D&D 5E Ray Winninger mentions third project!

WotC's Ray Winninger has confirmed that another D&D release, by James Wyatt, will be released in between Witchlight (September) and Strixhaven (November). Strixhaven was Amanda Hamon's project, while Witchlight is Chris Perkins'. That assumes he's not referring to the Feywild accessory kit in September.

A lot of people are asking Qs about the [D&D] releases for the rest of this year.

Yes, WILD BEYOND THE WITCHLIGHT is the [Chris Perkins] story product I referenced in our dev blog. STRIXHAVEN is [Amanda Hamon's] project. We have not yet announced [James Wyatt's] project, which releases between WITCHLIGHT and STRIXHAVEN.

Why did we announce STRIXHAVEN so early? Pretty simple--there was no way to release the STRIX-related Unearthed Arcana without letting the cat out of the bag.

You'll learn a lot more about all of these products at D&D Live on G4, July 16 and 17. And yes, there is still a little surprise or two ahead.



 

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Yeah I saw that data. The data they don’t release would be more telling than what they do. How many people completed that survey and how representative is it of the people who buy their products?
And the bigger point isn't fandom dingaling measurements (Greygaek is my favorite!), it's predicting WotC behavior, and what WotC believes yo be true is more important than objective truth. And since they did that research and publicly reached these conclusions, they have indeed published books for those top tier Settings.
 

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The player base has probably tripled or quadrupled since then, and a lot of those new players have no idea about older settings. Meaning, it is pretty meaningless, or only meaningful to older players (say, age 30+).
Indeed, but if they want to publish old Settings that appeal both old and new players (a given, considering Winningers statements), going with those which were popular in the past makes sensr.
 

Indeed, but if they want to publish old Settings that appeal both old and new players (a given, considering Winningers statements), going with those which were popular in the past makes sensr.
Yes, as long as they fill a niche that isn't already covered by omething already on the market. This is why I don't think we'll see Greyhawk or Mystara as a "normal" setting book (ala Eberron and Ravenloft), but only in a commemorative or special product (if at all).

On the other hand, Planescape (in whatever form), Dark Sun, and Dragonlance all fit the bill of appealing to new and old players. Planescape because it opens up D&D to the planes; Dark Sun because it covers the sword & sorcery/dark fantasy niche that is missing; and Dragonlance because it custom-made for an epic adventure path.

So if I were WotC, I'd publish them like so:

Dragonlance: A two-part (hardcover) adventure path recreating the War of the Lance. The first book would be a hybrid setting, rules, and adventure book, covering the Dragons of Autumn Twilight phase. The second book would focus on the next two books. If it was popular, they could eventually do a third book, covering all of Ansalon post-War of the Lance.

Alternate: The same basic format as above, but covering whatever story Weis & Hickman are working on (which I wouldn't be surprise if it is a re-working of the Chronicles, but that could be completely wrong as I haven't followed any rumors).

Planescape: A multi-book "year of the planes," starting with an adventure path that starts in the Realms and goes into the planes, perhaps involving a spelljammer. Maybe a two-parter focused on the githyanki. I think this "start in the Realms" is key to introducing new players to the planes. Following that would be two more products: a setting book focused on Sigil and the Outlands and a proper Manual of the Planes, detailing the planes, planar adventuring, and rules. As a bonus, a Spelljammer box set that has fun tokens and maps for battles, although this I see as less likely.

Dark Sun: Two books, one a setting/rules book and the other an episodic adventure book that can either be played as individual adventures or a Dark Sun campaign. Oh yeah, psionics.
 


Yes, as long as they fill a niche that isn't already covered by omething already on the market. This is why I don't think we'll see Greyhawk or Mystara as a "normal" setting book (ala Eberron and Ravenloft), but only in a commemorative or special product (if at all).

On the other hand, Planescape (in whatever form), Dark Sun, and Dragonlance all fit the bill of appealing to new and old players. Planescape because it opens up D&D to the planes; Dark Sun because it covers the sword & sorcery/dark fantasy niche that is missing; and Dragonlance because it custom-made for an epic adventure path.

So if I were WotC, I'd publish them like so:

Dragonlance: A two-part (hardcover) adventure path recreating the War of the Lance. The first book would be a hybrid setting, rules, and adventure book, covering the Dragons of Autumn Twilight phase. The second book would focus on the next two books. If it was popular, they could eventually do a third book, covering all of Ansalon post-War of the Lance.

Alternate: The same basic format as above, but covering whatever story Weis & Hickman are working on (which I wouldn't be surprise if it is a re-working of the Chronicles, but that could be completely wrong as I haven't followed any rumors).

Planescape: A multi-book "year of the planes," starting with an adventure path that starts in the Realms and goes into the planes, perhaps involving a spelljammer. Maybe a two-parter focused on the githyanki. I think this "start in the Realms" is key to introducing new players to the planes. Following that would be two more products: a setting book focused on Sigil and the Outlands and a proper Manual of the Planes, detailing the planes, planar adventuring, and rules. As a bonus, a Spelljammer box set that has fun tokens and maps for battles, although this I see as less likely.

Dark Sun: Two books, one a setting/rules book and the other an episodic adventure book that can either be played as individual adventures or a Dark Sun campaign. Oh yeah, psionics.
I think a 5E update of the War of the Lanxe ala Cirse of Strahd is very plausible. For Planescape or Dark Sun, i expect single book campaigns similar in structure to Ravnica, Eberron, Theros, and Ravenloft.
 


I think a 5E update of the War of the Lanxe ala Cirse of Strahd is very plausible. For Planescape or Dark Sun, i expect single book campaigns similar in structure to Ravnica, Eberron, Theros, and Ravenloft.
Maybe, but I don't think they can do Planescape justice in a single book, and Dark Sun probably needs an adventure.
 

That depends on who they're playing with and what settings their GM's are using doesn't it?
And if they use You tube so will mean in addition to Critical Role they might actually know more about those old settings than we realise!
 

Maybe, but I don't think they can do Planescape justice in a single book, and Dark Sun probably needs an adventure.
That book format includes a sample intro Adventure, in addition to Adventure creation material that plugs into the DMG tools in chapter 5.

Planescape is just as suitable for a single book as Eberron or Ravenloft:

  • Chapter 1: Character creation
  • Chapter 2: Factions
  • Chapter 3: Gazateer of the Planes
  • Chapter 4: Sigil
  • Chapter 5: Adventure material, plus a starter module
  • Chapter 6: Bestiary
 


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