D&D To Introduce Loot Boxes

Following on from the massive popularity and success of Loot Boxes in MMO video games such as Star Wars: Battlefront, WotC has announced that they will be coming to D&D! Loot Boxes, which are priced randomly, will be available from your local game store. Inside, customers will find a randomised selection of items, including inspiration dice, bonus levels, and automatic free completion of the current adventure.

Following on from the massive popularity and success of Loot Boxes in MMO video games such as Star Wars: Battlefront, WotC has announced that they will be coming to D&D! Loot Boxes, which are priced randomly, will be available from your local game store. Inside, customers will find a randomised selection of items, including inspiration dice, bonus levels, and automatic free completion of the current adventure.

dnd_loot_box.jpg




Amongst the bonus items you will find in a D&D Loot Box is a special Critical Hit Token. WotC lead developer Mark Morles said “We’ve done a lot of study on this. We discovered that the two things players love most of all about D&D are collecting things and critical hits. So we’re combining the concept and allowing them to collect critical hits for a fair price”.

WotC’s Jeremiah Crowford has been answering “sage advice” rules questions on social media and in a semi-regular column for years now. “I’ve always felt we don’t do enough”, Crowford observed. “As a modern role playing games company, we should be even more accessible than we currently are. To that end, in a number of uncommon Loot Boxes, the cellphone numbers of Mark Morles, Christine Firkins, and myself. You will be able to call any of us at any time, day or night, with your rules questions.”

I managed to get hold of a partial list of items:

  • Rare Miniatures. Included are the Nuclear Flumph, Intangible Weasel, Giant Giant, and Polka Dragon.
  • Super Advantage Dice. These come in d4s, d6s, d8s, d10s, d12s, d20s, and d100s, and can be used in combat to add to attack rolls. Seasonal colour schemes will ensure that players can only use their super advantage dice during the season for which they were produced.
  • Critical Hit Tokens. Play these tokens during play to automatically turn a hit into a critical hit.
  • D&D Designer Cellphone Number. Use these numbers to ask for rules clarifications day or night.
  • DM Overrides. These special items enable you to override a DM's decision.
  • Level Up. Your character instantly gains a level.
  • Skip Adventure. Using this item enables you to immediately skip to the end of the current adventure.
  • Edition Change. Morles explained this one -- "We recognise that there are many fans of older and future editions of D&D, so we are offering those people the ability to switch the edition of the game for a session. As we all know, it's illegal to play a previous edition of D&D, but these special licenses provide an exception to the usual rules."
  • New PC Classes & Races. Including the Chef, the Clown, the Pacifist, and the Snowman (the latter only available for the Summer season).
You can expect to see four Loot Box seasons per year, and you will need to use your rewards in the correct season.
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I'd go for the Edition Change token. There is actually a rule for this: according to the DRAGON magazine article "Up, Away, and Beyond", written by then-D&D brand manager Bruce Heard, a Greater God can, at DM's discretion, invoke a Realty Shift between editions. All of the characters are translated into a different edition (e.g. a 2E Bard becomes a BECMI D&D Thief who likes to sing), and the cosmology is switched to that edition (e.g. 2E Great Wheel to BECMI D&D Five Spheres). The various rules editions exist as distinct "game universes" - each edition is a parallel Multiverse (OD&D Multiverse, BECMI Multiverse, 1E Multiverse, 2E Multiverse, etc.). But only the gods know of these parallel "rules existences".

Seriously!

I'd like to play a Snowman Chef/Clown/Pacifist.
 

Kobold Boots

Banned
Banned
Because an April Fool's post isn't complete without at least one misunderstanding.

I don't know what these guys at WoTC are thinking.. it's not like they haven't ruined the game for countless people over the years just by tinkering with people's favorite rules. Now that people have these things the game will be changed forever.. I'm not buying any more stuff <ragequit>.

Damn them!
KB
 

Juomari Veren

Adventurer
Which would be funnier if D&D wasn't continually being offered on Loot Crate:
https://www.lootcrate.com/crates/dx

It's there this month with a teased rare D&D hoodie. They've done cool stuff in the past like a demogorgon figure.

That demogorgon was about right for its price point - it's as big as the case incentive minis they've been making for the WizKids figures and the crate it came in cost about $50, which is around the resale value of those large minis right now.

I just really didn't want to have to buy, build, and paint the GF9 one personally. And I don't regret another big hunk of molded plastic to stand among my special minis (especially since I already have the Orcus one from 2009, so they I can put them in a nice action pose fighting each other).
 




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