Ravneloft: Horrors Within tempts players with an offering of nine Dark Gifts, a category of feat that can be taken by players with their Dungeon Master’s permission, or given out by DMs as a reward (or consequence) during a Ravenloft campaign. Each Dark Gift features a selection of beneficial traits, but also comes with a terrifying downside.
In this article, we’ll explore three of these Dark Gifts and how DMs can use them to draw their players into the horrific landscape of Ravenloft and its Domains of Dread.
Check With Your Players First
Before bringing horror to the table, hold a Session 0 or similar group conversation to establish expectations, including what players do and don’t want to explore and where their hard and soft limits are. This is especially important before bestowing lasting changes on a character such as Dark Gifts.
Gaining Dark Gifts

Dark Gifts are feats born from sinister bargains, eerie visions, and whispered promises from powers best left unnamed. With the DM’s permission, whenever you would gain a feat from the Origin category, you can instead gain a Dark Gift feat. The DM can also bestow a Dark Gift feat during an adventure, reflecting an insidious deal with a Darklord, the Dark Powers, or some other nefarious being.
Aberrant Anatomy

The hero's flesh warps and twists, taking on new and hideous forms that can be both a blessing and a boon. New and hideous powers through sinew, but alongside that power comes a dark will of its own.
Aberrant Anatomy is the perfect Dark Gift to award a player who has ventured too close to the powers of the Far Realm or drawn the inscrutable attention of a Great Old One, perhaps even Cthulhu himself.
If a DM wishes to reveal this feat mysteriously and with suspense, secret notes delivered during a Long Rest would be an excellent approach.
Your players are setting up camp for the night—or what passes for it in the Domains of Dread—and you slip one a note that simply says “As sleep envelopes you, you wearily close your eyes. All three of them….”
The next day the player finds their character has gained the benefits of the feat, but the nagging will remain; what did that note mean? The revelations in flesh only get more horrific from there.
Aberrant Anatomy
Dark Gift Feat (Prerequisite: Ravenloft Campaign)
Exposure to alien horrors like those of the Far Realm has warped your physical form in supernatural ways. You gain the following features.
Breathless. You can hold your breath for 1 hour.
Extrasensory Perception. You have proficiency in the Perception skill, if you lack it. You also gain Expertise in that skill.
In addition, you have Blindsight with a range of 15 feet.
Warping Flesh. Immediately after you make a D20 Test and roll a 1 on the d20, the aberrant influence infecting your form flares, wrenching control of your flesh. Make a Constitution saving throw (DC 13 plus your Proficiency Bonus). On a failed save, you have the Stunned condition until the end of The Aberrant Anatomy Dark your next turn.
Living Shadow

Flickering candles and guttering torches throw the adventurer's shadow long against the wall, but this shadow is longer and darker than it should be, for it writhes with a foul life of its own. While it may serve the character to whom it belongs, its obedience is not assured, and it is less a case of if it will turn and instead when.
Whenever there is light, there is shadow, and with the Living Shadow Dark Gift, it takes on a life of its own. Through this feat you gain the Grasping Shadow and Lengthened Strike traits, granting you a deathly reach that may catch foes off-guard.
However, your animate projection comes with a will of its own and at any given moment it may attempt to dominate yours. When your Living Shadow intervenes, you may find yourself being moved against your will, attacking at random, or even dropping to the ground.
A character who lingers too long in the dark domain of Mordent might find the realm lingers with them in the form of a Living Shadow. This Dark Gift could start not as a presence in the physical world, but a voice that whispers to the character in the twilight moments between light and dark.
It could offer encouragement of deeds both fair and foul, before revealing its tangible presence through the boons of the feat itself. This feat opens up fun opportunities for roleplay, both between DM and player, and for the player on their own as they act out speaking to a shadowy ally only they can hear.
Living Shadow
Dark Gift Feat (Prerequisite: Ravenloft Campaign)
The shadow you cast is animate and ever-present—sometimes it even acts according to its own will. You gain the following features.
Grasping Shadow. You learn the Mage Hand spell and can cast it without spell components. Intelligence, Wisdom, or Charisma is your spellcasting ability for this spell (choose when you select this feat).
Lengthened Strike. When you make a melee attack roll as part of the Attack or Magic action on your turn, you can increase your reach for that attack by 10 feet, as your shadow stretches to aid you. You can use this feature a number of times equal to your Proficiency Bonus, and you regain all expended uses when you finish a Long Rest. The Living Shadow Dark Gift gives one’s shadow an appearance and will of its own.
Ominous Will. Immediately after you make a D20 Test and roll a 1 on the d20, your shadow attempts to exert its will. Make a Wisdom saving throw (DC 13 plus your Proficiency Bonus). On a failed save, you have the Incapacitated condition until the start of your next turn, at which point you must roll on the Shadow’s Will table to determine what you do during that turn.
Touch of Death

