If cast the spell using the scroll, you do not need any kind of components. But, as the spell scroll description says, the spell has to be in your class spell list.
If cast the spell using the scroll, you do not need any kind of components. But, as the spell scroll description says, the spell has to be in your class spell list.
It doesn't change the answer to Sans' question, but the description for spell scrolls on D&D Beyond is slightly incorrect; the SRD and DMG both say:
If the spell is on your class’s spell list, you can read the scroll and cast its spell without providing any material components.
So you'd still have to provide verbal and somatic components. This is an exception to the rules; as stated in Activating an Item, you normally don't have to provide any components when casting a spell from a magic item.
To answer your other question, yes, the material components are normally provided when the magic item is created. DMG p.129:
If a spell will be produced by the item being created, the creator must expend one spell slot of the spell's level for each day of the creation process. The spell's material components must also be at hand throughout the process. If the spell normally consumes those components, they are consumed by the creation process. If the item will be able to produce the spell only once, as with a spell scroll, the components are consumed only once by the process. Otherwise, the components are consumed once each day of the item's creation.
I am wondering about a Spell Scroll of Augury.
Is the material component still needed, or was it consumed when the scroll was created?
If cast the spell using the scroll, you do not need any kind of components. But, as the spell scroll description says, the spell has to be in your class spell list.
The Forum Infestation (TM)
Thank you InquisitiveCoder , I missed the errata.