created for the comfort of the living. Ze may rend this veil and call upon malicious apparitions to haunt zir victim.
System: The player spends 1 blood point and rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty 8). On a botch, the vampire permanently gains the Haunted Flaw, attracting the vilest and most hateful ghosts. If successful, the victim feels a sudden chill. The Difficulty for ghosts to affect the target with any power decreases by 1 for every success rolled, to a minimum of Difficulty 4. Malicious ghosts flock to the target, eagerly inflicting every horror at their disposal. The Difficulty reduction diminishes by 1 every day at dawn until the victim returns to normal and the Spectres lose interest. Multiple applications of this power may not be stacked to increase duration or intensity of effect. The statistics and powers of spectres are left to the Storyteller, but the experience should terrify the character utterly and may well result in Derangements at the least.
Source: V20 The Black Hand: A Guide to the Tal’Mahe’Ra
Developed by the Drakaina, this Path of Necromancy studies natural cycles, including the savage interplay of life and death. All life is a manifestation of entropy, a chaotic miracle punctuating Creation’s flow toward destruction. When rot claims a body, it impregnates the flesh with insects and lush plants, and its stench calls scavengers who sustain themselves with death’s bounty. Vampires demonstrate how this process can be arrested and manipulated, for Kindred stand suspended at the moment of death, before nature blesses them with the power to decompose and feed living things. The black seed lies dormant within them, but they can encourage its growth in others, manipulating rot and staining life with the ghostly essence.
Although the Drakaina developed the Path, they don’t hoard it — it’s the Dark Mother’s gift, to share with all who worship her. Any Bahari Necromancer may learn it from a Drakaina teacher. Lilin Nagaraja practice this Path in increasing numbers because it unifies the life and death principles in ways anticipated (but never realized) by their Idran forebears.
Modern forensics makes it possible to determine time of death with remarkable accuracy — a frightening prospect for Kindred with bodies to hide. On the other hand, sometimes it’s better for people to find corpses before rot takes them. Presenting evidence that elder Kindred have suffered the Final Death is sometimes difficult to come by, as their bodies rapidly molder into nondescript ash. A Necromancer with this power overcomes these difficulties. Ze can speed up or slow the process of decay, turning a dead mortal into a bloated host for flies in seconds or nullifying the decay of Final Death.
System: The player spends 1 blood point as the vampire lets some of zir blood drip on to a corpse, and rolls Wits + Occult (Difficulty 6). Successes allow the vampire to accelerate or arrest decomposition as follows:
Successes | Decay or Accelerate Rot By |
---|---|
1 | Up to 1 day |
2 | Up to 1 week |
3 | Up to 1 month |
4 | Up to 1 year |
5+ | Storyteller’s discretion |
The vampire may use this power on mortals and animals as long as the remains have not been substantially scattered. It may be used on Kindred no longer than 1 turn after they’ve met Final Death. Corpses that recently belonged to the living change according to local conditions, so that one stored in a dry place might mummify, while another that rests on soil quickly sprouts plants and maggots. Living things that feed from the dead are quickened or held in stasis as the corpse is, provided they’re plants, fungi, or no larger than a scarab beetle. Kindred under Final Death wither and fall to dust without attracting such organisms.
Every plant relies on death to grow. Rotting things enrich the soil, and the trees, vines, and grasses drink up Necrotic echoes along with vital nutrients. A Necromancer can awaken this death aura by exposing their fruits to zir blood. Ze awakens and concentrates their trace Necrotic energies so that anyone who consumes them can sense and touch the Shadowlands.
System: The player spends 1 blood point while the vampire touches edible plant matter. No roll is required. The first living creature to eat this tainted meal falls into a waking, ambulatory trance for a scene, during which xe may see into the Shadowlands, hear its denizens, and even touch and be touched by ghosts. The target may not make physical contact with buildings and other objects that were never alive, and may not be dragged into the Tempest or any other place that has no corresponding location in the living world. Tainted plant matter rots by the next sunrise and loses the ability to impart this state.
Witches’ fruits are mild hallucinogens. Twisted visions of ghosts and long-fallen buildings disorient mortals under their influence. This normally imposes +2 to Difficulties to perform any actions except for Willpower rolls while affected. Creatures who are familiar with supernatural phenomena don’t suffer this penalty.
Tales of Kid, Osiris, and the Green Man all describe beings who were brought back from death and clothed in verdant color. Isis raised Osiris to become a symbol of rebirth and growth, and neopagans say Green Man iconography remembers the god who is slain by Winter and reborn in the Goddess’ womb. Nightshade Necromancers channel these legends into the act of raising a corpse bound and strengthened by plant matter. Leaves cover its skin and strong vines supplement its rotted sinews. The living shell grants speed and self-preservation instincts not seen in other animated dead.
System: The player rolls Wits + Occult (Difficulty 8). Ze spends 1 Willpower point and 1 blood point while concentrating on a corpse that lays upon or within fertile soil. If the roll succeeds, red-tinged vines, branches, and leaves envelop the corpse, and it rises to do the Necromancer’s bidding. The Necromancer may only raise the Green Ones one at a time, and may never have multiple Green Ones active at the same time.
Green Ones are stronger, faster, and possess better instincts than most zombies. Their traits are Strength 4, Dexterity 4, Stamina 4, Athletics 2, Brawl 3, and the equivalent of 2 dots of Fortitude, as their damp bodies resist injuries. Bashing damage inflicts half damage to a Green One. Like vampires, they suffer Bashing damage from gunfire. Unlike ordinary zombies, they act in standard initiative order.
As the Necromancer’s understanding deepens, ze explores the wavering barrier between life and death. When ze screams like a banshee, ze can lure a soul to its demise, increasing the chance of a fatal injury. When ze whispers like a mother to her child, ze can fix a soul in the lands of the living, even when it occupies a body that should be dead.
System: The vampire concentrates on a target, screaming or whispering as zir intentions dictate. (The target does not need to be able to hear the vampire.) The player spends 1 point of Willpower and rolls Wits + Occult (Difficulty 8). If ze wishes to lure zir target closer to death, each success adds 1 level of Lethal damage to the total inflicted by the next injury xe suffers in that scene. If ze wishes to prevent the target from dying, each success sets aside 1 level of damage (of any kind) from the next injury the target suffers during the scene, but this benefit only lasts until the end of the scene, after which the set aside damage returns. The target suffers injury but doesn’t feel its effects, up to and including death, until the scene ends and the damage returns. Note that the Storyteller can rule that very large amounts of damage may cause death due to total or near-total destruction of the body, regardless of this power’s effects.
At the apex of this Path, a Necromancer combines murder and fertility to give birth to the ghost of a mortal ze has slain. Ze drinks the victim’s blood to grab hold of xyr soul, and after dispatching xem, traps it within zir. At a later time, ze may call it forth as a ghost to do zir bidding.
System: The vampire must drink at least 1 point of a mortal victim’s blood, but may kill xem using another method. Another person or incident may cause the mortal’s demise, but the Necromancer must make physical contact with xem at the moment of death. At that point the player spends 1 point of Willpower and rolls Wits + Occult (Difficulty 8). If the player succeeds, the soul occupies the vampire’s body in a dormant state for up to 1 month per success. (Aura Perception or similar powers will reveal the presence of the dormant soul, which might be mistaken for a form of possession.) The Necromancer may store multiple souls this way, but “twins,” “triplets,” and more tax the “mother’s” energy. Each soul stored beyond the first drains 1 additional blood point when the vampire awakens each night.
