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        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_the-six-abilities_ability-scores/?format=api",
            "name": "Ability Scores",
            "desc": "Each ability has a score from 1 to 20, although some monsters have a score as high as 30. The score represents the magnitude of an ability. The Ability Scores table summarizes what the scores mean.\n\n|Score|Meaning|\n|---|---|\n|1| This is the lowest a score can normally go. If an effect reduces a score to 0, that effect explains what happens. |\n|2–9| This represents a weak capability.|\n|10–11| This represents the human average.|\n|12–19| This represents a strong capability.|\n|20| This is the highest an adventurer's score can go unless a feature says otherwise. |\n|21–29| This represents an extraordinary capability. |\n|30| This is the highest a score can go.|",
            "index": 1,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_the-six-abilities/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_d20-tests_ability-checks/?format=api",
            "name": "Ability Checks",
            "desc": "An ability check represents a creature using talent and training to try to overcome a challenge, such as forcing open a stuck door, picking a lock, entertaining a crowd, or deciphering a cipher. The GM and the rules often call for an ability check when a creature attempts something other than an attack that has a chance of meaningful failure. When the outcome is uncertain and narratively interesting, the dice determine the result.\n\n## Ability Modifier\n\nAn ability check is named for the ability modifier it uses: a Strength check, an Intelligence check, and so on. Different ability checks are called for in different situations, depending on which ability is most relevant. See the Ability Check Examples table for examples of each check’s use.\n\n|Ability|Make a Check To …|\n|---|---|\n|Strength|Lift, push, pull, or break something|\n|Dexterity|Move nimbly, quickly, or quietly|\n|Constitution|Push your body beyond normal limits|\n|Intelligence|Reason or remember|\n|Wisdom|Notice things in the environment or in creatures’ behavior|\n|Charisma|Influence, entertain, or deceive|\n\n## Proficiency Bonus\n\nAdd your Proficiency Bonus to an ability check when the GM determines that a skill or tool proficiency is relevant to the check and you have that proficiency. For example, if a rule refers to a Strength (Acrobatics or Athletics) check, you can add your Proficiency Bonus to the check if you have proficiency in the Acrobatics or Athletics skill. See “Proficiency” later in “Playing the Game” for more information about skill and tool proficiencies.\n\n## Difficulty Class\n\nThe Difficulty Class of an ability check represents the task’s difficulty. The more difficult the task, the higher its DC. The rules provide DCs for certain checks, but the GM ultimately sets them. The Typical Difficulty Classes table presents a range of possible DCs for ability checks.\n\nTable: Typical Difficulty Classes\n\n|Task Difficulty|DC|\n|---|---|\n|Very easy|5|\n|Easy|10|\n|Medium|15|\n|Hard|20|\n|Very hard|25|\n|Nearly impossible|30|",
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_d20-tests/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_proficiency_bonus-dont-stack/?format=api",
            "name": "The Bonus Doesn’t Stack",
            "desc": "Your Proficiency Bonus can’t be added to a die roll or another number more than once. For example, if a rule allows you to make a Charisma (Deception or Persuasion) check, you add your Proficiency Bonus if you’re proficient in either skill, but you don’t add it twice if you’re proficient in both skills.\n\nOccasionally, a Proficiency Bonus might be multiplied or divided (doubled or halved, for example) before being added. For example, the Expertise feature (see “Rules Glossary”) doubles the Proficiency Bonus for certain ability checks. Whenever the bonus is used, it can be multiplied only once and divided only once.",
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_proficiency/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_social-interaction_roleplaying/?format=api",
            "name": "Roleplaying",
            "desc": "Roleplaying is, literally, the act of playing out a role. In this case, it’s you as a player determining how your character thinks, acts, and talks. Roleplaying is part of every aspect of the game, and it comes to the fore during social interactions.\n\nAs you roleplay, consider whether you prefer an active approach or a descriptive approach.\n\nThe GM uses an NPC’s personality and your character’s actions and attitudes to determine how an NPC reacts. A cowardly bandit might buckle under threats of imprisonment. A stubborn merchant refuses to help if the characters badger her. A vain dragon laps up flattery.\n\nWhen interacting with an NPC, pay attention to the GM’s portrayal of the NPC’s personality. You might be able to learn an NPC’s goals and then use that information to influence the NPC.\n\nIf you offer NPCs something they want or play on their sympathies, fears, or goals, you can form friendships, ward off violence, or learn a key piece of information. On the other hand, if you insult a proud warrior or speak ill of a noble’s allies, your efforts to convince or deceive will likely fail.",
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_exploration_adventuring-equipment/?format=api",
            "name": "Adventuring Equipment",
            "desc": "As adventurers explore, their equipment can help them in many ways. For example, they can reach out-of-the-way places with a Ladder, perceive things they wouldn’t otherwise notice with a Torch or another light source, bypass locked doors and containers with Thieves’ Tools, and create obstacles for pursuers with Caltrops.\n\nSee “Equipment” for rules on many items that are useful on adventures. The items in the “Tools” and “Adventuring Gear” sections are especially useful. The weapons in “Equipment” can also be used for more than battle; you could use a Quarterstaff, for example, to push a sinister-looking button that you’re reluctant to touch.",
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_exploration/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_combat_the-order-of-combat/?format=api",
            "name": "The Order of Combat",
            "desc": "A typical combat encounter is a clash between two sides: a flurry of weapon swings, feints, parries, footwork, and spellcasting. The game organizes combat into a cycle of rounds and turns. A round represents about 6 seconds in the game world. During a round, each participant in a battle takes a turn. The order of turns is determined at the beginning of combat when everyone rolls Initiative. Once everyone has taken a turn, the fight continues to the next round if neither side is defeated.\n\n## Combat Step by Step\n\nCombat unfolds in these steps:\n\n1. **Establish Positions.** The Game Master determines where all the characters and monsters are located. Given the adventurers’ marching order or their stated positions in the room or other location, the GM figures out where the adversaries are—how far away and in what direction.\n2. **Roll Initiative.** Everyone involved in the combat encounter rolls Initiative, determining the order of combatants’ turns.\n3. **Take Turns.** Each participant in the battle takes a turn in Initiative order. When everyone involved in the combat has had a turn, the round ends. Repeat this step until the fighting stops.\n\n## Initiative\n\nInitiative determines the order of turns during combat. When combat starts, every participant rolls Initiative; they make a Dexterity check that determines their place in the Initiative order. The GM rolls for monsters. For a group of identical creatures, the GM makes a single roll, so each member of the group has the same Initiative.\n\n**Surprise.