Forgotten Realms: Astarion's Book of Hungers - First Impressions

The first of three DLC for the new Forgotten Realms books.
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Astarion's Book of Hungers probably doesn't contain enough content to justify its $15 price tag unless a player is absolutely set on playing a dhampir or a vampire-adjacent character in their D&D campaign. Released today alongside the wide release of the new Forgotten Realms books, Astarion's Book of Hungers features a new species (the dhampir, receiving some minor adjustments from its last appearance in Von Richten's Guide to Ravenloft), three new backgrounds, and a collection of vampire-themed feats. Also included in the set are a handful of new monster statblocks and three stripped-down adventures in the vein of the 2024 Dungeon Master's Guide, all of which are set in the Rat's Run Tavern and are themed around Astarion's extended vampire spawn family.

The new adventure content is also the first of a new kind of product for Dungeons & Dragons - digital "DLC" tied to the release of a physical product. Astarion's Book of Hungers is one of three DLC for the new Forgotten Realms books and can be purchased either via a bundle with the Forgotten Realms books or individually for $15. The price point is where I'm really struggling with this content. Based on the $60 price point of Heroes of Faerun and the 194-page count, one would expect this DLC to have around 50 pages of content in it. It's hard to get an exact page count on this since it's digital, but it certainly feels a lot skinnier than that.

The content itself isn't disappointing - the dhampir contains some minor updates from its last iteration to make the lineage into a standard species. Some of the feats could also be combined to create either a flavorful vampire aspirant or a holy vampire slayer. The new monsters are interesting, especially the new devils that are tied to Mephistopheles. However, I really expected a bit more from this DLC. At the very least, we could have gotten a history of Astarion himself, especially as he's the central character of the book. I suppose Wizards is banking on anyone who purchased this book to have already played through Baldur's Gate 3, but I'm just stunned that there's not more of a focus on Astarion outside of a couple of quick adventures in which players are expected to save him from his vampire kin.

I've expected more digital-exclusive paid content on D&D Beyond for a long while, at least since Hasbro executives complained that D&D was "undermonetized." The key to these releases is to find the right price point and the right amount of content. To be blunt - Astarion's Book of Hungers isn't it. Maybe if the price were lower or if there was more content, this would feel less like a cash grab and more like true add-on content. While I don't mind what we got, I feel like the price point dictated more. Maybe the other DLCs will be more robust, but Astarion's Book of Hungers fell short.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer

Or alternatively, it shows that despite all the hate they get, digital-only releases fill a product niche for things too small to be economical for a physical release.
Eh. They're clearly working on some sort of player-facing book for 2026. Sliding the Dhampir stuff in there would probably have been fine with everyone.
 

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I haven’t downloaded it yet but would a 9.95 or 7.95 be more in line of cost expectation given the material given? Just curious of what people think would be ok.
personally, $4.99 would be a good price point, $9.99 is greedy, $7.50 is acceptable / kind of the upper limit of what can be justified
 


Or alternatively, it shows that despite all the hate they get, digital-only releases fill a product niche for things too small to be economical for a physical release. Due to how, as you said, the cost of physical releases doesn't scale linearly with their size.
it's not like they are scaling the digital releases linearly with their size either...
 

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