Religion is an important part of life in the worlds of the D&D multiverse. When gods walk the world, clerics channel divine power, evil cults perform dark sacrifices in subterranean lairs, and shining paladins stand like beacons against the darkness, it’s hard to be ambivalent about the deities and deny their existence.
Many people in the worlds of D&D worship different gods at different times and circumstances. People in the Forgotten Realms, for example, might pray to Sune for luck in love, make an offering to Waukeen before heading to the market, and pray to appease Talos when a severe storm blows in—all in the same day. Many people have a favorite among the gods, one whose ideals and teachings they make their own. And a few people dedicate themselves entirely to a single god, usually serving as a priest or champion of that god’s ideals. Your DM determines which gods, if any, are worshiped in his or her campaign. From among the gods available, you can choose a single deity for your character to serve, worship, or pay lip service to. Or you can pick a few that your character prays to most often. Or just make a mental note of the gods who are revered in your DM’s campaign so you can invoke their names when appropriate. If you’re playing a cleric or a character with the Acolyte background, decide which god your deity serves or served, and consider the deity’s suggested domains when selecting your character’s domain.
The Life and Death Domains
Many deities in this section suggest the Life domain, particularly if they are closely associated with healing, protection, childbirth, nurturing, or fertility. As described in the chapter 3, though, the Life domain is incredibly broad, and a cleric of any non-evil deity can choose it.
A number of other deities, mostly evil ones, suggest the Death domain, which is detailed in the Dungeon Master’s Guide. Most clerics who choose this domain are evil NPCs, but if you want to worship a god of death, consult your Dungeon Master.
D&D Pantheons
Each world in the D&D multiverse has its own pantheons of deities, ranging in size from the teeming pantheons of the Forgotten Realms and Greyhawk to the more focused religions of Eberron and Dragonlance. Many of the nonhuman races worship the same gods on different worlds—Moradin, for example, is revered by dwarves of the Forgotten Realms, Greyhawk, and many other worlds.
The Forgotten Realms
Dozens of deities are revered, worshiped, and feared throughout the world of the Forgotten Realms. At least thirty deities are widely known across the Realms, and many more are worshiped locally, by individual tribes, small cults, or certain sects of larger religious temples.
Deities of the Forgotten Realms
Deity | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Auril, goddess of winter | NE | Nature, Tempest | Six-pointed snowflake |
Azuth, god of wizards | LN | Knowledge | Left hand pointing upward, outlined in fire |
Bane, god of tyranny | LE | War | Upright black right hand, thumb and fingers together |
Beshaba, goddess of misfortune | CE | Trickery | Black antlers |
Bhaal, god of murder | NE | Death | Skull surrounded by a ring of blood droplets |
Chauntea, goddess of agriculture | NG | Life | Sheaf of grain or a blooming rose over grain |
Cyric, god of lies | CE | Trickery | White jawless skull on black or purple sunburst |
Deneir, god of writing | NG | Knowledge | Lit candle above an open eye |
Eldath, goddess of peace | NG | Life, Nature | Waterfall plunging into still pool |
Gond, god of craft | N | Knowledge | Toothed cog with four spokes |
Helm, god of protection | LN | Life, Light | Staring eye on upright left gauntlet |
Ilmater, god of endurance | LG | Life | Hands bound at the wrist with red cord |
Kelemvor, god of the dead | LN | Death | Upright skeletal arm holding balanced scales |
Lathander, god of birth and renewal | NG | Life, Light | Road traveling into a sunrise |
Leira, goddess of illusion | CN | Trickery | Point-down triangle containing a swirl of mist |
Lliira, goddess of joy | CG | Life | Triangle of three six-pointed stars |
Loviatar, goddess of pain | LE | Death | Nine-tailed barbed scourge |
Malar, god of the hunt | CE | Nature | Clawed paw |
Mask, god of thieves | CN | Trickery | Black mask |
Mielikki, goddess of forests | NG | Nature | Unicorn’s head |
