Dungeons & Dragons Releases New Unearthed Arcana Subclasses, Strongly Hinting at Dark Sun

It appears a Dark Sun campaign setting book is coming out in 2026.
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Wizards of the Coast has released four new D&D subclasses for playtesting, all of which have heavy thematic ties to the post-apocalyptic Dark Sun setting. The four subclasses, released as "Apocalyptic Subclasses," include the Circle of Preservation Druid, the Gladiator Fighter, the Defiled Sorcerer, and the Sorcerer-King Patron Warlock. Although not stated outright, the Gladiator and Sorcerer-King Patron are explicit nods to the Dark Sun setting, set in a ruined world ruled by Sorcerer-Kings where gladiatorial fights were common.

The Circle of Preservation Druid creates areas of preserved land that grants buffs to those who stand upon it. The Gladiator adds secondary Weapon Mastery properties to their attacks, with bonus abilities. Notably, the Gladiator uses Charisma as its secondary stat. The Defiled Sorcerer can expend its hit dice to amp up damage to its attacks and can also steal the life of its targets to deal additional damage. The Sorcerer-King Patron gains a number of abilities tying into tyranny and oppression, with the ability to cast Command as a Bonus Action without expending a spell slot, causing targets to gain the Frightened Condition, and forcing those who attack them to re-roll successful attacks.

The survey for the subclasses goes live on August 28th.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer

Well, it's not a surprise to me, as it is widely known that all Unearthed Arcana articles get a survey that opens the week after the article is released. That survey is open for 2 weeks.

Some may say that is not long enough, but that is how it worked leading up to the 2024 PHB subclasses too.

If people care, they will provide their feedback.
Yeah the only point is it's just going to be opinion-based/white room stuff. There were some long-ago UAs which had much, much larger timeframes? But I suspect WotC found those didn't actually help them all that much, otherwise why change it? Maybe the main value of UA surveys is opinion? Like, what % of people even gave genuinely playtest-based info? 5%? 10% I feel like that'd be the outside. And I wonder if a survey is a month or more after the UA, and open for a month or more, do they get fewer or more responses? I would have assumed more, a long time ago, but I've worked with surveys a lot for my job more recently, and I suspect they get more this way.
 

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It's going to be a tad jarring that the most evil beings on the planet apparently draw a line at something.

"I can excuse genocide but I draw the line at slavery!"
It doesn't have to be a moral choice. The economics of slavery aren't what they're cracked up to be, especially in an ecosystem like Athas. It might just be more efficient to make them serfs. Fewer rebellions, they feel like they have something of their own, and you don't have to constantly conquer or import new slaves (which is convenient when there's nowhere to conquer or import slaves from).
 

Yeah the only point is it's just going to be opinion-based/white room stuff. There were some long-ago UAs which had much, much larger timeframes? But I suspect WotC found those didn't actually help them all that much, otherwise why change it? Maybe the main value of UA surveys is opinion? Like, what % of people even gave genuinely playtest-based info? 5%? 10% I feel like that'd be the outside. And I wonder if a survey is a month or more after the UA, and open for a month or more, do they get fewer or more responses? I would have assumed more, a long time ago, but I've worked with surveys a lot for my job more recently, and I suspect they get more this way.
the other thing I think about surveys?

Sales are driven by emotion and excitement, not balance and min/maxing.......they want to know what people FEEL about the UA more than the actual balance stuff....
 


If there is going to be a Dark Sun book, I wonder what made them change their tune? Dark Sun represents pretty much everything current Wotc is set on avoiding.

Unless we're getting a family friendly version of Dark Sun...ugh...
A lot if the old guard who were saying that have recently left.

They could also just slap "mature audience" warnings on it, and have info in the text about potential issues with this sort of setting and advice on how to run it.

A few months ago, I wouldn't have thought they would touch Calimshan with a 10 foot pole, but now it's going to be one of the featured mini-settings in the upcoming FR books. Maybe they've decided to take a few risks?
 
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Yup. Any except Gladiator. If wanted to do literally all those things, even to RP a Gladiator, I'd just play Battlemaster. Anything this can, it can do better. Without being MAD. The only situation I see Gladiator even maybe making sense is if you were already using CHA as your attack stat, i.e. MC dipping from a CHA-attacking Warlock or something. But even then...
Gladiator looks pretty powerful. though I suspect it will mostly be for multiclassing with another charisma based class like Paladin, Warlock, Bard or Sorcerer. Already a dip for armor and Constitution save proficiency is very popular for casters. Five times per short rest (Max Charisma) for Brutality, and +5 AC with your reaction as often as you have reactions and are hit at 7th level, are pretty potent. True Strike (Charisma) along with a Swords Bard or Valor bard is likely going to be popular. It's too bad that Stagger brutality comes so late.
 

The economics of slavery aren't what they're cracked up to be
Yup. It's no mistake that slavery didn't really persist in Europe into the Middle ages even though it was common in the Roman era and fairly common in the Dark Ages ("Non Angli sed angeli", Viking use of thralls etc.). You can get pretty much all the major benefits with a much lower management overhead and lower direct costs with serfdom.
 




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