WotC Chris Perkins announces Retirement from Dungeons and Dragons

Over on Twitter and Bluesky, Chris Perkins has announced his retirement from Dungeons and Dragons.

Chris Perkins started officially working for Wizards of the Coast in 1997 as an Editor for Dungeon Magazine. Since then, he has functioned as the Editor in Chief of D&D Periodicals, A Senior Producer, and eventually landing as the Senior Story Editor over D&D 5e and Game Architect on D&D 5e 2024.

He also is known for acting as one of the Dungeons Masters for Acquisitions, Incorporated.

Personally, I'll miss the guy's work.

 

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I hope this is an actual retirement, rather than a “retirement”.

I have lots of fond memories of Chris Perkins adventures. Running The Shackled City AP is still probably the high point of my DMing career, with Perkins writing 5 of the 12 adventures in that campaign.

My group still fondly remembers the first 2 adventures. It really got the campaign off to a cracking start.
 

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I looked into this a while back, and came up with the following:

This still is not a super solid source.
 

I hope this is an actual retirement, rather than a “retirement”.

I have lots of fond memories of Chris Perkins adventures. Running The Shackled City AP is still probably the high point of my DMing career, with Perkins writing 5 of the 12 adventures in that campaign.

My group still fondly remembers the first 2 adventures. It really got the campaign off to a cracking start.

First 2 worth running as stand alones in 5E?
 


First 2 worth running as stand alones in 5E?
I’m not sure as it’s been over a decade since I ran those adventures.

Flood Season (which I think is the name of the opening adventure) has a memorable exploration of the gnome underground city of Jzadirune, but it is still largely a dungeon crawl.

I’d have to reread Drakthar’s Way to remember what it is even about as my only memory of it was that it involved a vampire (and I couldn’t even remember that as it was actually a vampiric bugbear).

Both adventures involve some investigation, but it’s investigation followed by dungeon crawls. So if that’s not your thing, then maybe not.

The mimic in Flood Season became a memorable NPC in my campaign (yes, really, the party befriended it) and there is a lot of foreshadowing of the rest of the AP in the first 2 adventures.
 


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