At any point before the soul leaves zir body, the vampire may summon it forth to manifest with either the traits of a recently deceased ghost or those it possessed in life, along with a recently deceased ghost’s supernatural abilities. It must perform 3 services for its “mother.” After that, the soul is free to move on to its ultimate destiny. If the ghost is commanded to perform any task that would traumatize a mortal (typically, those which would risk a Humanity check in a vampire with that trait at 7) it may, at the Storyteller’s discretion, treat the Necromancer as a “fetter,” an object that the ghost fixates upon and uses as a tie to the living world. This gives the ghost the ability to haunt the Necromancer until it is banished. The Necromancer may always simply dismiss the soul when it appears, or even command it to leave zir body while the soul still slumbers.
Source: V20 Dark Ages: Tome of Secrets
Cappadocians were often dismissed as apolitical; fit only for work in dungeons and plague pits. They possess none of the blood-borne talents allowing for manipulation and control of mortals. The expectation that a Graverobber would be more at home elbow-deep in a cadaver wasn’t fanciful, but there existed a strata of the clan who enjoyed remaining hidden, allowing their childer to wade through corpses while they played kingmaker. These Cappadocians called themselves Harbingers. Their order had existed for millennia. It would have formed the backbone of the clan, were its numbers not depleted in the Feast of Folly.
The Harbingers used Necromancy in an atypical fashion. Before the Long Night degenerated into the War of Princes, they created the Path of Skulls — a Necromantic Path dedicated to the theft of identity and knowledge from the dead. From throne rooms to merchant caravans, Necromancers who channelled the Path of Skulls exerted mastery over the diplomatic scene and Jyhad. Cappadocians invidiously guarded the Path of Skulls, largely due to the secrecy of the Harbinger agenda. Cappadocians who knew the Path would occasionally mentor those who showed a subtle political acumen. Knowing whether to assassinate a monarch, his queen, or their heir; perceiving whether to deliver, amend, or destroy a message from one court to another — such behaviors were observed by the Cappadocians who called themselves Harbingers, and rewarded by tutelage on the Path of Skulls.
One of Clan Cappadocian’s most prized secrets was the ability to spy via the eye-sockets of the dead. Few enquired why Graverobbers festooned their havens with the skulls of their victims. A simple Cainite may have passed off a cluster of skeletal remains as morbid decoration, not realizing from the empty sockets of a skull peers the gaze of a Necromancer.
System: The Necromancer must possess the skull of any creature ze’s personally slain. The player spends a blood point and rolls Perception + Occult (Difficulty 5). Failure has no effect; a botch means the skull crumbles to dust immediately. Success means the Necromancer can instantly enter a meditative state in which ze can see through the sockets of the skull, canceled only once the trance is broken or the sun rises. This spying state can be reentered a number of times equal to the number of successes.
Myth holds that the dead tell no lies. In truth, wraiths and animate corpses are as capable of falsehood as any other being, but the Harbingers believed there’s a grain of truth to the fable. The Cappadocians seeked a way to guarantee truthful responses from the deceased, and possession of the skull was the key. By conversing with the decapitated head of the departed target, it transpires that prying a guaranteed truth from decayed lips is quite possible.
System: The Necromancer must possess the decapitated head of a being whose language ze would understand. The player must spend at least 1 blood point and roll Manipulation + Empathy (Difficulty 6). Failure has no effect; a botch means the head will answer only in lies to the Necromancer’s questioning. Success forces the head to answer one question posed by the Necromancer truthfully, but it must be to a question to which the head’s former owner would know an answer. For each blood point spent above the initial one, an additional question may be asked.
No spirit is summoned with Consilium Mortuus — the dead being with whom the Necromancer communicates isn’t even aware of being channeled. The answer comes through vestigial memory, traces left in the head’s rotting brain, imprinted on its putrefying tongue.
Those practicing the Path of Skulls know being the recipient of sensitive information is a deadly business. The fetish of the Path — the eponymous skull — bears more utility than a simple medium for communication. It can act as a brutal tool in the hands of an accomplished Necromancer, and often must do, for Necromancers make many enemies.
Using this power, the Necromancer can grip the mandible and maxillae of the skull to use as a bizarre close-quarters weapon, affix the skull to a spear-point to attack from distance, or even leave the skull alone, to act as a trap. If not under the manual control of its wielder, the skull has a limited range. Such a restriction often leads Necromancers to place these skulls in beds, on desks, or inside chests. When the teeth clamp down on a victim, blood flows. Each drop rejuvenates the Necromancer.
System: The Necromancer must possess a skull or rotting head with all teeth removed. The player must spend 1 point of Willpower and at least 1 point of blood for this power to take effect. In place of teeth, a vicious row of fangs emerges in the skull, remaining until it consumes as many blood points as spent by the Necromancer in its activation. At this point, the skull becomes inert and its fangs fall out.
The skull instinctively bites when in a half-meter (1 1/2 feet) proximity to living flesh and warm blood. With the vampire’s expenditure of a second Willpower point, it will also tackle Cainites. The skull is able to propel itself half a meter (1 1/2 feet) with jaws wide on a single occasion, with a total combat dice pool of 6 and standard Difficulty. A successful bite from an independent skull is an immediate clinch from which the skull will not retract until destroyed.
The skull may be wielded as a weapon by the Necromancer, in which case it holds the same combat dice pool and Difficulty as the weapon upon which it’s affixed. In this case, the skull will willingly retract its bite if the Necromancer pulls it away from a victim.
The skull’s bite deals three levels of Aggravated damage for every turn its fangs are gripped on a target. It also consumes 1 blood point per turn, which is Necromantically channeled to the Cainite who gave it power. Vitae channeled in this way can count towards a blood bond.
The skull is destructible, but takes at least 1 turn of focused attack to destroy. For the purposes of defense, the skull cannot dodge or maneuver. It has a Strength rating of 3 for determining resistance to being pried free and a Stamina rating of 2; it only has 3 health levels, and it can only soak Bashing damage.
A Necromancer may animate multiple skulls by making the expenditure of Willpower and blood for each.
Outsiders were to never know the benefits of this power, for they would assume the practitioner guilty of the Amaranth. The Necromancers who perform Exedo Animus are not consuming the soul of one of the dead, but are allowing the memories of the deceased to inhabit their bodies for a time. Such presence gives the spirit no power over the host, but does give the host complete access to the identity, personality, and memory of the deceased.
By bearing a skull — either from a mortal or Cainite — the Necromancer forms a sympathetic bond with the skull’s former owner. Necromancers have used this power to fool the loved ones of the deceased, by indicating they speak for the dead’s last wishes. Others slay rivals, gaining access to their secrets by drinking memories from the skull of the deceased.
System: The Necromancer must possess a skull, and know the identity of the person of whom the skull once formed a part. The player must spend 2 Willpower and 2 blood points, and roll Intelligence + Occult (Difficulty 7). Failure has no effect; a botch means the memories of the deceased will be confused and misleading. Success allows the Necromancer to upend the skull and drink the personality from it. For each success, the Necromancer gains an hour as host to the skull’s memories and identity.
The effects of Exedo Animus allow the Necromancer to perform Intelligence-based rolls surrounding recollection and memories of the deceased at a Difficulty decreased by 3. These memories stop at the point of death — the spirit in communion is a shadow of life, rather than an independent, thinking wraith.
