Netheril's Fall - First Impressions

Netheril's Fall is the second DLC to be released for the new Forgotten Realms books.
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If Astarion's Book of Hungers is the player-facing add-on for Heroes of Faerun, than Netheril's Fall is the slightly more beefy add-on for Adventures in Faerun. The new digital "DLC" for the Forgotten Realms book is a gazetteer for the lost kingdom of Netheril, with an overview of the fallen kingdom, a look at two of its cities (one flying city, Eileanar, and the landbound city Conch), some magically-themed environmental hazards, and a short collection of mini-adventures in the style of the Dungeon Master's Guide. Netheril's Fall is functionally a mini-gazetteer, albeit not quite as beefy as the five gazetteers found in Adventures in Faerun that detail various regions.

At first glance, it's easy to see why Netheril's Fall wasn't included in Adventures in Faerun. Netheril is a fallen empire and having an adventure in Netheril will likely require the use of time gates (which are conveniently explained in the supplement, with two adventures dedicated to traveling and crossing through a Time Gate. I'll note that the adventures in this book feel much more specific than what we saw in Adventures in Faerun or the 2024 Dungeon Master's Guide. While the adventures in other books could be "plugged" into any level-appropriate campaign, these adventures feel much more narrow in scope and cover specific locations or events found in the DLC. There's a few adventures in Adventures in Faerun that cover locales seen in the gazetteer, but there aren't very many that cover a specific event. I don't mind the "one page adventure" format, but I'm not sure it works with every adventure type. If an adventure sends players into a mad wizard's attempted ascent into godhood, I want a little more meat than a few encounters and a resolution of "well, the players will have time to explore the city before the ritual fails."

Another criticism I have of Netheril's Fall is that Netheril doesn't feel nearly as fantastical as an ancient high-magic society should. Given that Adventures in Faerun did a very find job of elevating the Forgotten Realms beyond its generic high fantasy trappings, I feel like a bit more care could have really sold Netheril as more fantastical in nature than what we got. If we could have gotten a few more pages about Netheril's culture, I feel like Netheril would have been more appealing as a place that DMs would want to incorporate into their campaigns. As presented, there are a few cool ideas, but even the phaerimm (one of my favorite D&D monsters) feel a bit flat compared to what we would have gotten.

I was critical of Astarion's Book of Hunger's price point, and while I feel that $15 is still too high for Netheril's Fall, there's a lot more "content" compared to that book. Generally speaking, some adventure content, a gazetteer, and some monster statblocks is probably a bit more valuable than one new species and a collection of feats, although I'm probably a bit biased towards DM content since I'm usually the one behind the DM screen. I personally would had preferred a $10 price point for this DLC, but others may feel that the price point of these are more fair.

All in all, I feel a bit underwhelmed by Netheril's Fall. Netheril seems like a very cool part of Forgotten Realms lore, but it's not given full justice here. I know there's some other Netheril content out there from past editions, and I encourage people to check those out on DMs Guild if they want a real deep dive into this lost empire.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer

I was 8 in 1989. I vaguely remember seeing news on the TV about the Berlin Wall coming down. I have an even vaguer memory of watching the Challenger explode on the TV news. (I would have been 5 then.)
I was in high school for the Challenger and in science class. The teacher wheeled in a TV so the class could watch the launch live. As you would expect from a high school class, there was lots of talking and laughing. When the Challenger exploded, you could have heard a pin drop for about 30 seconds.
Contrast that with my memories of 9/11. Those felt seared in my memory as if they had happened only yesterday for many years.
Both the Challenger and 9/11 are seared in my memory and remain so. I worked retail in 2001 and went to work on 9/11. A woman walked in at some point and said, "Don't you just love when disasters like this happen? The stores are always so empty when I shop." It was all I could do not to tell her off.
 

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I was in high school for the Challenger and in science class. The teacher wheeled in a TV so the class could watch the launch live. As you would expect from a high school class, there was lots of talking and laughing. When the Challenger exploded, you could have heard a pin drop for about 30 seconds.
I can imagine!

Both the Challenger and 9/11 are seared in my memory and remain so. I worked retail in 2001 and went to work on 9/11. A woman walked in at some point and said, "Don't you just love when disasters like this happen? The stores are always so empty when I shop." It was all I could do not to tell her off.
Wow. That's callous. I can still remember much of 9/11 in great detail. It just no longer feels like it happened yesterday.
 

About the only way I could think to do it would be to show 9th, 10th, and 11th level spells being casually thrown about by powerful Arcanists.
What it probably requires is some deep thought about how it affects the world that there are guys who can throw around ninth 10th and 11th level spells, even when those guys aren’t around. Maybe make it a metaphor for multi billionaires?
 

Sorry, what was this Berlin Wall you keep talking about? Never heard of it.
This really, is the important question. To understand the significance, you need to know what the Berlin Wall was, and why it was there.

But that's not "lost" information. Even if you can't read, you can still find a village elder who can explain it to you.
 

The writers made a bit of an effort by stating that the Netherese wore togas and other Roman-style accoutrements. So you could argue that the time travel would be taking your Ren Faire PCs to an Ancient Rome pageant or something.

It’s interesting how many fantasy settings have an “Ancient Rome but with magic” society built into their fictional histories. FR has Netheril, Dragonlance has Istar, Dragon Age has Tevinter, and so on.
I've flipped the idea a bit.

My homebrew campaign has a Turkish/India flavored fallen empire, and the current main kingdom that has risen from the ashes is a Romanesque style culture.
 

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