D&D 5E Strixhaven Table of Contents

Strixhaven's table of contents has appeared on Reddit. The book contains 7 chapters, plus an appendix, including four adventures.
  1. Basic setting information, about 20 pages
  2. Character options, about 22 pages
  3. 4 adventures organized in a unified campaign, about 32 pages per adventure (plus general campaign organizational tools which take up about 20 pages)
  4. NPCs & monsters, about 42 pages

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BookTenTiger

He / Him
Huh. Could do one campaign that is in the book. And a second one based in Strixhaven but using content like Candlekeep. And I’m sure DMsGuild will have some folks add stuff to Strixhaven specifically
It would even be fun to do two concurrent campaigns. Every other adventure, the players are playing as students, and every other adventure they're playing as high-level professors.
 

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doctorbadwolf

Heretic of The Seventh Circle
I want to say that Pendragon had something like that, but I may be misremembering.
Seems like a good system for it.

I use it in Quest for Chevar because QfC has multiple eras of play, and the group/GM determine the state of the world at the beginning of a campaign, much in the same way that the McElroy's did in The Adventure Zone: Ethersea.

In their case they used The Quiet Year, but in QfC I'm building a system that speaks to the basic mechanics of game, and puts things like Contacts, Favors, and Relationships, front and center. Basically the players (which includes the GM at this point) determine how the major big events and conflicts of the previous era and several decades before the campaign played out, what the starting position of several factions are, what the state of play is in terms of relationships between the Hidden Folk and the Wise (humans who are wise to the other worlds), etc.

So if you play a campaign set in the 90's, influenced heavily by Buffy, you'd start by determining how the shadow war in the 1890's through 1930's played out, what supernatural factions are dominant in the region of play, how much major world governments know, and then zoom in further and further geographically while determining more and more recent events, until you're establishing the very recent history of the town in which the first adventure begins. If you know what basic tone of game you want, or even a type of threat you want to be prominent early on, say a teenage drama tone with vampires, you can make choices in the course of play that lead to a few different vampire cabals having risen to power in the past few decades, because of a First God who grants vampiric gifts (or even better, multiple who give very different vampiric gifts) having been nearly freed 100 years ago before a team of Rangers stopped the vampiric cultists from fully freeing these dark entities, and have PCs who are related to that old cult, to one of the First Gods, to the Rangers who stopped them, etc.

As you zoom in on Sunny Vale, CA, you can establish a string of short-lived mayors, or a guy who looks way too young for his age who has been mayor for 60 years, and one PCs mentor is the high school librarian, etc.

OTOH, you can play this part of the game without this forethought, and just see what happens.

It's a bit ambitious, and I don't know if we will get everything I want in it, but I'm pretty excited about it.
 

One thing I have heard about people playing Ye Ollde Tyme modules was that they were highly replayable.
There are two main reasons for that: they where largely map based, rather than story based, so "spoilers" weren't a problem, and the high mortality meant that adventures often ended with the party dead before the adventure was completed.

Neither of those seems to apply to Stryxhaven.
This frankly feels like a campaign that could be replayed happily, with different events and outcomes.
You could certainly retain the structure whist changing the main adversary, but I'm not sure that would be enough to keep the same group of players entertained. It would work if you had a player who had read but not played the adventure though, or where DMing it for a second time with different players.

I suspect that even played straight, it would benefit from being supplemented with additional sidequests. It seems to go through years and levels PDQ.
 
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It would even be fun to do two concurrent campaigns. Every other adventure, the players are playing as students, and every other adventure they're playing as high-level professors.
You could extend it: the players reach level 10 and graduate. Next year they return as professors. There are a couple of higher level adventures in Candlekeep Mysteries that could distract the PCs from lesson planning and staff meetings.
 

Parmandur

Book-Friend
There are two main reasons for that: they where largely map based, rather than story based, so "spoilers" weren't a problem, and the high mortality meant that adventures often ended with the party dead before the adventure was completed.

Neither of those seems to apply to Stryxhaven.

You could certainly retain the structure whist changing the main adversary, but I'm not sure that would be enough to keep the same group of players entertained. It would work if you had a player who had read but not played the adventure though, or where DMing it for a second time with different players.

I suspect that even played straight, it would benefit from being supplemented with additional sidequests. It seems to go through years and levels PDQ.
The big reason this seems repayable to me are the procedurally generated elements, auxh as relationships. That can be gone over again with drastically different experiences. Seems more like a "journey, not the destination" Module.
 

The big reason this seems repayable to me are the procedurally generated elements, auxh as relationships. That can be gone over again with drastically different experiences. Seems more like a "journey, not the destination" Module.
I've never been one to play again just to romance a different character. Frankly I can't see that aspect holding much appeal for my group.
 

Zarithar

Adventurer
This is the first D&D 5e book that I have pre-ordered and then cancelled. Literally nothing of use to me in WotC Hogwarts.
 


darjr

I crit!
I see the hogwarts thing but I kinda think it’s a lame complaint. It’s like complaining that the wheel of time is a copy of Lord of the Rings. Or Lord of the Rings is a copy of Nibelungenlied.

It is, to me, all of an obvious statement, an unconvincing argument against it, and a gross hilarious overstatement.

Like OK? So?
 

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