Exedo Animus also grants the Necromancer the power to impersonate the identity of the deceased, gaining 3 dice on Performance-based rolls when doing so. Such an imitation suffers penalties when the Necromancer doesn’t physically resemble the dead source of zir mimicry, but when utilizing Obfuscate or explaining ze’s channeling the dead instead of being the dead, these acts are more successful.
When Degulo was first practiced, its Necromancer creators celebrated in a long, grim reverie. Since then, Degulo’s efficacy is weighed against the dangers it presents. Where Daemonic Possession focuses on the art of transposing a departed spirit into the empty shell of a corpse, Degulo is the method by which a Necromancer consumes a fragment of soul and retains it forever as a part of zirself.
The process by which a Necromancer eats a spirit requires great sacrifice on the part of the practitioner, who must give up a part of zirself to allow the dead to move in. Some Necromancers were known to strip their bodies of frailty in order to take on the souls of mighty warriors, where others lost knowledge of their own languages to make room for ancient, arcane dialects. At the extreme end, some Harbingers divested themselves of their clan-given powers in exchange for Disciplines possessed by passed Cainites. Tales tell of Cappadocians who attempted to lose their curse, replaced with that held by another clan. To date, these attempts have been met with failure, but Necromancers are known for their commitment to incessant experimentation.
System: The Necromancer must possess the skull of the being whose powers ze wishes to ingest and subsume. The player must spend 2 Willpower and make a Willpower roll (Difficulty 9). Willpower cannot be spent to create an automatic success on this roll. Failure has no effect; a botch means the Necromancer loses whatever ze was prepared to sacrifice for the Discipline, but gains none of the benefits. Success allows the Necromancer to unhinge zir jaw and consume the skull whole, subsequently subsuming elements of the devoured spirit.
Degulo forces the vampire to lose any one trait on zir character sheet. The Storyteller then replaces this trait rating with that held by the dead person whose skull has been consumed.
Example: Simon is playing Silvanius, a Cappadocian with mastery over the Path of Skulls. Silvanius has procured the skull of his former lord — a Lasombra named Hywel. Always covetous of the Magister’s battle prowess, Silvanius wishes to consume this part of Hywel’s soul. Simon specifies to the Storyteller that should the Discipline use be successful, Silvanius will replace his Strength rating of 2 with whatever Hywel held. Simon deducts two temporary Willpower from Silvanius’ sheet, and makes a Willpower roll. He rolls 2, 2, 5, 6, 9 — just enough for a success. As Silvanius’ jaw drops open and Hywel’s skull disappears within the Cappadocian’s maw, a change comes over his body. Wracked with pain as his muscles wither and atrophy, at first Silvanius believes something has gone wrong. But then, ligaments knit and sinews tighten, muscle-mass forming from the consumed spirit. The Storyteller explains to Simon that he can mark a Strength rating of 4 on Silvanius’ character sheet.
The vampire using Degulo is restricted to swapping only one trait rating, and as the skull is consumed in the act, this act cannot be repeated with further traits from the same spirit. Unlike the other levels of the Path of Skulls, if there is a wraith of the deceased, it is affected by this power, gaining the trait bequeathed by the Necromancer in exchange for its own.
Degulo’s sole restriction applies to Disciplines, allowing only for an equal rating swap of Cainite powers. A Necromancer cannot exchange zir 1 dot in Auspex for another Cainite’s 4 dots in Dominate, but can exchange zir 1 dot in Auspex for the first dot of the deceased Cainite’s Dominate Discipline. The practitioner of Degulo then loses zir chosen Discipline as a Clan Discipline, gaining the consumed Discipline as zir new Clan Discipline.
Source: V20 Core
The Vitreous Path allows a Necromancer to control and influence the energies pertaining to death. This extremely rare Path manipulates entropy, a force that even most Necromancers are uncomfortable harnessing. A development of the Nagaraja bloodline (although they sometimes call the path “Nihilistics”), the Vitreous Path makes a formidable complement to the Necromantic craft, and those obsessed with mastery over death and souls — such as the Harbinger of Skulls — would certainly risk much to uncover this Path’s secrets.
Like most Necromancers, Nagaraja generally learn the Sepulchre Path before any others. The Vitreous Path is usually their second focus of study.
The Necromancer employing the Eyes of the Dead can see with the perceptions of the Restless Dead (called Deathsight). To such a manipulator of ghostly energies, the auras of surrounding beings give off telltale hints as to their health and even their ultimate fate; the Necromancer can see the energies of death flowing through everyone, just as ghosts can. By looking at the entropic markings on a person’s body, the Necromancer can gain rough knowledge of how far that person is from death, how soon that person is likely to die, and even what the cause of xyr death is likely to be. The information thus gained is not exact by any means, but it gives the Necromancer an edge over those ze scrutinizes.
System: The player rolls Perception + Occult, Difficulty 6. 1 success lets a Necromancer determine whether someone is injured, diseased, or dying, as well as whether the individual labors under any sort of curse or baleful magic.
Further, the vampire can divine the target’s eventual demise, depending on the successes scored. 1 success means the character can guess how long the target has to live to within a few weeks. 3 successes means the character can estimate how long the target has to live and what the probable source of death will be, as the entropic markings show the wounds that will someday exist on that person. 5 successes means the character can actually see where and when the event will occur by interpreting the black marks on the target’s soul.
This ability lasts for 1 scene, though the Necromancer may choose to end the power early. It can be used to read the fate of only 1 target at a time. Storytellers should exercise judgment with this power, since the markings of death are typically unavoidable. They may decide to roll the dice themself, so that the player has no way of knowing whether zir insight is correct.
The Necromancer can strengthen the feeling of entropy around them to the point where it breaks down nonliving objects and machines. It can gnarl wood, rust metal, crack silicon chips, and erode plastic, glass, and dead organic material. This power has a range of 1 yard or meter from the Necromancer’s body, but all those in the presence of the vampire can feel zir corruption as an icy wind.
System: No roll is required, but this power does cost at least 1 blood point. Objects subjected to this Aura of Decay break down and become useless after being targeted. How the object gives out, as well as the exact mechanism of failure, is up to the Storyteller. Corrosion, metal fatigue, or sheer brittleness are all suitably likely for any given item’s demise, but the in-game effect of using a doomed item is as if the owning character rolled a botch. The speed at which an item breaks down depends on how many blood points are spent.
Blood Spent | Time to Breakdown |
---|---|
1 | 1 week |
2 | 1 day |
3 | End of scene |
4 | 5 turns |
5 | 1 turn |
Note that since this power requires the expenditure of blood points, a character cannot cause an Aura of Decay while staked.
Just as the Necromancer can release entropic energies from within, ze may also pull them into zirself as a source of power. Soul Feasting allows the caster to either draw on the ambient death energies around zir or to actively feed on a ghost, stealing the wraith’s substance and mystically transforming that energy into sustenance.
System: The player spends 1 Willpower point to allow the vampire to feed on the negative energies of the dead. If the character is drawing the energies from the atmosphere, ze must be in a place where death has occurred within the hour or in a place where death is common, such as a cemetery, a morgue, or the scene of a recent murder. Generally, the Necromancer can draw anywhere from 1 to 4 points of entropy from such a location, although the Difficulty in using all Necromancy and similar deathly powers within the area increases by an equal amount for a number of nights equal to the points taken. The energies of such an area may only be drained once until the area’s entropy replenishes.
