Hiraeth Experimental Rules - Heroic Experiences
This playtest document presents a new optional rule: Heroic Experiences. This system is designed to give characters a distinct narrative identity beyond their class and background, allowing players to define unique facets of their hero’s story and bring them to bear in moments of need.
These rules are in draft form, usable in your campaign butand not yet refined by full game development and public feedback.
These rules are notinspired legalby in D&D Adventurers League events.Daggerheart.
A character is more than a collection of statistics and abilities. They are the sum of their triumphs, their failures, their training, and their deepest beliefs. The Heroic Experiences system provides a framework for defining these core truths and giving them a tangible, yet flexible, impact on the game.
This system is an addition, not a replacement. It sits alongside your character’s background, feats, and class features to add a unique layer of narrative depth and mechanical expression.
Creating Your Experiences
During character creation, you choose two Experiences for your character. An Experience is a short, descriptive phrase that embodies something specific about who your character is or what they can do.
Work with your Dungeon Master (DM) to ensure your Experiences fit the tone of the campaign. Once chosen, designate one as your Primary Experience and the other as your Secondary Experience. Your Primary Experience should represent the most defining aspect of your character’s story. These can be based off Background or based off your backstory to give your PC its own flavor.
Guidelines for Experiences
When creating your Experiences, follow these three principles:
- Be Specific, Not Broad. An Experience like “Brave” or “Skilled” is too general. Instead, choose something that points to a specific area of expertise or a distinct personality trait. Consider “Battle-Hardened Veteran of the
DragonGreat Wars” or “UnflinchingCourage.Courage in the Face of Political Evil.” - Be Narrative, Not Mechanical. Your Experience should not grant a specific game ability. “Cast Fireball” or “Extra Attack” are not valid Experiences. Instead, focus on the narrative truth behind such an ability, like “Unleashed Evocation Prodigy” or “Master of the Whirling Blades.”
- Add Flavor. Adding a specific detail, like a faction, location, or motto, makes an Experience more versatile and gives your DM story hooks to weave into the campaign. Instead of “Thief,” consider “Thief of the
OnyxRuby Hand.” Instead of “I’ve Got Your Back,” try “No One Gets Left Behind.”
Category | Experience | Example Uses |
---|---|---|
Background | Bodyguard to a Fallen King | Protect VIPs, recognize court protocols, spot assassins |
Background | Con Artist of the Silk Markets | Forge identities, read marks, spot scams |
Background | Noble Scion of a Ruined House | Leverage pedigree, navigate noble etiquette |
Background | Pirate of the | Seamanship, pirate codes, hidden coves |
Background | Scholar of the Forbidden Vaults | Obscure lore, research shortcuts, restricted archives |
Background | Assassin of the Crimson | Silent takedowns, poisons, assassin hand-signs |
Background | Sellsword of the | Mercenary contacts, battlefield tactics, camp etiquette |
Background | Blacksmith of | Appraise metalwork, quick repairs, craftsmen’s guilds |
Background | World Traveler of the | Local customs, travel routes, border smuggling |
Background | Bounty Hunter of the | Track fugitives, legal warrants, bounty networks |
Characteristic | Intimidating Presence | Coerce compliance, break morale, stare down threats |
Characteristic | Stubborn to a Fault | Resist persuasion, persist in grueling tasks |
Characteristic | Silver Tongue | Smooth talk, fast bargains, calm tempers |
Characteristic | Battle Hardened | Keep cool under fire, read a melee, shrug off fear |
Characteristic | Friend to the Downtrodden | Earn trust in slums, navigate underclass networks |
Characteristic | Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing | Conceal intentions, blend as harmless |
Characteristic | Observant to a Fault | Spot patterns, notice tells, catch inconsistencies |
Characteristic | Loyal to the Last | Hold formation, refuse bribes, protect allies |
Characteristic | Lone Wolf | Operate solo, avoid detection, minimize noise |