Milil, god of poetry and song | NG | Light | Five-stringed harp made of leaves |
Myrkul, god of death | NE | Death | White human skull |
Mystra, goddess of magic | NG | Knowledge | Circle of seven stars, or nine stars encircling a flowing red mist, or a single star |
Oghma, god of knowledge | N | Knowledge | Blank scroll |
Savras, god of divination and fate | LN | Knowledge | Crystal ball containing many kinds of eyes |
Selûne, goddess of the moon | CG | Knowledge, Life | Pair of eyes surrounded by seven stars |
Shar, goddess of darkness and loss | NE | Death, Trickery | Black disk encircled with a border |
Silvanus, god of wild nature | N | Nature | Oak leaf |
Sune, goddess of love and beauty | CG | Life, Light | Face of a beautiful red-haired woman |
Talona, goddess of disease and poison | CE | Death | Three teardrops on a triangle |
Talos, god of storms | CE | Tempest | Three lightning bolts radiating from a central point |
Tempus, god of war | N | War | Upright flaming sword |
Torm, god of courage and self-sacrifice | LG | War | White right gauntlet |
Tymora, goddess of good fortune | CG | Trickery | Face-up coin |
Tyr, god of justice | LG | War | Balanced scales resting on a warhammer |
Umberlee, goddess of the sea | CE | Tempest | Wave curling left and right |
Waukeen, goddess of trade | N | Knowledge, Trickery | Upright coin with Waukeen’s profile facing left |
Greyhawk
The gods of Greyhawk come from at least four different pantheons, representing the faiths of the various ethnic groups that populated the continent of Oerik over the ages. As a result, there’s a great deal of overlap in their portfolios: Pelor is the Flan god of the sun and Pholtus is the Oeridian sun god, for example.
Deities of Greyhawk
Deity | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Beory, goddess of nature | N | Nature | Green disk |
Boccob, god of magic | N | Knowledge | Eye within a pentagram |
Celestian, god of stars and wanderers | N | Knowledge | Arc of seven stars inside a circle |
Ehlonna, goddess of woodlands | NG | Life, Nature | Unicorn horn |
Erythnul, god of envy and slaughter | CE | War | Blood drop |
Fharlanghn, god of horizons and travel | NG | Knowledge, Trickery | Circle crossed by a curved horizon line |
Heironeous, god of chivalry and valor | LG | War | Lightning bolt |
Hextor, god of war and discord | LE | War | Six arrows facing downward in a fan |
Kord, god of athletics and sport | CG | Tempest, War | Four spears and four maces radiating out from a central point |
Incabulos, god of plague and famine | NE | Death | Reptilian eye with a horizontal diamond |
Istus, goddess of fate and destiny | N | Knowledge | Weaver’s spindle with three strands |
Iuz, god of pain and oppression | CE | Death | Grinning human skull |
Nerull, god of death | NE | Death | Skull with either a sickle or a scythe |
Obad-Hai, god of nature | N | Nature | Oak leaf and acorn |
Olidammara, god of revelry | CN | Trickery | Laughing mask |
Pelor, god of the sun and healing | NG | Life, Light | Sun |
Pholtus, god of light and law | LG | Light | Silver sun or full moon partially eclipsed by a smaller crescent moon |
Ralishaz, god of ill luck and insanity | CN | Trickery | Three bone fate-casting sticks |
Rao, god of peace and reason | LG | Knowledge | White heart |
St. Cuthbert, god of common sense and zeal | LN | Knowledge | Circle at the center of a starburst of lines |
Tharizdun, god of eternal darkness | CE | Trickery | Dark spiral or inverted ziggurat |
Trithereon, god of liberty and retribution | CG | War | Triskelion |
Ulaa, goddess of hills and mountains | LG | Life, War | Mountain with a circle at its heart |
Vecna, god of evil secrets | NE | Knowledge | Hand with eye in the palm |
Wee Jas, goddess of magic and death | LN | Death, Knowledge | Red skull in front of fireball |
Dragonlance
The gods of the world of Krynn are three families: seven gods of good headed by Paladine and Mishakal, seven of neutrality headed by Gilean, and seven of evil headed by Takhisis and Sargonnas. These deities have been called by many different names and held in varying levels of esteem by different peoples and cultures through the world’s history, but they are the only gods of this world—their place fixed in the stars as constellations.