In cases when the Necromancer feeds on a ghost, the vampire must actually attack the wraith as if feeding normally. Wraiths have up to 10 “blood points” that may be taken from them, and they become less and less substantial as their spirit essence drains away. The character is vulnerable to any attack the ghost might make, even those that do not normally affect the physical world; while feeding, the vampire is essentially in a half-state, existing in both the living lands and the Underworld simultaneously. The wraith so attacked is considered immobilized and cannot run or escape unless it can defeat the vampire in a resisted Willpower roll (Difficulty 6 for both sides). This power may also be used in conjunction with Ash Path Necromancy, allowing the vampire to drain power (though not sustenance) from ghosts while traveling in the lands of the dead.
This soul energy may be used just like blood in every respect except for when the vampire rises for the night. It can activate Disciplines, heal wounds, boost Attributes, etc. Botching this power renders the vampire unable to feed through the Shroud for the rest of the night. However, ze remains susceptible to the assaults of ghosts and spirits for several turns (generally, a number of turns equal to the amount of energy that could have been drawn from the area, or 1 turn if attacking a ghost) as ze hovers between worlds, unable to function effectively in either.
The Breath of Thanatos allows the Necromancer to draw out entropic energy and focus it upon an area or person by taking a deep breath and then forcefully exhaling a fog of Necromantic energy. This cloud of virulence is completely invisible to anyone without the ability to see the passing of entropy. The energy of this cloud is like a beacon for Spectres, and they are drawn to the entropic force like moths to a flame.
Once the energy is pulled from the Necromancer’s body, ze can either disperse it over a large area as a lure for Spectres, or use the mist for more sinister purposes. Channeled into an object or person, the death-mist inflicts the subject with a debilitating, wasting illness. Furthermore, the focused energies are tainted and eerie, and though generally invisible (except to powers such as Aura Perception), they tend to cause people and animals to feel uncomfortable around the victim.
System: The player spends 1 blood point and rolls Willpower (Difficulty 8). Only 1 success is needed to draw out the Breath of Thanatos. If dispersed to summon Spectres, the energies cover roughly 1/4 of a mile (400 meters) in radius, centered around the Necromancer. The range increases by an additional 1/4 mile or 400 meters for every additional blood point expended.
Spectres summoned with this power will ignore the summoning Necromancer for the duration of the power unless provoked, but may well go out of their way to wreak havoc on anyone else in the vicinity. The Necromancer can then use other Necromancy powers (such as those in the Sepulchre Path) to manipulate and affect these Spectres. Ghosts so targeted may then interact with the Necromancer as normal, although the other Spectres in the area will continue to ignore both the vampire and the targeted ghost. This energy disperses after a scene, after which the Spectres leave to find new prey.
If the cloud is directed toward a particular target, the Necromancer must either touch the target or direct the stream of entropy using Dexterity + Occult (Difficulty 7). A target laden with entropy suffers 1 (and only 1) level of Aggravated damage; this generally manifests as sudden illness or decay. The target’s Social Difficulties while interacting with those unfamiliar with the touch of death — most normal humans, as well as some supernatural creatures — increase by 2. Furthermore, supernatural perceptions indicate the target is tainted with decay, which can be dangerous. This form of taint lasts until sunrise; a victim already plagued by this power cannot be affected again until the previous fog of entropy has dispersed.
A botch on the roll to control this power indicates that the vampire has turned the energy upon zirself, and suffers all the effects of the vitriolic breath. This inflicts the usual injury and may subject the Necromancer to the possibly dangerous attention of provoked Spectres and other creatures from beyond the grave.
The breath of entropic energy becomes a scream of pure chaos. The Necromancer can issue an unearthly cry (heard both in the living world and in the Shadowlands). The howl pours icy oblivion into a target or group of targets — either sweeping away the inherent entropy or collecting that destruction and unleashing it.
System: The vampire chooses a number of targets within 1 yard or meter per dot of Necromancy and invokes Night Cry with a terrible scream. The player spends a Willpower point and a blood point for each target beyond the first. (In other words, ze spends no blood if only going after 1 target, or 1 blood for 2 targets. Generational blood limits apply, and the vampire may not “pre-spend” blood prior to using Night Cry.)
The player then chooses whether the vampire will aid or harm the targets, and rolls Manipulation + Occult (Difficulty 6). If ze chooses to aid the target or targets, each success gives each affected target a -2 Difficulty modifier to all of their actions for 1 turn per success. If ze instead chooses harm, each success causes an Aggravated wound to each target. Targets may be any kind of living creature, including supernatural ones.
No matter the result, the Night Cry is heard on both sides of the Shroud, attracting the attention of anyone nearby. On a botch, the Necromancy may summon unruly ghosts or Spectres, similar to Breath of Thanatos (although the ghosts are under no compulsion to ignore the Necromancer...).
Source: V20 Core
Call of the Hungry Dead takes only 10 minutes to cast and requires a hair from the target’s head. The ritual climaxes with the burning of that hair in the flame of a black candle, after which the victim becomes able to hear snatches of conversation from across the Shroud. If the target is not prepared, the voices come as a confusing welter of howls and unearthly demands; xe is unable to make out anything intelligible, and may go briefly mad.
Source: V20 Lore of the Clans (Giovanni)
The Giovanni have spent centuries going through the motions, making sure that nobody can question their public devotion to the Catholic Church. In private, however, the family often practices their own warped Black Mass, showing devotion to Dis Pater and drawing power from the darkness. This ritual acts as a grim parody of the traditional communion, ingesting literal blood (perhaps even of the father) and dedicating the subject to the Endless Night.
This ritual is not performed at every family Black Mass. An expedited, powerless version may be observed, but the full ritual is more involved.
System: The caster of this ritual is usually not the beneficiary. If the caster and the subject are the same, the caster suffers a +1 Difficulty to zir casting roll. Death’s Communion takes 1 hour to complete. The subject of the ritual gains a bonus of +2 dice to all Necromancy rolls for 1 night per success achieved on the casting roll.
Source: V20 Core
Eldritch Beacon takes 15 minutes to cast. The material component is a green candle, the melted wax from which must be collected and molded into a half-inch (1.5 cm) sphere. Whoever carries this sphere, whether in xyr hand or in a pocket, is highlighted in the Shadowlands with a sickly-glowing green-white aura. All ghostly powers affect this individual with greater ease and severity. The sphere retains its power for 1 hour per success on the casting roll.
Source: V20 Core
This ritual allows a Necromancer to stare into the eyes of a corpse and see reflected there the last thing the dead man witnessed. The vision appears only in the eyes of the cadaver and is visible to no one except the Necromancer using Insight. The player rolls as normal as the vampire stares into the target’s eyes for 5 minutes. The number of successes on the roll determines the clarity of the vision. A botch shows the Necromancer their own Final Death, which can provoke a Rötschreck roll.
This power cannot be used on the corpses of vampires who have reached Golconda, or on bodies in which both eyes are missing or advanced decomposition has already occurred.
Successes | Result |
---|---|
1 | A basic sense of the subject’s death |
2 | A clear image of the subject’s death and the seconds preceding it |
3 | A clear image, with sound, of the minutes preceding death |
4 | A clear image, with sound, of the half-hour before the subject’s demise |
5+ | Full sensory perception of the hour leading up to the target’s death |
Source: V20 Core
By use of zir own blood and the proper rituals, a Necromancer can mark a person’s spirit, allowing the vampire to see where zir subject is at any time, even after xe has died. In this fashion many of the spirit-haunted vampires keep tabs on zir close kin and zir enemies.
