This site is games | books | films

Skill Appraise (Intelligence)

This material is Open Game Content, and is licensed for public use under the terms of the Open Game License v1.0a.

What do you call this? Arthur Rackham, from A Christmas carol, by Charles Dickens, London, 1915., Appraise
What do you call this? Arthur Rackham, from A Christmas carol, by Charles Dickens, London, 1915.

Check

You can appraise common or well-known objects with a DC 12 Appraise check. Failure means that you estimate the value at 50% to 150% (2d6+3 times 10%,) of its actual value.

Appraising a rare or exotic item requires a successful check against DC 15, 20, or higher. If the check is successful, you estimate the value correctly; failure means you cannot estimate the item’s value.

A Magnifying glass gives you a +2 circumstance bonus on Appraise checks involving any item that is small or highly detailed, such as a gem.

A merchant’s scale gives you a +2 circumstance bonus on Appraise checks involving any items that are valued by weight, including anything made of precious metals.

These bonuses stack.

Action

Appraising an item takes 1 minute (ten consecutive full-round actions).

Try Again

No. You cannot try again on the same object, regardless of success.

Special

A dwarf gets a +2 racial bonus on Appraise checks that are related to stone or metal items because dwarves are familiar with valuable items of all kinds (especially those made of stone or metal).

The master of a raven familiar gains a +3 bonus on Appraise checks.

A character with the Diligent feat gets a +2 bonus on Appraise checks.

Synergy

If you have 5 ranks in any Craft skill, you gain a +2 bonus on Appraise checks related to items made with that Craft skill.

Untrained

For common items, failure on an untrained check means no estimate. For rare items, success means an estimate of 50% to 150% (2d6+3 times 10%)

Scroll to Top