** If a combatant is surprised by combat starting, that combatant has Disadvantage on their Initiative roll. For example, if an ambusher starts combat while hidden from a foe who is unaware that combat is starting, that foe is surprised.\n\n**Initiative Order.** A combatant’s check total is called their Initiative count, or Initiative for short. The GM ranks the combatants, from highest to lowest Initiative. This is the order in which they act during each round. The Initiative order remains the same from round to round.\n\n**Ties.** If a tie occurs, the GM decides the order among tied monsters, and the players decide the order among tied characters. The GM decides the order if the tie is between a monster and a player character.\n\n## Your Turn\n\nOn your turn, you can move a distance up to your Speed and take one action. You decide whether to move first or take your action first.\n\nThe main actions you can take are listed in “Actions” earlier in “Playing the Game.” A character’s features and a monster’s stat block also provide action options. “Movement and Position” later in “Playing the Game” gives the rules for movement.\n\n**Communicating.** You can communicate however you are able—through brief utterances and gestures—as you take your turn. Doing so uses neither your action nor your move.\n\nExtended communication, such as a detailed explanation of something or an attempt to persuade a foe, requires an action. The Influence action is the main way you try to influence a monster.\n\n**Interacting with Things.** You can interact with one object or feature of the environment for free, during either your move or action. For example, you could open a door during your move as you stride toward a foe.\n\nIf you want to interact with a second object, you need to take the Utilize action. Some magic items and other special objects always require an action to use, as stated in their descriptions.\n\nThe GM might require you to use an action for any of these activities when it needs special care or when it presents an unusual obstacle. For instance, the GM might require you to take the Utilize action to open a stuck door or turn a crank to lower a drawbridge.\n\n**Doing Nothing on Your Turn.** You can forgo moving, taking an action, or doing anything at all on your turn. If you can’t decide what to do, consider taking the defensive Dodge action or the Ready action to delay acting.\n\n## Ending Combat\n\nCombat ends when one side or the other is defeated, which can mean the creatures are killed or knocked out or have surrendered or fled. Combat can also end when both sides agree to end it.",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_damage-and-healing_hit-points/?format=api",
            "name": "Hit Points",
            "desc": "Hit Points represent durability and the will to live. Creatures with more Hit Points are more difficult to kill. Your Hit Point maximum is the number of Hit Points you have when uninjured. Your current Hit Points can be any number from that maximum down to 0, which is the lowest Hit Points can go.\n\nWhenever you take damage, subtract it from your Hit Points. Hit Point loss has no effect on your capabilities until you reach 0 Hit Points.\n\nIf you have half your Hit Points or fewer, you’re Bloodied, which has no game effect on its own but which might trigger other game effects.",
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_abilities_ability-scores-and-modifiers/?format=api",
            "name": "Ability Scores and Modifiers",
            "desc": "Each of a creature's abilities has a score, a number that defines the magnitude of that ability. An ability score is not just a measure of innate capabilities, but also encompasses a creature's training and competence in activities related to that ability.\n\nA score of 10 or 11 is the normal human average, but adventurers and many monsters are a cut above average in most abilities. A score of 18 is the highest that a person usually reaches. Adventurers can have scores as high as 20, and monsters and divine beings can have scores as high as 30.\n\nEach ability also has a modifier, derived from the score and ranging from -5 (for an ability score of 1) to +10 (for a score of 30). The Ability Scores and Modifiers table notes the ability modifiers for the range of possible ability scores, from 1 to 30.\n\n  To determine an ability modifier without consulting the table, subtract 10 from the ability score and then divide the total by 2 (round down).\n\n Because ability modifiers affect almost every attack roll, ability check, and saving throw, ability modifiers come up in play more often than their associated scores.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_actions-in-combat_attack/?format=api",
            "name": "Attack",
            "desc": "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, whether you are swinging a sword, firing an arrow from a bow, or brawling with your fists.\n\nWith this action, you make one melee or ranged attack. See the Making an Attack section for the rules that govern attacks. Certain features, such as the Extra Attack feature of the fighter, allow you to make more than one attack with this action.",
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_alignment_alignment-in-the-multiverse/?format=api",
            "name": "Alignment in the Multiverse",
            "desc": "For many thinking creatures, alignment is a moral choice. Humans, dwarves, elves, and other humanoid races can choose whether to follow the paths of good or evil, law or chaos. According to myth, the good- aligned gods who created these races gave them free will to choose their moral paths, knowing that good without free will is slavery.\n\nThe evil deities who created other races, though, made those races to serve them. Those races have strong inborn tendencies that match the nature of their gods. Most orcs share the violent, savage nature of the orc gods, and are thus inclined toward evil. Even if an orc chooses a good alignment, it struggles against its innate tendencies for its entire life. (Even half-orcs feel the lingering pull of the orc god's influence.)\n\nAlignment is an essential part of the nature of celestials and fiends. A devil does not choose to be lawful evil, and it doesn't tend toward lawful evil, but rather it is lawful evil in its essence. If it somehow ceased to be lawful evil, it would cease to be a devil.\n\nMost creatures that lack the capacity for rational thought do not have alignments-they are **unaligned**. Such a creature is incapable of making a moral or ethical choice and acts according to its bestial nature. Sharks are savage predators, for example, but they are not evil; they have no alignment.",
            "index": 1,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_alignment/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_armor_light-armor/?format=api",
            "name": "Light Armor",
            "desc": "Made from supple and thin materials, light armor favors agile adventurers since it offers some protection without sacrificing mobility. If you wear light armor, you add your Dexterity modifier to the base number from your armor type to determine your Armor Class.\n\n**_Padded._** Padded armor consists of quilted layers of cloth and batting.\n\n**_Leather._** The breastplate and shoulder protectors of this armor are made of leather that has been stiffened by being boiled in oil. The rest of the armor is made of softer and more flexible materials.\n\n**_Studded Leather._** Made from tough but flexible leather, studded leather is reinforced with close-set rivets or spikes.",
            "index": 1,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_armor/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_attacking_attack-rolls/?format=api",
            "name": "Attack Rolls",
            "desc": "When you make an attack, your attack roll determines whether the attack hits or misses. To make an attack roll, roll a d20 and add the appropriate modifiers. If the total of the roll plus modifiers equals or exceeds the target's Armor Class (AC), the attack hits. The AC of a character is determined at character creation, whereas the AC of a monster is in its stat block.",
