D&D General Who are the iconic NPCs in each D&D campaign setting?

Then characters from Planescape: Torment like: The Nameless One, Morte, Dakkon, Annah, Fall-From-Grace
I feel like the Torment folks are probably the Planescape characters closest to mainstream awareness, but is a single computer game (if acclaimed, and a personal favorite) enough? Not sure.

Though I guess Morte just appeared in 5e Planescape, right?
 

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I feel like the Torment folks are probably the Planescape characters closest to mainstream awareness, but is a single computer game (if acclaimed, and a personal favorite) enough? Not sure.

Though I guess Morte just appeared in 5e Planescape, right?
A bunch of the Torment characters were canonized into the setting through things like Dragon Magazine articles, Ravel comes to mind and so does Fall-From-Grace. And I certainly remember Ignus featured in the 5e book.
 

....other than that, how was the play, Mrs. Lincoln?


I mean, other than being in one of the most iconic modules in history, AND on the cover of the 5e PHB, what has King Snurre done?

Tough crowd!
Sorry, don't mean to denigrate Snurre! Though I admit that it seems like Acererak might outweigh him statistically (both the big bads of famous 1e adventures, both on the covers of 5e core rulebooks, but only Acererak got a brand-new 5e adventure centered around him). And I'm not sure Acererak beats out Iuz or Vecna...
 

Sorry, don't mean to denigrate Snurre! Though I admit that it seems like Acererak might outweigh him statistically (both the big bads of famous 1e adventures, both on the covers of 5e core rulebooks, but only Acererak got a brand-new 5e adventure centered around him). And I'm not sure Acererak beats out Iuz or Vecna...

No worries- tone doesn't come across. I'm usually kidding around, and I was there.

I think it's hard to compare GH personalities (for the most part) to those from FR and other settings, simply because GH doesn't have the same amount of lore. Whether you are a Gygaxian purist, or a lover of the 2e and 3e lore, there is still very little out there compared to, say, all of the FR books and settings and Greenwood writings and everything else.

Which means that the mythic figures of Greyhawk are much more blank slates, in a way, that people have built up not because of all the stuff about them, but in the absence thereof. When I say mythic, I am being literal in many ways.

It's similar with, say, ZARGON! I still think of Zargon, even though ... I mean, he is barely a part of a module in the B series.

But in the '80s, Vecna was famous not because there were stories, or the lore was fleshed out (um... ew...) but because the sparse details led people to elevate the idea in their own minds.

It's the Boba Fett theory of life. Sometimes, a thing can be much cooler the less you know about it.
 

The Lady of Pain, probably, though it's really better if she DOESN'T appear in your game.

The Lady of Pain gets several mentions in the 2024 PHB. My favorite is in the description of wish, wherein it states that if you use the spell to try to change the structure of the Multiverse, or affect the status of Sigil or the Lady of Pain, she momentarily appears in a vision, wags her finger at you, and the spell automatically fails.
 

Well, I appreciate the Vecna love. Because, for me, Vecna is, and always will be, Greyhawk. But I think that this is likely a disappearing fact (and opinion).

If the characters defeat Vecna at the end of the recent adventure, it states that he's banished back to Oerth in weakened form. This would seem to indicate that they're moving him back to be a mainly Greyhawk NPC, at least for the moment
 


Fett, Jedi in general, Snake-Eyes, Gambit, Wolverine...

In fairness, I never thought that Han Solo was cool until I learned how he got his name in Solo: A Star Wars Movie.

When we said that he traveled alone, and the guy looked at him, and said ... "Okay, from now on, you're going to carry this red solo cup and play beer pong with me .... Han .... SOLO," I finally realized just how cool he was, and not just some scruffy-looking nerf herder.

The lesson, as always, is that overexplaining things makes them more cool. Just like it makes jokes funnier.
 

I've also been trying to pick the Dragonlance iconics too. I agree with everyone whose answered, but I think I'd add Dalamar, thanks to Wizards Three in the real world and head of the Conclave in-world.
I dunno. I'd say Dalamar is still pretty obscure. He's not in the Chronicles trilogy, for one thing.

That being said, he is in the 5e DragonLance adventure, so maybe that makes him a bit more iconic for the 5e era?
 

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