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A Detailed City?
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<blockquote data-quote="GrimJesta" data-source="post: 171607" data-attributes="member: 1949"><p>My money goes to Geanavue: Stones of Peace. Despite being a Kalamar setting ciye, it can EASILY be added to any setting. As a matter of fact, there isn't alot of material that cannot be considered generic setting-wise. I have the Waterdeep book, and my friend George has the Hallowfaust book. I used to own several other city books and still have SOMEWHERE the Lankhmar citybook for D&D 2e.</p><p></p><p>Geanavue is more detailed than all of them. </p><p></p><p>It is a hustling and bustling merchant city which, despite being LG/LN for the citizens, several of the ruling noble houses are of an evil bent. Theres enough intrigue in the city between the Guilds, Houses, Ruling Lord, and the peoples that Byzantium looks tame. If you want a good dungeon crawl, the sewers beneath the city (which are alsoi very mapped in the book) are alot of fun and have their own history. Its proximity to a city of pirates and cut-throats, a city ruled by a Vampire, and monster infested mountains makes local wilderness adventures alot of fun too.</p><p></p><p>Geanavue's strongpoints are its flavor though. When you read the book the city is realistically alive, something even the famed Waterdeep boxed set failed to do for me.</p><p></p><p>If you are looking for an excellent city with a high level of detail, realism, and flavor, check out Geanavue.</p><p></p><p>-=Grim=-</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GrimJesta, post: 171607, member: 1949"] My money goes to Geanavue: Stones of Peace. Despite being a Kalamar setting ciye, it can EASILY be added to any setting. As a matter of fact, there isn't alot of material that cannot be considered generic setting-wise. I have the Waterdeep book, and my friend George has the Hallowfaust book. I used to own several other city books and still have SOMEWHERE the Lankhmar citybook for D&D 2e. Geanavue is more detailed than all of them. It is a hustling and bustling merchant city which, despite being LG/LN for the citizens, several of the ruling noble houses are of an evil bent. Theres enough intrigue in the city between the Guilds, Houses, Ruling Lord, and the peoples that Byzantium looks tame. If you want a good dungeon crawl, the sewers beneath the city (which are alsoi very mapped in the book) are alot of fun and have their own history. Its proximity to a city of pirates and cut-throats, a city ruled by a Vampire, and monster infested mountains makes local wilderness adventures alot of fun too. Geanavue's strongpoints are its flavor though. When you read the book the city is realistically alive, something even the famed Waterdeep boxed set failed to do for me. If you are looking for an excellent city with a high level of detail, realism, and flavor, check out Geanavue. -=Grim=- [/QUOTE]
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