Critical Role Wildemount: Most Pre-orders Since D&D Core Rulebooks

It seems that the most popular D&D setting in the 5E era is... Wildemount! Talking about the upcoming Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, WotC's Greg Tito said on a Twitch stream recently that "we're pretty sure that this book has seen the most pre-orders and pre-release excitement since any of the core rulebooks for Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition were released".

It seems that the most popular D&D setting in the 5E era is... Wildemount! Talking about the upcoming Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, WotC's Greg Tito said on a Twitch stream recently that "we're pretty sure that this book has seen the most pre-orders and pre-release excitement since any of the core rulebooks for Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition were released".

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Here's the quote in full:

"...It was number 1, ranked number 1, for all books on Amazon. How many of you out there remember when Amazon was just selling books? Raise your hands. Yeah, that's me. So it's really cool, even though obviously I do a lot more other fun stuff right now, there is a ton out there that are excited for this book, and it isn't even out yet.

"We have little bit of an internal metrics, but we're pretty sure that this book has seen the most pre-orders and pre-release excitement since any of the core rulebooks for Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition were released, and if you've been following along at home, Dungeons & Dragons has been selling like hotcakes since 5th Edition released in 2014."

It sounds like the Critical Role setting is proving more popular (at least right now) than traditional D&D settings like Ravenloft or Eberron, newer ones like Ravnica, or adventures set in the Forgotten Realms.

Explorer's Guide to Wildemount will hit game stores on March 17th.
 

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Zardnaar

Legend
No surprise. Generally I don't care what they put in new stuff. You either like it or you don't but they're not messing anything up.
 
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Parmandur

Book-Friend
So basically gods stolen from an eclectic mix of different settings. Suggests Mercer isn't very interested in fantasy religion. You could justify it though, with the idea that Exandria has no native gods so they are all interlopers from other planes.

They couldn't mention Sarenrae and Torog though, since those are both from Golarion, and must belong to Paizo.

Torog is WotC IP: other than Sarenrae (the Campaign 1 Cleric was written up with the PF Core Rulebook and Mercer just says "yes" to the players using options from the book), the gods are all from the 4E default pantheon, and retain the Dawn War mythology. Mercer is actually quite interested in fleshing that out, though. The Green Ronin book gets into the Dawn War in detail, but uses circumlocutions by way of title ("Dawn-Father" and such) for all the god's names.

Suspiciously, it seems to me in retrospect that went back to using the WotC proper names in game just about when work on this book began.
 

Parmandur

Book-Friend
Well, they're doing the Whitestone arc in the animated series, but I'd buy an Exandria based video game. Maybe the Chroma Conclave arc, searching out artifacts so that you and your party have a chance to defeat the biggest, baddest dragons in the realm.

A prequel would probably be best for a video game, set apart from their in-campaign events (a la Icewind Dale I & II).
 



Rikka66

Adventurer
Like Orcus?

I know Orcus is in both D&D and Pathfinder, but the Pathfinder lore says he's more interested in other worlds. Which just fuels my theory of all D&D and D&D adjacent properties exist in the same multiverse.

Based off the Pathfinder wiki Torag seems to be their version of Moradin. Though Torog tricking the dwarves with an alternate identity would make a decent story.
 

doctorbadwolf

Heretic of The Seventh Circle
While Disney+ isn't embracing the RPG spirit yet, NBC's new streaming service Peacock is launching with an Adventure Zone series.

Plenty of D&D pods are set in Eberron. DragonLance has a popular one as well. Most are homebrew, because that's how the majority of people play D&D.
I didn’t know there was a popular Dragonlance podcast! Happen to know the name?
Wizards is currently working on a Magic the Gathering animated series with Netflix. So they are doing that, just with their stronger brand that has more of an identity as a setting and has fewer rights encumbered with bad TSR licensing decisions.
Makes sense, though I’d love to see an Eberron cartoon.
 


gyor

Legend
Torog is WotC IP: other than Sarenrae (the Campaign 1 Cleric was written up with the PF Core Rulebook and Mercer just says "yes" to the players using options from the book), the gods are all from the 4E default pantheon, and retain the Dawn War mythology. Mercer is actually quite interested in fleshing that out, though. The Green Ronin book gets into the Dawn War in detail, but uses circumlocutions by way of title ("Dawn-Father" and such) for all the god's names.

Suspiciously, it seems to me in retrospect that went back to using the WotC proper names in game just about when work on this book began.

So how do you think this book will handle the Sarenrae issue?
 

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