D&D 5E WotC Confirms Horror-themed Icewind Dale: Rime of the Frostmaiden

During WotC's Comic Relief charity-supporting livestream this evening, presenters Anna Prosser and Mica Burton confirmed that the September D&D adventure is, indeed, Icewind Dale: Rime of the Frostmaiden. The adventure has a regular and limited edition cover. The presenters say this is the first time anybody has heard the title(?), and that this was the first time they'd seen the cover...
During WotC's Comic Relief charity-supporting livestream this evening, presenters Anna Prosser and Mica Burton confirmed that the September D&D adventure is, indeed, Icewind Dale: Rime of the Frostmaiden.

The adventure has a regular and limited edition cover.

The presenters say this is the first time anybody has heard the title(?), and that this was the first time they'd seen the cover.

Chris Perkins says its a horror adventure, with these of isolation and secrecy. Levels 1-12.

SOME SECRETS ARE WORTH DYING FOR
Feel the cold touch of death in this adventure for the world’s greatest roleplaying game.

In Icewind Dale, adventure is a dish best served cold.

Beneath the unyielding night sky, you stand before a towering glacier and recite an ancient rhyme, causing a crack to form in the great wall of ice. Beyond this yawning fissure, the Caves of Hunger await. And past this icy dungeon is a secret so old and terrifying that few dare speak of it. The mad wizards of the Arcane Brotherhood long to possess that which the god of winter’s wrath has so coldly preserved—as do you! What fantastic secrets and treasures are entombed in the sunless heart of the glacier, and what will their discovery mean for the denizens of Icewind Dale? Can you save Ten-Towns from the Frostmaiden’s everlasting night?

Icewind Dale: Rime of the Frostmaiden is a tale of dark terror that revisits the forlorn, flickering candlelights of civilization known as Ten-Towns and sheds light on the many bone-chilling locations that surround these frontier settlements.


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The deity antagonist, Auril, is a god who Perkins says is a lot like Hella from the Thor: Ragnarok movie. In this book, the Frostmaiden has multiple stat blocks depending on the form she takes. The book has over 50 stat blocks.

The book has lots of quests, each of which is a mini adventure. Or play through them all as an epic horror story emerges. A campaign, or slice it up.

The environment itself is a villain -- blizzards, avalanches, survival, limited food, fishing for Knucklehead Trout.

There's a number of sports and games for the characters to play. A "Goliath sport" for example.

320 pages, poster map, for levels 1-12.

For the 10 minutes or so before the stream launched, the "Coming Soon' page featured the cover art (which was leaked by D&D Beyond last week).

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Kurotowa

Legend
In the D&D Beyond videos, Chris Perkins is coy about the overall plot, except to say it's "modern horror". However, he references John Carpenter's The Thing numerous times.

I'm going to speculate that there's an illithid nautiloid buried under a glacier and intellect devourers are infiltrating and taking over the Ten Towns.

An interesting concept, but it doesn't fit the "Rime of the Frostmaiden" title at all. I'll lay my own prediction on there being some sort of wendigo curse that's turning people into secret cannibal monsters and slowly spreading. That'd fit with Auril's portfolio and the repeated references to The Thing.
 




Coroc

Hero
Three Kobolds in a Trenchcoat stat block:

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"On a failed DC5 investigation check you are totally convinced that its a perfect human being, apart from the odd movement beyond his clothing, the strange facial features, odd claw like feet and wait ... is this a tail ? nah I think I just got confused by the blur of the falling snow... "

Haha those are so ROFL
 


I'm actually wondering if they'll try to go into survival horror territory in this one. Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the most obvious influence, but with the ship in the ice there's a lot of The Terror there as well, and they're both about trying to avoid dying long and slow in the cold...
 

Weiley31

Legend
"On a failed DC5 investigation check you are totally convinced that its a perfect human being, apart from the odd movement beyond his clothing, the strange facial features, odd claw like feet and wait ... is this a tail ? nah I think I just got confused by the blur of the falling snow... "

Haha those are so ROFL
You could totally play your Kobold PC as Kobolds in a Trenchcoat. Just gotta reflavor it as medium. Or even make a Kobold in a Trenchcoat Sidekick.
 

From the interactive map:
Angajuk
Swimming in the frigid waters of the Sea of Moving Ice is Angajuk, an awakened sperm whale with a ship strapped on its back. Although most sperm whales live to be seventy years old, Angajuk has plied these waters for two hundred years. Throughout its life, the whale has faced its share of trouble, including near-fatal encounters with Auril’s roc, which left scars along the whale’s dorsal fins. Local explorers agree that a negotiation with Angajuk is the safest way to explore the Sea of Moving Ice.

- If this is not the coolest thing you ever heard in your life, I dont know what to say! Hope they give us ship stats for Ship-Strapped-to-a-Whale's-Back in the book!
Is there a scientist determined to hunt it down and prove it's actually a submarine?
 

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