Dragonlance Dragonlance Brings New Options to D&D

As expected, Wizards Presents had Dragonlance announcements, starting with a release date – December 6, 2022 – and players will have several choices as to which Dragonlance product they buy. Like other adventures, Dragonlance: Shadow of the Dragon Queen, will have two editions: a mass market edition with a cover by Cynthia Sheppard, and an alternative cover edition featuring Lord Soth, only...

As expected, Wizards Presents had Dragonlance announcements, starting with a release date – December 6, 2022 – and players will have several choices as to which Dragonlance product they buy.

Dragonlance - TRPG Standard Cover (Front) – Art by Cynthia Sheppard. .png


Like other adventures, Dragonlance: Shadow of the Dragon Queen, will have two editions: a mass market edition with a cover by Cynthia Sheppard, and an alternative cover edition featuring Lord Soth, only available through game stores. That latter cover, with art by Chase Stone, almost makes his helmet look three dimensional. The 224-page adventure will take players from 1st to 11th level.

Dragonlance - TRPG Alt Cover (Front) – Art by Chase Stone.png


Another of the new purchase options is one fans have been clamoring for – bundles of the physical book and a digital copy through D&D Beyond. Those who pre-order the bundle will get their digital copy on November 22, two weeks before the physical book is available. Unfortunately, the digital/book bundle only applies to the standard cover so if you buy alternative covers through your local game store, a digital bundle isn't available.

Dragonlance - Standard Bundle.png


Additionally, WotC is offering Dragonlance: Shadow of the Dragon Queen Deluxe Edition, which includes:
  • The physical book (Cover by Antonio Jose Manzanedo and Anato Finnstark)
  • The digital book via D&D Beyond
  • The board game Dragonlance: Warriors of Krynn
  • A DM screen
The deluxe edition will cost $154.98 and includes free shipping for the U.S., UK, France, and Germany.

Dragonlance Deluxe Edition – Outer Box – Art by Antonio José Manzanedo.png


Dragonlance is really D&D's setting for war, for massive conflicts, for these worldwide, sweeping, world-changing battles” Wes Schneider, Senior Game Designer for D&D and project lead for Dragonlance: Shadow of the Dragon Queen, said at a press event on August 16. “In this adventure, we're going to take players back to the storied War of the Lance where the forces of the infamous Tiamat, or Takhisis as she is known in Krynn, is marching her armies of evil dragons and draconian dragon folks and other evil humanoids against the people of Krynn, trying to take over the world.”

329834 – ch 1 opener – Art by Kieran Yanner.png


“In this adventure we're going to see the dragon army's incursion into Solamnia, which is a land of knights and heroes. The players will find themselves at the forefront of this battle in the defense of Solmnia against this evil wave of tyranny,” continued Schneider. “It's not just the fate of a town, it's not just the fate of your pocketbook. It's the fate of the entire world at stake in this.”

329847 – ch 2 opener – Art by Evyn Fong.png


Kate Irwin, Principal Art Director for D&D, then talked about demonstrating the expanse of Dragonlance to life through the artwork.

329862 – ch 4 opener – Art by Daarken.png


“It's not just plucky band of adventurers going off to do something,” said irwin. “The stakes are very high. So when we were talking about art for this, we asked how do we show that epic expanse of what can happen. Our chapter openers are always a big flashy part of the book so in this case instead of doing a single page piece of art, we're doing a double page piece of art. The artists who are doing the chapter openers were able to focus then on some personal stories and also that great, big expanse of war and see how this is different from other books.”

“We took aspiration from movies and famous photographs from World War I and World War II. The dragon where the adventurers are on top of the dragon was kind of inspired by 'oh, we captured a tank and now we're taking a picture with a tank'.”

329908 – Kansaldi on Dragon – Art by Katerina Ladon.png


“Another thing you don't often see in D&D stories is people riding dragons, partnering with dragons,” added Irwin while talking about what makes Dragonlance different. DLSotDQ features several images of dragon riders, sometimes leading armies.

329972 – Lord Soth on Death Dragon – Art by Kieran Yanner.png


When talking about a piece of art featuring knights from early in the adventure Irwin said, “I think there's something really relatable even though it's showing this big epic. Like I said, we were taking inspiration from movies like Saving Private Ryan or 1917 where you are involved in the characters that are in the movie, but you're also involved in feeling like a part of something so much bigger.”

That aesthetic ties into the design created by Bree Heiss, Art Director for D&D, for the board game, Dragonlance: Warriors of Krynn. “That Dragonlance through line, that small group fighting against the odds in a world at war is present in the board game, as well.”

