NPCs stay findable
Recurring allies, villains, merchants, rivals, and patrons become durable wiki pages instead of scattered bullet points.
Scry for Dungeons & Dragons 5e
Turn D&D 5e session notes into a campaign wiki that remembers NPCs, quests, factions, magic items, and player choices.
Why Scry
Recurring allies, villains, merchants, rivals, and patrons become durable wiki pages instead of scattered bullet points.
Open hooks, rewards, complications, and failed promises stay connected to sessions, factions, and locations.
Items, spell clues, rituals, curses, and strange lore can live beside the sessions where players discovered them.
Public wiki demo
System notes
Dungeons & Dragons 5e campaigns accumulate detail quickly. A single night can introduce three suspicious nobles, a tavern rumor, a spell scroll, a hidden faction symbol, two unfinished quests, and a combat encounter whose aftermath matters more than the initiative order. Scry is built for that pace. It turns session audio and DM notes into connected campaign memory, then keeps that memory organized as your table moves from town intrigue to dungeon crawl to planar consequence.
For Dungeon Masters, the hard part is rarely imagination. The hard part is continuity. Players remember the innkeeper you improvised six weeks ago. They ask whether the cultist had the same tattoo as the smuggler. They want to know if the wizard copied that spell before the tower burned. Scry keeps NPCs, locations, factions, items, quests, lore, events, players, and sessions as linked wiki entities, so the details that make a campaign feel alive do not vanish between games.
A D&D 5e table also needs notes that respect mechanics without turning every page into a stat block. Scry can track quest state, magic item context, party discoveries, spell-related clues, faction clocks, and combat aftermath. Your campaign wiki can keep the Black Lantern as an item, the Lantern Road Guild as a faction, and the Copper Tankard as a place, while session summaries preserve the choices that changed all three. The result is useful during prep and readable after the session ends.
Public sharing gives your players a clean view of what their characters know. You can publish a campaign chronicle, link to recent sessions, and expose revealed details without dumping private DM notes. That matters in D&D because secrets are fuel: the dragon behind the mine collapse, the patron with a false name, the prophecy that means something different after level seven. Scry helps you separate player-facing memory from the private material you still need behind the screen.
The D&D 5e pack starts with entity types that match common campaign structures: people, players, places, items, quests, factions, events, lore, and sessions. It is flexible enough for homebrew worlds, published adventures, West Marches tables, and long-running character arcs. You can begin with the default structure, then customize entity types as your campaign develops its own vocabulary.
Scry is most useful when the campaign has become too textured for a single notes document. If your party is juggling rival guilds, open quests, spell consequences, recurring villains, and player backstories, the wiki gives every detail a home. Instead of searching old documents for "that dwarf from the bridge fight," you can open the entity, see the connected sessions, and prep the next reveal with confidence.
Capture the practical beats after every game: decisions, discoveries, combat fallout, new hooks, and unresolved questions.
Keep factions, rivals, secret patrons, and long-running villains tied to the places and quests they influence.
Give artifacts, scrolls, keys, relics, and strange evidence their own pages so their history does not get lost.
Connect sessions and events into a campaign record your table can revisit between arcs.
Pricing
$0/mo
Start a campaign, test summaries, and explore the wiki flow.
$9/mo
For active tables that want dependable session memory.
$24/mo
For heavier campaigns, commercial tools, and advanced workflows.
FAQ
Yes. The D&D 5e pack includes people, places, items, quests, factions, events, lore, players, and sessions as separate entity types.
No. Scry is for session intelligence, campaign notes, and wiki memory. It complements tools like D&D Beyond, Foundry, Roll20, or paper sheets.
Yes. Public sharing lets you publish a player-facing chronicle while keeping private DM notes out of the shared view.
Yes. The default structure works for homebrew and modules, and you can customize entity types as your campaign needs become clearer.
Start your free trial and give the campaign a wiki that can keep up with the table.