A foul air hangs about the hero, an aura of the macabre and malign, for they have passed too close to the veil between life and death and have brought back a grim entity with them. Now wherever they walk, death walks alongside them, tugging them back towards the realm beyond but satiating itself on the heroes foes in the meanwhile.
Death may be common within the Mists of Ravenloft, but it’s not always permanent, and with the help of a cleric—or some other power—an adventurer may return from beyond the veil. However, sometimes the hero's soul isn’t the only thing that comes back, and a grim hitchhiker may follow them.
With the Touch of Death Dark Gift, the bearer is imbued with an empowered version of the Chill Touch spell. However, those that move closer to the veil than most will find it easier to be pulled through—this feat comes with a penalty to your Death Saving Throws.
This feat could be a grim reminder for any character that’s been resurrected within the Dark Domains of Ravenloft, the mark of the reaper still hanging about them since their raising.
Touch of Death
Dark Gift Feat (Prerequisite: Ravenloft Campaign)
Deathly power resides within you, bursting out at the slightest provocation. You gain the following features.
Death Touch. You learn the Chill Touch spell and can cast it without spell components. Necrotic damage you deal with this spell ignores Resistance. Intelligence, Wisdom, or Charisma is your spellcasting ability for this spell (choose when you select this feat).
Pull of the Grave. You have Disadvantage on Death Saving Throws.
Some Gifts Cannot Be Returned
With Dark Gifts at your disposal as a DM, or as a tempting option for players to choose of their own free will, adventuring within Ravenloft becomes even more terrifying. With these nine options, you and your players are bound to find something that both delights and disturbs within the pages of Ravenloft: Horrors Within.
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Posted Jun 16, 2026If we're going full DM bestowing feats, I'm just adding a swim speed to my players' Aberrant Anatomy.
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Posted Jun 16, 2026I am all for more features to make PCs unique. Keep it up.
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Posted Jun 16, 2026I'm creating straight up monsters between these and manually implementing the Grim Hollow Transformations, alongside Crooked Moon Dark Bargains. Horror fans on here are eating good
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Posted Jun 17, 2026This book is an embarrassment to DnD. It is a quarter of the thought that was put into both Grim Hollow (not perfect) and Crooked Moon (near perfect). Step it up Wizards ... you've already lost soooo much of your audience.
We need:
- player options (more, better, interesting).
- DM tools: many, many more rules options and interesting stats/ideas for encounters and special characteristics/effects (e.g. stress/horror).
- Spells: for god's sake in every book please.
- Same goes for magic items.
- FULL short adventures. Maps good, art good, ideas ... mostly good, details? Lacking.
- Less general advice and theory. This is a game: give us examples we can use.
Many thanks.
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Posted Jun 17, 2026to play devil's advocate they have limited page counts and budget for any given book or project, where as 3rd party groups tend to be able to crowd fund and otherwise get people to contribute to the funds available to make the book a reality with things like kickstarter, so while i do agree, for all we know they could be doing the best they can with the limits imposed on them by the superiors in the company, remember they are still a business and have to function as such else people will risk losing their jobs
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Posted Jun 17, 2026I concur and would like to add an additional point. As the sole DM for my very large group of players, I Homebrew large amounts of material, which is my point to wit. Take advantage of the opportunity to Homebrew. Yes, it can take some time to get right, just like content publishers must do, but at the same time, you can get almost anything you want! And if time is limited, the library of Homebrew content is immense with many very good options. Personally, I think that is a large part of being a successful DM.
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Posted Jun 17, 2026It's a setting book, not a compilation like Staircase or Yawning Portal. if you want full prewritten adventures, curse of strahd is right there.
Iirc, both grim hollow and crooked moon were crowd funded, weren't they? Crooked moon was, definitely, cuz one of my players backed the campaign. Meaning they were able to make it as detailed as they did because they reached the funding/profit goal needed to make the effort required worthwhile. While I do agree that we should get more player content than just one subclass per class and a handful of feats, I don't think we need a ton of new spells for a horror campaign; we've already got stuff like raise dead, chill touch, blight, Evard's Black Tentacles, etc. I guess having official updates to 5.5 for some of the supplemental materials from 5e would be nice, but it's not strictly necessary; there's a decade of 5e content that's compatible with 5.5, we don't need ever expanding material.
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Posted Jun 20, 2026That’s a solid perspective in general, it does a good job explaining why the third party content hits better than the official stuff lately.
But since this book is 75% recycled content from Van Richten’s Guide To Ravenloft we had higher expectations for the remaining 25%. These dark power feats are a cool touch
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Posted Jun 20, 2026Are there more in the book? I like making a lvl 4 campaign in which every player has a diferent dark gift tied to the backstory, with the chacters discovering their friends secret powers. Worthy for Ravenloft.
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Posted Jun 20, 2026And each having a Ravenloft subclass. It will be amazing for my edgy maniac player.
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Posted Jun 21, 2026There’s 7 Subclasses in this book, 2 From Van Ritchens, 5 Other Or New. There’s also 6 more dark gifts so luckily there’s enough hopefully. 7 subclasses and 9 dark gifts means even with 1 dark gift per player 2 left.
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Posted Jun 22, 2026once you see the typo you won't unsee it.
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Posted Jun 30, 2026On a failed save, you have the Stunned condition until the end of The Aberrant Anatomy Dark your next turn.
Come on guys.