The Surprising Origins of Rando Magic Items

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A random magic item refers to a magical object or artifact that is acquired by chance or through randomized means. These items can often be found in fantasy role-playing games, such as Dungeons and Dragons, where they add an element of unpredictability and excitement to gameplay. Random magic items can come in various forms, from weapons and armor to trinkets and potions. They are typically imbued with magical properties that can grant special abilities or enhance the capabilities of the wielder. The properties of these items can vary greatly, ranging from simple enhancements like increased strength or durability to more complex effects such as teleportation or spellcasting abilities. One of the main draws of random magic items is the element of surprise they bring.


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For descendants of enslaved Africans in the United States, particularly those whose families navigated the Great Migration, this story is significant because of the way brown uses memory and setting to articulate the lived experiences of racialized and gendered people, to collapse timelines, and to contextualize the far-reaching implications of environmental injustice, gentrification, and social inequity. Built on a collection of 40,000 popular, high-quality books from 250 of the world s best publishers, Epic safely fuels curiosity and reading confidence for kids 12 and under.

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One of the main draws of random magic items is the element of surprise they bring. Players typically acquire these items through encounters with enemies, from treasure chests, or by completing quests. The specific item acquired is often determined randomly from a predetermined list or through dice rolls, which adds an element of chance to the game.

Magic, Memory, and Myth: On adrienne maree brown’s “Fables and Spells”

ONE OF THE MOST significant meditations I have ever experienced occurred while watching A Wrinkle in Time (2018). Knocking at 30’s door, having barely survived a brutal Saturn return—only to find myself drowning in sheer panic and uncertainty during the initial stages of COVID-19 chaos—I found myself deeply moved when Mrs. Which asks Meg, “Do you realize how many events, choices, that had to occur since the birth of the universe leading up to the making of you? Just exactly the way you are?” A wave of emotions swelled, and as I tried to answer that question, I wept. I called the known names of the ancestors and loved ones who kept me and thanked the spirits of those benevolent ancestors whose names were anglicized, erased, or forgotten over this lifetime. In moments of chaos, conflict, disappointment, grief, and uncertainty, Mrs. Which’s question often helps me to re-member.

Re-membering grounds me in gratitude and solemness as I sankofarrate—engaging the memories of my foreparents who survived, and at times, flourished in the face of US chattel slavery, Jim and Jane Crow, cissexism, misogynoir, and more. Linear time is suspended as I expand across timelines, calling them and future versions of myself forward, locating opportunities to relinquish and restore. Sankofarration, initially coined by John Jennings, is “a cosmological episteme that centers the act of claiming the future as well as the past.” By sankofarrating, I actively divest from colonial capitalistic cisheteropatriarchy—seeking every opportunity to “go back and fetch” that which was hidden, misrepresented, or stolen. I engage intuitive and spiritual technologies that have been invalidated by state-sanctioned religious violence. I reclaim short-lived moments of joy, locating opportunities to transmute communal and intergenerational fear, grief, and rage into things more useful for liberation and world-building.

In her 2022 book Fables and Spells: Collected and New Short Fiction and Poetry, adrienne maree brown brilliantly facilitates endless opportunities not only to re-member but also to learn new ways to liberate, love, resist, and exist. Fables and Spells opens with brown poignantly articulating that “[i]t can take a while to recognize what you are when the lineage has been swept away. I reach back for the tools I was given to be in and shape the world, and at first, I cannot find them.” She names witching as a tool of her liberatory praxis and explains:

Witching is a practice of engaging the essential, natural world with magic and supernatural intentions. Throughout history there have been many names for witches and the work of witches, including shamanism, sorcery, healing, herbalism, midwifery and doula labor, conjuring, rootwork, ritual and spellcasting.


Her witching practice includes writing, according to brown: “I feel and channel, I get taken over by the need to express something that feels true, and I listen.” Furthermore, brown asserts that “the work [she does] is to repeat the instructions of love that want to be heard, over and over.” Every page in Fables and Spells offers readers liminal space to emerge, to grieve, to commune as and with celestial bodies, and to learn and develop their own spells. Throughout the volume, brown names and illustrates many of the intuitive and spiritual technologies that descendants of dispossessed people have been systematically separated from.