            "index": 1,
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            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_attacking/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_backgrounds_proficiencies/?format=api",
            "name": "Proficiencies",
            "desc": "Each background gives a character proficiency in two skills (described in “Using Ability Scores”).\n\nIn addition, most backgrounds give a character proficiency with one or more tools (detailed in “Equipment”).\n\nIf a character would gain the same proficiency from two different sources, he or she can choose a different proficiency of the same kind (skill or tool) instead.",
            "index": 1,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_backgrounds/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_between-adventures_lifestyle-expenses/?format=api",
            "name": "Lifestyle Expenses",
            "desc": "Between adventures, you choose a particular quality of life and pay the cost of maintaining that lifestyle.\n\nLiving a particular lifestyle doesn't have a huge effect on your character, but your lifestyle can affect the way other individuals and groups react to you. For example, when you lead an aristocratic lifestyle, it might be easier for you to influence the nobles of the city than if you live in poverty.",
            "index": 1,
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_between-adventures/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_coins_exchange-rates/?format=api",
            "name": "Training",
            "desc": "| Coin          | CP    | SP   | EP   | GP    | PP      |\n|---------------|-------|------|------|-------|---------|\n| Copper (cp)   | 1     | 1/10 | 1/50 | 1/100 | 1/1,000 |\n| Silver (sp)   | 10    | 1    | 1/5  | 1/10  | 1/100   |\n| Electrum (ep) | 50    | 5    | 1    | 1/2   | 1/20    |\n| Gold (gp)     | 100   | 10   | 2    | 1     | 1/10    |\n| Platinum (pp) | 1,000 | 100  | 20   | 10    | 1       |",
            "index": 1,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_combat-sequence_initiative/?format=api",
            "name": "Initiative",
            "desc": "Initiative determines the order of turns during combat. When combat starts, every participant makes a Dexterity check to determine their place in the initiative order. The GM makes one roll for an entire group of identical creatures, so each member of the group acts at the same time.\n\nThe GM ranks the combatants in order from the one with the highest Dexterity check total to the one with the lowest. This is the order (called the initiative order) in which they act during each round. The initiative order remains the same from round to round.\n\nIf a tie occurs, the GM decides the order among tied GM-controlled creatures, and the players decide the order among their tied characters. The GM can decide the order if the tie is between a monster and a player character. Optionally, the GM can have the tied characters and monsters each roll a d20 to determine the order, highest roll going first.",
            "index": 1,
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_damage-and-healing_hit-points/?format=api",
            "name": "Hit Points",
            "desc": "Hit points represent a combination of physical and mental durability, the will to live, and luck. Creatures with more hit points are more difficult to kill. Those with fewer hit points are more fragile.\n\nA creature's current hit points (usually just called hit points) can be any number from the creature's hit point maximum down to 0. This number changes frequently as a creature takes damage or receives healing.\n\nWhenever a creature takes damage, that damage is subtracted from its hit points. The loss of hit points has no effect on a creature's capabilities until the creature drops to 0 hit points.\n\n## Damage Rolls\n\nEach weapon, spell, and harmful monster ability specifies the damage it deals. You roll the damage die or dice, add any modifiers, and apply the damage to your target. Magic weapons, special abilities, and other factors can grant a bonus to damage. With a penalty, it is possible to deal 0 damage, but never negative damage. When attacking with a **weapon**, you add your ability modifier---the same modifier used for the attack roll---to the damage. A **spell** tells you which dice to roll for damage and whether to add any modifiers.\n\nIf a spell or other effect deals damage to **more** **than one target** at the same time, roll the damage once for all of them. For example, when a wizard casts srd:fireball or a cleric casts srd:flame-strike, the spell's damage is rolled once for all creatures caught in the blast.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_diseases_sample-diseases/?format=api",
            "name": "Sample Diseases",
            "desc": "The diseases here illustrate the variety of ways disease can work in the game. Feel free to alter the saving throw DCs, incubation times, symptoms, and other characteristics of these diseases to suit your campaign.",
            "index": 1,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_diseases/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_environment_falling/?format=api",
            "name": "Falling",
            "desc": "A fall from a great height is one of the most common hazards facing anadventurer. At the end of a fall, a creature takes 1d6 bludgeoningdamage for every 10 feet it fell, to a maximum of 20d6. The creaturelands prone, unless it avoids taking damage from the fall.",
            "index": 1,
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_environment/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_expenses_lifestyle-expenses/?format=api",
            "name": "Lifestyle Expenses",
            "desc": "Lifestyle expenses provide you with a simple way to account for the cost of living in a fantasy world. They cover your accommodations, food and drink, and all your other necessities. Furthermore, expenses cover the cost of maintaining your equipment so you can be ready when adventure next calls.\n\nAt the start of each week or month (your choice), choose a lifestyle from the Expenses table and pay the price to sustain that lifestyle. The prices listed are per day, so if you wish to calculate the cost of your chosen lifestyle over a thirty-day period, multiply the listed price by 30. Your lifestyle might change from one period to the next, based on the funds you have at your disposal, or you might maintain the same lifestyle throughout your character's career.\n\nYour lifestyle choice can have consequences. Maintaining a wealthy lifestyle might help you make contacts with the rich and powerful, though you run the risk of attracting thieves. Likewise, living frugally might help you avoid criminals, but you are unlikely to make powerful connections.\n\n**Lifestyle Expenses (table)**\n\n| Lifestyle    | Price/Day     |\n|--------------|---------------|\n| Wretched     | -             |\n| Squalid      | 1 sp          |\n| Poor         | 2 sp          |\n| Modest       | 1 gp          |\n| Comfortable  | 2 gp          |\n| Wealthy      | 4 gp          |\n| Aristocratic | 10 gp minimum |\n\n**_Wretched._** You live in inhumane conditions. With no place to call home, you shelter wherever you can, sneaking into barns, huddling in old crates, and relying on the good graces of people better off than you. A wretched lifestyle presents abundant dangers. Violence, disease, and hunger follow you wherever you go. Other wretched people covet your armor, weapons, and adventuring gear, which represent a fortune by their standards. You are beneath the notice of most people.