D&D 5E [Updated with cover!] The D&D Book Is.... Van Richten's Guide to Ravenloft!

Yesterday's hints that a new D&D book would be announced today have born fruit -- we now have a product description and a title! It's a Ravenloft setting book, with tools and new rules for horror-themed games, and new horror-themed character options. I'll update this post with a product image as soon as one is revealed -- the official announcement allegedly comes today!

CF44D3FC-AF00-4860-A655-B64EE5F77949.png



Here’s some info on Dr. Rudolph Van Richten! He's a vampire hunter (he appeared in Curse of Strahd, and he's been around in the Ravenloft setting for decades) and is basically Van Helsing to Strahd's Dracula. His name appears on a whole pile of 2nd Edition D&D sourcebooks, all titled "Van Richten's Guide to.... Vampires/Ghosts/Werebeasts, etc."

The Ravenloft setting, of course, features a bunch of 'domains' other than Barovia itself, each ruled by its own Dark Lord. Strahd rules Barovia, but even other signature D&D villains like Lord Soth and Vecna have been placed in Ravenloft ruling dread domains of their own, along with an assortment of other domain rulers.

Screen Shot 2021-02-23 at 11.07.39 AM.png

The Mist Beckons


2.png

1.jpeg

The image below is not of the upcoming book, but of one of the many D&D 2nd Edition Van Richten's Guides.

Screen Shot 2021-02-23 at 11.19.04 AM.png
 
Last edited:

log in or register to remove this ad


log in or register to remove this ad



Reynard

Legend
I hope this signals that 5E is moving into a new development phase that allows WotC to be more experimental and creative and away from being deeply enmeshed in traditional gaming fantasy tropes. yes, I know Ravenloft is a legacy setting so it is not new and and still draws on nostalgia, but the needs of a successful gothic dark fantasy are much different than those of heroic fantasy so, presumably, there will be tools to play D&D differently.

Or, it will just be a Halloween Town coat of paint on top of the usual stuff and won't make any real difference. Who knows?
 


NotQuiteANoble

Explorer
We don't have a cover image yet, but yesterday's hints that a new D&D book would be announced today have born fruit -- we now have a product description and a title! It's a Ravenloft setting book, with tools and new rules for horror-themed games, and new horror-themed character options. I'll update this post with a product image as soon as one is revealed -- the official announcement allegedly comes today!

While we await a cover, here's some info on Dr. Rudolph Van Richten! He's a vampire hunter (he appeared in Curse of Strahd, and he's been around in the Ravenloft setting for decades) and is basically Van Helsing to Strahd's Dracula. His name appears on a whole pile of 2nd Edition D&D sourcebooks, all titled "Van Richten's Guide to.... Vampires/Ghosts/Werebeasts, etc."

The Ravenloft setting, of course, features a bunch of 'domains' other than Barovia itself, each ruled by its own Dark Lord. Strahd rules Barovia, but even other signature D&D villains like Lord Soth and Vecna have been placed in Ravenloft ruling dread domains of their own, along with an assortment of other domain rulers.

View attachment 133172
The Mist Beckons


View attachment 133170
View attachment 133171
The image below is not of the upcoming book, but of one of the many D&D 2nd Edition Van Richten's Guides.

View attachment 133173
I'm personally more excited for the lineages. Was planning a Hexblood Druid, and it seems to be like Vampires, Hags and Undead Lineages refer to Dhampir, Hexblood and Revived. I'll definitely take it.
 


embee

Lawyer by day. Rules lawyer by night.
The opposite. Dracula was published in 1897. Van Richten was created for D&D about a hundred years later, in the 1980s.
Unless....

Dracula was written in the future and then Bram Stoker (or someone acting on his behalf) time-traveled back to the 19th Century and published Dracula then.

It's like how the Beatles' songs won't be written for another several hundred years but then Sir George Martin will travel via a rift in the spacetime continuum back to the 1960's to record them.
 

ART!

Deluxe Unhuman
What's interesting is that the presumption we have, rightly, is that this is a setting book. However, the naming convention is one of the toolbox books we have been getting for 5th.

I'm personally more excited for the lineages. Was planning a Hexblood Druid, and it seems to be like Vampires, Hags and Undead Lineages refer to Dhampir, Hexblood and Revived. I'll definitely take it.
I'll have to wait until they release a table of contents with page numbers, so I can see how much of each subject is in the book, but I am surprisingly interested in this. I was gifted the PHB and DMG about 5 years ago, and have only bought some digital content from WOTC since then - mostly player options from various releases. But if this has a decent amount of new character options and a lot of "how to do different kinds of horror in 5E", I might have to buy the whole thing!
 

Oofta

Legend
Unless....

Dracula was written in the future and then Bram Stoker (or someone acting on his behalf) time-traveled back to the 19th Century and published Dracula then.

It's like how the Beatles' songs won't be written for another several hundred years but then Sir George Martin will travel via a rift in the spacetime continuum back to the 1960's to record them.

Nah, Jules Verne really did invent a time machine, traveled to the late 20th century, only had time to pick up a quick guidebook and shared it with his buddy Bram (who was looking for ideas) when he got back. ;)
 

Remove ads

Remove ads

AD6_gamerati_skyscraper

Remove ads

Upcoming Releases

Top