HaroldTheHobbit
Hero
I have very fond memories of The Cleric Quintet and Dragonlance Chronicles. Yes, they are UA stuff, but I still occasionally bring them as comfort reading on vacations etc.
Now it has been a long time since I've read anything Drizzt, so take everything I'm about to say with a heaping spoonful of salt. But I think there are two main problems, especially in the later books. First, Drizzt seems to have gotten a reputation as a Mary Sue. He's simply the best at everything. 3,872 orcs? That's an easy encounter for our dark elf hero!I often see… ire? Online for all things Drizzt, but I’ve had to have read Honeland-Sojourn at least 3-4 times since I discovered them in middle school.
I'm not sure if it was the original source for this, but the Baldur's Gate CRPG included a Drizzt cameo in which he slaughters dozens of gnolls whilst the low level player character and their party are still on their first one. It's kind of like the Black Widow/Happy scene in Iron Man 2.First, Drizzt seems to have gotten a reputation as a Mary Sue. He's simply the best at everything. 3,872 orcs? That's an easy encounter for our dark elf hero!
Other. Lynn Abbey’s Urik-based Dark Sun quasi-trilogy.
As much as I dislike the changes that it made to the setting in retrospect, I did totally love the PrismPentaxPentad series when I read it back in the day.
edit: I seem to have trained my autocorrect in some oddly specific ways.
Dark Sun was probably the first thing I ever became curmudgeonly about. They created this setting with all these intriguing plot seeds DMs could do all sorts of things with, then in the first licensed series meant to introduce the setting to people they destroyed a huge chunk of them. Killing Kalak off in the first book was fine, that changed the setting in a way that made it more interesting for PCs, but by the end they'd revealed WAY too much initially-mysterious backstory, killed off "The" Dragon and a few too many other key characters, altered the political situation beyond recognition (rather than just throwing a single interesting spanner in it as the first book did), shown us quite a bit of what lay outside the Tablelands (only a little of which was all that interesting)... I would have been much happier if they'd ended that series after a lot less than five books.Good read bad for setting.