Lord Soth appears to be a Darklord again in Ravenloft: The Horrors Within

The new Dungeon Masters Actual Play series involves Lord Soth in some capacity.
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Lord Soth, the iconic Dragonlance villain, appears to be trapped in Ravenloft once more. Wizards of the Coast has released several big hints that Lord Soth will be featured in the Ravenloft: The Horrors Within book due for release later this year. For one, Wizards of the Coast is releasing a D&D Encounters: Shadows of Sithicus mini-adventure as a pre-order bonus for the book. Sithicus, of course, is the Domain of Dread Lord Soth was trapped in. Additionally, the upcoming Actual Play series Dungeon Masters will feature "a fractured band of unlikely allies becoming trapped in a haunted land ruled by the infamous fallen paladin, Lord Soth." One of the selling points of Dungeon Masters is that it will feature unreleased content from Ravenloft: The Horrors Within, with some content available to those who pre-order the book early as mini-encounters.

Lord Soth has an interesting history with Ravenloft. The character was pulled from Krynn (home of the Dragonlance campaign setting) to star in the Ravenloft novel Knight of the Black Rose. However, Tracy Hickman and Margaret Weis later returned to TSR to write more Dragonlance novels and were reportedly unhappy with Soth's inclusion in Ravenloft. The pair featured Soth in a Dragonlance novel and an explanation was given that Soth had been returned to Krynn at the moment of his departure by the Dark Powers that govern Ravenloft. Soth's departure from Ravenloft was eventually shown in the 1999 novel Spectre of the Black Rose.

The previous Ravenloft book, Van Richten's Guide to Ravenloft, did not feature Soth as the designers wished to keep Soth's freedom from the realm (and his subsequent death in Dragonlance novels) canon. Lord Soth has since appeared in two campaign books - Dragonlance: Shadow of the Dragon Queen and the mulitversal Vecna: Eve of Ruin, both of which were set during the War of the Lance. More Dragonlance content seems to be on the way, as Hickman and Weis recently publicized that they were working with Wizards again.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer


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It's funny, I'm old enough to remember when WotC announced that only their 5e material was 'canon' any more, and now if they're going to bring Soth back to Ravenloft they're decanonicising a reference in VRGtR where they had Sithicus slowly dissolving into nothingness now its lord had departed...

Still, that stuff doesn't really bother me. Canon is what you make it or need it to be. Soth can be in Sithicus if you're running a Ravenloft campaign, and in Krynn for a Dragonlance campaign.

I'll be interested to see what they do with him though. Soth was always a good fit to Ravenloft because he was such a wonderfully classic Gothic villain - but on the other hand it was a bit strange because his story was so tightly tied in with the Cataclysm and other Dragonlance setting lore, so if you were playing a Ravenloft PC in a Ravenloft campaign and were involving yourself with Soth then you had to learn all this stuff about Krynn and Paladine and the Balance and Istar for it all to make sense.


This looks ... relevant to the interests of my current Dragonlance campaign. Before i dive into a hundred plus hours of it, do you mind me asking for a quick summary/trailer of the concept?
 

if you were playing a Ravenloft PC in a Ravenloft campaign and were involving yourself with Soth then you had to learn all this stuff about Krynn and Paladine and the Balance and Istar for it all to make sense.
Not any more than you need to know all about Strahd's original world.

"I killed my wife and child because I decided the kid wasn't mine and then let my next wife die because I was sure she had cheated on me" is plenty for Ravenloft.
 



In my game Sithicus isn't a dark domain but a "Shadowfell domain". And what is the difference? My "Sithicus" isn't within the demiplane of dread but Krynnspace Shadowfell. Maybe this "new Sithicus" is a demiplane created by Takishis to torture lord Soth but after the end of the war of the souls this zone is "reused" with a new no-so-evil intention, to work like a cosmic firewall in the space-time continium. Let's say this Sithicus is like the "bad end" of the videogame. It is a "patchworld" with all distopian or apocalyptic timelines of Krynn. The new mission of lord Sorth would be to defend the region to avoid planar intruders tried to invade the Krynnspace. Why would lord Soth accept this? Because it was asked by (the spirits of) his two wives and two sons. He has been a monster but he shouldn't reject easily any opportunity to clean his tainted honor.

Of course the plot twist would be he is manipulated by the deity Raistlin and this manipulation is allowed by the rest of Krynnian gods because it is necessary to avoid a worse menace.

Other reason for the creation of this new Sithicus is to hide the gray gem. This is not only very dangerous but agents of Vecna and Tharizdum (the elemental evil eye) are looking for it with very bad intentions.

The irony is now has got a serious rival, a true pain in the neck, the kingpriest of Istar, a neighbour Shadowfell lord.

And I would add infernal dragons to this Sithicus because not everything can be only undeads.
 



Well, Dragonlance as a setting is owned by Hasbro, so Weis and Hickman can say what they want but it is unlikely to change what WotC will do with the setting. W&H are merely stating their personal opinion, though it's a weighty one. As several others have mentioned there's no reason in a fictional world why he can't be in both. But it remains to be seen what the explanation is as to how that might occur pans out, if any.
 


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