D&D 5E 16 More Details About Theros

The latest edition of WotC's online magazine contains some juicy tidbits about Mythic Odysseys of Theros!

The latest edition of WotC's online magazine contains some juicy tidbits about Mythic Odysseys of Theros!

theros2jpg.jpg

  1. It features Volothamp Geddarm.
  2. It was headed up by James Wyatt, who used to work on D&D, and now works on Magic: The Gathering. He worked on the 3E Deities & Demigods.
  3. It's based on a novella, which Wyatt spent considerable time researching.
  4. He also read about the government of Athens, and the Greek calendar.
  5. Subclasses include the College of Eloquence bard ("the philosopher ideal'), the Oath of Heroism paladin, and the Forge and Grave cleric domains.
  6. The DMG piety system has been "blown up into a huge thing"... "That includes all sorts of rewards and restrictions for characters who choose to devote themselves to a god and track their piety.”
  7. New magic items of the gods - artifacts and weapons.
  8. “Everyone gets this extra leg up that is a gift of the gods, which is separate from the usual character background. It may be a magical thing about your nature, such as you have the mind of a sphinx and your thoughts can’t be read. Or you might be an oracle, which is an opportunity for your Dungeon Master to give you plenty of adventure hooks. It’s a straight power-up but not a huge power-up”
  9. A table of omens with 100 entries.
  10. Minotaurs, centaurs, merfolk (tritons from Volo), satyrs, leonine.
  11. “The leonin is a different, stronger cat person, not just a tabaxi!”
  12. "Satyrs are pretty much as you would expect. They’re party animals with good Dexterity and Charisma, they have a headbutt attack, they’re fast, they’re fey, they resist magic and they have musical instrument proficiency and persuasion."
  13. Different lore for D&D creatures to match the Greek setting.
  14. Mythic threats are boss fights. More than legendary. Aresta of the Endless Web is a spider. Has baby spiders which fight you.
  15. Dyson Logos did the maps.
  16. "There’s a temple of Athreos in two parts, split by the river that flows between the mortal world and the underworld."
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teitan

Legend
I'm not worried about getting ill myself, but that doesn't mean my trip couldn't be derailed.

Right? I have to go to Italy in April myself and to Northern Italy (Turino) at that but I figure by the time April 17th is here it will have been lessened a good deal. Once quarantines are in effect things tend to start falling off.
 

R_J_K75

Legend
Right? I have to go to Italy in April myself and to Northern Italy (Turino) at that but I figure by the time April 17th is here it will have been lessened a good deal. Once quarantines are in effect things tend to start falling off.

NY just had its first confirmed case yesterday. I've been sick since Sat before last. Kind of like a cross between the cold and the flu, but wasn't bad. Doubt its the Coronavirus, but I bet there is more people that have or have had it than they know.
 


dave2008

Legend
Right? I have to go to Italy in April myself and to Northern Italy (Turino) at that but I figure by the time April 17th is here it will have been lessened a good deal. Once quarantines are in effect things tend to start falling off.
I'm going at the end of May, so I was thinking the same as you basically.
 

dave2008

Legend
And we all know that D&D books are unavailable in third-world Europe.
I never thought about that actually, I just assumed getting an English language version in Italy would not be the norm. But I have no idea how that works in reality. My thought was:
  1. I don't want to lug a book back from Italy (though it would be great to read on the flight home), and...
  2. I want to support my local gaming store. I have relationship with them after all.
 

dave2008

Legend
Ancient Greek calendar, eh? The one used by the Spartans and Macedonians (among others) that started after the autumnal equinox? Or the one used by the Thebans (among others) that started after the winter solstice? Or the hugely atypical one used almost exclusively by the Athenians that started after the summer solstice? It's probably the latter, even despite its unusualness.

(Wyatt is right in that the lunisolar calendars used by the ancient Greeks - and pretty much all civilizations of the time other than the Egyptians - look unusual in our eyes, especially with the periodic intercalary months, but the various calendars used by the ancient Greeks varied so wildly from state to state that one can't speak of an "Ancient Greek Calendar" in general)
Didn't he mention one of them in the article. I seem to remember the winter solstice being mentioned, but I could be wrong.
 



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