PRINCES OF THE APOCALYPSE For Fantasy Grounds VTT

Princes of the Apocalypse is now available for Fantasy Grounds, the virtual tabletop software with the official D&D license. As usual, the package contains the full adventure, along with handouts, maps, tactical maps, and tokens. You need one of Fantasy Grounds' official 5E ruleset modules to make use of it; it will cost you $34.99.

Princes of the Apocalypse is now available for Fantasy Grounds, the virtual tabletop software with the official D&D license. As usual, the package contains the full adventure, along with handouts, maps, tactical maps, and tokens. You need one of Fantasy Grounds' official 5E ruleset modules to make use of it; it will cost you $34.99.

It's available right here.


WOTC5EPOTA.jpg

Abolish an Ancient Evil Threatening Devastation in this Adventure for the World's Greatest Roleplaying Game

Called by the Elder Elemental Eye to serve, four corrupt prophets have risen from the depths of anonymity to claim mighty weapons with direct links to the power of the elemental princes. Each of these prophets has assembled a cadre of cultists and creatures to serve them in the construction of four elemental temples of lethal design. It is up to adventurers from heroic factions such as the Emerald Enclave and the Order of the Gauntlet to discover where the true power of each prophet lay, and dismantle it before it comes boiling up to obliterate the Realms.

An epic adventure for characters levels 1 - 15, the Elemental Evil story arc, Princes of the Apocalypse provides everything a Dungeon Master needs to create an exciting and memorable play experience.

Includes new elemental spells and the element-touched genasi as a new playable race.

Adventure design and development by Sasquatch Game Studio LLC.

Dungeon Masters purchasing this module can use it to run the adventure with very little prep, other than reading through the adventure in advance. The contents of the story are indexed and linked, where appropriate. Combat encounters and boxed text are preloaded and ready to drop onto maps and into the chat window with a few clicks. Nearly everything has been optimized and streamlined for ease of play online.

This Module Includes

  • the entire contents of Princes of the Apocalypse adventure
  • image handouts that can be shared with players collectively or individually
  • maps containing information for the Dungeon Master (DM) only and with all locations pre-linked to story entries which may contain additional DM notes, boxed text, encounters, images and treasure parcels
  • maps with all hidden information removed and resized for use as tactical combat maps
  • tokens for many of the monsters in the module. When no token is available, a letter token is used to represent the NPC
  • XP for encounters that can be dragged to the party sheet and awarded to the players as they complete them
  • Searchable monster indexes by CR, type and in alphabetical order

Elemental-Evil-Combat.jpg


Elemental-Evil-Items.jpg


Elemental-Evil-Map-1.jpg


Elemental-Evil-New-Races.jpg


Elemental-Evil-Stories-linked-with-maps.jpg

 

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KidSnide

Adventurer
I'm kind of torn about the whole FG / 5e pricing scheme. I used FG for 4e games, and it's pretty good. But the total price to repurchase everything I have in paper form is a little steep. I guess it would be worth it if on-line table top was my primary avenue for gaming, but it's just too expensive if you only want to dabble.

-KS
 

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smiteworks

Explorer
The nice thing about the adventures is that they include all the monsters. If your plan is to just run the adventures, you can skip the Monster Pack and then just add in any homebrew or 1-off monsters you want as you go. The class packs are also optional, although I'd say the D&D Basic Rules packs in a big bang for the buck for just $2.99.

By the time that Out of the Abyss arrives, we should be rolling out simultaneous with the printed products so you can choose if you want to buy the printed version, the FG version or both.
 






Uller

Adventurer
Is there a good video showing a game session? One made from Lost Mines or RoT so we can see the full 5e production in use would be great. My group used to use the rpgtable online even for in person games...we'd sit in a living room with a 50" TV hooked up to a laptop and I'd run the game from my laptop. I could see doing that with this, but with the price point I'd like to show it to my players first. Since RPGTO has gone off line we have gone back to playing at the kitchen table with no electronic aids at all...that is also a very nice way to play so I'm not sure which they would prefer (okay...my 13 yo daughter would prefer FG...she likes when D&D is more like a video game...but the adults could probably all go either way).
 

Mithreinmaethor

First Post
Is there a good video showing a game session? One made from Lost Mines or RoT so we can see the full 5e production in use would be great. My group used to use the rpgtable online even for in person games...we'd sit in a living room with a 50" TV hooked up to a laptop and I'd run the game from my laptop. I could see doing that with this, but with the price point I'd like to show it to my players first. Since RPGTO has gone off line we have gone back to playing at the kitchen table with no electronic aids at all...that is also a very nice way to play so I'm not sure which they would prefer (okay...my 13 yo daughter would prefer FG...she likes when D&D is more like a video game...but the adults could probably all go either way).

Try this set of 20 videos ..... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiTB9eZyW5A&list=PLujLyRuC2pgi8dlndSFxjRRTBKvgufqdq

Or just this basic search ..... https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=fantasy+grounds
 
Last edited by a moderator:

I'm A Banana

Potassium-Rich
has anyone tried the others? I am curious how it played out

I'm going through Lost Mine at the moment. It's working pretty well, though there's a few formatting hiccups (which isn't exactly surprising given the word count and that this was the first one), but overall, smooth.
 

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