D&D General Forgotten Realms Book preview from NYCC

A quick flip-through of the Adventures in Faerun book.
Nerd Initiative on YouTube previewed the new Forgotten Realms books with Mackenzie De Armas in this short video, including a quick flip-through of the Adventures in Faerun book.



During the quick flip-through, he shows off blurry but mostly readable pages from the Dalelands section of the book, including a few of the DMG-style adventures, including a level 13 adventure called Heart of Fire, where the party is asked to recover a magic item in an Adult Red Dragon's hoard.

Notably, none of the adventures you can see in the video seem to have any new monsters from the book included. Also, not all of the adventures are confined to a single page. Some seem to be at least a page and a half, while others are even smaller to just a half page.
 

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That link doesn’t work for me but this is from Lost Empires of Faerun.

View attachment 420246

Not all have them but they can exist.

IIRC from Pool of Radiance there is a gem or a number of gems that act as control mechanisms for Myth Drannors mythall. But that was a pretty lousy product linked to the computer game.
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Except for elven Myth Drannor, I am less familiar with the Dales region. What are the main cultural differences between the Dales and the Sword Coast?
More independent minded. No city states large villages and towns all autonomous. Largely agrarian. Everyone defends their lands. The temperaments of the various dales varies somewhat. The chafe under direct rule.
 




Except for elven Myth Drannor, I am less familiar with the Dales region. What are the main cultural differences between the Dales and the Sword Coast?
So, the rustic town of Shadowdale is the home base for Ed Greenwood's second campaign (the other being in Waterdeep), in terms of soft culture both the Dalelands and Sword Coast are part of the "Heartlands" where standard 70s AD&D social assumptions (Medievalized Midwestern Americana/Canadianess) prevail.

In terms of material culture, the "Dales" are sparsely populated rural areas between large stretches of ancient Elven dominated forest, though now with less Wlves. Sort of like if The Shire was a bunch of clearings (Dales) between sections of Mirkwood, but with a Wild West vibe. Shadowdale is where people going to Myth Drannor to plunge into the megadungeon that is Elven Khazad Dun (what if Lothlorien became Moria??) for riches operate out of.

Their neighbors to the North, West, and South are aggressive and expansionistic, but the Monster infested forests actually insulted the Dalelands from larger nations.
 
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So, the rustic town of Shadowdale is the home base for Ed Greenwood's second campaign (the other being in Waterdeep), in terms of soft culture both the Dalelands and Sword Coast are part of the "Heartlands" where standard 70s AD&D social assumptions (Medievalized Midwestern Americana/Canadianess) prevail.

In terms of material culture, the "Dales" are sparsely populated rural areas between large stretches of ancient Elven dominated forest, though now with less Wlves. Sort of like if The Shife was a bunch of clearing (Dales) between sections of Mirkwood, but with a Wild West vibe. Shadowdale is where people going to Myth Drannor to plunge into the megadungeon that is Elven Khazad Dun (what if Lothlorien became Moria??) for riches operate out of.

Their neighbors to the North, West, and South are aggressive and expansionistic, but the Monster infested forests actually insulted the Dalelands from larger nations.
It sounds like the Dales are more like 4e Nentir Vale / Points of Light?
 


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