Deities of Dragonlance: Good
The Gods of Good | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Paladine, god of rulers and guardians | LG | War | Silver triangle |
Branchala, god of music | NG | Light | Bard’s harp |
Habbakuk, god of animal life and the sea | NG | Nature, Tempest | Blue bird |
Kiri-Jolith, god of honor and war | LG | War | Bison’s horns |
Majere, god of meditation and order | LG | Knowledge | Copper spider |
Mishakal, goddess of healing | LG | Knowledge, Life | Blue infinity sign |
Solinari, god of good magic | LG | no clerics | White circle or sphere |
Deities of Dragonlance: Neutral
The Gods of Neutrality | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Gilean, god of knowledge | N | Knowledge | Open book |
Chislev, goddess of nature | N | Nature | Feather |
Reorx, god of craft | N | Knowledge | Forging hammer |
Shinare, goddess of wealth and trade | N | Knowledge, Trickery | Griffon’s wing |
Sirrion, god of fire and change | N | Nature | Multi-colored fire |
Zivilyn, god of wisdom | N | Knowledge | Great green or gold tree |
Lunitari, goddess of neutral magic | N | no clerics | Red circle or sphere |
Deities of Dragonlance: Evil
The Gods of Evil | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Takhisis, goddess of night and hatred | LE | Death | Black crescent |
Chemosh, god of the undead | LE | Death | Yellow skull |
Hiddukel, god of lies and greed | CE | Trickery | Broken merchant’s scales |
Morgion, god of disease and secrecy | NE | Death | Hood with two red eyes |
Sargonnas, god of vengeance and fire | LE | War | Stylized red condor |
Zeboim, goddess of the sea and storms | CE | Tempest | Turtle shell |
Nuitari, god of evil magic | LE | no clerics | Black circle or sphere |
Eberron
The world of Eberron has many different religions, but the most important revolves around a pantheon called the Sovereign Host and their malign shadow, the Dark Six. The gods of the Sovereign Host are thought to have dominion over every aspect of existence, and to speak with a unified voice. But the Dark Six are the primitive, bloody, and cruel gods who offer a dissenting voice. Eberron’s other religions are very different from the traditional D&D pantheons. The monotheistic Church of the Silver Flame is devoted to fighting against evil in the world, but plagued by corruption in its own ranks. The philosophy of the Blood of Vol teaches that divinity lies within all mortal beings and reveres the undead who have secured that immortality. Various mad cults are devoted to the demons and horrors imprisoned in Eberron’s Underdark (called Khyber, the Dragon Below). The followers of the Path of Light believe that the world is heading toward a glorious future where the shadows that cloud this world will be transformed into light. And two related nations of elves revere their ancestral spirits: the Undying Court, preserved as spirits or even undead forms, and the glorified Spirits of the Past, the great heroes of ancient wars.