The Necromancer cuts zir skin or otherwise bleeds zirself, and then uses the vitae to paint the name of the target on a consecrated stone. If the ritual is successful, ze can afterward learn the target’s current whereabouts by dancing around the stone in a trance state until 1 of the spirits whispers the desired information into zir ear. The stone loses its powers on the night of All Saints Day unless the vampire spends a blood point.
Source: V20 Core
The Necromancer obtains a piece of a dead body and simmers it in a pot with half a quart (or half a liter) of vampiric vitae. To this stew, the Necromancer adds rosemary (for remembrance), basil (the funerary herb), and salt (the alchemic principle of clarification). After bringing the concoction to a full boil, the Necromancer eats it.
If the roll to activate this ritual is successful, the character discovers whether the subject of the grisly rite became a wraith or Spectre after death, or if indeed xe became either. Unfortunately, this information can be learned only about the person from whose body the “stew meat” was taken.
The blood component is spent progressively through the ritual: If the Necromancer takes the blood from another Kindred, ze doesn’t become partially bound from drinking it, nor does ze add a point to zir blood pool. Similarly, if ze uses zir own blood, zir pool decreases by a point but does not increase when ze consumes the soup.
Necromantic vampires without the Eat Food Merit can’t keep the soup down, but can still use the ritual and gain the information.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Unusual)
This ritual enables the user to create an elixir that keeps dead flesh from rotting. The ritual requires the caster to physically coat the dead flesh with a liquid composed of grave dirt, defiled holy water, and rare herbs. Once the liquid dries, the flesh is indefinitely preserved — some have been known to last for hundreds of years. The ritual produces enough elixir to coat 1 adult human corpse.
Source: V20 Core
This ritual allows the Necromancer to use an obsidian mirror to see as ghosts do. By gazing into the mirror’s ebony depths, the vampire may discover an object’s flaws, assess the general health of mortals, or even read a being’s aura.
At the start of the ritual, the Kindred decides which of the ritual’s 2 aspects ze will use — ze may not use both at the same time. With Lifesight, the Necromancer may read auras as if ze had the Level 2 Auspex power Aura Perception. Deathsight, on the other hand, grants the Necromancer the ability to see ghosts and the Shadowlands. It also shows the stain of oblivion on the living, as per Eyes of the Dead (Vitreous Path). At the Storyteller’s discretion, the Kindred may make a similar study of an inanimate object’s flaws and how to repair them, if that object has a strong link to either life- or death-energies (such as a murderer’s knife or a window box used to grow healing herbs).
To perform the ritual, the Necromancer grasps an obsidian mirror that has had its edge sharpened so that it cuts the flesh of whoever takes hold of it. As the vitae flows onto the mirror’s surface, it allows the mirror’s reflective power to bridge the worlds of the living and the dead, much as it allows the Necromancer zirself to do. The player then rolls to activate the ritual as normal. If successful, the Necromancer may view the world as a ghost does via the reflective surface of the mirror, for 1 scene. On a botch, the vampire may well invoke the ire of the spirits upon whom ze calls.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Independents)
Necromancers in the Classical Era called forth the spirits of the dead to gain insight upon the future. In the modern nights, Necromancers still perform this form of divination. The Necromancer travels to a known haunted location, or a place where the barrier between this world and the next is known to be weaker. There ze sets up a triangle comprised of 3 items that represent zir own past, present, and desired future. An incense burner is positioned and lit in the center of the triangle. The Necromancer calls upon the spirits present to grant insight into events yet to come that will enable zir to reach zir desired goal.
System: Upon successfully casting the ritual, smoke billows from the incense burner and a myriad of ghostly faces can be seen within. Each face mutters or whispers a word or phrase, each one overlapping, making a cacophonous din. The vision and the voices fade after a few seconds.
The future is a wide, changing sea of possibilities, so from the outset, the Necromancer must specify a particular subject that ze is enquiring about (closing a successful deal, obtaining a particular item, overcoming a certain problem, etc. The Necromancer doesn’t necessarily find the voices coherent or understandable, but when the ritual comes to fruition, ze experiences a moment of clarity and knows what the message meant.
Mechanically, this insight allows the Necromancer to reroll 1 failed action later on in the same night the ritual was cast, as long as it is in direct pursuit of the future ze divined. Ze foresaw this failure, and potentially knew how to avoid it. If ze fails the second roll, ze still fails, realizing the insight just a moment too late.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Independents)
Many Necromancers keep wraiths as their personal servants. Whether they control them with an iron fist or a velvet glove, it doesn’t change the fact that wraiths need to feed, just like Kindred. However, while the Kindred feeds on blood, the wraith feeds on emotion. Whether used as a practical tool to empower his servants, or as a reward for loyal servitude, by casting this ritual, the wraiths in service to the Necromancer can partake in their masters’ feeding by drinking from the wave of emotion generated by the Kiss.
The Necromancer gathers their wraith retainers and spirit slaves around the intended victim, and then carves the names of their ghostly servants into the flesh of the victim. Once this is complete, they begin to drain the victim dry. For some Necromancers (the Giovanni and the Nagaraja, for example) the act of feeding is not pleasurable for the victim, and xe is gripped by intense pain. For others, the Kiss works as normal and generates an intense wave of euphoria. It is the intensity of the sensation that is important here, not whether it is considered positive or negative; the wraith gets to indulge all the same. Terror or euphoria sustains them equally well.
System: Upon successful casting the rite, the Necromancer gains all the blood ze would normally obtain from the act of feeding from the victim, and each of zir ghostly companions may replenish each of their Passion Pools by the same amount (ignoring any excess). This is ultimately an act of murder and should therefore prompt a Humanity check. As such, this ritual is practiced more often by those on a Path of Enlightenment (such as the Path of the Bones) that would not object to such an act being committed.
Source: V20 Core
This ritual, which takes 2 hours to cast, causes the target to experience intermittent visions of xyr death over the period of a week. The visions come without warning and can last up to a minute. The caster of the ritual has no idea what the visions contain, as only the victim sees them. Each time a vision manifests, the target must roll Courage (Difficulty 7) or be reduced to quivering panic. The visions, which come randomly, can also interfere with activities such as driving, studying, shooting, and so on.
Eyes of the Grave requires a pinch of soil from a fresh grave.
Source: V20 Lore of the Bloodlines (Harbingers of Skulls)
Harbingers of Skulls who taste the blood of Lasombra find their link to the Styx reawakened. Under the new moon, the Necromancer must spill blood comprising Harbinger and Lasombra vitae into any body of water (from a puddle, to an ocean) and listen to voices from across the Shroud with a ritual such as Call of the Hungry Dead. A vortex forms, with each point of blood spilt making the whirlpool last an additional turn. Stepping into the vortex takes the vampire to the Shadowlands equivalent of the body of water, and a single person (mortal or vampire) can follow for each turn the vortex is still active. The ritual works in reverse, but requires the expenditure of 2 blood points from each individual following the Necromancer from the Shadowlands to the Skinlands, and can only take place on a night under the full moon.
Source: V20 Core
The Hand of Glory is a mummified hand used by the Necromancer to anesthetize a home’s residents and, thereby, allow them free rein to do what they will in the residence. To create one, the Necromancer wraps the severed hand of a condemned murderer in a shroud, draws it tight to squeeze out any remaining blood, and preserves the hand in an earthenware jar with salt, saltpeter, and long peppers. After a fortnight, the vampire removes the hand and dries it in an oven with vervain and fern. At the end of this process, if the roll to activate the ritual garners any successes, the creation is viable.
