PHR: Dragonborn Mini-Review

LightPhoenix

First Post
I picked this up today. It was a short read, so I thought I'd post a mini-review. Also, since my FLGS had it wrapped, I'd be happy to answer any general questions about the book. However, given the low price, its eventual inclusion in DDI, and one other point made below, I won't be answering too many specifics.

Summary: Straight up, those of you who are hoping for a book full of crunch will almost certainly be disappointed with this book. If you're a DM or player of Dragonborn, you may find it worth checking out. Whether you'll like it to the tune of $10 will likely depend on your purchasing preferences. I'm no art connoisseur, but I didn't see any atrocious pieces, and there are some fairly neat ones. Overall I'm content with the purchase, though not ecstatic.

Breakdown: The book is 32 pages. I would estimate roughly 8 pages for art, 11-12 pages of crunch, and the rest (12-13 pages) is fluff.

Fluff: The fluff includes a short story (two pages) that I honestly only skimmed over. There's also several short essays. "The Blood of Io" covers origins and alignment, "Scions of Arkhosia" covers history and adventuring, and "Family and Clan" covers society. There are also short articles covering each of the four main power sources (Arcane, Divine, Martial, Primal) with regards to Dragonborn. These, as well as Family and Clan, include backgrounds for players to use; some might consider these crunch, but I do not. There's also a final assay on Quests that basically covers long-term goals for the player that I found lacking.

Personally, I found a lot of the essays getting my creative juices flowing, especially "Blood of Io." It talks about the divide between Bahamut and Tiamat, and a third option who worship them in duality. I have this neat idea for my upcoming campaign now that Dragonborn will follow the ideas of Aristotle's phronimos, as an extension of that. The power source articles contain a lot of little hooks that could be expanded upon by a DM in world-building. Overall I was pleased.

Crunch: As can be imagined, most of the crunch involves the Dragon Breath power. Each of the four main power sources has a single paragon path at the end of the essay (Ninefold Master, Platinum Templar, Honorable Blade, Storm Dragon). Of these, I really have to call out the Storm Dragon PP for a poor choice of inclusion. As a prerequisite, you have to be able to use your dragon breath dealing lightning damage. This seems very restrictive to me, considering there are only four PPs in the book, and only one for Primal. Yes, there are feats to make your breath do lightning damage, but I don't think it should be so limiting.

There's about four pages of feats. Personally, I think this is the best part of the crunch. There's roughly the same amount of feats for each tier, whereas DDI tends to focus on Heroic tier overly much. Most key off dragon breath, so having Dragonborn be a prerequisite makes sense. There are a couple that could be generalized (Glorious Victory in particular) but only a couple. The feats fall into three general categories: class-specific feats, general feats to bolster dragon breath, and element-specific feats bolstering dragon breath (in Paragon/Epic tier). The most popular of these by far will be Bolstering Breath, a heroic tier feat which causes your breath to target enemies instead of creatures.

There's two pages of items, including one set (Silver Dragon Regalia). The set items were neat, the general ones were okay but nothing special. I would have preferred them to make the items more related to dragonborn; I think that's why I like the set better. There's one Epic Destiny (Avatar of Io) that basically supercharges your breath weapon and gives you a fly speed with hover. I'm not a huge fan of EDs in general, so this didn't blow my skirt up.

Final Notes: Personally, as is I think it would work better at $7, but that's just me. I would have preferred a little more crunch for $10, though the fluff held up it's end. Specifically, I would have liked to have seen at least one more paragon path per power source. It would have been a nice treat to have one for Psionic, given the impending release of PHB3. I could see that and Shadow being a DDI add-on. Personally, I think this would have worked better as a month-long Dragon theme (ala the Assassin release) versus a soft-cover. In particular, the fluff pieces (mostly geared towards players) would be a decent addition to fill-out slow days in the schedule, although I suspect some would be upset at that.

