The Stormsong Trials
The Stormsong Trials
- Endurance in the face of nature’s wrath
- Faith vs. skepticism
- Survival and sacrifice
- The danger of zealotry
Overview
The Stormsong Trials place the characters within this fragile web of passage and belief. They are not heroes arriving to fix a problem, nor pilgrims who fully understand the rites they brush against. Instead, they are travelers caught at a threshold, exposed to a place where vows linger in the air and intention matters more than reputation. The mountains listen, and what they hear is not always spoken aloud.
As the journey continues, the tone shifts from immediate danger to quiet unease. Shelter does not mean safety, and sanctuary does not mean absolution. The characters are observed, weighed, and invited to reflect—sometimes subtly, sometimes uncomfortably—on what they carry with them. Faith here is not uniform, and conviction takes many forms, from compassion to zeal, from patience to ruthless certainty.
The Stormsong Trials are ultimately about endurance: of identity, of belief, and of connection. The campaign asks who the characters are when stripped of momentum and forced to remain still beneath a listening sky. What matters is not what the storm will do, but what the characters choose to hold onto when the wind refuses to pass them by.Communities
Ancestries
Some Daggerheart ancestries that may experience notable advantages, pressures, or thematic friction in The Stormsong Trials. As with classes, this is not about mechanical imbalance, but about how the fiction of the Velkar Spires engages different ancestries
Human
Elf
Infernis
Simiah
Classes
No class is advantaged/disadvantaged mechanically in The Stormsong Trials. Instead, different classes experience different kinds of spotlight
Bard
Druid
Rogue
Wizard/Sorcerer
Player Principles
You Are Not Here to Win, You Are Here to Endure
Approach challenges with the understanding that survival, growth, and meaning matter more than dominance or perfection. Success is defined by what your character preserves, changes, or lets go of, not by clean victories.
Silence and Stillness Are Also Actions
Not every important moment is loud or violent. Reflection, restraint, and choosing not to act can be as meaningful as bold intervention. Give space for quiet decisions to carry weight.
Trust Is a Choice, Not a Given
Cooperation keeps you alive, but trust must be earned and maintained. Let relationships between characters evolve under pressure, shaped by shared risk, disagreement, and moments of reliance.
Lean Into the Storm, Not Away From It
When danger, doubt, or uncertainty arises, engage it directly. Hesitation, fear, and failure are part of the story and often lead to richer consequences rather than dead ends.
GM Principles
Let the Storm Speak Before It Strikes
Advance the World Through Consequence
When players roll with Fear or make imperfect choices, move the situation forward instead of stopping it. Escalate pressure, reveal costs, or shift the terrain—never negate player intent outright.
Spotlight Vows, Not Just Abilities
Frame scenes so characters’ beliefs, promises, and relationships are as relevant as their skills. Ask questions that invite players to define what their characters are willing to risk or sacrifice in the moment.
Keep Threats Multi-Directional
Design scenes with overlapping pressures—environmental hazards, social tension, moral strain—so every character has meaningful ways to engage. Avoid single-solution problems or “correct” paths.
Distinctions
The Storm Is an Active Presence
In this campaign, the storm is treated as a participant rather than a backdrop. Wind, lightning, and resonance are used to frame scenes, heighten tension, and guide attention, often reacting to what the characters say, believe, or hesitate to do. The weather carries implication and judgment before it ever becomes overtly dangerous, creating a sense that the environment is listening and responding. This approach reinforces the feeling that the world is not indifferent and that survival depends on awareness as much as action.
Vows Are Narrative Currency
Promises, oaths, and personal codes function as a form of narrative weight that shapes how the story unfolds. Characters are not rewarded simply for making vows, but for living with them, struggling against them, or choosing when to uphold or abandon them. NPCs, institutions, and even places respond differently depending on how a character treats their obligations. Over time, these commitments become a quiet measure of identity, influencing trust, pressure, and consequence without needing to be tracked as a separate mechanic.
Session Zero Questions
- What promise or obligation follows your character into the Velkar Spires, even though they wish it would not?
This can be a vow, debt, belief, or expectation placed on them by someone else.
- Who on the caravan does your character already trust, and why does that trust feel dangerous here?
Trust can be earned, assumed, or forced by circumstance.
- When the storm listens, what truth does your character fear it might repeat aloud?
This can be a doubt, regret, or unresolved choice.
- What would make your character choose endurance over escape when things become unbearable?
Name the line they will not cross, even if leaving would be easier.
- What does your character believe a true trial is meant to reveal about a person?
Strength, faith, guilt, loyalty, or something else entirely.