Characteristic | Prankster with a Purpose | Disarm tension, create distractions, sleight-of-hand gags |
Specialty | Magical Historian | Identify arcane traditions, decipher rituals |
Specialty | Master of Disguise | Create personas, mimic mannerisms, stage makeup |
Specialty | Navigator of the Sunless Sea | Chart subterranean routes, read echoes |
Specialty | Survivalist of the Frozen Wastes | Shelter, forage, whiteout navigation |
Specialty | Tactician of the Iron Legion | Battle plans, unit drills, flanking schemes |
Specialty | Sharpshooter of the Ember Range | Long shots, wind calls, ambush prep |
Specialty | Healer of the Field | Triage, stabilize under fire, improvised splints |
Specialty | Inventor of Clockwork Oddities | Jury-rig devices, diagnose mechanisms |
Specialty | Acrobat of the Sapphire Circus | Tumbling, tightropes, crowd movement |
Specialty | Mapmaker of the Old Empire | Secret paths, landmarks, map forgeries |
Skill/Knack | Barter Savant | Spot value, haggle hard, trade networks |
Skill/Knack | Repair on the Fly | Field-fix weapons/armor, improvise parts |
Skill/Knack | Tracker of Cold Trails | Read old signs, urban tracking, scent masking |
Skill/Knack | Quick Hands | Palm items, fast draws, swift knots |
Skill/Knack | Incredible Strength (Showman) | Feats of might, lift obstacles, bend bars |
Skill/Knack | Deadly Aim (Patient) | Take time to line the perfect shot |
Skill/Knack | Silvered Liar | Maintain lies under scrutiny, layered cover stories |
Skill/Knack | Steel-Nerved Negotiator | High-stakes deals, hold firm on terms |
Skill/Knack | Light Feet | Silent movement, balance, pressure plates |
Skill/Knack | Animal Whisperer | Calm beasts, simple commands, read behavior |
Phrase/Motto | I Won’t Let You Down | Rally allies, push through when someone’s counting on you |
Phrase/Motto | This Is Not a Negotiation | Project finality, shut down haggling |
Phrase/Motto | Knowledge Is Power | Recall key facts, leverage research, cite precedent |
Phrase/Motto | The Show Must Go On | Perform under pressure, cover mistakes publicly |
Phrase/Motto | Fake It Till You Make It | Bluff competence, operate unfamiliar tools |
Phrase/Motto | No One Left Behind | Risk to extract allies, carry someone out |
Phrase/Motto | Hold the Line | Defensive stands, anchor chokepoints, orderly retreats |
Phrase/Motto | Pick on Someone Your Own Size | Draw aggro, protect the weak, duel challenges |
Phrase/Motto | Catch Me If You Can | Escapes, chase scenes, misdirection routes |
Phrase/Motto | First Time’s the Charm | Bold first attempts, cold reads, untested tactics |
Using Your Experiences
Your Experiences alloware youfiction-first totools. digThey deepreward in a crucial moment, drawing on your history and identity to influence the outcome. This is represented by a pool of **Focus points**players for eachdescribing Experience.
- that
PrimaryauthenticallyExperience:leverageYoutheirhavecharacter’sastory.number of Focus points equal to your proficiency bonus.Secondary Experience:You have a number of Focus points equal to half your proficiency bonus (rounded down, minimum of 1).
You regain all expended Focus points when you finish a long rest.
Invoking an Experience
When you face a challenge where one of your Experiences is directlyclearly relevant, you can expend one of its Focus points to invoke it. To do so, you must take these two steps:relevant:
- Describe
YouryourMethod.method. Explaintohow theDMExperiencehowchanges yourExperience informs the way you are attempting the action. This is the most important step. A Fighter with “Hold the Line” doesn’t just make an attack; they plant their feet, set their shield, and create a bastion for their allies to rally behind. Choose an Effect.approach. If the DM agreesthatit’syourcentralExperienceandapplies,meaningful, youexpendinvokeoneit.- Choose
Focusanpointeffect.from its pool and choosePick one of the followingeffects:benefits.
- DM can limit each benefit can be used no more than once per scene per Experience per Player - prolonged RP or other circumstances may change this.
- Advantage on a Relevant Test: Gain
Advantage.You gainadvantage on oned20 test (anability check, attack roll, or savingthrow)throw that directlyusesleverages your Experience. - Aid an Ally: Use your reaction to grant advantage to an ally’s d20 test within 30 feet when you describe how your Experience helps them.
