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

I would reboot prior to death of the Sorcerer King of Tyr, back when the shadow of the Sorcerer Kings covered all hope and there was no thought that they would or could be killed. Any hope in the setting had to be created and harbored by the PC's.
 

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Reboot time, Sorcerer Kings in charge and trying to become Dragons. Dragon at large and nobody knows what its goals are. Preservers have to hide in the shadows. The world is dying and life is cheap.
personally I would get rid of the dragon and Rajaat, and just have the sorcerer-kings vying for supremacy / ascension. To me the dragon / Rajaat angle always undermined the message of the sorcerer-kings being the bad guys
 

Somebody wants to follow the continuity and the metaplot, others would rather to be the heroes who killed the sorcerer-kings forgoting the canon of the novels, and more one player would like to add his personal touch, for example adding the totemist shaman (magic of incarnum) and the ardent class (the complete psionic).

The Athasian ratfolk are the "tari".

Are there werewernim in Athas?

Defilers are more powerful, but if you don't work for the sorcerer-kings then everybody wants to kill you and you can't blame them because you are literally poisoning the land.

Most of D&D would rather to think D&D villains will be defeated because their bad karma.

What if the new faction from the adventure "the black spine", the city of spires, had settled domains within "the Grey"?

Maybe the "Grey" plane should be renamed Greyvoid or like this.

The "land-within-the wind", the Athasian Feywild could be where we could add PC species from editions after 2nd. The t'sa appeared in Dragon magazine #257. These hiperactive reptilians could become masters of the life-shape arts.

If planar travel toward the elemental planes is possible, could Athas be invaded by genies or other elemental factions?

Are spinewyrms true dragons?

What happens with primal spirits from Dragon Magazine #395? Forest Father, Silver Wind, the Spirit Khanate and Stone Brother. And what about the possible astral realm created by the Athasian deities?

What if cultists of Tharizdun, the elder elemental eye, could cause troubles in Athas?

What if the "Athasian celestial plane" is the timeline where time-travelers fixed everything? This would be the afterlife of the heroes from the novels if they don't ascend toward divinity.
 

personally I would get rid of the dragon and Rajaat, and just have the sorcerer-kings vying for supremacy / ascension. To me the dragon / Rajaat angle always undermined the message of the sorcerer-kings being the bad guys
The Dragon is just a higher level Sorcerer King that the others are aspiring to be like.
Two of the other Sorcerer Kings are already almost another Dragon.

Dregoth, and Nibenay
 

The Dragon is just a higher level Sorcerer King that the others are aspiring to be like.
I am aware, I still would get rid of him and his reason for existing. Once it becomes clear that the sorcerer-kings sacrificing their men to the dragon serves the purpose of keeping Rajaat imprisoned, they become kinda the good guys in this
 

I am aware, I still would get rid of him and his reason for existing. Once it becomes clear that the sorcerer-kings sacrificing their men to the dragon serves the purpose of keeping Rajaat imprisoned, they become kinda the good guys in this
I don’t think that matters like at all. The Dragon is cool, and Rajaat doesn’t matter.
 

Heck from checking the 4e version the Dragon there already finished the seal, he’s just another Tyrant Sorcerer King. He takes his levy of slaves from the other Sorcerer Kings as food, experiment fodder or gifts for his favoured servants.
 

I am aware, I still would get rid of him and his reason for existing. Once it becomes clear that the sorcerer-kings sacrificing their men to the dragon serves the purpose of keeping Rajaat imprisoned, they become kinda the good guys in this
That... doesn't track. They're keeping another evil sealed, but for the sake of self-preservation, not altruism. Also, you know, sacrificing countless innocents to do so is evil no matter how you slice it.
 

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