Dungeons & Dragons Teases New Campaign Settings

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Dungeons & Dragons seems to be preparing to explore brand new campaign settings. Last week, EN World had the opportunity to visit Wizards of the Coast headquarters and get new details about D&D's 2025 slate. While much of the focus was on the newly announced Eberron: Forge of the Artificer book or the upcoming pair of Forgotten Realms book, the D&D design team is also looking at expanding their official multiverse to include brand new worlds.

When asked about the decision to return to Eberron in 2025, the D&D design team noted that keeping the Fifth Edition ruleset allowed them to grow the game instead of rehash it. "One of the opportunities that we have by revising the game, as opposed blowing it up and starting over, is we can actually move forward," said Jeremy Crawford, game director . "And I can't wait until we can tell you about 2026 and 2027."

"With Jeremy Crawford taking on the game director role and then Chris Perkins taking on the creative director role is that we were able to really reestablish a world building environment," added Jess Lanzillo, VP of D&D Franchise at Wizards of the Coast. "What does that mean? We can really establish our worlds and settings like the Forgotten Realms and also look to creating new ones again. That's something that we are working on and we don't have anything to really discuss today other than to tell you like we are re-establishing everything that we have and we are going to make some new stuff too."

While Wizards of the Coast has integrated Magic: The Gathering worlds and Critical Role's Exandria as campaign settings for 5th Edition, D&D's last truly new campaign setting was Nentir Vale, a 'points of light' setting that established small bastions of civilization in an otherwise dark world. In 2023, D&D introduced the Radiant Citadel, a new city within the Ethereal Plane that was connected to numerous new civilizations and worlds briefly touched on in anthology books.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer

About Birthright, could someone explain the why of this? All I have ever heard about it is the domain management and that the players are rulers. But I do not understand why one needs a setting for this.
If the game is primary about running a kingdom, then would not a 4x or a wargame be more appropriate. If it is a traditional rpg with some light diplomacy/wargaming in the later game is MCDM's Stronghold and Followers or a similar subsystem a better fit. Why does it have to be a specific setting.
 

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If WotC does an honest to goodness new setting, I would like to see them do something radically different from other D&D settings. Give me a world of flying islands and airship pirates. give me a aquatic setting. Give me super far future science fantasy. give me a dyson sphere.
Back with the D&D Setting Search that eventually lead to Eberron, one of the points was that they wanted a setting that "everything from D&D fit".

So I'd love your concept and your specifics, but most likely it would need to be a setting that would include everything currently in the game which narrows the options.
 




Councyl of Wyrms could need a lot of work to create monster classes, and always somebody will want to play a different dragon specie, for example a cobra dragon to be the leader of a yuan-ti cult.

* The oldest settings are like those classical vintage cars. They are fabulous but their motors can't work so well like the last model designed the two years ago.

* Eberron was the winner of a contest, but there were also other two selected and we know nothing about these.

* Other option is a reimagination of Dragonlance.
 

Yeah, I'm surprised Birthright's come up this much compared to Mystara (which at least gets mention every now and again) or Council of Wyrms.

While Mystara's the likely and easy "Bring this set back from the dead, give it a light polishing and release" if they chose to do one, Council of Wyrms is far more likely than Birthright for the simple marketing fact "Play as a dragon!" is a simple, easy draw. Just "Yeah this race/class of Dragon can only be used in this setting and isn't balanced for play with regular players" as a warning, and there you go
 

WotC already has 5e Far Scifi setting coming.


Slight correction, WotC is developing a sci-fi setting and also decided to not use Star Frontiers at this time.

The 3pp sci-fi settings have already been out for several years and one was nominated for Ennie.
 

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