With Spelljammer, they designed their named NPCs around New generic NPC statblocks.Maybe they'll have a number of the NPCs in Sigil show up in the monster book.
The achaierai were updated in Minsc and Boo's Journal of Villainy (they're CR 5). I could see WotC reprinting them.Achaierai, for another throwback to the Fiend Folio
Literally the first genuinely good thing I've heard about Spelljammer. Certainly a good direction.With Spelljammer, they designed their named NPCs around New generic NPC statblocks.
Honestly, what's there is pretty good, it would have just been better as 320 pages instead of 192.Literally the first genuinely good thing I've heard about Spelljammer. Certainly a good direction.
Even if it got the 256 that Planescape is getting, actually...Honestly, what's there is pretty good, it would have just been better as 320 pages instead of 192.
For sure! My main comparison is Eberron, which got 320 pages. If they had edited down Rising from the Last War to 192 pages, that would be pretty frustrating.Even if it got the 256 that Planescape is getting, actually...
Going in-depth on the Lords of Hell and the Abyss would be fodder for a book along the lines of 3E's Fiendish Codex or the Planes of Law (Baator)/Chaos (Abyss). I'd rather not more than an overview of the power structure/court clutter up a Planescape campaign book that supposedly covering ALL the planes (I'm not fond of the fascination with demons & devils in the game - especially rulers who are unlikely to ever be directly faced, and the less of them, the happier I am).Yeah, I have to agree. I love delving into the big name planar powers like the Lords of Nine, but in Mord's Tome of Foes and Monsters of the Multiverse, they didn't just stat out a Lord of Nine in Zariel, but also former Lords of Nine like Geryon and Moloch and even lesser Infernal Nobles like Bael, Hutijin, and Titivilus.
I've been mapping out the political structure ofBaatorthe Nine Hells for a personal project for some time, and if they go by the metric used in MToF, they're looking at dozens of statblocks to draw from. The Rabble of Devilkin, a collection lesser archdevils living in exile in the hinterlands of Avernus, is a good 15+ names just by itself, and that's before getting into the consorts and courts of the various Lords of Nine. Then, if I were to indulge in some wishful thinking, you'd also need to consider the Dark Eight, the generals of the Three Commands, and the various deities that set up shopon Baatorin the Nine Hells like Tiamat and Set and their respective entourages.
That's basically a full-sized sourcebook onBaatorthe Nine Hells in and of itself, well before getting into talking about Demon Lords they have yet to touch on (of which there are a similar, if not greater, number), hierarch modrons,gehrelethsdemodands, guardinals,eladrinwhatever the CG celestials are now, rilmani, ratatosk, dabus, and other planar creatures.
In a 64 page book ostensibly covering an array of creatures from across the multiverse, that'd be basically impossible.