I've been out of D&D for a long time, but getting involved in a new campaign, heavily weighted with undead. I'm playing a Paladin and the DM is allowing us choice of item. Not sure what to get considering the campaign type. He didn't indicate cost limits, and some person already received approval for Holy Composite Longbow+1 and Dwarven waraxe with bane (undead) and keen for examples. Thanks!
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2\$\begingroup\$ Oh, a note about keen, Undead are immune to crits (unless you have a truedeath crystal) so I expect your friend with Keen will be very disappointed. \$\endgroup\$– Brian Ballsun-StantonCommented Oct 30, 2010 at 6:44
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\$\begingroup\$ Also note ghost touch with the ghost strike synergy from the Magic Item Compendium. Allows one to sneak attack and crit undead (not just incorporeal) \$\endgroup\$– LitheOhmCommented Sep 18, 2012 at 4:16
6 Answers
It depends whether you want to be a key damage dealer or not. (And how much $$ your DM is letting you have to equip.)
The Holy Avenger is a good choice that augments defense of the paladin and the entire party, so if you want to be a support/healer/defending type it's great.
If you want to deal damage, undead bane is great and cheap.
Holy actually isn't quite as good specifically against undead (and there are neutral undead, warning!) but if you're also going to be dealing with demons and devils and stuff has wider utility, and it bypasses "good" DR.
At mid to high levels most undead will be incorporeal and you will really, really need ghost touch. It's also nice and cheap. (You definitely want this on armor too)
Disruption is more useful at low levels. A DC 14 Will save is reasonably easy to make and it leaves you with zero damage enhancement. Better if you have lots of attacks (two weapon) or don't have good damage anyway and the chance of instakill is better (like a rogue with no damage bonus but high sneak attack).
So I'd tend to say "undead bane + ghost touch" for damage (+3 equiv), holy (+3 equiv) if your game isn't really going to be all about undead, and holy avenger if you can get away with it and want to be a support type.
If you're allowed the Magic Item Compendium and its glorious, glorious cheese, look at the Crystal of Screening (provides incorporeal touch protection), or Lifekeeping (protects against death effects).
In terms of weapons, there is a Divine Wrath weapon enchant that gives you +1d6 per point of CHA bonus at the cost of a turn undead attempt - your character style might dictate that fewer big punches are better than +2d6 on lots of punches. Ghost Strike probably isn't worth it. Sacred is a suboptimal mix of holy and undead bane, but you can put Sacred Burst atop it if it's your thing.
And truedeath crystals are a cheap way of getting an additional d6 of damage; their price doesn't up the "plusses cost" so if you're dealing with a high plus weapon, it's less expensive than adding more enchants and you can port it to later weapons you find that are "good but aren't ghost touch" for example.
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\$\begingroup\$ I can't believe this was two years ago and I forgot to set an answer! Anyways, I went with the Holy Avenger but the campaign died a week into it. I was sad and haven't tried to get back into it again. Thanks for the great answer though! \$\endgroup\$– WilCommented Nov 21, 2012 at 14:51
If you're in the mood to be a traditionalist (and not at all cheesy), a (blunt weapon) of disruption is always fun.
If you want to be a paladin par-excellance, with a weapon that looks to be cheesy, a Holy Avenger is a good request.
On a more practical note, armor enchanted as per custom magic item rules with death ward is quite literally a life-saver at (Command word activated, unlimited uses per day, 4*7*1800=50400 gold, drop uses per day for a discount). As a paladin, you're at a severe disadvantage already, so a more powerful item is indicated. At the price point of Holy+1 (18000 gp), and browsing through Bunko's Bargain Basement we don't see a lot at that price point. Browsing through the forums, we find this ancient thread on the paladins. It suggests maybe a "Truedeath crystal" for your weapon and ghost ward armor.
Also take a look at the heroes of horror book and Libris Mortis for collections of interesting items. Complete Divine may have some relics of interest as well.
This answer can be more specific if you indicate what kind of build you're going for.
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1\$\begingroup\$ I don't think you got the price right for the armor. Items with unlimited usages are always a problem (compare: weapon, use-activated, True Strike, 2000gp). There are already official versions of something like this: Death Ward armor from MIC (once per day, +1 enhancement) and Soulfire armor from BoED (continuous, +4 enhancement). \$\endgroup\$– user660Commented Oct 30, 2010 at 11:04
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2\$\begingroup\$ Addendum: see also this thread on ENWorld for a discussion about the pricing of such an item with an additional item suggestion from the PGtF (once per day at first exposure, +2 enhancement). \$\endgroup\$– user660Commented Oct 30, 2010 at 11:08
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\$\begingroup\$ Thanks for the references to the enchantments. I recommend putting them in your own comment so you can get points for them :). It's a good answer. I personally don't trust the +X enchantment pricing, especially houseruling them in. It feels far too easy to get wrong. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 30, 2010 at 12:50
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\$\begingroup\$ I would go with the armor with Death Ward personally. A lot of undead are made tougher by their negative energy or energy drain attacks. Becoming immune to those can give you a big advantage in numerous situations. \$\endgroup\$– BBlakeCommented Oct 31, 2010 at 12:06
Here are a few useful items that a paladin could find helpful against undead
Shirt of Wraith Stalking (MiC 216, 6,000 gp) Hide from Undead at will with no save, even for intelligent undead.
Truedeath Crystal (lesser) (MiC 66, 5,000 gp) Gives the weapon the Ghost Touch ability for much less than it would cost to add the ability to a high-powered weapon.
If you can purchase items from the Magic Item Compendium, then Deathstrike Bracers would be a good option, particularly for a rogue or anyone with a keen weapon:
Price: 5,000gp
Activation: Swift (mental)
When activated, deathstrike bracers allow you to use melee weapons to deal extra damage from critical hits and sneak attacks to constructs, elementals, oozes, plants, and undead as if they were not immune to such extra damage.
See also the Undead Bane Weapon spell in the Spell Compendium (Cleric 4, Paladin 3). Duration is 1 hour/level and it can affect one weapon or 50 projectiles.
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\$\begingroup\$ Can you add in what the Deathstrike Bracers do? \$\endgroup\$– yhw42Commented Nov 2, 2010 at 14:58
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\$\begingroup\$ How is anything "particularly for a rogue" relevant to a question about paladins? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 2, 2010 at 15:50
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\$\begingroup\$ It isn't exclusively useful for a rogue, since anyone who uses a melee weapon (including a paladin) could benefit from having such an item. However, it is clearly more useful for a character who has the sneak attack / skirmish / sudden strike class feature. Although it can only be used 3 times/day, it can alleviate some of the frustration of playing that style of character in a campaign where most of the monsters are immune to your most powerful attack. \$\endgroup\$– AzeariCommented Nov 3, 2010 at 6:12
Useful items are wands of healing because having some of 'em not only keeps you and your mates quite safer, but also because healing spells involve positive energy, harmful for undead creatures.
A scarab of protection.1 It's in the SRD.
While not offensive, few other items provide protection from negative energy and death effects. Add in protection from energy drain and you've got a nice item. SR20 isn't terrible. Even if it's only useful against twelve attacks, it's still pretty cool. Maybe you could even up the number of attacks it is useful against by upping the price. Even my epic level ninja/fighter/assassin picked up one of these, and she wasn't even terribly interested in undead.