Melf's Guide to Greyhawk

D&D General Melf's Guide to Greyhawk Coming From Luke Gygax & WotC

I don't play D&D now. If I were I'd play "Nimble". One of the reasons I quit playing D&D/5E was lack of the short adventures. Give me 16 pages and I'm good. So, this is good news.
 

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I'm actually kinda scratching my head on this, I don't think there are any UA subclasses that really scream "greyhawk" and, tbh, as someone who's never played in it I don't really know how one would make a "greyhawk themed" subclass the same way one might make an FR or Eberron or Dark Sun subclass.
The Cavalier Fighter, straight outta Unearthed Arcana by the Big G himself.
 

That's how I feel about Dark Sun, Ravenloft, the Forgotten Realms, Spelljammer, Planescape, Dragonlance, and Mystara... But, you know, other people like those settings and I'm not the only person in the universe that matters.
How dare you take such a nuanced and open minded position towards other people's joy, in clear defiance of all our most sacred traditions.
 





Forge of the Artificer had Keith Baker as a consultant but unlike Rising or Explorer's Guide, he wasn't the credited author. Hickman was a consultant on Curse of Strahd. Greenwood was a consultant on the Forgotten Realms books. My guess is Luke is going to be somewhere between co-author and highly active consultant on this project. Luke can add a lot of weight to any upcoming Greyhawk book by citing things that either were mentioned in his father's games or were part of his father's notes. It could even by akin to Christopher Tolkien's guardianship of his father's unfinished material.
 



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