Given the low amount of crunch in the book, I'd be happy to answer general questions, but I won't be posting stuff wholesale. If you want to have detailed crunch, pick it up, it's not expensive. Alternatively, wait for it to be released on the Compendium/CB next month.
 

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Piratecat

Sesquipedalian
Good review - I'll be giving this product a miss and getting the crunch from DDI, I think.

Could you please repost it in our review database? (Click "reviews" at the top of the page.)
 

LightPhoenix

First Post
Good review - I'll be giving this product a miss and getting the crunch from DDI, I think.

Personally, I think that's what a lot of people will end up doing.

Could you please repost it in our review database? (Click "reviews" at the top of the page.)
You can't tell me what to do man! :cool:

Actually, I wasn't sure what the status of the Reviews page was, especially with the impending switch to vB4.

EDIT: It's posted on the reviews page now.
 
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Dragonhelm

Knight of Solamnia
Is there any mention of draconians in the book? If so, how are dragonborn related to draconians, if at all?

Is the book color or B&W?
 

LightPhoenix

First Post
Is there any mention of draconians in the book? If so, how are dragonborn related to draconians, if at all?

No mention of Draconians, or any other setting specific (FR/Eb/DL/DS) stuff. Artificer and Swordmage get brief mentions in the section on Arcane Dragonborn, but get no specific crunch.

Is the book color or B&W?

It's in color. The pages themselves are, to my detection, the same stock as from the hardcovers. The cover itself is a thicker weight, rigid material that I think is card-stock. I don't know much about publishing, so those might be misleading terms (except "thicker weight").

As an aside, I love the colors on the front of the book; the purple/magenta/red is very aesthetically pleasing.
 

Zaukrie

New Publisher
I skimmed it, hoping for about 15-20 pages of fluff. There are 8 pages at the front dedicated to fluff. All the rest of the fluff is either side bars or hidden in character backgrounds (which were uninspiring to me, but I only read 2), or in the paragon paths or in the crunch. Very, very disappointing. I have no idea who this is aimed at. There isn't enough fluff to be meaningful, and the powers will be in DDI (I guess it is aimed at those that don't get DDI).
 

Coldwyn

First Post
I skimmed it, hoping for about 15-20 pages of fluff. There are 8 pages at the front dedicated to fluff. All the rest of the fluff is either side bars or hidden in character backgrounds (which were uninspiring to me, but I only read 2), or in the paragon paths or in the crunch. Very, very disappointing. I have no idea who this is aimed at. There isn't enough fluff to be meaningful, and the powers will be in DDI (I guess it is aimed at those that don't get DDI).

Or for people like me who need something physical to whack his gm with because dragonborn got houseruled-out in our campaign ;)
 


Obryn

Hero
It was my add-on for free shipping on the Underdark book. :) Good to know it's got some decent amounts of fluff.

-O
 

Dire Bare

Legend
I have no idea who this is aimed at. There isn't enough fluff to be meaningful, and the powers will be in DDI (I guess it is aimed at those that don't get DDI).

It's an experiment. We haven't seen this format in 3rd or 4th edition, and actually even in earlier editions. Sure in 2nd we had the "Complete" book of every race and every class splats, but while serving the same niche this book brings a new format to the game. If this and the tiefling followup do well, we'll see more.

This book is "aimed" at those who dig dragonborn and would jump at an inexpensive book all about the race (and, yes, $10 is "inexpensive" nowadays). We get some new background fluff about the race, geared towards players, and a decent sampling of some new crunch.

It's also changing up the release model of the game. You could say it's aimed at folks weary of shelling out $20-$40 each month for a new hardcover. The "location" books coming soon are aimed at this purpose for the DM (Hammerfast, Vor Rukoth)

I haven't seen the book yet myself, but I'm excited to purchase a copy. I'm also looking forward to the tiefling book, and I'm hoping to see an eladrin book followup as well.
 

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