Sphinx Ring
A small band with a little head of a lion, made from either metal, bone, or wood. By stroking the band while worn, the lion whispers a riddle based on events which its wearers has witnessed, and the riddles can vary widely in difficulty- from simple riddles to questions only previous wearers could logically answer. If the answer is correct, the ring purrs, while if incorrect, it roars. It is mostly used to pass the time during long travels, but nobles have been known to use them in party games.

Fool's Ace
To the untrained eye, this unassuming card is a faded ace of any suit. However, on further inspection, the "A" is actually a small rune which creates weak illusions. By tapping the Fool's Ace against another card, the rune changes that card into another ace- and any card touching the changed card is also changed, turning the entire hand into all aces. The illusion is broken by taking the cards affected by the magic and shuffling them. These cards are used for cheating in games, but there has been the occasion where a Fool's Ace has been implemented where the goal is to find the original card before the entire deck becomes identical and has to be re-shuffled.

Glove of Booping
A childish toy. Upon command, this sheepskin glove flies around and pokes a chosen person's nose or cheek. It then becomes limp and falls onto the ground. More complicated forms of magic allow the glove to act on its own, but those are more complicated and expensive, while these are made by apprentices who are practicing simple animation and sold for pocket change. Perfect for practical jokes! Max range of 30 feet. If no target is given, the glove veers back and pokes the person who sent it away.