Deities of Eberron
Deities of Eberron
The Sovereign Host | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Arawai, goddess of fertility | NG | Life, Nature | Sheaf of wheat tied with green ribbon |
Aureon, god of law and knowledge | LN | Knowledge | Open tome |
Balinor, god of beasts and the hunt | N | Life, Nature | Pair of antlers |
Boldrei, goddess of community and home | LG | Life | Fire in a stone hearth |
Dol Arrah, goddess of sunlight and honor | LG | Light, War | Rising sun |
Dol Dorn, god of strength at arms | CG | War | Longsword crossed over a shield |
Kol Korran, god of trade and wealth | N | Trickery | Nine-sided gold coin |
Olladra, goddess of good fortune | NG | Life, Trickery | Domino |
Onatar, god of craft | NG | Knowledge | Crossed hammer and tongs |
The Dark Six | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
The Devourer, god of nature’s wrath | NE | Tempest | Bundle of five sharpened bones |
The Fury, goddess of wrath and madness | NE | War | Winged wyrm with woman’s head and upper body |
The Keeper, god of greed and death | NE | Death | Dragonshard stone in the shape of a fang |
The Mockery, god of violence and treachery | NE | War | Five blood-spattered tools |
The Shadow, god of dark magic | CE | Knowledge | Obsidian tower |
The Traveler, deity of chaos and change | CN | Knowledge, Trickery | Four crossed, rune-inscribed bones |
Other Faiths of Eberron | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
The Silver Flame, deity of protection and good | LG | Life, Light, War | Flame drawn on silver or molded from silver |
The Blood of Vol, philosophy of immortality and undeath | LN | Death, Life | Stylized dragon skull on red teardrop gem |
Cults of the Dragon Below, deities of madness | NE | Trickery | Varies |
The Path of Light, philosophy of light and self-improvement | LN | Life, Light | Brilliant crystal |
The Undying Court, elven ancestors | NG | Knowledge, Life | Varies |
The Spirits of the Past, elven ancestors | CG | War | Varies |
Nonhuman Deities
Certain gods closely associated with nonhuman races are revered on many different worlds, though not always in the same way. The nonhuman races of the Forgotten Realms and Greyhawk share these deities.
Nonhuman races often have whole pantheons of their own. Besides Moradin, for example, the dwarf gods include Moradin’s wife, Berronar Truesilver, and a number of other gods thought to be their children and grandchildren: Abbathor, Clangeddin Silverbeard, Dugmaren Brightmantle, Dumathoin, Gorm Gulthyn, Haela Brightaxe, Marthammor Duin, Sharindlar, Thard Harr, and Vergadain. Individual clans and kingdoms of dwarves might revere some, all, or none of these deities, and some have other gods unknown (or known by other names) to outsiders.
Nonhuman Deities
Deity | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Bahamut, dragon god of good | LG | Life, War | Dragon’s head in profile |
Blibdoolpoolp, kuo-toa goddess | NE | Death | Lobster head or black pearl |
Corellon Larethian, elf deity of art and magic | CG | Light | Quarter moon or starburst |
Deep Sashelas, elf god of the sea | CG | Nature, Tempest | Dolphin |
Eadro, merfolk deity of the sea | N | Nature, Tempest | Spiral design |
Garl Glittergold, gnome god of trickery and wiles | LG | Trickery | Gold nugget |
Grolantor, hill giant god of war | CE | War | Wooden club |
Gruumsh, orc god of storms and war | CE | Tempest, War | Unblinking eye |
Hruggek, bugbear god of violence | CE | War | Morningstar |
Kurtulmak, kobold god of war and mining | LE | War | Gnome skull |
Laogzed, troglodyte god of hunger | CE | Death | Image of the lizard/toad god |
Lolth, drow goddess of spiders | CE | Trickery | Spider |
Maglubiyet, goblinoid god of war | LE | War | Bloody axe |
Moradin, dwarf god of creation | LG | Knowledge | Hammer and anvil |
Rillifane Rallathil, wood elf god of nature | CG | Nature | Oak |
Sehanine Moonbow, elf goddess of the moon | CG | Knowledge | Crescent moon |
Sekolah, sahuagin god of the hunt | LE | Nature, Tempest | Shark |
Semuanya, lizardfolk deity of survival | N | Life | Egg |
Skerrit, centaur and satyr god of nature | N | Nature | Oak growing from acorn |
Skoraeus Stonebones, god of stone giants and art | N | Knowledge | Stalactite |
Surtur, god of fire giants and craft | LE | Knowledge, War | Flaming sword |
Thrym, god of frost giants and strength | CE | War | White double-bladed axe |
Tiamat, dragon goddess of evil | LE | Trickery | Dragon head with five claw marks |
Yondalla, halfling goddess of fertility and protection | LG | Life | Shield |
Fantasy-Historical Pantheons
The Celtic, Egyptian, Greek, and Norse pantheons are fantasy interpretations of historical religions from our world’s ancient times. They include deities that are most appropriate for use in a D&D game, divorced from their historical context in the real world and united into pantheons that serve the needs of the game.
