The smartest assassins know that the stinger or bite of a creature might be painful, but it's hardly the thing for you to worry about. Instead, the deadly nature of a scorpion or a snake is the natural venom they produce. A poisoner's kit allows the smarter adventurers to harvest venom to create powerful poisons to immobilize, debilitate or otherwise cause unending pain to their targets.
A poisoner's kit includes a journal, glass vials, a mortar and pestle, chemicals, and a glass stirring rod. Proficiency with this kit lets you add your proficiency bonus to any ability checks you make to craft or use poisons. The tools weigh 3 lbs and costs 50 gp.
Each poisoner keeps a journal with their equipment to record their findings and to keep recipes. These journals are highly prized by assassins and are rarely shared with others. When a poisoner starts out, they typically know three recipes and can expand their recipes by trading notes with others, finding other journals, or experimenting with venoms and plants.
Every poisoner keeps a journal of their formulas, with almost all of them using their own shorthand or code for their recipes. This is to prevent would-be robbers from stealing their knowledge or protecting them, in case their journal is seized, from revealing their true identity. If an adventurer wishes to uncover the secrets, they must succeed on an Intelligence (Poisoner's Kit) check against the DC of the poisoner and spend 1 hour per recipe to work on the code.
The typical DC is DC 12, based off of the Assassin's statblock in the Monster Manual.
Journal DC: 8 + Proficiency Bonus + Intelligence Modifier
Before you can create your dangerous concoctions, you must first have access to the venom of certain types of creatures, harvest the plants needed, or be able to pay someone else to get it for you. When a poison shows a component cost, you must either have access to the component or spend the gold necessary for the component. This cost may increase or decrease depending on the region you are located in; or may not even be available unless you know the right people.
Once you have access to your components, and are proficient in the poisoner's kit, you can go about creating your poison. By spending an hour mixing and combining the necessary ingredients, you can make a crafting check using your Intelligence modifier plus your proficiency bonus for the poisoner's kit. If you hit or exceed the DC for the poison, your poison was successfully created and it is ready to be used. On a failed roll, the components are wasted in the attempt.
If you find a creature you wish to extract it's venom from, you must have an empty vial and you must extract the venom while it is alive or within an hour of its death. By extracting your own venom, you can forgo the component cost of a poison.
When you extract the venom, you must attempt an Intelligence (Poisoner's Kit) check against the DC of the creature being milked. This process takes several minutes to complete.
Extract DC: 10 + half the CR of the creature (rounded up) On a success, you extract enough venom for one dose of a poison. If you wish to extract more venom, you must locate another creature or wait for the creature to produce more venom.
On a fail, the venom is lost and you must wait for the creature to produce more venom or find another creature that produces that venom.
If you find yourself with extra venom, but no recipes to use that venom, you can try and create a new poison out of it. By spending an hour experimenting with the venom and testing it on a living creature, you can create a new recipe by making an Intelligence (Poisoner's Kit) check against the Recipe DC. Most poisoners have rats, pigs or chickens to experiment their poisons on, but a poisoner can always test their poisons on themselves.
The DC to create the recipe is based off of the CR of the creature, and you may have advantage on this roll if you have previously worked on this venom, per the GM's discretion. Recipe DC: 12 + half the CR of the creature (rounded up)
Some poisons must be ingested, others rely on contact via weapons, and others must be in mist form. A poison will list how it must be delivered for it to work, utilizing a poison by using it in a different way often makes it useless. Certain poisons initial effect can be extremely weak, but they feature aftereffects. These aftereffects begin working at the start of the creature's next turn but only if they failed their initial saving throw against the poison.
Contact poisons must be applied to weapons and are only delivered on a hit and when the weapon deals damage.
Ingested poisons must be eaten and do not take effect until the start of the target's next turn.
Mist poisons must be aerosolized during creation and the target must breathe in the poison.
Aftereffects only come into effect once the target has failed their initial saving throw.
To apply a poison to a weapon, drop it on food or in a cup, or similar activity requires an action to complete.
An assassin's favorite tool to make the target think they have food poisoning. This is the best tool to get a target away from a group and allow them to finish the job.
The first poison must poisoners learn and is easily produced. This poison is the hallmark for assassins just beginning.
This mist burns through the membranes of nasal passageways and through the soft tissue of the mouth. Created from the dried venom of giant wasps, this lingering poison is designed to kill quickly before its effects can be stopped.
One of the odder venoms on the market, this venom is theorized to be created from the necrotic flesh that Carrion Crawlers regularly devour. Many claim that feeding Carrion Crawlers drow will make the venom that much deadlier.
This thick, mud-like poison has a sharp blue color to it, that almost makes it seem otherworldly. This venom can only be harvested from the elusive phase spiders, though many drow have easy access to these poisons.
By slowly harvesting the poison glands of a green dragon, you can bottle the potent poisonous gas and release it, either by breaking the bottle or opening the lid. The thick gas immediately fills up a 10' square area before dissipating away.
This flavorless, blue powder is harvested by deadly fungi cultivated by ettercaps in their dark realms of spiders and webs.
A pale tan liquid, this strange substance is harvested from fungi cultivated by myconids in their lairs in the underground lands. The poison is extracted by squeezing the liquid out of pale mushrooms.
This purple goo easily coats a weapon and even has a sharp smell to it that burns the nostrils. From the stingers of a purple worm, this powerful poison is also used in alcoholic beverages to provide a powerful kick, though it isn't for the faint of heart.
Despite the name, this poison is only rarely created from scorpion venom, more often harvested from snakes and spiders. This purple-black poison hails from the desert and is used to distract targets, making it easier to bring down fighters.
This venom resembles amber and comes from the vicious wyverns that attack sailors or airships. Many have died trying to harvest this venom as the tail of a wyvern will occasionally jab out with muscle spasms, even in death.
The prices above are based on the published prices in the Player's Handbook and in the Dungeon Master's Guide that are widely expensive for what damage they offer. If you'd like a more balanced price for poisons, you can use the prices listed below, or make your own based on the prices below and the ones provided in the official sources.
Poison | Offical Cost | Sensible Cost |
---|---|---|
Assassin's Blood | 150 gp | 90 gp |
Basic Poison | 100 gp | 50 gp |
Burnt Othur Fumes | 500 gp | 280 gp |
Carrion Crawler Brain Juice | 300 gp* | 150 gp |
Deathjump Spider Venom | 600 gp* | 240 gp |
Dragon's Breath | 1600 gp* | 650 gp |
Ground Thassil Shroom | 400 gp* | 120 gp |
Pale Tincture | 250 gp | 110 gp |
Purple Worm Poison | 2000 gp | 1,550 gp |
Stormclaw Scorpion Venom | 200 gp* | 90 gp |
Wyvern Poison | 1200 gp | 740 gp |
*This poison's “official” price is based on the other poisons and does not appear in an official source.