\n\n**_Squalid._** You live in a leaky stable, a mud-floored hut just outside town, or a vermin-infested boarding house in the worst part of town. You have shelter from the elements, but you live in a desperate and often violent environment, in places rife with disease, hunger, and misfortune. You are beneath the notice of most people, and you have few legal protections. Most people at this lifestyle level have suffered some terrible setback. They might be disturbed, marked as exiles, or suffer from disease.\n\n**_Poor._** A poor lifestyle means going without the comforts available in a stable community. Simple food and lodgings, threadbare clothing, and unpredictable conditions result in a sufficient, though probably unpleasant, experience. Your accommodations might be a room in a flophouse or in the common room above a tavern. You benefit from some legal protections, but you still have to contend with violence, crime, and disease. People at this lifestyle level tend to be unskilled laborers, costermongers, peddlers, thieves, mercenaries, and other disreputable types.\n\n**_Modest._** A modest lifestyle keeps you out of the slums and ensures that you can maintain your equipment. You live in an older part of town, renting a room in a boarding house, inn, or temple. You don't go hungry or thirsty, and your living conditions are clean, if simple. Ordinary people living modest lifestyles include soldiers with families, laborers, students, priests, hedge wizards, and the like.\n\n**_Comfortable._** Choosing a comfortable lifestyle means that you can afford nicer clothing and can easily maintain your equipment. You live in a small cottage in a middle-class neighborhood or in a private room at a fine inn. You associate with merchants, skilled tradespeople, and military officers.\n\n**_Wealthy._** Choosing a wealthy lifestyle means living a life of luxury, though you might not have achieved the social status associated with the old money of nobility or royalty. You live a lifestyle comparable to that of a highly successful merchant, a favored servant of the royalty, or the owner of a few small businesses. You have respectable lodgings, usually a spacious home in a good part of town or a comfortable suite at a fine inn. You likely have a small staff of servants.\n\n**_Aristocratic._** You live a life of plenty and comfort. You move in circles populated by the most powerful people in the community. You have excellent lodgings, perhaps a townhouse in the nicest part of town or rooms in the finest inn. You dine at the best restaurants, retain the most skilled and fashionable tailor, and have servants attending to your every need. You receive invitations to the social gatherings of the rich and powerful, and spend evenings in the company of politicians, guild leaders, high priests, and nobility. You must also contend with the highest levels of deceit and treachery. The wealthier you are, the greater the chance you will be drawn into political intrigue as a pawn or participant.",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_inspiration_gaining-inspiration/?format=api",
            "name": "Gaining Inspiration",
            "desc": "Your GM can choose to give you inspiration for a variety of reasons. Typically, GMs award it when you play out your personality traits, give in to the drawbacks presented by a flaw or bond, and otherwise portray your character in a compelling way. Your GM will tell you how you can earn inspiration in the game.\n\nYou either have inspiration or you don't - you can't stockpile multiple “inspirations” for later use.",
            "index": 1,
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            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_inspiration/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_inspiration_using-inspiration/?format=api",
            "name": "Using Inspiration",
            "desc": "If you have inspiration, you can expend it when you make an attack roll, saving throw, or ability check. Spending your inspiration gives you advantage on that roll.\n\nAdditionally, if you have inspiration, you can reward another player for good roleplaying, clever thinking, or simply doing something exciting in the game. When another player character does something that really contributes to the story in a fun and interesting way, you can give up your inspiration to give that character inspiration.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_madness_going-mad/?format=api",
            "name": "Going Mad",
            "desc": "Various magical effects can inflict madness on an otherwise stable mind. Certain spells, such as _contact other plane_ and _symbol_, can cause insanity, and you can use the madness rules here instead of the spell effects of those spells*.* Diseases, poisons, and planar effects such as psychic wind or the howling winds of Pandemonium can all inflict madness. Some artifacts can also break the psyche of a character who uses or becomes attuned to them.\n\nResisting a madness-inducing effect usually requires a Wisdom or Charisma saving throw.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_magic-items_attunement/?format=api",
            "name": "Attunement",
            "desc": "Some magic items require a creature to form a bond with them before their magical properties can be used. This bond is called attunement, and certain items have a prerequisite for it. If the prerequisite is a class, a creature must be a member of that class to attune to the item. (If the class is a spellcasting class, a monster qualifies if it has spell slots and uses that class’s spell list.) If the prerequisite is to be a spellcaster, a creature qualifies if it can cast at least one spell using its traits or features, not using a magic item or the like.\n\nWithout becoming attuned to an item that requires attunement, a creature gains only its nonmagical benefits, unless its description states otherwise. For example, a magic shield that requires attunement provides the benefits of a normal shield to a creature not attuned to it, but none of its magical properties.\n\nAttuning to an item requires a creature to spend a short rest focused on only that item while being in physical contact with it (this can’t be the same short rest used to learn the item’s properties). This focus can take the form of weapon practice (for a weapon), meditation (for a wondrous item), or some other appropriate activity. If the short rest is interrupted, the attunement attempt fails. Otherwise, at the end of the short rest, the creature gains an intuitive understanding of how to activate any magical properties of the item, including any necessary command words.\n\nAn item can be attuned to only one creature at a time, and a creature can be attuned to no more than three magic items at a time. Any attempt to attune to a fourth item fails; the creature must end its attunement to an item first. Additionally, a creature can’t attune to more than one copy of an item. For example, a creature can’t attune to more than one *ring of protection* at a time.\n\nA creature’s attunement to an item ends if the creature no longer satisfies the prerequisites for attunement, if the item has been more than 100 feet away for at least 24 hours, if the creature dies, or if another creature attunes to the item. A creature can also voluntarily end attunement by spending another short rest focused on the item, unless the item is cursed.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_monsters_size/?format=api",
            "name": "Size",
            "desc": "A monster can be Tiny, Small, Medium, Large, Huge, or Gargantuan. The Size Categories table shows how much space a creature of a particular size controls in combat. See the *Player’s Handbook* for more information on creature size and space.\n\n### Size Categories\n\n| Size | Space | Examples |\n|--------|----------|---------------|\n| Tiny | 2½ by 2½ ft. | Imp, sprite |\n| Small | 5 b 5 ft. | Giant rat, goblin |\n| Medium | 5 b 5 ft. | Orc, werewolf |\n| Large | 10 b 10 ft. | Hippogriff, ogre |\n| Huge | 15 b 15 ft. | Fire giant, treant |\n| Gargantuan | 20 b 20 ft. or larger | Kraken, purple worm ",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_mounted-combat_mounting-and-dismounting/?format=api",
