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Elements of Magic: Revised -- here at last!

Morrus

Well, that was fun
Staff member
[IMAGER]http://www.rpgnow.com/products/product_2699.JPG[/IMAGER]Yup, it's finally here. Elements of Magic: Revised is done, finished, complete. It is available for sale at RPGNow right here.
[bq]
Magic defines fantasy. It is the magical that makes a normal story into a fantasy that delights listeners, readers, and gamers by making all the impossibilities we can imagine become real. Dreams of magic can make even the most mundane day something to cherish, like a poem evoking the charm of the everyday world.

But sometimes, just like poems, magic can become stale and clichéd. Through repeated exposure, its novelty can wear off, and certainly, thirty years of magic missiles and fingers of death have been enough to render many fantasy gamers jaded. At its core, saying, “My love is a dove,” in a poem is as trite as, “I cast detect magic.”

Elements of Magic opens the world of magic to you, letting you create almost any type of magic-user you’d like. Magic is an artform, like poetry, and any good poet is never content to merely recite the works of others.

Elements of Magic is modular, able to fit whatever role you want it to play. It can be added to an existing campaign that already has wizards, sorcerers, clerics, and druids, perhaps representing another, higher sort of magic, or it can wholly replace the existing magic system, providing a whole new feel to your fantasy gaming. You will need a d20 core rulebook to use these rules, but this book will let you ignore the old, clichéd spells presented in those books, and create your own works of magical art.

Elements of Magic is a rules module designed to replace the "fire and forget" spell system of the d20 Core Rules. The d20 spell system, while balanced and usable, is not flexible enough to model the magic users from most fantasy books and movies. Few wizards have ever memorized or prepared a spell, and even fewer forget them immediately afterwards. In Elements of Magic, each character has only a single spellcasting level, no matter how many types of magic she learns in her career. The Elements of Magic gives characters many times the options of the standard d20 rules. Individual spells are replaced by spell lists. Instead of learning a fireball spell, for example, a mage could learn the Evoke Area Fire spell list, which is very flexible as to its usage and appearance. Nor is the mage limited to fire evocations – with 20 elements to choose from, she could learn Evoke Area Ice or Lightning, or an even more exotic spell list, such as Imbue Creature with Lava or Shadow. It would take thousands of standard spells to duplicate the effects of the spell lists in this 100 page book.

This revised edition of the bestselling d20 sourcebook is finally here![/bq]
Also, check out this competition for the first five people to review this product here at EN World.
 

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RangerWickett said:
Due to the significance of the revision, there will be no discount. A teaser of the revision is available on the ENPublishing website.

Hmmm..

A jump straight from free upgrades to zero discount.

That's nice.
 

BryonD said:
Hmmm..

A jump straight from free upgrades to zero discount.

That's nice.

At www.enworld.org/enpublishing, you can download the majority of the basic rules for the revision, enough to run a game with the updates. We wanted to make sure everybody'd be able to take advantage of the updates, especially those who purchased the original version. However, the update is practically a new book. Consider it the 3.5 update, and the teaser available on the site is the SRD. If you want the pretty version with the new art, the flavor, and the advice sections, it's only $8.95.
 

BryonD said:
Hmmm..

A jump straight from free upgrades to zero discount.

That's nice.
It's worth noting that ENPublishing is not the only publisher not offering free upgrades to move material from 3.0 to 3.5 - it's not like they're alone in this. And there are other companies that ARE still offering free upgrades. There's no "standard" one way or the other... usually upgrades from 3.0 to 3.0 and from 3.5 to 3.5 have been free, it's just upgrades that jump the 3.0 to 3.5 gap that haven't been. Again, there are exceptions.

--The Sigil
 

The Sigil said:
It's worth noting that ENPublishing is not the only publisher not offering free upgrades to move material from 3.0 to 3.5 - it's not like they're alone in this.
That's not what Rangerwickett just said. There's a free 44 page document for those who don't want to buy the PDF.

That despite the fact that this is not a 3.5 upgrade - it's a completely new book, written from scratch, inspired by the previous book.

Given that it's not an "update" or an "upgrade", I think we've been pretty friggin' generous to give away a 44 page version of it for free. :)
 

Don't forget, the original was later part of the $1 blowout sale, so any discount would almost be double dipping for people who already got the it for a song. I'm also guessing that trying to give a discount just to the original (full-price) buyers would take so much time that it would be cost-prohibitive.
 

The Sigil said:
It's worth noting that ENPublishing is not the only publisher not offering free upgrades to move material from 3.0 to 3.5 - it's not like they're alone in this. And there are other companies that ARE still offering free upgrades. There's no "standard" one way or the other... usually upgrades from 3.0 to 3.0 and from 3.5 to 3.5 have been free, it's just upgrades that jump the 3.0 to 3.5 gap that haven't been. Again, there are exceptions.

--The Sigil

Certainly, but a free upgrade WAS promised. Which makes all the difference.

I still have my e-mail.
 

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