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 mean, I can at least appreciate an adventure that actually tells players what they're going to experience if they don't play a powerful spellcaster.

2E was different. I've seen a 2E fighter kill a marilith, Lich and adult dragon in 3 rounds. While shrugging off save or sucks.

Darksun ramped that up. Fighter probably had very high strength, wild talent etc.
 

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2E was different. I've seen a 2E fighter kill a marilith, Lich and adult dragon in 3 rounds. While shrugging off save or sucks.

Darksun ramped that up. Fighter probably had very high strength, wild talent etc.
I'll have to take your word for it. My experience of 2e is through Planescape: Torment and Baldur's Gate 1/2/SoA. In those games, combats were, just like in 3e and 5e, decided by spellcasters in advance. The non-spellcasters just cleaned up after.
 

I'll have to take your word for it. My experience of 2e is through Planescape: Torment and Baldur's Gate 1/2/SoA. In those games, combats were, just like in 3e and 5e, decided by spellcasters in advance. The non-spellcasters just cleaned up after.

Haven't played them. VGs usually simplify the mechanics and no idea on loot or monsters used with MR.
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How will they handle the problematic content of Dark Sun? Will this be a big sourcebook or a big adventure? Is it going to be a boxed set or one or more books?

Those are all interesting questions, but I think there's one main question that's on everyone's mind...

How are they going to shoehorn Baldur's Gate into Dark Sun??

(practicing that joke for my talk show in a couple of hours...)
 


I'll have to take your word for it. My experience of 2e is through Planescape: Torment and Baldur's Gate 1/2/SoA. In those games, combats were, just like in 3e and 5e, decided by spellcasters in advance. The non-spellcasters just cleaned up after.
It’s a level thing I think. The CRPGs went up to level 20+, but most tabletop games rarely got over level 9. Levelling was much slower.
 

Dont let the amateurs currently working at wotc ruin another setting :(
That's simple. Don't buy it. Pretend like the book doesn't exist. Then your precious ideas about how Dark Sun should be can be maintained.

No one has to buy these setting books. If (general) you do... knowing full well you aren't going to like the result... it means that you are just slapping yourselves in the face for no good reason other than wanting to make yourself upset. But that's not WotC's responsibility to keep you from doing that.
 

We can't forget the possible secrets of the Pristine Tower. Maybe this is the cause of "new" PC species or monsters appearing in Athas.

I guess the best option for the metaplot would be to tell a couple of clues and the own fandom will invent a lot of ideas about what could happen in the future.

I doubt to watch the stats of the SKs for 5e because they are epic levels.

I imagine a future sourcebook with a title like "Traveler's guide of the shatered lands". And it wouldn't only about the region of Tyr but also other apocaliptic settings, like a reimagination of Gamma World.

Maybe Rajaat didn't start being so evil but he was affected by the Pristine Tower in some way, and this happened because Pristine Tower isn't working rightly, like those sci-fi stories where a machine starts to malfuction and to cause serious troubles.

I guess WotC team has understood a good setting has to allow different facts to be happening in different places without links to the main metaplot.

The Dark Powers of Ravenloft could allow a planar gate between Kalidnai and Athas to mock those who try to escape the demiplane.

Vecna and other factions or powers could use Athas to hide things because there are zones where nobody goes there.

What if druids created secret demiplanes like biomas to save biodiversity? Or something like "domains of delight" within the "Land-within-the wind".

What if there is an echo plane where arcane and divine magic can't work and then only planar travel is possible using primal or spirit magic/psionic?

What if the orbyriths could act in Athas causing potential menaces?
 


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