D&D General ShortQuests Are Digest-Sized D&D Adventures

Digest-sized D&D adventures designed for 1-2 game sessions.
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ShortQuests is a brand new series of digest-sized adventures (levels 2 to 7) ready to plug into your existing D&D games. This Kickstarter contains 5 ShortQuests designed to start you on your way!
  • The Business of Emotion by Paul Oklesh (levels 2-3)
  • The Haunting of Calrow Ruins by Aaron Infante-Levy (levels 2-4)
  • Winterheart by Esper (level 4)
  • Croaking Sirocco by Kyle Carty (level 5)
  • Don't Wake Dretchlor by Kiel Chenier (levels 5-7)
Designed for your Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition games. These books are compatible with both D&D 2014 and D&D 2024.

Most ShortQuests books are 20 pages or less, A5 (half letter) sized. Each adventure can be played as a one shot adventure over one or two sessions, or can be plugged into your own existing campaign.

Back it now on Kickstarter!
 

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Good stuff, I think I'll be backing at towards the end. so... The article here doesn't mention that ti's an ENWorld production; nor does the promo image except on the cover images it's quite small...

Notwithstanding the minor quibble above, as this matches my interests, I am very liable to back because of ENWorld's track record of shipping pdf upon crowdfund completion and hardcopy within a reasonable timeframe (like 1-2 months iirc?).
In addition, the quality is consistently high with ENWorld products.

And now that I've changed banks, my card doesn't choke on non-USD currency, so purchase will be a breeze.
It's just about my own funds at this point...

(This was NOT a paid endorsement :ROFLMAO: )
 

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I still think the 5.5 tag is a mistake.
...yeah, i generally avoid anything expressly designed for 5.24 and those stickers convey a strong impression that any other 5e ecosystem compatibility is a squint-and-it's-close-enough afterthought...

...regardless: modules are great!..the market's gone through a weird lifecycle where the dearth of brick-and-mortar distribution killed viability of the form-factor in favor of hardcover campaigns and anthologies, only for them to sneak back around where they started, as indie zines rather than the big perfect-bound floppies they evolved into...

...i do think brendan's onto something, where clever packaging might combine both a hardcover and floppy/loose form-factors into a single product suitable for both markets...TSR experimented with the idea for about ten years and although they never quite got it right, the potential remains...
 
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I really missed the old modules like this. Unfortunately the size of these makes it a no-go for me for physical versions, but I might back this for the digital.
 

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