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

Yes, but I’m not a random peasant living on Athas. I know his name is Borys and it kinda ruins the mystique a bit.

Also, I was looking up DS lore the other day and saw something about one of the sorcerer-king’s killing a different dragon. I didn’t know there were any others!
As soon as you say there is only one of something, or it must be rare, everyone wants to make use of a special exception. This applies to writers as much as players. It's why every second Dark Sun adventure seems to have a portal to another world or visitors from elsewhere or whatever, despite the fact that Athas is meant to be cut off from the rest of the D&D cosmology.
 

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As soon as you say there is only one of something, or it must be rare, everyone wants to make use of a special exception. This applies to writers as much as players. It's why every second Dark Sun adventure seems to have a portal to another world or visitors from elsewhere or whatever, despite the fact that Athas is meant to be cut off from the rest of the D&D cosmology.
Apparently the other dragon, Farcluun, is in the 1993 adventure, Black Flames. Abelach-Re kills her. But Wikipedia describes Abelach-Re as a dragon as well, so maybe that’s wrong?

Black Flames - Wikipedia
 

Apparently the other dragon, Farcluun, is in the 1993 adventure, Black Flames. Abelach-Re kills her. But Wikipedia describes Abelach-Re as a dragon as well, so maybe that’s wrong?

Black Flames - Wikipedia
Abalach-Re is a dragon inasmuch as all the Sorcerer Kings are on the path to becoming dragons. They are dragons colloquially, but not true dragons. A brief googling tells me that Farcluun is also on the path, and not a full dragon.
 

Note that Dark Sun, as settings go, is really small. This is the approximate size of the original DS box set map superimposed on a map of the FR Sword Coast:
View attachment 415283
The revised map is significantly larger, but still not quite the size of the region that has had FR fans complaining the last few years that they've only focused on a tiny part of the setting:
View attachment 415287
Or, to use real-world comparisons:
View attachment 415289
View attachment 415290

Now, the Last Sea is at the very north end of the map so yes, it is quite far away – about 660 miles north of Tyr (a bit longer if you're going to the city). But we're talking about the same distance as Waterdeep to Candlekeep in FR – not exactly next door, particularly not with Athasian terrain, but not "other side of the world" distances.
(For the record, the approximate sizes are 360 x 240 miles for the OG map and 800 x 1000 miles for the revised – so the revised has ~8 times the area with ~2 times the amount of material)
Wow... I knew the Revised set made the map bigger but I didn't realize it was that much bigger.

IIRC the 4E version revised it again so that it was in between the two extremes.
 

I don’t think the original book ever mentioned his actual name, and even when it was revealed the number of people who it are a little over a dozen. To basically everyone he is just “The Dragon”
That's correct. Borys appears to have first been named in the novel The Prism Pentad Book 2: The Crimson Legion (April 1992), but isn't mentioned in a game product until The Complete Gladiator's Handbook (June 1993), which is literally just a single mention. Even the Dragon Kings (May 1992) hardcover refers to him at just "The Dragon of Tyr".
 



I didn’t know there were any others!
The idea that there might be other dragons (even fully transformed ones) came fairly early on in the product line. Dragon Kings (essentially a level 20-30 expansion for Dark Sun) presents the process of transformation as an option for any character with sufficient levels in the right classes, and has this to say:
Screenshot 2025-08-25 at 07.19.32.jpg
 

That's correct. Borys appears to have first been named in the novel The Prism Pentad Book 2: The Crimson Legion (April 1992), but isn't mentioned in a game product until The Complete Gladiator's Handbook (June 1993), which is literally just a single mention. Even the Dragon Kings (May 1992) hardcover refers to him at just "The Dragon of Tyr".
And to add another little wrinkle to the lore, in Verdant Passage we have Nok, the wise old halfling questgiver who sets up the main characters to kill Kalak, saying ‘there are many dragons in the world. Kalak of Tyr is not yet one of them’.

So given how small the Tyr region is in the context of Athas the planet, did Rajaat have other champions on other continents, running around exterminating, I dunno, kappas and wayangs? Or is this just TSR making up the lore on the fly again, wildly contradicting themselves, and the novel people not working in conjunction with the game people?
 

The idea that there might be other dragons (even fully transformed ones) came fairly early on in the product line. Dragon Kings (essentially a level 20-30 expansion for Dark Sun) presents the process of transformation as an option for any character with sufficient levels in the right classes, and has this to say:
View attachment 415431
If I recall, Dragon Kings and The Valley of Dust and Fire were both written before Troy wrote the finale novel in the Prism Pentad.

After Troy was shuffled off to novels, the novel writers of TSR were highly separated from the RPG developers.
 

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