The book opens with “radical gratitude spell.” Although the entire spell is beautifully articulated, the first stanza’s opening can disarm the most defensive and distrusting souls:

you are a miracle in motion
i greet you with wonder
in a world which seeks to own
your joy and your imagination
you have chosen to be free
every day as a practice.


As the spell continues, brown articulates some of the most compassionate affirmations. The final lines read:

i want you to know
i honor the choices
you made in solitude
and i honor the work
you have done to belong.
i honor your commitment
to that which is larger
than yourself
and your journey
to love the particular vessel of life
that is you.
you are enough
your work is enough
you are needed
your work is sacred
you are here
and i am grateful


In a society that often requires commodification of self and others and that breeds competition, distrust, and selfishness for survival’s sake, brown’s radical gratitude spell models the divinity, disruptiveness, and necessity of affirming compassion. More importantly, brown reminds us that, despite all the things that separate us, our survival and wellness are best served by understanding that we are reflections. By acknowledging the “commitment to that which is larger than yourself,” brown signifies a South African philosophy that explains the complementary nature of community. For people socialized within or inhabiting individualistic cultures, umuntu umuntu nagabuntu, or “a person is a person because of people” is something that must be modeled and embodied, not performed by allyship and virtue signaling. Furthermore, Fables and Spells holds sacred space not only for the messiness of unpacking inherited burdens and learning new ways of relating, but also for transmuting that which has served its purpose.

While the poetic spells are entrancing, brown captures the imagination through dynamic characterizations and circumstances, vivid settings, and the employment of memory as a narrative device. While locating diverse manifestations of emotional and intuitive technologies and capitalistic cisheteropatriarchal epistemologies, brown reminds readers of, or introduces them to, tenets of liberatory praxis. Octavia E. Butler tried to tell us, especially through Parable of the Sower (1993) and Parable of the Talents (1998), to consider the implications of our beliefs, identities, practices, and policies. Butler’s Parable series vividly illustrates umuntu umuntu nagabuntu, in part because of how Black/diasporic concepts inform her complex characters and semiotic settings. Similarly, in brown’s short stories “The River,” “Call the Water,” and “Harness the Water,” brown simultaneously incorporates cosmologies and ontologies of Black, Brown, Indigenous, and Melanated people and signifies Butler’s literary corpus.

Notably, brown’s short stories transport readers through generations of history, creating vivid depictions of dispossession, marginalization, resistance, and liberation. In Moorings and Metaphors: Figures of Culture and Gender in Black Women’s Literature (1992), Karla F. C. Holloway explains that “memory is culturally inscribed” and “[t]he mythic dimensions within [Black femme/women writing] stress the intimacy between myth and cultural memory.” Moreover, Holloway asserts that “[m]emory is a tactile path toward cultural recovery. When we complicate this value with the de-stabilizing activities of traditional historiography, we are forced to acknowledge the distinct versions of memory that myth, as an a priori oral text, recovers.” Through “The River,” brown illustrates how memory, as a path toward cultural recovery, also serves as an effective narrative strategy.

In this story, the narrator describes the protagonist as a “water woman” who “had been born not too far from the river, Chalmers, on the east side.” This “water woman” recounts her grandfather telling her that “Black people come from a big spacious place, under a great big sky. This little country here, we have to fight for any inches we get. But the water has always helped us get free one way or another.” For descendants of enslaved Africans in the United States, particularly those whose families navigated the Great Migration, this story is significant because of the way brown uses memory and setting to articulate the lived experiences of racialized and gendered people, to collapse timelines, and to contextualize the far-reaching implications of environmental injustice, gentrification, and social inequity. Not only does brown brilliantly remind us of our connection to the water; she also demonstrates that the water and the land are living with nightmarish memories of humanity.

