Posts Warlock 101: The Archfey. The Ultimate Warlock 5e Guide to Dungeons and Dragons "Desert Fortress" by Dominick Critelli Face the Facts, and Make Some Pacts Dungeons and Dragons is about doing the things you can't do otherwise -- whether that involves adventuring through the mountains, fighting bugbears, or making pacts with otherworldly beings. Warlock Spells by Name . Three have come up with decent personal plots that I can work with, but the Pact of the Tome warlock is having trouble coming up with a backstory. Otherworldly Patron At 1st Level, you have struck a bargain with an otherworldly being of your choice, such as The Fiend.Your choice grants you features at 1st Level and again at 6th, 10th, and 14th level. All of this guides the player and helps them role play a better warlock. specifically the identity of his patron! I’ve covered a lot of elements of the fey in the course of this series. A being that exists only in the realm of sleep, Som Liatria sustains herself on the dreams of her warlocks and their prey. It's all early days right now, and I am trying to think of a basic idea for one of my players, who is playing a half-elf warlock with the Archfey patron. Archfey who were known to make warlock pacts included the Queen Titania, Oberon, the Queen of Air and Darkness, Hyrsam, Prince of Fools, and the Prince of Frost. Finally more secrets about my dnd warlock Edmund have been revealed!! You are immune to being charmed, and when another creature attempts to charm you, you can use your reaction to attempt to turn the charm back on that creature. I'm not quite sure what the issue is-- you make a Warlock with the Archfey as Patron, and then you pick out some appropriate spells, cantrips and, ultimately, invocations-- maybe pushing ones like Sleep, Silent Image, Misty Step, etc, to make it feel more Fae-like. They are most commonly utilized as patrons for Warlocks. Today I want to talk about one of the main reasons that we care about them in the first place: warlocks take them as patrons (and some paladins swear Ancient oaths to them). These entities from the Feywild are possible patrons for warlocks, granting them many powers and expanded spell options. Hi everyone, I'm writing a campaign, and part of that is incorporating my player's backstories. In order to not make up the warlock's backstory for him, but still give him his own side quest, I had his Archfey patron contact him. When you reach 6th level, for example, you learn a new warlock spell, which can be 1st, 2nd, or 3rd level. I have ran an Archfey Warlock into the low teens (13th level) and I found some cool things to make you a pretty tough customer, and they will work for any Warlock not just an Archfey. Beginning at 10th level, your patron teaches you how to turn the mind-affecting magic of your enemies against them. Of all the Patrons a warlock could draw power from, few are as cruel as Som Liatria. I feel like it's every day I see another post about a GM who has arbitrarily ruled out a core class feature or cool spell because it 'feels' OP, and they're almost always wrong. Patrons might also send signs to their warlocks that are open to interpretation. Making a deal with an Archfey known as the the Winter Prince, Edmund is attempting to help lift the curse on his banishment from the Fairy Courts of the Feywild. The Spells Known column of the Warlock table shows when you learn more warlock spells of your choice of 1st level or higher.