D&D General Greyhawk book is NOT 'Shield Lands' but 'Borderlands of Iuz' according to team member

According to Jay Scott, the book is actually called 'Melf's Guide to Greyhawk: The Borderlands of Iuz'.
Iuz.webp

Iuz, courtesy of greyhawk.fandom.com

Last week, Luke Gygax referred to the upcoming Greyhawk book for Dungeons & Dragons as Melf's Guide to Greyhawk: The Shield Lands. However, it turns out that that might not be the actual title.

According to Jay Scott, who is on the writing team, the book is actually called 'Melf's Guide to Greyhawk: The Borderlands of Iuz'.

I came on to clarify as I believe Luke was mistaken when he was excitedly talking about the project and the Easley artwork of Melf. My real name is Jay Scott: I was directly mentioned in the press conference with Luke and Dan Ayoub .... We have a project meeting with Luke and the entire team this evening, and the project is on point to make all date goals. I will specifically ask Luke about his comments on the title. To my knowledge, Book 1 is still titled: Melf's Guide to Greyhawk: The Borderlands of Iuz. If a change has been made, I would be happy to let you know here.

Possibly more importantly, Scott also refers to the book as 'Book 1'--hinting that a series of books is on the table. Additionally, he refers to "the old, gritty Greyhawk while being written in current 5.5 2024 ruleset". Finally, he notes that no WotC personnel are involved with the project, although the book is 'Official Greyhawk D&D WotC.

Scott also mentioned that the team was small, including Stephen Radney-Macfarland and Les "Oblivion Seeker" Reno.

The title Borderlands of Iuz refers to an evil demigod in the Greyhawk setting. He lives on Oerth itself (the world of Greyhawk) ruling an empire, and is the son of Graz'zt, one of the demon lords of the Abyss, and Iggwilv, a human witch. The Shield Lands, by contrast, refer to a number of provinces, many of which are ruled by Iuz, with the exception of the 'New Shield Lands', which seeks to reclaim the areas lost to Iuz.

 

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Why Scott chose to comment BEFORE his meeting with Luke and the design team, later that day, to get clarification on the title . . . it just adds unnecessary confusion.

If no WotC folks are involved at all . . . this is likely to appear on the DM's Guild.

More likely, no one from WotC gets writing or design credits. But if WotC is publishing the book, their folks are involved.

Or I suppose it could be published by a third party under license, but would still likely need somebody from WotC to give approval before publication.

I'm still curious how "gritty" this will be, as I never really saw the original Greyhawk material as any more or less "gritty" than other settings. YMMV.
 



Didn't the 5.5 DMG remove all alternate and optional rules for slow healing?
That's an easy adjustment to make 5th Ed a bit more dangerous, and less super heroic.
 
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Didn't the 5.5 DMG remove all alternate and optional rules for slow healing?
That's what makes 5th Ed a bit more dangerous, and less upper heroic.
Yeah, the 5.5 DMG took out pretty much ALL the optional rules presented in the 5e DMG.

For me, it didn't really register, since if I want to implement an optional rule, source doesn't generally matter - as long as it works for, and is cool with, the current table playing.
 




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