D&D 5E Where is the content?

The Big BZ

Explorer
My group is about to finish Descent into Avernus, we have played every hard back released so far, the Extra Life stuff, Goodman Games Keep on the Borderlands reprint and some of our number have played all of the Adventurers League content released so far so what's next? We have run out of content!

I am a True Believer Kool Aid Drinker and own every 5th edition book released so far in at least two formats (Hard copy, Beyond and Special Eds) and I like the slow release schedule so this is not the rant of a naysayer but I think the release schedule this year is out of kilter. The two new setting books are fine but what we really need is adventures!

We play once a fortnight for 6/7 hours and I guess we are pretty quick but surely not unreasonably so. We convert old adventures (I am running Night Below next) and we liberally use 3rd party stuff but finding decent 3rd party APs is tricky and converting can be laborious. We don't really homebrew because we find it can vary in quality to put it mildly and we are also full adults with jobs and commitments and stuff, we want to pick up a book, do standard prep and run it.

TL:DR We need more Adventures!
 

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Tyler Do'Urden

Soap Maker
Kobold Press has over 200 mostly shorter adventures for 5E available; lots of anthologies (Lairs, Prepared, Towers), the Warlock Lairs series (46 modules and counting), and several longer modules (with a lvl 1-13 epic coming out later this year, as well as more Warlock mods and at least two more anthologies of all new adventure content).

Broadsword is a great 5e resource as well - check that out (and all of DMDave's stuff).

If you're up to converting - well, there are 20+ core Pathfinder adventure paths alone, the 3 Dungeon Magazine adventure paths from 3e, and lots of interesting and convertible Dungeon Crawl Classics (including the 3e Dungeon Crawl Classics) modules and Lamentations of the Flame Princess modules (if you're into the weird - which I am). Also check out some of the OSR review blogs for other suggestions.

There's enough there to keep you going for a loooong time, and that's without hitting the slush pile...
 


jayoungr

Legend
Supporter
To add to what others have said:

Don't forget that WotC also has a season of AL modules for every hardback, too. I ran the Ravenloft season as a campaign last year (need to get back to my writeups on those, but shameless plug, I'm working on a thread about it here).

Or you could check out Odyssey of the Dragonlords, which is amazing (I want to run it so much!!).

 



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