Succubus Covenant !full! -
You are playing a morally grey character, you love high-risk/high-reward roleplay, and you trust your Dungeon Master to make the consequences hurt in a fun way.
Because Succubi are fallen angels, some covenants include a "redemption clause." If the mortal signee can somehow make the Succubus feel a genuine, selfless emotion—love, sacrifice, regret—the contract is voided.
Here is what you need to know about the lore, the mechanics, and the tragic consequences of signing on the dotted line. succubus covenant
The most compelling narrative aspect of the Succubus Covenant is the potential for reversal. Unlike a deal with a pit fiend (which is usually a one-way ticket to the Hells), a Succubus Covenant often has a hidden clause.
The Succubus Covenant is not a tool for min-maxing. It is a narrative bomb. When you sign it, you aren't just gaining power—you are telling the DM that you are ready for your character to fall from grace, or to crawl their way back out of Hell. You are playing a morally grey character, you
Of course, trying to make a master manipulator feel love is a suicide mission. But it makes for a hell of a story.
Would you sign? Have you ever run a campaign featuring a Succubus Covenant? How did your players break (or embrace) the contract? Let us know in the comments below. The most compelling narrative aspect of the Succubus
For the aging warrior losing their strength, it offers beauty. For the scorned mage, it offers revenge. For the lonely rogue, it offers a lover who will never truly die.