- Introduce a Story
Detail.Detail:You establishEstablish aminorminor, fitting narrative fact related to yourExperience.ExperienceYou(amight declare that your “Assassin of the Crimson Veil” training included recognizing the secret hand-signs ofcontact, arivalproceduralguild, or that asinsight, a“Pirateknownof the Serpent Isles,” you knowsignal, a hiddencove on this coastline perfect for hiding your ship.route). The DM has final sayonand may adjust the detailand can adjust itto fit established lore. - Adjust Fictional Positioning: The DM may ease a DC, waive a minor check, or shift an NPC’s initial attitude by one step when your Experience provides credible leverage (e.g., “Pirate of the
establishedThalassia”world.among corsairs). OfferPerAid.Scene Guideline:WhenEach Experience can meaningfully affect play once per scene. If a scene is long and shifts context (e.g., from parley to chase), the DM may allow a second use if it’s justified in the new context.- Non-Stacking: If you already have advantage on a roll, invoking an Experience instead grants a +1 bonus to that roll, or allows you to reroll one die (DM’s choice).
- Compatibility: You can’t combine an Experience’s advantage with Bardic Inspiration/Guidance on the same roll to create excessive stacking. Choose which benefit to apply after you roll but before outcomes are declared.
- This might be revoked depending on playtest.
- Battle-Hardened (Primary): In a chaotic melee, you describe locking shields and calling tempo. Gain advantage on a Wisdom (Perception) check to read the flow, or let an ally
withinreroll30afeet1 on their next attack by steadying their strike - consumes reaction. - Master of
youDisguisemakes(Primary): Entering ad20nobletest,gala, youcanestablish a minor detail: your persona once served the vintner. The DM adjusts initial attitude to Friendly after RP and waives the first Deception check to gain kitchen access. - No One Left Behind (Secondary): During a retreat, use your reaction to
expend a Focus point. Describe how your Experience helps them, andgranttheman ally advantage onthatanroll.Athletics check to escape a grappling vine as you heave them free. - Navigator
Frequency and Limits To minimize bookkeeping and keep play fast:
Optional Design Note: Focus Points (Not Used by Default) Early drafts considered “Focus points” tied to each Experience to regulate frequency and scaling by proficiency bonus. While this provides clear pacing, many tables prefer fewer resources to track. For this HE, Experiences use the per-scene guideline above to stay lightweight. DMs who want stricter pacing can adopt Focus-style tracking as a variant.
Examples in Play
The Dungeon Master's Role
This system thrives on collaboration. Asof the DM,Dark yourSea role(Secondary): In the Underdark, you choose to introduce a story detail—a half-flooded lava tube that connects two caverns—cutting travel time and bypassing a posted guard.
Balance Notes
- Keep Experiences narrow and evocative. They should open doors in certain situations, not grant blanket power.
- Advantage is strong but self-limiting when tied to
facilitatenarrativecreativefitapplicationsand per-scene use. - The “non-stacking” rule preserves bounded accuracy and keeps Bardic Inspiration and Guidance meaningful.
Playtest Feedback Needed
Thanks for reading over Heroic Experiences. We’re looking for impressions that help us tune clarity, pacing, and balance.
Tell us how easy it was to create and use the players’ chosen Experiences to enrichat the campaign.
AdjudicatingDid Experiences.the The“specific, keynarrative, toflavored” decidingguidance ifmake sense? Did you and your DM agree quickly on when an Experience appliesapplied? isLet us know if the player’s“once description.per scene” guideline felt natural or if another pace (per encounter/rest/day) worked better.
Describe the flow of play. Did invoking Experiences speed decisions and inspire better roleplay, or add friction?
We’re also interested in narrative integration. Did Experiences reliably create hooks, relationships, and spotlight moments? Which formats (Background, Characteristic, Specialty, Phrase) produced the best scenes, and did adding qualifiers (faction, region, mentor, motto) help?
Comment on frequency. Did “once per scene per Experience” feel right, too frequent, or too rare—especially in long, multi-phase scenes?
Call out edge cases, unclear wording, or unintended combos, and how you resolved them. If theyyou can articulatetested a clearresource-based variant (like Focus tied to proficiency bonus), tell us whether it improved pacing or just added bookkeeping.
Close with your overall verdict: keep as-is, tweak, or drop—and why. Your feedback will guide the next iteration toward a fiction-first tool that enhances identity and compellingcreativity linkwithout betweenextra their Experience and their action, it should be rewarded. An Experience is not a passive bonus; it requires active roleplaying.complexity.
Story Hooks. A player’s Experiences are a gift to the DM. They are built-in plot hooks, factions, rivals, and allies. If a player is a “Bodyguard to a Fallen King,” perhaps loyalists (or enemies) of that king appear. If another is a “Scholar of the Forbidden Vaults,” they might be hunted by an order that protects those secrets. Weave these truths into your world to make the characters feel truly a part of it.