To use the Hand of Glory, the vampire first coats the fingertips of the mummified hand with a flammable substance derived from the fat of a hanged man and sets the fingers alight. The Necromancer then recites the phrase, “Let all those who are asleep be asleep, and let those who are awake be awake.” All mortals within a household who are affected fall into a deep sleep and cannot be roused (the Hand has no effect on supernatural creatures). For each unaffected occupant of a home, 1 finger of the Hand will refuse to light. Botches may result in all of the fingers being lit but no one in the home being asleep. The Hand may be extinguished at any time by the Necromancer who created it. Anyone else wishing to douse the Hand must use milk to do so — nothing else works. Once made, the Hand of Glory may be reused indefinitely. Effects last for 1 scene.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Unusual)
The vampire can summon a light supernatural wind which serves to frighten and confuse all those within a small area or single building no larger than 100 feet/30 meters in diameter. Until the next sunrise (or until willfully dispelled by the caster), the wind in this location is filled with the soft echoes of whispers, warnings, curses, and the laughter of the dead. These terrifying sounds distract and disquiet, increasing the Difficulty of Perception rolls by 2 and all other rolls by 1 for all those who remain within the area. In addition, all mortals must make a Courage roll (Difficulty 4) or be spooked badly, leaving the area. Such individuals are unwilling to return under any circumstances for at least 1 hour.
Source: V20 Core
To cast this ritual, the Necromancer needs an eye from a corpse whose absent soul became a ghost or Spectre. The eye is ritually prepared in a process involving incense, the new moon, and a period of midnight chanting. The chanting climaxes when the Necromancer removes one of zir own eyes and replaces it with the one from the corpse (fresher is better). Kindred healing takes over at that point, sealing the eye within the socket.
If the ritual succeeds, the Necromancer permanently gains the Shroudsight ability (Ash Path 1). This ability is always active and does not require a roll.
Furthermore, if it was a Spectre’s corpse, the vampire can hear the vague murmuring of any Spectres in the area. This ability isn’t very precise; rather than mind reading, it’s more like trying to overhear a low-voiced conversation in the next room. With a Perception + Occult roll, the Necromancer can glean a very vague impression of what nearby Spectres are up to. Botching this roll may well earn the Necromancer a new Derangement (at the Storyteller’s discretion), as the whispers creep into the caster’s subconscious.
This ritual has some major drawbacks, the first being that its proper result is hideously ugly. Unless the vampire wears sunglasses or finds some other way to conceal zir eye, zir Appearance is reduced by 1 dot.
Also, dead or rotted tissue is not the best for normal perception. Any mundane visual Perception rolls are at +1 Difficulty (possibly more if the corpse had bad eyesight in life). On the other hand, since the eye offers a window into a different soul than the Necromancer, it offers some protection against powers requiring eye contact. These Disciplines are used against the dead-eyed Necromancer at +1 Difficulty.
Most importantly, however, the ghost whose body was desecrated knows it, and very likely hates it. The ghost can find the Necromancer possessing xyr eye anywhere, and all ghostly powers used against the Necromancer by that particular ghost are at –1 Difficulty.
Source: V20 The Black Hand: A Guide to the Tal’Mahe’Ra
Subsisting on souls is a harrowing affair, leaving morality in tatters with each feeding. In more practical terms, the corpus of wraiths are sufficient nourishment for the fuel of Disciplines, but leave a vampire hollow upon waking each night. When the Harbingers of Skulls first entered the Shadowlands, it became apparent that a source of blood would be required, otherwise torpor or diablerie would be left as the alternatives.
The ancient Lazarene Abraham long ago studied a relic known as the Black Torah. This set of scrolls illuminated much of the mystery of the Underworld, and through its review he developed understanding of how the dead interfered with the world of the living. Through recollection of the Black Torah’s words, he successfully practiced Parting the Veil on a Christian temple in Tarsus, temporarily weakening the Gauntlet sufficiently to allow mortals to pass into the land of the dead. None returned, but the Harbingers were fed for the first time since their exile.
The rite is enacted in the Shadowlands reflection of a location. The Necromancer must sacrifice blood in order to obtain more, holding zir wrists over open flames until skin begins to crack and part. Ze must then snuff the flames with zir own blood. The heady mix of pain, will, and Necromancy allows the world of the living to become more visible to the Necromancer. Mortals on the other side who are unfortunate enough to pass between the 2 doused flames unknowingly enter the Shadowlands.
Although kine can cross over, Kindred cannot leave. Abraham theorizes this restriction is placed on his bloodline rather than the ritual, and craves to find the shadow of the Black Torah in order to ascertain the truth of this notion and create a ritual allowing two-way travel. The Black Torah of the world above was destroyed in an inferno when Abraham faked his own demise to deter his Giovanni hunters.
In the present night, many Shadowlands Necromancers strive for this ritual. It’s never been shared with the Giovanni, but the Harbingers revealed it to their hosts in the Tal’Mahe’Ra. Wherever the ritual is practiced, mortals disappear with a greater propensity, at least until the veil closes.
System: To successfully cast the rite, the Necromancer will first need to find the Shadowlands reflection of a location of spiritual resonance, such as a temple, graveyard, or murder site, or a place where passions run highly, such as a sports stadium, drug den, or adolescent’s bedroom.
After lighting flames in the Shadowlands version of this location and exposing the flesh of zir wrists to them (typically 1 either side of the caster), the Necromancer will need to make a Courage roll to resist Rötschreck with a Difficulty of 7. If Fortitude is used to mitigate the damage dealt by the fire, the ritual fails.
The caster must expend 2 blood points in order to douse the flames (more points must be spent if the flames are larger than those of torches). The Gauntlet is weakened for hours equal to the caster’s number of points in zir highest Necromancy Path, and allows a translucent view into the mortal world.
A number of mortals equal to the number of blood points spent can pass through between the flames used in the rite, becoming trapped in the Shadowlands. The veil closes after either the requisite number of mortals passes through, or the hours run out.
Source: V20 Core
Used primarily to facilitate conversations with the recently departed, though also applied as a method of psychological torture, Puppet prepares a subject (willing or unwilling) as a suitable receptacle for ghostly possession. Over the course of 1 hour, the Necromancer smears grave soil across the subject’s eyes, lips, and forehead. For the remainder of the night, any wraith attempting to take control of the subject gains 2 automatic successes. The ritual’s effects remain even if the soil is washed off.
Source: V20 Core
This ritual cannot be cast by itself, but only in conjunction with another Necromantic ritual, or with the heavily ritualized use of a Necromantic Path. The action of the ritual is this: 2 or more Kindred Necromancers restrain a mortal vessel and inflict incisions in the shape of blasphemous symbols (typically subverted Egyptian hieroglyphs or Aztec symbols). They then drink from these injuries. Each participating Necromancer must make zir own cut and drink from no other cut. Thereafter, the Necromantic power the Kindred seek to employ gains the benefit of all the participants’ knowledge. This ritual makes it possible for Necromancers to create truly fearsome feats of death magic.
The player rolls to activate this ritual as normal. If the roll succeeds, the Kindred who have participated in the ritual may work together on the path or ritual the Ritual of Pochtli is intended to assist, and players share successes. Note that the primary application of Necromancy requires its own roll, and that successes (and failures) garnered by the group are pooled. All Kindred participating in the ritual must know the Ritual of Pochtli as well as the ritual or path power the group seeks to enact.