The Celtic Pantheon
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. The Celtic gods are as often served by druids as by clerics, for they are closely aligned with the forces of nature that druids revere.
Celtic Deities
Deity | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
The Daghdha, god of weather and crops | CG | Nature, Trickery | Bubbling cauldron or shield |
Arawn, god of life and death | NE | Life, Death | Black star on gray background |
Belenus, god of sun, light, and warmth | NG | Light | Solar disk and standing stones |
Brigantia, goddess of rivers and livestock | NG | Life | Footbridge |
Diancecht, god of medicine and healing | LG | Life | Crossed oak and mistletoe branches |
Dunatis, god of mountains and peaks | N | Nature | Red sun-capped mountain peak |
Goibhniu, god of smiths and healing | NG | Knowledge, Life | Giant mallet over sword |
Lugh, god of arts, travel, and commerce | CN | Knowledge, Life | Pair of long hands |
Manannan mac Lir, god of oceans and sea creatures | LN | Nature, Tempest | Wave of white water on green |
Math Mathonwy, god of magic | NE | Knowledge | Staff |
Morrigan, goddess of battle | CE | War | Two crossed spears |
Nuada, god of war and warriors | N | War | Silver hand on black background |
Oghma, god of speech and writing | NG | Knowledge | Unfurled scroll |
Silvanus, god of nature and forests | N | Nature | Summer oak tree |
The Greek Pantheon
The gods of Olympus make themselves known with the gentle lap of waves against the shores and the crash of the thunder among the cloud—enshrouded peaks. The thick boar-infested woods and the sere, olive-covered hillsides hold evidence of their passing. Every aspect of nature echoes with their presence, and they’ve made a place for themselves inside the human heart, too.
Greek Deities
Deity | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Zeus, god of the sky, ruler of the gods | N | Tempest | Fist full of lightning bolts |
Aphrodite, goddess of love and beauty | CG | Light | Sea shell |
Apollo, god of light, music, and healing | CG | Knowledge, Life, Light | Lyre |
Ares, god of war and strife | CE | War | Spear |
Artemis, goddess of hunting and childbirth | NG | Life, Nature | Bow and arrow on lunar disk |
Athena, goddess of wisdom and civilization | LG | Knowledge, War | Owl |
Demeter, goddess of agriculture | NG | Life | Mare’s head |
Dionysus, god of mirth and wine | CN | Life | Thyrsus (staff tipped with pine cone) |
Hades, god of the underworld | LE | Death | Black ram |
Hecate, goddess of magic and the moon | CE | Knowledge, Trickery | Setting moon |
Hephaestus, god of smithing and craft | NG | Knowledge | Hammer and anvil |
Hera, goddess of marriage and intrigue | CN | Trickery | Fan of peacock feathers |
Hercules, god of strength and adventure | CG | Tempest, War | Lion’s head |
Hermes, god of travel and commerce | CG | Trickery | Caduceus (winged staff and serpents) |
Hestia, goddess of home and family | NG | Life | Hearth |
Nike, goddess of victory | LN | War | Winged woman |
Pan, god of nature | CN | Nature | Syrinx (pan pipes) |
Poseidon, god of the sea and earthquakes | CN | Tempest | Trident |
Tyche, goddess of good fortune | N | Trickery | Red pentagram |
The Egyptian Pantheon
These gods are a young dynasty of an ancient divine family, heirs to the rulership of the cosmos and the maintenance of the divine principle of Ma’at—the fundamental order of truth, justice, law, and order that puts gods, mortal pharaohs, and ordinary men and women in their logical and rightful place in the universe.
The Egyptian pantheon is unusual in having three gods with the Death domain of different alignments.
Anubis is the lawful neutral god of the afterlife, who judges the souls of the dead. Set is a chaotic evil god of murder, perhaps best known for killing his brother Osiris. And Nephthys is a chaotic good goddess of mourning. Thus, although most clerics of the Death domain (found in the Dungeon Master’s Guide) are villainous characters, clerics who serve Anubis or Nephthys need not be.
