D&D 5E (2024) How excited are you for the 2 upcoming Forgotten Realms books?

How excited are you for the 2 Forgotten Realms books?

  • Very

    Votes: 33 26.4%
  • A little

    Votes: 30 24.0%
  • Meh... we will see

    Votes: 16 12.8%
  • Not really... might be good though

    Votes: 12 9.6%
  • Not at all

    Votes: 27 21.6%
  • D&D is dead to me

    Votes: 7 5.6%

They're talking about the rollback of much bigger controversial changes, such as rearranging/removing large portions of the continent and the world, removing well-known (even beloved) cities/nations/regions, and adding much-derided new cities/nations/regions (although I imagine Tymanther at least will stay in some form). Compared to these, the changes in the PDK are like a mere candle vs the sun.

Tymanther suffered from being linked to the Spellplague for awhile, but I think the SCAG & The Brimstone Angels & Griffin Brotherhood Saga changed that and it really feels like it made a place for itself in FR. It wasn't the only major change to a location that survived the Sundering however. Dambrath stayed a Were creature tribal nation instead of going back to a Half Drow nation for example.
 

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I want those alt covers badly. And I'm better make sure to pre-order em when I can cuz I have a hunch that once they are out, they could be a pain in the butt to get at market retail value value. Those scalpers will probably try to jack up the prices to ride on that BG3 high/popularity.
 




I voted "a little". I'm interested but apprehensive. I'm sad that two of the five settings have been done to death at this point (Baldur's Gate and Icewind Dale). That's a pure example of the marketing taking priority over new material -- I literally have two sources for each of those published in the past ten years but nothing on Thay for like 30 years. Moonshae's has also been done by excellent designers for Baldman Games and is available on the DM's Guild so I don't feel like that needs to be covered either. So that leaves two of five locations that are really new to me.

As far as the book itself goes, I want a sourcebook packed with cool locations and adventure hooks I can use to build my own adventures and my own campaign. Eberron Rising from the Last War and Guildmaster's Guide to Ravnica are both my reference level sourcebooks from WOTC so we'll see how these compare. I'm less interested in the player guide -- crunchy stuff just doesn't interest me as much. Same with monsters, frankly. I have thousands of monsters already and I end up building my own on the fly half the time anyway. I want lore. Tons and tons of lore. Table-usable lore. I'm hoping the 50(!) mini adventures they pack into this book act as table-usable lore. We'll see.
 


An evergreen setting for the Forgotten Realms, especially one with as many regions, cities, locations, wildly distant from each other, could support more adventure than one could play out in their lifetime.

Does that sound dead to anyone else?
 

I believe I heard it was James Wyatt as lead for these books, and no one has more experience and better experience at world building then James Wyatt at WotC. Both MtG and D&D side. He also has FR experience.
Nope, the lead for these is Jason Tondro (lead on Many Things, edited the OD&D collectio ), Wyatt was working on the DMG.
 

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