            "name": "Mounting and Dismounting",
            "desc": "Once during your move, you can mount a creature that is within 5 feet of you or dismount. Doing so costs an amount of movement equal to half your speed. For example, if your speed is 30 feet, you must spend 15 feet of movement to mount a horse. Therefore, you can't mount it if you don't have 15 feet of movement left or if your speed is 0.\n\nIf an effect moves your mount against its will while you're on it, you must succeed on a DC 10 Dexterity saving throw or fall off the mount, landing srd:prone in a space within 5 feet of it. If you're knocked srd:prone while mounted, you must make the same saving throw.\n\nIf your mount is knocked srd:prone, you can use your reaction to dismount it as it falls and land on your feet. Otherwise, you are dismounted and fall srd:prone in a space within 5 feet it.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_mounts-and-vehicles_mounts/?format=api",
            "name": "Mounts and Other Animals",
            "desc": "| Item           | Cost   | Speed  | Carrying Capacity |\n|----------------|--------|--------|-------------------|\n| Camel          | 50 gp  | 50 ft. | 480 lb.           |\n| Donkey or mule | 8 gp   | 40 ft. | 420 lb.           |\n| Elephant       | 200 gp | 40 ft. | 1,320 lb.         |\n| Horse, draft   | 50 gp  | 40 ft. | 540 lb.           |\n| Horse, riding  | 75 gp  | 60 ft. | 480 lb.           |\n| Mastiff        | 25 gp  | 40 ft. | 195 lb.           |\n| Pony           | 30 gp  | 40 ft. | 225 lb.           |\n| Warhorse       | 400 gp | 60 ft. | 540 lb.           |",
            "index": 1,
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            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_mounts-and-vehicles/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_movement_speed/?format=api",
            "name": "Speed",
            "desc": "Every character and monster has a speed, which is the distance in feetthat the character or monster can walk in 1 round. This number assumesshort bursts of energetic movement in the midst of a life-threatening situation.\n\nThe following rules determine how far a character or monster can move in a minute, an hour, or a day.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_multiclassing_prerequistes/?format=api",
            "name": "Prerequisites",
            "desc": "To qualify for a new class, you must meet the ability score prerequisites for both your current class and your new one, as shown in the Multiclassing Prerequisites table. For example, a barbarian who decides to multiclass into the druid class must have both Strength and Wisdom scores of 13 or higher. Without the full training that a beginning character receives, you must be a quick study in your new class, having a natural aptitude that is reflected by higher- than-average ability scores.\n\n**Multiclassing Prerequisites (table)**\n\n| Class     | Ability Score Minimum       |\n|-----------|-----------------------------|\n| Barbarian | Strength 13                 |\n| Bard      | Charisma 13                 |\n| Cleric    | Wisdom 13                   |\n| Druid     | Wisdom 13                   |\n| Fighter   | Strength 13 or Dexterity 13 |\n| Monk      | Dexterity 13 and Wisdom 13  |\n| Paladin   | Strength 13 and Charisma 13 |\n| Ranger    | Dexterity 13 and Wisdom 13  |\n| Rogue     | Dexterity 13                |\n| Sorcerer  | Charisma 13                 |\n| Warlock   | Charisma 13                 |\n| Wizard    | Intelligence 13             |",
            "index": 1,
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            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_multiclassing/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_objects_statistics-for-objects/?format=api",
            "name": "Statistics for Objects",
            "desc": "When time is a factor, you can assign an Armor Class and hit points to a destructible object. You can also give it immunities, resistances, and vulnerabilities to specific types of damage.\n\n**_Armor Class_**. An object's Armor Class is a measure of how difficult it is to deal damage to the object when striking it (because the object has no chance of dodging out of the way). The Object Armor Class table provides suggested AC values for various substances.\n\n**Object Armor Class (table)**\n| Substance           | AC |\n|---------------------|----|\n| Cloth, paper, rope  | 11 |\n| Crystal, glass, ice | 13 |\n| Wood, bone          | 15 |\n| Stone               | 17 |\n| Iron, steel         | 19 |\n| Mithral             | 21 |\n| Adamantine          | 23 |\n\n**_Hit Points_**. An object's hit points measure how much damage it can take before losing its structural integrity. Resilient objects have more hit points than fragile ones. Large objects also tend to have more hit points than small ones, unless breaking a small part of the object is just as effective as breaking the whole thing. The Object Hit Points table provides suggested hit points for fragile and resilient objects that are Large or smaller.\n\n**Object Hit Points (table)**\n\n| Size                                  | Fragile  | Resilient |\n|---------------------------------------|----------|-----------|\n| Tiny (bottle, lock)                   | 2 (1d4)  | 5 (2d4)   |\n| Small (chest, lute)                   | 3 (1d6)  | 10 (3d6)  |\n| Medium (barrel, chandelier)           | 4 (1d8)  | 18 (4d8)  |\n| Large (cart, 10-ft.-by-10-ft. window) | 5 (1d10) | 27 (5d10) |",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_pantheons_the-celtic-pantheon/?format=api",
            "name": "The Celtic Pantheon",
            "desc": "It's said that something wild lurks in the heart of every soul, a space that thrills to the sound of geese calling at night, to the whispering wind through the pines, to the unexpected red of mistletoe on an oak-and it is in this space that the Celtic gods dwell. They sprang from the brook and stream, their might heightened by the strength of the oak and the beauty of the woodlands and open moor. When the first forester dared put a name to the face seen in the bole of a tree or the voice babbling in a brook, these gods forced themselves into being.\n\nThe Celtic gods are as often served by druids as by clerics, for they are closely aligned with the forces of nature that druids revere.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_planes_the-material-plane/?format=api",
            "name": "The Material Plane",
            "desc": "The Material Plane is the nexus where the philosophical and elemental forces that define the other planes collide in the jumbled existence of mortal life and mundane matter. All fantasy gaming worlds exist within the Material Plane, making it the starting point for most campaigns and adventures. The rest of the multiverse is defined in relation to the Material Plane.\n\nThe worlds of the Material Plane are infinitely diverse, for they reflect the creative imagination of the GMs who set their games there, as well as the players whose heroes adventure there. They include magic-wasted desert planets and island-dotted water worlds, worlds where magic combines with advanced technology and others trapped in an endless Stone Age, worlds where the gods walk and places they have abandoned.",
            "index": 1,
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            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_planes/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_poisons_sample-poisons/?format=api",
            "name": "Sample Poisons",