The water woman asks her dear friend, “What’s up with the river?” He laughs, and then says, “Your river? Man, Detroit is in that river. The whole river and the parts of the river. Certain parts, it’s like an ancestral burying ground. It’s like a holy vortex of energy.” Such characterizations and semiotic settings signify deities and spiritual information while simultaneously articulating the nuances of systemic racism and poor stewardship of stolen land, but also the perseverance and power of descendants of dispossessed people. Like Butler’s parables, brown’s fables permit readers to interrogate their positionality and relationships with the planet, human and nonhuman inhabitants, institutions, and other cosmic entities.

Reading Fables and Spells is a phenomenally transformative experience. As a Black, Gender-expansive, Queer, Disabled, Neurodivergent spiritualist and educator of predominantly first year undergraduate students at an HBCU, I am excited to incorporate Fables and Spells to contextualize writing, especially creative writing, as a tool of liberatory praxis. I am excited to welcome new faces with the warmth and wisdom of her poems and stories. Above all, I am grateful for “juneteenth spell,” which opens:

i dedicate my life force to black people

that we may celebrate and leap forward
know freedom without waiting
that when our chance to be courageous comes
we feel no hesitation


And for “aug 3, 2020,” one of brown’s “Black August Haikus,” which reads:

i matter to people who
matter to me, who
love all the ways i am free

we matter to people who
matter to we, who
love all the ways we get free


And I carry these words from “not busy, focused; not busy, full” as an affirmation in my own sankofarration process:

i am so full of ancestors and characters and I can’t tell which is who
but they are a chorus
telling me humans are not the protagonist
and nothing i can say is more brilliant than a stand of trees or a mycelial warning
or a newborn’s first shuddering dance


Fables and Spells is transformative for many reasons, but similarly to Mrs. Which’s question, adrienne maree brown’s writing inspires deep reflection that, with a bit of courage, truth-telling, and vulnerability, facilitates paradigm-shifting revelations that can help readers embody the medicine of her magic.

i matter to people who
matter to me, who
love all the ways i am free
Rando magic item

Random magic items can greatly impact gameplay and character progression. They can be instrumental in overcoming difficult challenges, providing crucial advantages during combat, or uncovering hidden secrets and areas. The acquisition of these items can also be a catalyst for character development and storytelling, as players must adapt their strategies and narrative based on the new abilities and limitations imposed by the item. However, the randomness of these items can also introduce balance issues or the potential for underwhelming rewards. Some items may be significantly more powerful or useful than others, which can lead to unfair advantages or disappointment. Game designers must carefully balance the distribution and power level of these items to ensure a fair and enjoyable experience for players. In conclusion, random magic items are an exciting and integral part of fantasy role-playing games. They add an element of unpredictability and adventure to gameplay, offering players the chance to acquire unique and powerful artifacts. While they can introduce challenges in terms of balance and rewards, when implemented effectively, these items can enhance the overall experience and create memorable moments in the world of gaming..

Reviews for "Wearing Rando Magic Items: A Fashion Statement with a Twist"

1. Mary - 2 stars - I was really excited to try out the Rando magic item, but I was ultimately disappointed. The random item it gave me was completely useless and had no practical purpose. I was hoping for something magical and exciting, but instead, I got a silly trinket that I couldn't do anything with. The concept of a random magic item generator is great, but the execution fell short in this case.
2. John - 1 star - The Rando magic item was a waste of my time and money. The item it generated was not only useless, but it was also poorly made. It broke within minutes of me using it, which was incredibly disappointing. I expected a quality magic item, but what I received was cheap and flimsy. I wouldn't recommend this product to anyone looking for a reliable and useful magic item.
3. Sarah - 2 stars - The Rando magic item didn't meet my expectations at all. The item it randomly generated was something that I already had in my collection. I was hoping for something unique and exciting, but instead, I got a duplicate of an item I already owned. It felt like a waste of money and left me feeling unsatisfied. I would have preferred the option to choose from a pool of different items rather than relying on the randomness of the generator.

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