D&D 5E The March D&D Book Will Be Announced Next Tuesday

As has become standard these days, the upcoming D&D book has appeared -- in an anonymous, secretive guise -- on various bookstores in advance of an announcement. In this case, Amazon, Penguin Random House, and Barnes & Noble, all of whom confirm that the book will be announced next Tuesday on January 12th, and released on March 16th. The book will cost $49.99. B&N has its dimensions as being...

As has become standard these days, the upcoming D&D book has appeared -- in an anonymous, secretive guise -- on various bookstores in advance of an announcement. In this case, Amazon, Penguin Random House, and Barnes & Noble, all of whom confirm that the book will be announced next Tuesday on January 12th, and released on March 16th.

The book will cost $49.99. B&N has its dimensions as being 6.5 x 9.5 inches, which is smaller than a standard D&D hardcover (but that information could just be a placeholder). B&N also indicates that the authors are Peter Lee and Rodney Thompson, but they also say that for Tasha's Cauldron and other WotC books, so that also looks like it's just their boilerplate for WotC. There's also an ISBN number: 978-0786967223.

This is almost an exact mirror of this time last year, almost down to the dates (last year it appeared on stores on Jan 6th, was announced as Explorer's Guide to Wildemount on Jan 9th, and released March 17th).

There's been plenty of speculation recently. Last year WotC said that three classic settings were getting active attention, and that the coming years would have a greater emphasis on settings, as well as more anthologies and Magic: The Gathering collaborations. And, of course, WotC has recently been involved in a Dragonlance lawsuit, which was voluntarily dismissed in December with Margaret Weis tweeting that there was exciting news in the weeks to come.

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R_J_K75

Legend
Years ago, it was pretty mixed. Now, it's excellent, as good as a mid-level professional publisher.

Note that the content creator also has some responsibility in this: If they don't create the text for the spine, for instance, there won't be any.

But as this semi-pro sector is getting more and more pro, the nicer books are indistinguishable from what you might get in a game store. It's how a lot of Kickstarters now fulfill their print orders, for instance.
You make a good point. If the quality of the content isn't there, as well as the price point, the semi-semi-pro's will slowly disappear and we'll be left with the elite of the semi-pros. This will make me more inclined to get more .pdf or something printed-on-demand or kickstarted. BUt I do miss Dungeon and Dragon mag. Guess I'm just reluctant to change.
 


R_J_K75

Legend
Nah, it's not as nice as offset printing. We do a lot of books where we have an offset print run and we do a PoD option via DTRPG, and the offset print run is notably higher quality (and cheaper, but that's by the by). You put them side by side and you really notice the difference
I've never got a POD so I was curious as to the quality. I suppose its all a matter of knowing your potential customer base and ROI. Am I making money off better quality hard copies or pdfs and few PODs.
 

el-remmen

Moderator Emeritus
BUt I do miss Dungeon and Dragon mag. Guess I'm just reluctant to change.

Me too. I don't care how long ago it was (though the 3E era of Dungeon was pretty weak - esp. once they switched to complex full-color maps without their printer being able to print them clearly that were ugly and hard to read). I still use 1E and 2E Dungeon adventures regularly.
 

R_J_K75

Legend
I’ve had a few issues with damaged or never-arriving shipping and pages cut off the bottom of all the pages so only the top half of the page numbers show. But they have always sent a replacement.
Sounds hit or miss. But I can respect that if they replace the item. I just got something delivered yesterday and it didnt work. I called them and they are sending a replacement so its good. Its the hassle of having to return it that makes me reluctant.
 


Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
Nah, it's not as nice as offset printing. We do a lot of books where we have an offset print run and we do a PoD option via DTRPG, and the offset print run is notably higher quality (and cheaper, but that's by the by). You put them side by side and you really notice the difference
I would put off-set printed books in the higher end of what RPG companies are doing nowadays. You have publishers like Free League near the top, but it's a long way down the mountain from there. Lots of publishers are going with "fine," presumably for cost and shipping time reasons.
 


There is one thing that makes me think it could be an undead monster book like Volo’s...

The set of miniatures coming out in March is called ‘The Boneyard’
They do release sets unconnected to the books sometimes though.
 

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