Dragonlance DRAGONLANCE LIVES! Unearthed Arcana Explores Heroes of Krynn!

The latest Unearthed Arcana has arrived and the 6-page document contains rules for kender, lunar magic, Knights of Solamnia, and Mages of High Sorcery. In today’s Unearthed Arcana, we explore character options from the Dragonlance setting. This playtest document presents the kender race, the Lunar Magic sorcerer subclass, the Knight of Solamnia and Mage of High Sorcery backgrounds, and a...

The latest Unearthed Arcana has arrived and the 6-page document contains rules for kender, lunar magic, Knights of Solamnia, and Mages of High Sorcery.

Dragonlance.jpg


In today’s Unearthed Arcana, we explore character options from the Dragonlance setting. This playtest document presents the kender race, the Lunar Magic sorcerer subclass, the Knight of Solamnia and Mage of High Sorcery backgrounds, and a collection of new feats, all for use in Dungeons & Dragons.


Kender have a (surprisingly magical) ability to pull things out of a bag, and a supernatural taunt feature. This magical ability appears to replace the older 'kleptomania' description -- "Unknown to most mortals, a magical phenomenon surrounds a kender. Spurred by their curiosity and love for trinkets, curios, and keepsakes, a kender’s pouches or pockets will be magically filled with these objects. No one knows where these objects come from, not even the kender. This has led many kender to be mislabeled as thieves when they fish these items out of their pockets."

Lunar Magic is a sorcerer subclass which draws power from the moon(s); there are notes for using it in Eberron.

Also included are feats such as Adepts of the Black, White, and Red Robes, and Knights of the Sword, Rose, and Crown.

 

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Parmandur

Book-Friend
Or maybe you're thinking of the Supernatural Gifts from Theros, which do work the way you describe. But (so far) those are only officially available to Theros characters.
As do "Dark Gifts" in Ravenloft...and the Strixhaven Background Feats...and the Dragonlance Background Feats...

I wouldn't be shocked if Spelljammer also had 1st Level Feats, just like every Setting product since 2020.
 

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Parmandur

Book-Friend
🤷‍♂️ If I wanted something absurdly complicated I would still be playing Pathfinder!

I see simplicity as pretty much the whole point of 5e.
That's actually what has my interest piqued about the potential of the implementation of a Background Feat system in core: it's straightforward, easy for people to grasp, but opens up some room for customization.
 




doctorbadwolf

Heretic of The Seventh Circle
We're discussing a lot of them from Setting books!
Absolutely. Not to mention feats themselves, advanced tool and downtime mechanics in Xanathar's, increased complexity character options in Tasha's, etc.

The whole edition is built as a toolkit. A sometimes poorly explained and organized toolkit, but a toolkit nonetheless.
See, I saw making as many different fans of D&D as happy as possible as being the whole point of 5e. At least back when it was released. Now, I'm not sure what the design philosophy is.
wait...
Appeal to the broadest base of players to maximize profits?
it's....
Yeah, there it is.
right there.

Those bolded bits of text are the same statement.


5e's design philosophy started out, continued to be through the years, and continues now to be:

Make a game that can be played at a very basic very simple level, while allowing for customization and "OC building" as far as it can reasonably be taken without sacrificing the ability of the "we want a simple game comparable to early dnd" players to have what they want, all designed using data gathered from social media, playtesters, survey respondents, and any other data stream we can create or take advantage of, to make an evergreen version of DnD that we can continue to add new modules to over the years without needing a reboot.
 

See, I saw making as many different fans of D&D as happy as possible as being the whole point of 5e. At least back when it was released. Now, I'm not sure what the design philosophy is.
I'm pretty sure bringing in new players without having to grapple with arcane rules was the actual point, whatever they may have said to placate the existing players.

But it brought me back to D&D after I quit at 2nd edition, so it must have some appeal for older players.
 

Micah Sweet

Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
I'm pretty sure bringing in new players without having to grapple with arcane rules was the actual point, whatever they may have said to placate the existing players.

But it brought me back to D&D after I quit at 2nd edition, so it must have some appeal for older players.
Nothing i like better than being placated. Mollified is nice too.
 

Faolyn

(she/her)
Out of curiosity, can anyone elaborate on why the UA Strixhaven floating subclass model didn't work? Went back and looked at it, and it seemed sound to me - they only worked with certain classes, and you become eligible for the subclass features after certain minimum levels are reached (allowing the features to fill in the right slots at different levels).

Does anyone think this might work better for Solamnic Knights and High Sorcery Mages than it did for Strixhaven schools?
Part of it is because classes get their archetype abilities at sometimes vastly different levels. For instance, a bard gets them at 3rd, 6th, and 14th levels. A sorcerer gets them at 1st, 6th, 14th, and 18th. A warlock, at 1st, 6th, 10th, and 14th. A wizard, at 2nd, 6th, 10th, and 14th. So it's difficult to make any archetype that would fit two or more arcane classes--they all get abilities at 6th and 14th level, but only some of them get them at 10th, and and only one gets an 18th-level ability. So how do you make any archetypes that would allow both wizards and sorcerers? Or bards and any other class?

For 6th edition (or whenever they completely revamp class structure while keeping archetypes) they could decide that each class gets one archetype ability per tier of play (6th and 10th level are both tier two), and thus multiclass archetypes could be much more easily fit in. And I hope so, because it's definitely a good idea.
 

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