The downside of this power is that a single player’s botch negates the successes of the entire group, resulting in a horrific failure for all the ritual workers.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Independents)
The first recorded success recreating the effects of Thanatosis with Necromancy was this ritual. First, the Necromancer obtains a rotting corpse. Ze then proceeds to bathe, symbolizing zir ritual purification. Then, ze lies down upon the corpse, not necessarily to indulge in necrophilia (although the act will not interfere with the ritual), but to cause the corpse to break open and fall apart. Finally, once the Necromancer is covered in rotting, decaying flesh, ze consumes the heart of the corpse (or what remains of it) and the ritual is complete.
System: Until the next sunrise, the Necromancer may perform a single use of Putrefaction upon a target, using the same systems as outlined for the original power.
Source: V20 Core
The Necromancer ceremonially “kills” a mortal, laying xem out on a pallet and putting pennies on xyr eyes. The mortal’s soul journeys to the Underworld, which xe perceives, initially at least, as a way-station. The mortal can interact with the souls of the dead and travel elsewhere in the Underworld, while also retaining the power to speak to the vampire and describe what xe’s experiencing. While in the Underworld, however, the subject’s soul cannot affect the environment. Although xe may talk to other spirits, xe may not physically interact with them or xyr surroundings — xe is a “ghost among ghosts,” as it were. Minions may voluntarily undergo the ritual to assist Necromancers, or the vampire may use Two Centimes to terrify unwilling victims.
Source: V20 Core
The Blood Dance allows a ghost to communicate with a living relative. Necromancers sometimes perform this ritual for people in exchange for money or favors.
The vampire must dance and chant for 2 hours, calling forth the right spirit and entreating all other ghosts to leave the area. While dancing, the vampire pours colored sands and ocean salt on the ground in a precise pattern and then makes the link between the living person and the deceased. If successful, the ghost “appears” within the Necromancer’s sand-sigil and the living person can communicate with xem for 1 hour. Failure means the spirit could not be contacted.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Unusual)
Some Necromancers of the Tal’Mahe’Ra collect fragments of hair, bone, ash, or flesh from their enemies as a reminder of a victory. Using Necromancy, they use these remains to create a paint-like residue with which they decorate porcelain masks known as Death’s Heads. Once activated, such a mask causes its wearer (who may be someone other than the Necromancer who made the mask) to appear as a wraith so long as xe wears the mask. In the physical world, the wearer looks translucent and ghostlike (but is granted no special ability to pass through physical items or cross into the Shadowlands). In the Shadowlands, the wearer can pass as a wraith even among true wraiths. Note that the user’s aura becomes pale, like that of a wraith (and xyr creature type reads as a wraith), but this does not hide or alter any other patterns or colors (such as diablerie streaks).
A Death’s Head, once painted, is enchanted but inactive until used. Once activated (by putting the mask on), the mask crumbles into dust, leaving a faint pattern of bone-white marks across the user’s face. If the user wills the effect to end early; the soft patterns fade into nothingness and the user is returned to xyr normal physical appearance. A Necromancer may create only 1 Death’s Head at a time; any already-existing masks are destroyed (or active uses canceled) when a second is created. It takes 1 full night to create a Death’s Head.
Source: V20 Core
Upon learning a person’s birth date, the Necromancer’s player may roll to activate this ritual. If successful, the Kindred may use this to predict the target’s next course of action, allowing zir to deal with it accordingly. The effect on ghosts is quite different: Instead, the ritual imparts upon the Necromancer so intimate an understanding of the wraith in question that it acts as a connection to the ghost, making it easier to invoke other Necromancy effects on that spirit. For story purposes, it’s the equivalent to holding one of that wraith’s fetters (see Ritual of the Unearthed Fetter).
Source: V20 Core
This ritual is similar to the Level 1 Ritual Call of the Hungry Dead in that it makes the sounds of the Underworld audible in the physical realm. However, Din of the Damned is an area-affecting ritual used to ward a room against eavesdropping. Over the course of half an hour, the Necromancer draws an unbroken line of ash from a crematorium along the room’s walls (this line may pass over door frames to allow entrance and egress). For the rest of the night, any attempt to listen in on events inside the room, whether simple (such as a glass to the wall), electronic (like a laser microphone), or mystic (including powers such as Heightened Senses), requires the eavesdropper to score more successes in a Perception + Occult roll (Difficulty 7) than the caster of the ritual scored. Failure to beat this mark gives the listener an earful of ghostly wailing and moaning and the sound of howling winds; a botch deafens xem for the rest of the night.
Source: V20 Core
The Necromancer using this ritual sends the dead to haunt the dreams of an enemy, using the ghosts to drive an opponent slowly insane. Once the ritual is cast, the vampire has no control over this power, except to stop it from continuing. The shape of the nightmares and the images that assault the target are not under the control of the Necromancer; they are under the control of the ghosts who actually do the haunting.
The Necromancer uses zir own blood and a personal possession of the target’s in this ritual. Once the item has been coated with blood, the vampire must burn the item, sending a ghostly icon of it to the Shadowlands both as an identifying badge and as a reward to the ghosts who agree to haunt the target. While the item burns, the Necromancer (and assistants, if available) pound out a relentless beat on gigantic drums of human skin. The drums are inaudible in this realm but thunderous in the home of the dead. To silence the deafening drums, the ghosts resignedly agree to negotiate with the Necromancer. They promise to send nightmares to the victim for as long as the vampire demands, in return for a favor. Their request normally runs along the lines of passing a message to a living relative or exacting revenge against someone who slighted them.
Source: V20 Core
This ritual requires that a Necromancer have a finger bone from the skeleton of the particular ghost ze’s interested in. When the ritual is cast, the finger bone becomes attuned to something vitally important to the wraith, the possession of which by the Necromancer makes the casting of Necromantic powers against that ghost much easier (see the Sepulchre Path for an example). Most Necromancers take the attuned finger bone and suspend it from a thread, allowing it to act as a sort of supernatural compass and following it to the special item in question.
Ritual of the Unearthed Fetter takes 3 hours to cast properly. It requires both the name of the ghost targeted and the finger bone already mentioned, as well as a chip knocked off a gravestone or other marker (not necessarily the marker of the bone’s former owner). During the course of the ritual the stone crumbles to dust, which is then sprinkled over the finger bone.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Independents)
In order to pay the tithe of souls that Venice demands, many Giovanni Necromancers previously bound wraiths to a set of objects and sent these to the Mausoleum. However, as the demands of the Elders become greater, some Necromancers have sought to find a more effective way of transporting greater numbers of wraiths in one shipment. The Tempest Prison was their solution.
The Necromancer first obtains a large, glass container (such as a gallon glass jug) and takes it to a graveyard. Ze then buries the sealed jar in the earth above a grave of someone that died prematurely, or by violence, or in some fashion that meant xe stood a good chance of creating a wraith upon xyr demise (which may require a bit of research prior to casting). The Necromancer then laces the ground with blood as ze chants, calling forth the power of the storm that rages deep within the lands of the dead.
System: Upon completion of the rite, the ground shudders for a moment to indicate its success. Digging up the glass container, it is now full of a swirling purple and black mist, in which can be seen occasional flecks of light, like miniature lighting. When the Necromancer opens the bottle, any wraith in line of sight of the container must make a Strength test (using their Strength stat as it is when in the Shadowlands) against a Difficulty of 6 plus the number of successes gained upon on the casting of the Ritual. This test is repeated each round until the wraith is out of sight of the container, or they fail and are sucked immediately into the vortex (which does not leave the container).
