Evil Drow Statblocks to Return in Forgotten Realms Rulebooks Later This Year

drow matron.jpg


Drow-specific NPC statblocks will be included in the upcoming Forgotten Realms Adventurer's Guide set for release later this year. Over the past several weeks, much hullabaloo has been made over the Monster Manual, specifically that the D&D design team replaced specific drow and orc statblocks with generic NPC statblocks that can be used for any kind of humanoids. In a video released today, D&D lead designer Jeremy Crawford confirmed that more specific statblocks tied to specific humanoid sects or characters would return in future rulebooks, with evil drow given as an example.

"Also for anyone who's eager to see more species-tailored humanoid statblocks, people are going to see more of that in our setting books," Crawford said. "You're going to see that in our Forgotten Realms products, for example. The malevolent drow of Menzoberranzan are an important part of that setting and so they get their own statblocks. This is really true of all the creatures in the Monster Manual. This is your massive starting toy box of monsters that are usable anywhere in the multiverse. The bestiaries in our setting products, that's where we can provide you versions of things tailored to the cultures and histories of our different worlds."

 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer


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D&D's version, within pop culture consciousness (Comic/Marvel Movie Multiverse is the actual one) is not the same. You can skate by on a technicality if you like, but its not what people think of.

A multiverse of alt history Universes for Marvel & DC vs different planes of existence (although Marvel & DC have those too), I get what your saying, but it's more then technicality that both of these are multiverses, it's an Extremely broad term that both D&D, MtG, and Comic books have been using for ages, I get why folks are acting like it's a new fangled term, it's been in use for at least decades, if not centuries, in both fiction and physics and may e theology and philosophy for a very long time.
 

D&D's multiverse has no strong conception of alternate history, which is to me part and parcel of the multiverse concept.
Why? Are you thinking alternate earths like comics? That is definitely a comic book approach, but it is not what is suggested by string theory when we scientifically discuss multiverses. Of course the idea of alternate histories does have a history in D&D, just not a strong one.
 


Why? Are you thinking alternate earths like comics? That is definitely a comic book approach, but it is not what is suggested by string theory when we scientifically discuss multiverses. Of course the idea of alternate histories does have a history in D&D, just not a strong one.
What are folks more familiar with: string theory or comics?
 

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