            "desc": "Each type of poison has its own debilitating effects.\n\n **_Assassin's Blood (Ingested)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must make a DC 10 Constitution saving throw. On a failed save, it takes 6 (1d12) poison damage and is poisoned for 24 hours. On a successful save, the creature takes half damage and isn't poisoned.\n\n **_Burnt Othur Fumes (Inhaled)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 13 Constitution saving throw or take 10 (3d6) poison damage, and must repeat the saving throw at the start of each of its turns. On each successive failed save, the character takes 3 (1d6) poison damage. After three successful saves, the poison ends.\n\n **_Crawler Mucus (Contact)_**. This poison must be harvested from a dead or incapacitated crawler. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 13 Constitution saving throw or be poisoned for 1 minute. The poisoned creature is paralyzed. The creature can repeat the saving throw at the end of each of its turns, ending the effect on itself on a success.\n\n **_Drow Poison (Injury)_**. This poison is typically made only by the drow, and only in a place far removed from sunlight. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 13 Constitution saving throw or be poisoned for 1 hour. If the saving throw fails by 5 or more, the creature is also unconscious while poisoned in this way. The creature wakes up if it takes damage or if another creature takes an action to shake it awake.\n\n **_Essence of Ether (Inhaled)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 15 Constitution saving throw or become poisoned for 8 hours. The poisoned creature is unconscious. The creature wakes up if it takes damage or if another creature takes an action to shake it awake.\n\n **_Malice (Inhaled)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 15 Constitution saving throw or become poisoned for 1 hour. The poisoned creature is blinded.\n\n **_Midnight Tears (Ingested)_**. A creature that ingests this poison suffers no effect until the stroke of midnight. If the poison has not been neutralized before then, the creature must succeed on a DC 17 Constitution saving throw, taking 31 (9d6) poison damage on a failed save, or half as much damage on a successful one.\n\n **_Oil of Taggit (Contact)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 13 Constitution saving throw or become poisoned for 24 hours. The poisoned creature is unconscious. The creature wakes up if it takes damage.\n\n **_Pale Tincture (Ingested)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 16 Constitution saving throw or take 3 (1d6) poison damage and become poisoned. The poisoned creature must repeat the saving throw every 24 hours, taking 3 (1d6) poison damage on a failed save. Until this poison ends, the damage the poison deals can't be healed by any means. After seven successful saving throws, the effect ends and the creature can heal normally.\n\n **_Purple Worm Poison (Injury)_**. This poison must be harvested from a dead or incapacitated purple worm. A creature subjected to this poison must make a DC 19 Constitution saving throw, taking 42 (12d6) poison damage on a failed save, or half as much damage on a successful one.\n\n **_Serpent Venom (Injury)_**. This poison must be harvested from a dead or incapacitated giant poisonous snake. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 11 Constitution saving throw, taking 10 (3d6) poison damage on a failed save, or half as much damage on a successful one.\n\n **_Torpor (Ingested)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 15 Constitution saving throw or become poisoned for 4d6 hours. The poisoned creature is incapacitated.\n\n **_Truth Serum (Ingested)_**. A creature subjected to this poison must succeed on a DC 11 Constitution saving throw or become poisoned for 1 hour. The poisoned creature can't knowingly speak a lie, as if under the effect of a _zone of truth_ spell.\n\n **_Wyvern Poison (Injury)_**. This poison must be harvested from a dead or incapacitated wyvern. A creature subjected to this poison must make a DC 15 Constitution saving throw, taking 24 (7d6) poison damage on a failed save, or half as much damage on a successful one.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_race_racial-traits/?format=api",
            "name": "Racial Traits",
            "desc": "The description of each race includes racial traits that are common to members of that race. The following entries appear among the traits of most races.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_spellcasting_what-is-a-spell/?format=api",
            "name": "What Is a Spell?",
            "desc": "A spell is a discrete magical effect, a single shaping of the magical energies that suffuse the multiverse into a specific, limited expression. In casting a spell, a character carefully plucks at the invisible strands of raw magic suffusing the world, pins them in place in a particular pattern, sets them vibrating in a specific way, and then releases them to unleash the desired effect-in most cases, all in the span of seconds.\n\nSpells can be versatile tools, weapons, or protective wards. They can deal damage or undo it, impose or remove conditions (see appendix A), drain life energy away, and restore life to the dead.\n\nUncounted thousands of spells have been created over the course of the multiverse's history, and many of them are long forgotten. Some might yet lie recorded in crumbling spellbooks hidden in ancient ruins or trapped in the minds of dead gods. Or they might someday be reinvented by a character who has amassed enough power and wisdom to do so.",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_traps_traps-in-play/?format=api",
            "name": "Traps in Play",
            "desc": "When adventurers come across a trap, you need to know how the trap is triggered and what it does, as well as the possibility for the characters to detect the trap and to disable or avoid it.",
            "index": 1,
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_weapons_weapon-proficiency/?format=api",
            "name": "Weapon Proficiency",
            "desc": "Your race, class, and feats can grant you proficiency with certain weapons or categories of weapons. The two categories are **simple** and **martial**. Most people can use simple weapons with proficiency. These weapons include clubs, maces, and other weapons often found in the hands of commoners. Martial weapons, including swords, axes, and polearms, require more specialized training to use effectively. Most warriors use martial weapons because these weapons put their fighting style and training to best use.\n\nProficiency with a weapon allows you to add your proficiency bonus to the attack roll for any attack you make with that weapon. If you make an attack roll using a weapon with which you lack proficiency, you do not add your proficiency bonus to the attack roll.",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_the-six-abilities_ability-modifiers/?format=api",
            "name": "Ability Modifiers",
            "desc": "Each ability has a modifier that you apply whenever you make a D20 Test with that ability (explained in “D20 Tests”). An ability modifier is derived from its score, as shown in the Ability Modifiers table.\n\n> **Round Down**\n> Whenever you divide or multiply a number in the game, round down if you end up with a fraction, even if the fraction is one-half or greater. Some rules make an exception and tell you to round up.\n\n|Score|Modifier|\n|---|---|\n|1|−5|\n|2–3|−4|\n|4–5|−3|\n|6–7|−2|\n|8–9|−1|\n|10–11|+0|\n|12–13|+1|\n|14–15|+2|\n|16–17|+3|\n|18–19|+4|\n|20–21|+5|\n|22–23|+6|\n|24–25|+7|\n|26–27|+8|\n|28–29|+9|\n|30|+10|",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_the-six-abilities/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_d20-tests_saving-throw/?format=api",
            "name": "Saving Throws",