For groups playing both the TTRPG and the board game, there will be places where you can switch from RPG to board game to play out a battle and then go back to the RPG. The board game comes with a few “plucky allies” that players can choose, and one such ally is especially dear to Heiss.

“I'm a huge Dragonlance fan, in case that isn't obvious, and I always imagined myself as a Knight of the Rose and I got to, as we were making the figures for the game, I got to have a little bit of input,” said Heiss, “and we wanted our Solamnic knight to be maximum tall, like [Game of Thrones'] Brianne of Tarth, so strong and so big, and I'm so ready to play this. The horns on her helm, she would place [in real life] at 6'5”, 6'7” – she's gonna stomp.”

Iconic Dragonlance villain Lord Soth appears in the adventure, riding a Death Dragon, a new type of undead dragon. Schneider commented that even if people don't know Lord Soth from dozens of stories and adventures that they know him from the Monster Manual.

“Lord Soth is D&D's iconic Death Knight, and when we knew we were returning to the world of Krynn and the Dragonlance campaign setting, we knew we had to have one of D&D's most famous villains central to the threat,” said Schneider.

329899 – Captain Hask – Art by David Sladek.png



Draconians were also re-conceptualized for DLSotDQ to clearly distinguish them from dragonborn and other bipedal lizards in D&D. It also plays up the fact that in Dragonlance evil chromatic dragons have been stealing metallic dragon eggs, manipulating them with magic, and turning them into Takhisis' evil foot soldiers. This has both weakened the forces of good and made the adult good dragons hesitate because they'd be fighting their own children.


Warriors Of Krynn Box inside Deluxe (front) – Box Art by Dominik Mayer.png


DLSotDQ also contains a gazetteer. The focus is on eastern Solamnia, though, so don't expect a deep dive into Krynn. A poster map also comes with the book. DLSotDQ is a complete story, not beholden to the novels or prior adventures. Schneider compared it to the new Star Wars TV shows in that you know the beloved heroes are out there doing things but DLSotDQ focuses on different characters in a different region.

Warriors of Krynn inside Deluxe (back) – Box Art by Dominik Mayer.png


DLSotDQ and DLWoK fall “very early in the War of the Lance, early into the invasion of western Solamnia,”said Schneider. “Stories have been told about the major offenses from the middle of the continent further to the west. This is a new story about the very first launch the red dragon army does into Solamnia, an early forey with specific plots and goals to bring a devastating weapon to bear.”

“You're getting not just this massive, epic, D&D narrative adventure in the RPG experience but you also have the Warriors of Krynn board game... and they're meant to weave in and out of each other,” said Schneider.

Schneider then clarified that if you play both, you can take your RPG characters to the board game and then back to the RPG. “Warriors of Krynn isn't your usual moving units and strategy. This is more of a strategy game that focuses on those elements but from a D&D perspective. You're still playing your characters, around the edges of battle, doing what's important to turn the tide of battle, all of the little things that thousands of lives might be riding on. And then once you've played that out you can then take that result back to [Shadow of the Dragon Queen] and have that result affect how your RPG continues.”

However, you do not need DLWoK to play DLSotDQ and vice versa. DLWoK can be played independently from the RPG DLSotDQ. Similarly, if you only want to play the TTRPG, it has instructions on how to handle the battles instead of switching to the board game.

Miniatures that come with DLWoK are the same scale as conventional miniatures, such as WizKids minis. So if you want to use the exact mini for your character while playing the RPG you can bring it right to the board game. The board game also comes with six hero miniatures you can use while playing if you don't have your own minis.

Choices that you make in DLWoK will carry through, but it's not a legacy board game. No cards or such are torn up or removed, but what you do in the board game affects the RPG if you're playing both.

Dragonlance: Warriors of Krynn is a cooperative board game designed by Rob Daviau and Stephen Baker. Back in April at D&D Direct, when asked if DLWoK could be used to stage large-scale battles in other iconic D&D settings, Ray Winninger, Executive Producer of Dungeons & Dragons, said yes, adding that if it does well they'll consider customized versions for other settings.

Pre-orders for the bundles can be placed through dndstore.wizards.com.
 

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Beth Rimmels

Beth Rimmels

Yeah, it is. It's just reinforcing a political agenda that you think of as "the way things obviously are."

It's like the old cliche of a fish not noticing water.
Ha but the fish will notice the absence of water though...

Not everything is about politics or hidden agendas. Most of the time, there is no political or hidden agenda of any kind. There is such a thing as art for art and entertainment for entertainment only. And most people should see that when a work of art is pushing an agenda, it is often not well received by those who only wish to be entertained.
 

