Trace Magic Aura
Trace Magic Aura
Until the spell ends, you sense the lingering aura of spells that were cast within the recent past. For you to detect a spell’s aura, it must have been cast within the radius of this spell and in a location you can see. You can pinpoint the location where the spellcaster stood at the time that they cast the spell, the spell’s schools of magic, and its area of effect (if it is within this spell’s radius). If the spell is one that you know, you can identify it as such.
Stone Sentinel
Stone Sentinel
You touch a statue and transform it into a
Silver Shield
Silver Shield
You touch a nonmagical shield, giving it a silver mirror coating.
Eavesdrop
Eavesdrop
You touch the target and mark it with a glyph that acts as a scrying sensor. The glyph is visible and resembles a one-inch-tall drawing of an ear. The sensor can be covered or concealed without changing the function of the spell. A creature can wipe it away as an action, ending the spell. You can only have one such sensor active at once.
Reopen Rift
Reopen Rift
If any creature used teleportation or plane shift magic, such as
Identify Weapon
Identify Weapon
While casting this spell, you touch a wound on a creature or corpse.
Sky-Seeker Simirengo
Sky-Seeker Simirengo
Sky-seeker flocks live on the loftiest mountain peaks, seeing the high places as a representation of the last part of the hunter’s journey before their enlightenment. Such simirengo are focused on spiritual perfection and the time they don’t spend hunting is used for meditation and communion with birds and spirits alike. Skyseekers tend to be reclusive, actively hiding from the outside world so they can find greater spiritual understanding. They especially revere simirengo that are capable of true flight.
Far-Flyer Simirengo
Far-Flyer Simirengo
Some simirengo flocks leave their native mountains, seeking wisdom in the new skills, environments, and peoples of other lands as the hunter gained wisdom from Ibis. They settle in short-lived camps, learning, praying, and training as they wait for word from the spirits that they have gained what wisdom the area has to offer. Once such a sign appears, the group readies to leave for the next stage of their spiritual journey.
Crag-Keeper Simirengo
Crag-Keeper Simirengo
Most flocks of simirengo live in their traditional nesting areas in high foothills or mountain crags, honing their bodies in continual pursuit of excellence. While all simirengo value the hunt, such communities apply it to other facets of their lives, focusing on physical competition from an early age to hone the next generation of hunters. Leadership roles in particular are points of fierce contention, causing some other cultures to consider them individualistic. Nothing could be further from the truth: such contention is merely to ensure the best possible candidate for the job.