It’s in Explorer’s Guide to Wildmount, isn’t it?Do you have a source for this? The blood hunter definitely seemed more put together but the gravity barbarian seemed like Matt was literally writing it as the campaign went along.
No. Check the post I just made. It’s custom for Tal.It’s in Explorer’s Guide to Wildmount, isn’t it?
I mean, a home game isn’t a TV show, but Critical Role is. And again, this isn’t a new thing, Matt has had a team the whole time, it has only grown since campaign 1. And Brennan has also had a team on Dimension 20, so he’s no stranger to working this way.I actually worry that this might turn into a too many cooks in the kitchen situation. When running a campaign, it's not a TV show. Too many people putting forth their vision and input could get confusing and chaotic! But, hopefully, Brennan knows how to juggle it all and will just use all of that as background and support.
Whitney wanted to play a demon and didn't know you really can't play a demon demon in 5e. I'm sure they used the tieflings as a base for it but possibly with some tweaks as tieflings as such don't seem to exist in this setting.I'm not sure if Tyranny is actually a demon, or a tiefling? I've assumed she is still just a tiefling but because this is a homebrew setting, the lore difference between tiefling and a full fledged demon may not be clear.
Haha, no. I can see why you might get that impression given Liam’s proclivity for playing tortured, emotional characters, but that’s just his taste as a performer. Taliesin is a goth, as in a member of the goth subculture. The original goth subculture, in the 80s and early 90s, and his fashion sense still leans very trad goth. People who don’t belong to the subculture also frequently have a misconception that it’s all emotional angst and darkness, but that’s not actually the case. I mean, when goth first branched off from punk, before the name “goth” got applied to it, it was referred to as “positive punk.” It was more focused on introspection in contrast to the outward-focused anger and aggression of the punk movement, and goths do in fact tend to be much more positive in outlook than people expect based on their outwardly projected appearance. It was the later emo movement that actually embraced the depression and angst that people incorrectly associated with goth.Yeah. Between Tal and Liam, Liam is the more dramatic and dark goth type. Tal seems to be more attention seeking and performative “look at me.” I wouldn’t describe either of them as spotlight hogs.
Cool! Yeah, I thought it was 3rd party, but I wasn’t 100% sure.So that Clue spell that Kattigan cast came from Valda's Spire of Secrets which I saw was available as a 3PP on D&D Beyond.
Tyranny is definitely a demon, not a tiefling. I watched an interview where Whitney talked about it, and she said the character concept literally started as just “I want to play a hot, pink demon,” and she said she didn’t realize at the time that demon wasn’t a playable D&D species, but that Brennan eagerly agreed to work with her to figure out a way to let her play one.I'm not sure if Tyranny is actually a demon, or a tiefling? I've assumed she is still just a tiefling but because this is a homebrew setting, the lore difference between tiefling and a full fledged demon may not be clear.
No, not co-DMs, but also, I’m sure there are people on the crew helping organize notes, maintain the setting bible, etc. I guess I could be wrong about that, but it would seem crazy to me not to if the option is available.This isn’t how I took that comment at all. It sounded far more like Brennan thanking the behind the camera people at D20 and CR for their hard work in making these TV shows possible. Camera operators, set design, lighting, makeup, etc. Not that other people were co-DMs.
Now I’m being goth-splained to. I need to go lie down.Haha, no. I can see why you might get that impression given Liam’s proclivity for playing tortured, emotional characters, but that’s just his taste as a performer. Taliesin is a goth, as in a member of the goth subculture. The original goth subculture, in the 80s and early 90s, and his fashion sense still leans very trad goth. People who don’t belong to the subculture also frequently have a misconception that it’s all emotional angst and darkness, but that’s not actually the case. I mean, when goth first branched off from punk, before the name “goth” got applied to it, it was referred to as “positive punk.” It was more focused on introspection in contrast to the outward-focused anger and aggression of the punk movement, and goths do in fact tend to be much more positive in outlook than people expect based on their outwardly projected appearance. It was the later emo movement that actually embraced the depression and angst that people incorrectly associated with goth.