D&D 5E Latest D&D Errata: Drow, Alignment, & More

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Sage Advice is a series of articles in which Jeremy Crawford, one of the D&D Studio’s game design architects, talks about the design of the game’s rules and answers questions about them.


D&D books occasionally receive corrections and other updates to their rules and story. This Sage Advice installment presents updates to several books. I then answer a handful of rules questions, focusing on queries related to Fizban’s Treasury of Dragons and Strixhaven: A Curriculum of Chaos.


Official errata has been published for the following books:
Here's some of the highlights.
  • Alignment is removed from the Racial Traits section of races.
  • Drow have undergone lore changes which reflect the different types of drow. The 'darkness of the drow' sidebar which portrays them as only evil has been removed.
  • Storm King's Thunder alters references to 'Savage Frontier' and 'barbarians'; Curse of Strahd alters references to the Vistani.
  • The controversial Silvery Barbs spell has been clarified.
As a drow, you are infused with the magic of the Underdark, an underground realm of wonders and horrors rarely seen on the surface above. You are at home in shadows and, thanks to your innate magic, learn to con- jure forth both light and darkness. Your kin tend to have stark white hair and grayish skin of many hues.

The cult of the god Lolth, Queen of Spiders, has cor- rupted some of the oldest drow cities, especially in the worlds of Oerth and Toril. Eberron, Krynn, and other realms have escaped the cult’s influence—for now. Wherever the cult lurks, drow heroes stand on the front lines in the war against it, seeking to sunder Lolth’s web.
 

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I did not use him on purpose because the Punisher symbol has been coopted elsewhere to something far beyond the realm of edgelord.
Yeah he was much more of a basic-ass edgelord-magnet in the '90s, but he is indeed something else extremely creepy now.

What blows my mind is that in the 1970s, with Dirty Harry, when cops started idolizing him after the first movie, the Dirty Harry people made literally the first sequel, Magnum Force, be about Harry having to deal with a bunch of murderous cops who idolize him, and who he thus has to shoot for being murderous (he also repeatedly explains that they're wrong and stupid). Dirty Harry still hugely problematic on a lot of levels (including racism), but it's fascinating that back then it provoke an immediate reaction. And it was offensive enough to the right people that he didn't catch on in the same way with them.

Whereas Marvel's reaction to cops idolizing the Punisher took years and was pretty damn mild (unless I've missed something since).
 


The idea came from one of Keith Baker's Dragonshards, which were short articles about Eberron that were published on the D&D site. They're no longer around there unfortunately, but that one is at least archived here (though it looks like crap since all the images are broken).
YOINK!! I now know what to call good Yuan-Ti in my games now. Thanks!
 


The terrifying thing is I've seen this said inironically.

Well, given that Patrick Bateman said that he preferred Genesis after Peter Gabriel left ... how can you NOT know he's a villain?


That, and the causal misogyny and murder. There's that too. But really, you mess with Foxtrot, you mess with all that is good and holy.
 





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