Yeah, it's on the main page here, on the left side.I’m sure folk have seen this but I saw this on Amazon today - released September. The Wild beyond the Witchlight, a feyland adventure for 5e.
Well, we know that there are two brand new Settigns in the works, and I've seen people speculating that a sort of Fey inverse to Ravenloft would make a lot of sense as a Genre-specific Setting (surreal absurdist fantasy, like Silverlock or Alice in Wonderland).I wish this was a sourcebook, like van Richten's, rather than an adventure...but I guess if it's successful then maybe we'll get a sourcebook someday?
Those UA fey races have to go somewhere. My guess is Witchlight will be structured similarly to Saltmarsh, with rules and a gazetteer up front, and the adventure and new monsters in the back.I wish this was a sourcebook, like van Richten's, rather than an adventure...but I guess if it's successful then maybe we'll get a sourcebook someday?
I am always banging on about Saltmarsh-style books, I know, but Dungeonland/The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror would be a great anchor for a Feywild-style Saltmarsh book, along with old Dungeon adventures and newly created ones to flesh it out.Well, we know that there are two brand new Settigns in the works, and I've seen people speculating that a sort of Fey inverse to Ravenloft would make a lot of sense as a Genre-specific Setting (surreal absurdist fantasy, like Silverlock or Alice in Wonderland).
Saltmarsh is a great model, what I expect to see is maybe more like Curse of Strahd (though Curse of Strahd is arguably the model for Saltmarsh, I suppose).I am always banging on about Saltmarsh-style books, I know, but Dungeonland/The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror would be a great anchor for a Feywild-style Saltmarsh book, along with old Dungeon adventures and newly created ones to flesh it out.
I like Faerie, but I'm not yet convinced that it could carry a book like Van Richten's at this time.
I would guess Eldraine would be more likely to be that book than a Feywild sourcebook. But I agree that it's a missing flavor that would be great to see supported.The appeal of a straight up Fairyland Setting book would be that it is mostly new to D&D: Fey elements have been present, but never fully developed full-throttle.