Built for dense choices
Keep encounter outcomes, conditions, clues, and downtime consequences connected to the campaign record.
Scry for Pathfinder 2e
Keep Pathfinder 2e sessions searchable across actions, ancestries, archetypes, factions, clues, and tactical consequences.
Why Scry
Keep encounter outcomes, conditions, clues, and downtime consequences connected to the campaign record.
Track ancestry and archetype details as campaign objects, not side notes that disappear after level-up.
Places, factions, quests, and sessions remain searchable as published or homebrew arcs become more complex.
Public wiki demo
System notes
Pathfinder 2e campaigns reward precision. The three-action economy makes choices visible, encounter math matters, conditions stack, and character options often carry story weight. A campaign note system for PF2e should not flatten all of that into generic fantasy prose. Scry gives Game Masters a connected wiki where tactical outcomes, ancestry details, archetype hooks, factions, locations, and session consequences can sit beside the story they shaped.
PF2e tables often run with a delightful density of rules and character identity. An ancestry feat might explain why a clue resonates. A dedication might create a contact in a guild. A hazard might matter three sessions later because the party learned the wrong lesson from it. Scry helps preserve that density without requiring the GM to maintain a spreadsheet for every small connection. Entities become pages, sessions become context, and discoveries can link back to the characters and places that made them matter.
The Pathfinder 2e pack starts with the familiar fantasy structure of people, players, places, items, quests, factions, events, lore, and sessions, then adds ancestry and archetype as first-class wiki categories. That means a Duskwalker thread, a Chronoskimmer dedication, or a house-rule archetype can be tracked with the same care as an NPC patron or a dangerous ruin. You can keep mechanical notes concise while preserving the campaign meaning around them.
Scry is not trying to be a rules engine. It is the memory layer around the table. When your players ask which faction hired the automaton theologians, what the brass sigil meant, or whether the haunted observatory was tied to the planar lock, Scry gives you a place to find the answer. It is especially helpful for Adventure Paths, homebrew sandboxes, and long tactical campaigns where consequences branch across many sessions.
Public campaign sharing also fits PF2e well because players often benefit from a clean record of known facts. You can publish the revealed chronicle, recent session summaries, known entities, and timeline context without exposing GM-only notes. That lets players review what their characters know before choosing feats, planning downtime, negotiating with factions, or preparing for the next severe encounter.
The best Pathfinder 2e campaigns make rules and story feel like one machine. Scry supports that by keeping precise notes attached to human context: who made the bargain, where the hazard appeared, which faction gained leverage, and why the archetype choice suddenly matters. It gives the GM a durable memory for complex play without asking the table to slow down.
Record what changed after each encounter, negotiation, downtime scene, or exploration turn.
Give character-defining choices their own place in the wiki so mechanical identity can carry story context.
Find the NPC, hazard, ritual, faction, or clue you need without combing through old session documents.
Share known campaign facts while protecting hidden GM material and future reveals.
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
No. Scry is not a character builder or encounter calculator. It is a session note, summary, and campaign wiki system for PF2e tables.
PF2e character options often create setting hooks, contacts, obligations, and lore. Scry lets those details become part of the campaign wiki.
Yes. Scry works well for Adventure Paths because it helps track named NPCs, places, factions, clues, and consequences across long arcs.
Yes. You can share the public campaign chronicle so players can review known facts before sessions.
Start your free trial and give the campaign a wiki that can keep up with the table.