Most fantasy games treat vampires as a single creature.
One stat block. A handful of abilities. A different name depending on the region.
History tells a different story.
Across the world, cultures described the dead returning in many forms. Some rose from their graves swollen with decay. Some walked among the living, hidden in plain sight. Some fed on blood. Others fed on breath, vitality, or spirit. Each followed different rules. Each carried different weaknesses.
The Crimson Codex: A Global Vampire Taxonomy for 5e transforms these traditions into fully playable content.
This is not a variant list.
It is a system.
Inside this 200+-page, full-color field manual, you will find:
- Dozens of vampire traditions drawn from global folklore
- Unique mechanics for each strain
- Spawn models, bloodline hierarchies, and transformation systems
- Servitors, thralls, and lesser vampiric creatures
- Blood-feeding beasts and parasitic drainers
- A modular vampirism system for introducing the curse into your campaign
Every major entry includes cultural context, behavior patterns, mechanical translation, and a complete 5e stat block, along with variants where appropriate, spawn structures, and environmental impact.
The result is a world where vampires are not interchangeable monsters.
They are regional predators shaped by culture, myth, and environment.
If you want vampires that influence entire regions rather than single encounters, this book gives you the tools to build them.
If you want the full anatomy of vampirism, this is the manual.