Dungeonosophy
Legend
The evidence?
1) This setting has recently been featured in at least 15 (!) short videos on WotC's D&D facebook feed. If any other Classic Setting had been featured in 15+ official fb posts, folks would be all over it. But maybe people don't immediately think of the Cartoon Show as a "setting."
2) Warduke, Strongheart and friends were featured in Wild Beyond the Witchlight. Besides being LJN Action Figures, the main figures also appeared in the Cartoon Show.
3) The design of the "Mystery Mine" rollercoaster in the Witchlight Carnival (link to map) is modeled after the one seen in the intro sequence of the Cartoon Show. This could serve as the entryway.
The "brand new format" could be a format where you create a character based on yourself.
I wrote a thread about this back in 2014: D&D 5E - The Realm of the D&D Cartoon Show as a 5e campaign model
BTW, there's an official rudimentary map of The Realm: the two sticker books.
Any other evidence?
-Shane H. (Dungeonosophy)
1) This setting has recently been featured in at least 15 (!) short videos on WotC's D&D facebook feed. If any other Classic Setting had been featured in 15+ official fb posts, folks would be all over it. But maybe people don't immediately think of the Cartoon Show as a "setting."
2) Warduke, Strongheart and friends were featured in Wild Beyond the Witchlight. Besides being LJN Action Figures, the main figures also appeared in the Cartoon Show.
3) The design of the "Mystery Mine" rollercoaster in the Witchlight Carnival (link to map) is modeled after the one seen in the intro sequence of the Cartoon Show. This could serve as the entryway.
The "brand new format" could be a format where you create a character based on yourself.
I wrote a thread about this back in 2014: D&D 5E - The Realm of the D&D Cartoon Show as a 5e campaign model
BTW, there's an official rudimentary map of The Realm: the two sticker books.
Any other evidence?
-Shane H. (Dungeonosophy)
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