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bedir than

Full Moon Storyteller
We have to document evil, in all it's forms, so that we can RECOGNISE it. Good people (of whatever stripe) often have trouble detecting evil when it wanders in of the street and starts setting up shop. “Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” is not just a quote, it's a warning.
What is the evil being documented in writing about Gully Dwarves?
 


What is the evil being documented in writing about Gully Dwarves?
I will concede anything at this point. Can we move on to something not sounding like the last half decade of political meat grinding that has been slowly killing my will to live?

I know I joined in, and it was my own failing. I'm trying to stop.
 

Medic

Neutral Evil
Yeah, it is. It's just reinforcing a political agenda that you think of as "the way things obviously are."

It's like the old cliche of a fish not noticing water.
Everyone unintentionally allows what they say and do to be colored by the paradigm from which they evaluate reality. True, there is no such thing as "apolitical" literature. But, the gulf between a work meant to entertain and an expressly political work is so wide that the two should not really be evaluated in the same light.

J.R.R. Tolkien was a philologist who, despite participating in an armed conflict and openly expressing his views on numerous occasions, focused on creating a fictional world rich with myth and linguistics. His beliefs, while present and clear, are fairly unintrusive. Compare against George Orwell, who fought for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War, whose explicitly partisan body of work still influences political discourse to this day.

I do not judge the merits of Lord of the Rings by how well it explores ethics or sociology, much in the same way that I do not assess Animal Farm on the basis of how potent the prose is or how much fun I had reading it. I could - but neither work was tailored to that purpose.

Bringing this back on topic, the common theme that I am seeing with many of these complaints is that the Dragonlance setting was crafted by a pair of Mormon demiliches from their crypt in Utah, and how their antiquated views do not have a place in any modern Dungeons & Dragons merchandise. Being something an enthusiast of Abrahamic lore myself, this is normally where I segue into the same tired spiel about how cultural pieces are not only the product of their period, but their environment and the society from which they originate, and how we must appraise them through this lens, and what have you, but I feel that I've rambled enough.

I don't even like Dragonlance.

What is the evil being documented in writing about Gully Dwarves?
Their existence.
 

Bringing this back on topic, the common theme that I am seeing with many of these complaints is that the Dragonlance setting was crafted by a pair of Mormon demiliches from their crypt in Utah, and how their antiquated views do not have a place in any modern Dungeons & Dragons merchandise. Being something an enthusiast of Abrahamic lore myself, this is normally where I segue into the same tired spiel about how cultural pieces are not only the product of their period, but their environment and the society from which they originate, and how we must appraise them through this lens, and what have you, but I feel that I've rambled enough.
I...

Okay...

No. I'm done. I'm out. Bye.
 


jolt

Adventurer
Being apolitical just prevents change from ever happening.

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."

Nothing exists in a vacuum and you either support something or you don't. The only point of being apolitical is to prevent good people from doing something - it doesn't even want to let you talk about doing something. Silence never benefits the oppressed or the wronged. Intent is only relevant when there's a willingness to change.
 

mamba

Legend
I personally think there was something akin to the "Mercer Effect" with dragonlance in the original setting. The novels set expectations, and when the RPG didn't hold up to that... It lead to problems. The original modules even made it worse by expecting certain characters to be involved with certain events, with it actually written in to make sure the rails NEVER came dislodged.

When I ran dragonlance, I made sure the players were just about as far from the original characters as possible to prevent this
Yeah, I do not like being forced into specific chars, bad idea imo. Railroad was also a bit heavy at times, but if you write this as a module series I guess you have to do that, otherwise you never manage to fit the pieces together ;)

Wouldn’t mind both of these being addressed, but I guess the new adventure is not the one to do it as it takes your approach (being far away) ;)

Also wouldn’t mind some way of healing, otherwise you are too much forced into a story that has to solve that first, before it can focus on its actual goal(s)
 

mamba

Legend
Being apolitical just prevents change from ever happening.

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."

Nothing exists in a vacuum and you either support something or you don't. The only point of being apolitical is to prevent good people from doing something - it doesn't even want to let you talk about doing something. Silence never benefits the oppressed or the wronged. Intent is only relevant when there's a willingness to change.
So basically because politics exist in the world at large, everything always is political even if it intentionally makes no political statement whatsoever… that means the political statement of an apolitical piece changes over time based of the politics surrounding it. So what political statement can it then effectively make… great logic you have going there

Also, your statement works much better for a person than a work of fiction / art / etc.
 

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