Plus spelljamming. Let's keep our eyes on the prize here gentlefolk. It all about sailing the Astral Seas and space pirate shenanigans.Yeah. But that content could be covered in a Manual of the Planes.
Plus spelljamming. Let's keep our eyes on the prize here gentlefolk. It all about sailing the Astral Seas and space pirate shenanigans.Yeah. But that content could be covered in a Manual of the Planes.
Yeah. But that content could be covered in a Manual of the Planes.
/snip
- Are those setting materials above easily integrated in Roll20 with existing officially published D&D materials?
- /snip
...
Even AD&D 1e only really had three settings: Greyhawk, Dragonlance, and the Realms.
No it didn't. Ravenloft the setting came about in 2nd. The Hickman module is not the setting.Well... and Ravenloft
No it didn't. Ravenloft the setting came about in 2nd. The Hickman module is not the setting.
It is correct. The House on Griffin Hill (1986) was published a year before 2nd edition (1987) and several years before the campaign setting (1990).But there are more modules which do not have the 2nd ed logo, I am quite sure about that?
SAGA definitely had the best Bestiary of all time, though. And the simple stats meant the era was golden for fluff.
Poor old Griffin Hill was the red-headed stepchild of Ravenloft. Despite being the foundation for a lot of core aspects of the setting (the domain of Mordent, the Apparatus, Azalin, the Timothy and Renier families), its weird plot and the whole "blond mortal Strahd and his evil vampire twin" led to it being unmentioned most of the time. The original module, on the other hand, has been remade multiple times: House of Strahd (2E the one that is in canon with the Ravenloft settings), Expedition to Castle Ravenloft (3E), and Curse of Strahd (5E). The latter two are reimaginings that have little to do with the setting.It is correct. The House on Griffin Hill (1986) was published a year before 2nd edition (1987) and several years before the campaign setting (1990).