Egyptian Deities
Deity | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Re-Horakhty, god of the sun, ruler of the gods | LG | Life, Light | Solar disk encircled by serpent |
Anubis, god of judgment and death | LN | Death | Black jackal |
Apep, god of evil, fire, and serpents | NE | Trickery | Flaming snake |
Bast, goddess of cats and vengeance | CG | War | Cat |
Bes, god of luck and music | CN | Trickery | Image of the misshapen deity |
Hathor, goddess of love, music, and motherhood | NG | Life, Light | Horned cow’s head with lunar disk |
Imhotep, god of crafts and medicine | NG | Knowledge | Step pyramid |
Isis, goddess of fertility and magic | NG | Knowledge, Life | Ankh and star |
Nephthys, goddess of death and grief | CG | Death | Horns around a lunar disk |
Osiris, god of nature and the underworld | LG | Life, Nature | Crook and flail |
Ptah, god of crafts, knowledge, and secrets | LN | Knowledge | Bull |
Set, god of darkness and desert storms | CE | Death, Tempest, Trickery | Coiled cobra |
Sobek, god of water and crocodiles | LE | Nature, Tempest | Crocodile head with horns and plumes |
Thoth, god of knowledge and wisdom | N | Knowledge | Ibis |
The Norse Pantheon
Where the land plummets from the snowy hills into the icy fjords below, where the longboats draw up on to the beach, where the glaciers flow forward and retreat with every fall and spring—this is the land of the Vikings, the home of the Norse pantheon. It’s a brutal clime, and one that calls for brutal living. The warriors of the land have had to adapt to the harsh conditions in order to survive, but they haven’t been too twisted by the needs of their environment. Given the necessity of raiding for food and wealth, it’s surprising the mortals turned out as well as they did. Their powers reflect the need these warriors had for strong leadership and decisive action. Thus, they see their deities in every bend of a river, hear them in the crash of the thunder and the booming of the glaciers, and smell them in the smoke of a burning longhouse.
The Norse pantheon includes two main families, the Aesir (deities of war and destiny) and the Vanir (gods of fertility and prosperity). Once enemies, these two families are now closely allied against their common enemies, the giants (including the gods Surtur and Thrym). Like the gods of Greyhawk, gods in different families sometimes have overlap in their spheres of influence: Frey (of the Vanir) and Odur (of the Aesir) are both associated with the sun, for example.
Norse Deities
Deity | Alignment | Suggested Domains | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|
Odin, god of knowledge and war | NG | Knowledge, War | Watching blue eye |
Aegir, god of the sea and storms | NE | Tempest | Rough ocean waves |
Balder, god of beauty and poetry | NG | Life, Light | Gem-encrusted silver chalice |
Forseti, god of justice and law | N | Light | Head of a bearded man |
Frey, god of fertility and the sun | NG | Life, Light | Ice-blue greatsword |
Freya, goddess of fertility and love | NG | Life | Falcon |
Frigga, goddess of birth and fertility | N | Life, Light | Cat |
Heimdall, god of watchfulness and loyalty | LG | Light, War | Curling musical horn |
Hel, goddess of the underworld | NE | Death | Woman’s face, rotting on one side |
Hermod, god of luck | CN | Trickery | Winged scroll |
Loki, god of thieves and trickery | CE | Trickery | Flame |
Njord, god of sea and wind | NG | Nature, Tempest | Gold coin |
Odur, god of light and the sun | CG | Light | Solar disk |
Sif, goddess of war | CG | War | Upraised sword |
Skadi, god of earth and mountains | N | Nature | Mountain peak |
Surtur, god of fire giants and war | LE | War | Flaming sword |
Thor, god of storms and thunder | CG | Tempest, War | Hammer |
Thrym, god of fire giants and cold | CE | War | White double-bladed axe |
Tyr, god of courage and strategy | LN | Knowledge, War | Sword |
Uller, god of hunting and winter | CN | Nature | Longbow |