AverageTable
First Post
In a follow up to the posts above, are we correct in assuming that the hobgoblins you mention are the Bloodreaver slavers introduced in H1?
See below:
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Evistro is a demon. It's straight out of the MM
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In a follow up to the posts above, are we correct in assuming that the hobgoblins you mention are the Bloodreaver slavers introduced in H1?
D'Karr,
What else can you tell us about H2? You mentioned that it comes in two booklets. Should I assume they are as flimsy as the two found in H1?
Also, do they supply maps for all encounters or just a few like H1? Judging by the sheer number of encounters, I'm guess not many of them are poster mapped.
Yeah, I found it.
Regarding the, are they medium or small?Norkers
Also, do they supply maps for all encounters or just a few like H1? Judging by the sheer number of encounters, I'm guess not many of them are poster mapped.
Thanks for all the great info... I really appreciate it!
Followups:
1) How nicely "story" or "roleplay" thick is this adventure? More, the same, or less than H1?
2) How linear is it - are there sections where you might take encounters out of order depending on player choice?
Not suggesting either is good or bad or not really concerned about the merits of everything, but just curious. Sounds like they've kept the format of H1 for the encounters instead of the old delve (campaign at beginning, all encounters in order at end... lots of flipping large chunks) is that correct?
Overall, it is a larger adventure than H1. It has a complete booklet with "campaign" information that a DM could use to expand the adventure as desired. I can see several areas where an enterprising DM could offer several side-treks. Most of the encounters you can run directly from the booklet. However, there is a complete section for Random Encounters and this section does not have any stat blocks for the creatures, so you will need the Monster Manual to run those.