The Tempest Prison can hold a number of wraiths equal to 5 times the number of successes rolled in its activation. It also lasts for a number of nights equal to 5 times successes rolled, after which time, the vortex subsides and the wraiths are released. This may also be ended prematurely by simply smashing the container (which may lead to suddenly dealing with a storm of angry wraiths).
The Tempest Prison does not necessarily need to be wielded by a Necromancer after it has been created. It requires a Necromancer to create it, but not to use it. Indeed, many Giovanni who are called upon to rid an area of ghostly interference lend their employers such a container to collect the troublesome ghosts. They then “dispose” of the ghosts elsewhere. In these cases, both sides of the deal get what they want.
Source: V20 Core
Unlike most rituals, Tempesta Scudo can be cast speedily. The Necromancer performs a short and awkward dance that ends with zir biting through zir own lip and spitting the blood in a circle around zir. All ghosts’ actions within the circle of blood are made at +2 Difficulty.
To cast this ritual successfully, the Necromancer must spend 1 combat turn performing the dance. At the end of the turn, ze makes a Dexterity + Performance roll at Difficulty 7 (if done outside of combat, the Difficulty is only 6). During the next combat turn, ze bites through zir own lips (taking a level of Bashing damage) and spit (spending 1 blood point). Then the normal ritual roll is made to see whether the power takes effect.
Source: V20 Core
A Baleful Doll is a powerful figure that is linked directly to the spirit of the target. This Doll must be handcrafted, and is only finished when it has been painted with the blood of the Necromancer and dressed in some article of clothing from the victim (which should be unwashed for a better connection). Once the Doll has been cursed, the vampire can use it to cause physical damage to the target. If the Doll is injured (often with pins or other items), the victim takes 6 dice of Bashing damage. If the Doll is destroyed, the target suffers 6 dice of Lethal damage.
The Necromancer must craft the Doll, using ritual chants throughout the process. This normally takes 4 to 5 hours. The player rolls Stamina + Crafts (Difficulty 8) to succeed in this part of the ritual — a Doll that does not resemble its victim is useless for the purposes of this ritual, though some Necromancers sell failures as “authentic voodoo dolls” to tourists.
Source: V20 Core
Casting this ritual is tricky because it requires the removal of a leg bone from a living person. The donor must survive the removal, at least for a little while. The bone is then submerged in molten lead. Once it cools, the thin lead coating is inscribed with various runes. The Necromancer then uses this metal-shod bone to beat its donor to death while repeating a droning Greek chant.
With a successful roll, this ritual produces a bastone diabolico or “devil stick.” The stick can be activated by anyone who holds it and expends a point of Willpower. Activation lasts for a scene, and during that time any ghost hit with the devil stick loses a point from its Passion pool. In addition to its normal effects, this club does an additional die of damage when used against the walking dead (not vampires), and such damage is Aggravated.
Unfortunately for the Necromancer, ghosts can sense that the bastone diabolico is bad news, even if they don’t know exactly what the thing does. They tend to stay away from anybody carrying one, which means that all rolls for such a character to use powers that summon or attract ghosts occur at +1 Difficulty.
Source: V20 Core
By chanting for 3 hours and melting a wax doll in the shape of the target, the Necromancer turns a mortal target into a corpselike ruin. As the doll loses the last of its form, the target becomes cold and clammy. Xyr pulse becomes weak and thready, and xyr flesh pale and chalky. For all intents and purposes, xe becomes a reasonable facsimile of the walking dead. This can have some adverse effects in social situations (+2 Difficulty on all Social rolls). The effects of the ritual wear off only when the wax of the doll is permitted to solidify. If the wax is allowed to boil off, the spell is broken.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Unusual)
Believed to be stolen from a mortal mage by the name of Eochar, this ritual shields the user against possession by ghosts, infernal entities, or other spiritual powers. Rumors are that Eochar used this magic to protect himself and his students from the machinations of the dead. While this ritual is active, the Necromancer’s body cannot be taken over, nor can zir soul be pulled out of zir flesh. Powers that command the mind (such as Dominate) are still effective. This ritual may be cast on others, but if done against xyr permission (such as to keep an enemy from activating Psychic Projection, Subsume the Spirit, or Possession), the ritualist must have a bit of the target’s hair, spend a Willpower, and make a successful Manipulation + Occult, while the subject rolls xyr Willpower in a resisted action (Difficulty 7 for each). Once activated, Impregnable Soul remains until canceled by the user, or until the next sunrise.
Source: V20 Core
This hour-long ritual enchants a handful of ergot fungi mold to act as a catalyst for second sight. By eating a pinch of the mold, a subject gains the benefits of Shroudsight for a number of hours equal to the Necromancer’s Stamina score. 3 doses of the enchanted ergot are created for every success on the roll. Ergot is normally poisonous to some degree; this ritual removes its toxic properties. However, a botch renders the ergot highly and instantaneously toxic, inflicting 8 dice of Lethal damage on any subject who ingests it — including vampires.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Independents)
This ritual was discovered by Voudoun Necromancers that were already adept at being able to create Baleful Dolls. By taking a needle that has been previously stabbed into a Baleful Doll, the Necromancer immerses the needle completely in blood under the light of the moon for a whole night. Upon successful completion of the ritual, the blood turns to ash and the needle develops a red tint.
System: Until the next sunrise, the Necromancer may perform a single use of Withering upon a target, using the same systems as outlined for the original power, but with a prick from the needle replacing a touch attack.
Source: V20 Core
To perform the ritual, the Kindred removes zir victim’s top layer of skin with an obsidian dagger, taking care to damage the skin as little as possible in the process. The victim must survive this process (though xe may well die of blood loss shortly after the ritual if not seen to properly). The caster then drains the victim’s blood into a large ceremonial golden bowl. There the blood is mixed with octli, amaranth flower, and other ingredients. When imbibed by the Necromancer, this mixture causes zir to sweat a glistening sheen of blood (equal to 1 blood point). The Kindred then dons the skin of zir victim, which on a successful roll absorbs the Kindred vitae and begins to heal, forming a second skin over the vampire’s own. The victim needs to be of similar stature — otherwise, the features become distorted and the disguise is rendered useless. This power also has no effect on supernatural creatures (although it can affect ghouls).
Under normal visual scrutiny, the ruse is flawless. Of course, it imparts none of the victim’s knowledge or mannerisms (and does nothing to mask the Kindred’s own undead nature). Therefore, it works best for situations in which contact with friends and family may be minimized. To preserve the skin’s condition, the Kindred must bathe it in a blood point’s worth of vitae nightly. When the Necromancer removes the skin (which causes 1 level of unsoakable Lethal damage to the user and must be done with the same knife used to flay the victim in the first place), it is ruined in the process.
Source: V20 Rites of the Blood (The Independents)
Based upon accounts of the Telyavelic Tremere’s ability to summon temporary hordes of ghostly combatants, the Giovanni have been able to partially replicate the power previously known as the “Army of Souls.” The Necromancer chants a prayer to the dead while standing in the center of a circle made from the ground-up remains of a cremated corpse, the coffin in which it was buried, and the headstone of the deceased’s grave.
System: At the end of the chant, if the ritual is successful, the number of successes rolled determines how many drones (mindless ghosts, rather than full-blown wraiths) the Necromancer can summon. These ghosts appear as ethereal images of warriors long dead. Although they can not materialize fully in the physical world, they can use their own powers to hurl objects or frighten away attackers, in defense of the Necromancer. The ghosts return to their rest at the next sunrise.