            "desc": "A saving throw—also called a save—represents an attempt to evade or resist a threat, such as a fiery explosion, a blast of poisonous gas, or a spell trying to invade your mind. You don’t normally choose to make a save; you must make one because your character or a monster (if you’re the GM) is at risk. A save’s result is detailed in the effect that caused it.\n\nIf you don’t want to resist the effect, you can choose to fail the save without rolling.\n\n## Ability Modifier\n\nSaving throws are named for the ability modifiers they use: a Constitution saving throw, a Wisdom saving throw, and so on. Different saving throws are used to resist different kinds of effects, as shown on the Saving Throw Examples table.\n\nTable: Saving Throw Examples\n\n|Ability|Make a Save To …|\n|---|---|\n|Strength|Physically resist direct force|\n|Dexterity|Dodge out of harm’s way|\n|Constitution|Endure a toxic hazard|\n|Intelligence|Recognize an illusion as fake|\n|Wisdom|Resist a mental assault|\n|Charisma|Assert your identity|\n\n## Proficiency Bonus\n\nYou add your Proficiency Bonus to your saving throw if you have proficiency in that kind of save. See “Proficiency” later in “Playing the Game.”\n\n## Difficulty Class\n\nThe Difficulty Class for a saving throw is determined by the effect that causes it or by the GM. For example, if a spell forces you to make a save, the DC is determined by the caster’s spellcasting ability and Proficiency Bonus. Monster abilities that call for saves specify the DC.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_d20-tests/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_proficiency_skill-proficiencies/?format=api",
            "name": "Skill Proficiencies",
            "desc": "Most ability checks involve using a skill, which represents a category of things creatures try to do with an ability check. The descriptions of the actions you take (see “Actions” later in “Playing the Game”) specify which skill applies if you make an ability check for that action, and many other rules note when a skill is relevant. The GM has the ultimate say on whether a skill is relevant in a situation.\n\nIf a creature is proficient in a skill, the creature applies its Proficiency Bonus to ability checks involving that skill. Without proficiency in a skill, a creature can still make ability checks involving that skill but doesn’t add its Proficiency Bonus. For example, if a character tries to climb a cliff, the GM might ask for a Strength (Athletics) check. If the character has Athletics proficiency, the character adds their Proficiency Bonus to the Strength check. If the character lacks that proficiency, they make the check without adding their Proficiency Bonus.\n\nTable: Skills\n\n|Skill|Ability|Example Uses|\n|---|---|---|\n|Acrobatics|Dexterity|Stay on your feet in a tricky situation, or perform an acrobatic stunt.|\n|Animal Handling|Wisdom|Calm or train an animal, or get an animal to behave in a certain way.|\n|Arcana|Intelligence|Recall lore about spells, magic items, and the planes of existence.|\n|Athletics|Strength|Jump farther than normal, stay afloat in rough water, or break something.|\n|Deception|Charisma|Tell a convincing lie, or wear a disguise convincingly.|\n|History|Intelligence|Recall lore about historical events, people, nations, and cultures.|\n|Insight|Wisdom|Discern a person’s mood and intentions.|\n|Intimidation|Charisma|Awe or threaten someone into doing what you want.|\n|Investigation|Intelligence|Find obscure information in books, or deduce how something works.|\n|Medicine|Wisdom|Diagnose an illness, or determine what killed the recently slain.|\n|Nature|Intelligence|Recall lore about terrain, plants, animals, and weather.|\n|Perception|Wisdom|Using a combination of senses, notice something that’s easy to miss.|\n|Performance|Charisma|Act, tell a story, perform music, or dance.|\n|Persuasion|Charisma|Honestly and graciously convince someone of something.|\n|Religion|Intelligence|Recall lore about gods, religious rituals, and holy symbols.|\n|Sleight of Hand|Dexterity|Pick a pocket, conceal a handheld object, or perform legerdemain.|\n|Stealth|Dexterity|Escape notice by moving quietly and hiding behind things.|\n|Survival|Wisdom|Follow tracks, forage, find a trail, or avoid natural hazards.|\n\n## Skill Lists\n\nThe skills are shown on the Skills table, which notes example uses for each skill proficiency as well as the ability check the skill most often applies to.\n\n## Determining Skills\n\nA character’s starting skill proficiencies are determined at character creation, and a monster’s skill proficiencies appear in its stat block.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_proficiency/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_social-interaction_ability-checks/?format=api",
            "name": "Ability Checks",
            "desc": "Ability checks can be key in determining the outcome of a social interaction. Your roleplaying efforts can alter an NPC’s attitude, but there might still be an element of chance if the GM wants dice to play a role in determining an NPC’s response to you. In such situations, the GM will typically ask you to take the Influence action.\n\nPay attention to your skill proficiencies when thinking of how you will interact with an NPC; use an approach that relies on your group’s skill proficiencies. For example, if the group needs to trick a guard into letting them into a castle, the Rogue who is proficient in Deception should lead the discussion.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_social-interaction/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_exploration_vision-and-light/?format=api",
            "name": "Vision and Light",
            "desc": "Some adventuring tasks—such as noticing danger, hitting an enemy, and targeting certain spells are affected by sight, so effects that obscure vision can hinder you, as explained below.\n\n## Obscured Areas\n\nAn area might be Lightly or Heavily Obscured. In a Lightly Obscured area—such as an area with Dim Light, patchy fog, or moderate foliage—you have Disadvantage on Wisdom (Perception) checks that rely on sight.\n\nA Heavily Obscured area—such as an area with Darkness, heavy fog, or dense foliage—is opaque. You have the Blinded condition (see “Rules Glossary”) when trying to see something there.\n\n## Light\n\nThe presence or absence of light determines the category of illumination in an area, as defined below.\n\n**Bright Light.** Bright Light lets most creatures see normally. Even gloomy days provide Bright Light, as do torches, lanterns, fires, and other sources of illumination within a specific radius.\n\n**Dim Light.** Dim Light, also called shadows, creates a Lightly Obscured area. An area of Dim Light is usually a boundary between Bright Light and surrounding Darkness. The soft light of twilight and dawn also counts as Dim Light. A full moon might bathe the land in Dim Light.\n\n**Darkness.** Darkness creates a Heavily Obscured area. Characters face Darkness outdoors at night (even most moonlit nights), within the confines of an unlit dungeon, or in an area of magical Darkness.\n\n## Special Senses\n\nSome creatures have special senses that help them perceive things in certain situations. “Rules Glossary” defines the following special senses:\n\n* Blindsight\n* Darkvision\n* Tremorsense\n* Truesight",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_exploration/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_combat_playing-on-a-grid/?format=api",
            "name": "Playing on a Grid",
            "desc": "If you play using a square grid and miniatures or other tokens, follow these rules.\n\n**Squares.** Each square represents 5 feet.\n\n**Speed.** Rather than moving foot by foot, move square by square on the grid, using your Speed in 5-foot segments. You can translate your Speed into squares by dividing it by 5. For example, a Speed of 30 feet translates into 6 squares. If you use a grid often, consider writing your Speed in squares on your character sheet.\n\n**Entering a Square.** To enter a square, you must have enough movement left to pay for entering. It costs 1 square of movement to enter an unoccupied square that’s adjacent to your space (orthogonally or diagonally adjacent). A square of Difficult Terrain costs 2 squares to enter. Other effects might make a square cost even more.\n\n**Corners.** Diagonal movement can’t cross the corner of a wall, a large tree, or another terrain feature that fills its space.\n\n**Ranges.** To determine the range on a grid between two things—whether creatures or objects—count squares from a square adjacent to one of them and stop counting in the space of the other one. Count by the shortest route.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_combat/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd-2024_damage-and-healing_resting/?format=api",
