D&D General D&D Red Box: Who Is The Warrior?

A WizKids miniature reveals the iconic character's face for the first time.
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The Dungeons & Dragons Red Box, famously illustrated by Larry Elmore in 1983, featured cover art of a warrior fighting a red dragon. The piece is an iconic part of D&D's history.

WizKids is creating a 50th Anniversary D&D miniatures set for the D&D Icons of the Realms line which includes models based on classic art from the game, such as the AD&D Player's Handbook's famous 'A Paladin In Hell' piece by David Sutherland in 1978, along with various monsters and other iconic images. The set will be available in July 2024.

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Amongst the collection is Elmore's dragon-fighting warrior. This character has only ever been seen from behind, and has never been named or identified. However, WizKids’ miniature gives us our first look at them from the front. The warrior is a woman; the view from behind is identical to the original art, while the view from the front--the first time the character's face has ever been seen--is, as WizKids told ComicBook.com, "purposefully and clearly" a woman. This will be one of 10 secret rare miniatures included in the D&D Icons of the Realms: 50th Anniversary booster boxes.


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The original artist, Larry Elmore, says otherwise. (Update—the linked post has since been edited).

It's a man!

Gary didn't know what he wanted, all he wanted was something simple that would jump out at you. He wanted a male warrior. If it was a woman, you would know it for I'm pretty famous for painting women.

There was never a question in all these years about the male warrior.

No one thought it was a female warrior. "Whoever thought it was a female warrior is quite crazy and do not know what they are talking about."

This is stupid. I painted it, I should know.
- Larry Elmore​

Whether or not Elmore's intent was for the character to be a man, it seems that officially she's a woman. Either way, it's an awesome miniature. And for those who love the art, you can buy a print from Larry Elmore's official website.
 

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It's not about the clothing options. To truly be "equal," you would need to show me a painting of a non-sexualized, powerful woman, next to a weaker, sexualized man.
One of the art pieces I had done when I did Chromatic Dungeons. Turned the tables on the traditional gender roles in a fantasy action scene. And yes, I also ensured that if I were doing art that represented a culture, I had an artist belonging to that culture do the piece.

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Let's see the women with big giant pectoral muscles and necks like tree trunks.
This reminds me of a show I used to watch, Big Giant Swords. Irish Mike (who is so awesome to watch) made a sword for Olympic athlete Sarah Robles. In that show, the talked about how great she is because she's being a role model outside of the stereotypical "buff muscle woman" for women who are physically strong. I have always been an advocate for having diversity in body types being represented in fantasy. It's why as i mentioned above, Holloway was one of my all time favorite artists. We need more of that please.

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This reminds me of a show I used to watch, Big Giant Swords. Irish Mike (who is so awesome to watch) made a sword for Olympic athlete Sarah Robles. In that show, the talked about how great she is because she's being a role model outside of the stereotypical "buff muscle woman" for women who are physically strong. I have always been an advocate for having diversity in body types being represented in fantasy. It's why as i mentioned above, Holloway was one of my all time favorite artists. We need more of that please.

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I agree, Holloway was great. Part of that was because he did not illustrate his characters as superheroes.
 

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