D&D 5E New Eberron Book Details From WotC

WotC’s Jeremy Crawford appeared on Twitch last night with Bart Carroll, discussing the upcoming D&D setting book Eberron: Rising from the Last War. Lots of details within!

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- Overview of Eberron, emphasized potentials for adventure and post-WWI pulp style of setting.

- Dragonmarked Houses as fantasy Corporations, playable Dragonmarked characters as race rules in the book

- Rules and stories for playing, Warforged, Changlings, Kalsthar, Shifters, Goblins, Hobgoblins, Bugbears, Orcs. Playable Orc is different fro mthe Volo's Guide rules to reflect the different story (no intelligence malus, few other tweaks, still usable for other worlds, these are PC Orcs as opposed to Monster Manual Orcs like Volo's).

- Full rules for the Artificer, including a new feature in this book for making Common and Uncommon magic items

- Aberrant Dragonmark Feats are in the book

- Group patron rules for organizations the late 19th-early 20th century style: newspapers, criminal syndicates, universities, spy rings: fourth choice after Race-Class-Background that the party makes together, has new fluff background features to give characters and adventure hooks

- Possibility of the party becoming their own patron, example being creating your own Crime Syndicate

- All of the above is Chapter 1 material

- Chapter 2 is a Gazeeter of Korvaire and the world: delves into great nations, the religions, touches on otehr continents

- Chapter 3 is a zoom in on Sharn, a microcosm of the setting, great place for Noir intrigue

- Chapter 4 is a 100 page adventure creation toolkit comparable to Guildmaster's Guide to Ravnica: wealth of adventure building tables, maps, organization information, first level adventure set in Sharn. Reveals brand new information about the Mournland, for instance, during the war they created not just regular Warforged and Warforged Titans but also Warforged Colossi the size of skyscrapers: one of the maps is of a fallen Warfored Colossi as a dungeon @doctorbadwolf

- Section in "massive" chapter for creating adventures about Eberron's cosmology, and how it relates to Great Wheel multiverse, left to DM to decide how sealed off Eberron is by the Progenitor Dragons

- There are extended magical item economy rules in chapter 5, Common magical items are plentiful: buying, selling, crafting rules and price lists.

- Eberron specific monsters and NPCs in the sixth and final chapter, covering things like Daelkyr, Living Spells (3 different Living Spells in the book including Living Cloud Kill, and a template for making more) and various specific NPCs

 
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TwoSix

Dirty, realism-hating munchkin powergamer
It's weird, this Ravnica/Eberron format is reminding me a lot of some of the 3.5 Complete books and "Races of" books, with its mix of player crunch, monster crunch, and location fluff. Except instead of creating some random new fluff no one cares about, they're doing deep dives into popular IP. I have to say, it's grown on me as a publishing model.
 


Parmandur

Book-Friend
It's weird, this Ravnica/Eberron format is reminding me a lot of some of the 3.5 Complete books and "Races of" books, with its mix of player crunch, monster crunch, and location fluff. Except instead of creating some random new fluff no one cares about, they're doing deep dives into popular IP. I have to say, it's grown on me as a publishing model.

If you think about it, it really boils down to Chapter 1 being a PHB module, Chapters 2-5 being DMG modules, and Chapter 6 being a MM module. Add-ons to Core, as desired.
 


Ash Mantle

Adventurer
Crawford was at pains to emphasize how useful the book could be for non-Eberron DMs, and it seems plausible. The bestiary sounds like it will be substantial and meaty.
The bestiary at the back of the Ravnica book was truly a gem in the gemstone lode that was GGtR. If the upcoming Eberron could include things like living spells, beings like the daelkyr, the quori, Vol, the Lord of Blades, the various monarchs of the Five Nations, named NPCs of the Dragonmarked Houses, named NPCs of the Undying Court, things from the Mournlands, and others, that would be amazeballs.
 

Parmandur

Book-Friend
The bestiary at the back of the Ravnica book was truly a gem in the gemstone lode that was GGtR. If the upcoming Eberron could include things like living spells, beings like the daelkyr, the quori, Vol, the Lord of Blades, the various monarchs of the Five Nations, named NPCs of the Dragonmarked Houses, named NPCs of the Undying Court, things from the Mournlands, and others, that would be amazeballs.

Well, Daelkyr and Living Spells confirmed today!
 

TwoSix

Dirty, realism-hating munchkin powergamer
The bestiary at the back of the Ravnica book was truly a gem in the gemstone lode that was GGtR. If the upcoming Eberron could include things like living spells, beings like the daelkyr, the quori, Vol, the Lord of Blades, the various monarchs of the Five Nations, named NPCs of the Dragonmarked Houses, named NPCs of the Undying Court, things from the Mournlands, and others, that would be amazeballs.
I haven't really sent it discussed much, but I feel like monster design has improved tremendously since the MM. Both MToF and GGtR had some really good, deep monsters with interesting abilities.
 

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