            "name": "Resting",
            "desc": "Adventurers can’t spend every hour adventuring. They need rest. Any creature can take hour-long Short Rests in the midst of a day and an 8-hour Long Rest to end it. Regaining Hit Points is one of the main benefits of a rest. “Rules Glossary” provides the rules for Short and Long Rests.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2024/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd-2024_damage-and-healing/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_abilities_advantage-and-disadvantage/?format=api",
            "name": "Advantage and Disadvantage",
            "desc": "Sometimes a special ability or spell tells you that you have advantage or disadvantage on an ability check, a saving throw, or an attack roll.\nWhen that happens, you roll a second d20 when you make the roll. Use the higher of the two rolls if you have advantage, and use the lower roll if you have disadvantage. For example, if you have disadvantage and roll a 17 and a 5, you use the 5. If you instead have advantage and roll those numbers, you use the 17.\n\nIf multiple situations affect a roll and each one grants advantage or imposes disadvantage on it, you don't roll more than one additional d20.\nIf two favorable situations grant advantage, for example, you still roll only one additional d20.\n\nIf circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, you are considered to have neither of them, and you roll one d20. This is true even if multiple circumstances impose disadvantage and only one grants advantage or vice versa. In such a situation, you have neither advantage nor disadvantage.\n\nWhen you have advantage or disadvantage and something in the game, such as the halfling's Lucky trait, lets you reroll the d20, you can reroll only one of the dice. You choose which one. For example, if a halfling has advantage or disadvantage on an ability check and rolls a 1 and a 13, the halfling could use the Lucky trait to reroll the 1.\n\nYou usually gain advantage or disadvantage through the use of special abilities, actions, or spells. Inspiration can also give a character advantage. The GM can also decide that circumstances influence a roll in one direction or the other and grant advantage or impose disadvantage as a result.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_abilities/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_actions-in-combat_cast-a-spell/?format=api",
            "name": "Cast a Spell",
            "desc": "Spellcasters such as wizards and clerics, as well as many monsters, have access to spells and can use them to great effect in combat. Each spell has a casting time, which specifies whether the caster must use an action, a reaction, minutes, or even hours to cast the spell. Casting a spell is, therefore, not necessarily an action. Most spells do have a casting time of 1 action, so a spellcaster often uses his or her action in combat to cast such a spell.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 3,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_actions-in-combat/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_armor_medium-armor/?format=api",
            "name": "Medium Armor",
            "desc": "Medium armor offers more protection than light armor, but it also impairs movement more. If you wear medium armor, you add your Dexterity modifier, to a maximum of +2, to the base number from your armor type to determine your Armor Class.\n\n**_Hide._** This crude armor consists of thick furs and pelts. It is commonly worn by barbarian tribes, evil humanoids, and other folk who lack access to the tools and materials needed to create better armor.\n\n**_Chain Shirt._** Made of interlocking metal rings, a chain shirt is worn between layers of clothing or leather. This armor offers modest protection to the wearer's upper body and allows the sound of the rings rubbing against one another to be muffled by outer layers.\n\n**_Scale Mail._** This armor consists of a coat and leggings (and perhaps a separate skirt) of leather covered with overlapping pieces of metal, much like the scales of a fish. The suit includes gauntlets.\n\n**_Breastplate._** This armor consists of a fitted metal chest piece worn with supple leather. Although it leaves the legs and arms relatively unprotected, this armor provides good protection for the wearer's vital organs while leaving the wearer relatively unencumbered.\n\n**_Half Plate._** Half plate consists of shaped metal plates that cover most of the wearer's body. It does not include leg protection beyond simple greaves that are attached with leather straps.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_armor/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_attacking_attack-modifiers/?format=api",
            "name": "Modifiers to the Roll",
            "desc": "When a character makes an attack roll, the two most common modifiers to the roll are an ability modifier and the character's proficiency bonus. When a monster makes an attack roll, it uses whatever modifier is provided in its stat block.\n\n**Ability Modifier.** The ability modifier used for a melee weapon attack is Strength, and the ability modifier used for a ranged weapon attack is Dexterity. Weapons that have the finesse or thrown property break this rule.\n\nSome spells also require an attack roll. The ability modifier used for a spell attack depends on the spellcasting ability of the spellcaster.\n\n**Proficiency Bonus.** You add your proficiency bonus to your attack roll when you attack using a weapon with which you have proficiency, as well as when you attack with a spell.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 3,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_attacking/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_backgrounds_languages/?format=api",
            "name": "Languages",
            "desc": "Some backgrounds also allow characters to learn additional languages beyond those given by race. See “Languages.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_backgrounds/?format=api"
        },
        {
            "url": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rules/srd_between-adventures_downtime-activities/?format=api",
            "name": "Downtime Activities",
            "desc": "Between adventures, the GM might ask you what your character is doing during his or her downtime. Periods of downtime can vary in duration, but each downtime activity requires a certain number of days to complete before you gain any benefit, and at least 8 hours of each day must be spent on the downtime activity for the day to count. The days do not need to be consecutive. If you have more than the minimum amount of days to spend, you can keep doing the same thing for a longer period of time, or switch to a new downtime activity.\n\n Downtime activities other than the ones presented below are possible. If you want your character to spend his or her downtime performing an activity not covered here, discuss it with your GM.",
            "index": 2,
            "initialHeaderLevel": 2,
            "document": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/documents/srd-2014/?format=api",
            "ruleset": "https://api-beta.open5e.com/v2/rulesets/srd_between-adventures/?format=api"
        }
    ]
}