D&D 5E The March D&D Book Will Be Announced Next Tuesday

As has become standard these days, the upcoming D&D book has appeared -- in an anonymous, secretive guise -- on various bookstores in advance of an announcement. In this case, Amazon, Penguin Random House, and Barnes & Noble, all of whom confirm that the book will be announced next Tuesday on January 12th, and released on March 16th. The book will cost $49.99. B&N has its dimensions as being...

As has become standard these days, the upcoming D&D book has appeared -- in an anonymous, secretive guise -- on various bookstores in advance of an announcement. In this case, Amazon, Penguin Random House, and Barnes & Noble, all of whom confirm that the book will be announced next Tuesday on January 12th, and released on March 16th.

The book will cost $49.99. B&N has its dimensions as being 6.5 x 9.5 inches, which is smaller than a standard D&D hardcover (but that information could just be a placeholder). B&N also indicates that the authors are Peter Lee and Rodney Thompson, but they also say that for Tasha's Cauldron and other WotC books, so that also looks like it's just their boilerplate for WotC. There's also an ISBN number: 978-0786967223.

This is almost an exact mirror of this time last year, almost down to the dates (last year it appeared on stores on Jan 6th, was announced as Explorer's Guide to Wildemount on Jan 9th, and released March 17th).

There's been plenty of speculation recently. Last year WotC said that three classic settings were getting active attention, and that the coming years would have a greater emphasis on settings, as well as more anthologies and Magic: The Gathering collaborations. And, of course, WotC has recently been involved in a Dragonlance lawsuit, which was voluntarily dismissed in December with Margaret Weis tweeting that there was exciting news in the weeks to come.

soon.jpg
 

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ccs

41st lv DM
I knew that was going to be the first response to my post.

Off the top of my head a sourcebook on merchant families/costers, trade routes, trade goods would fit that. Even if its set in FR its still out of the ordinary of what they've been releasing.

In years past there were books like Den of Thieves, Bastion of Faith and the College of Wizardry. Something different would be nice.
So the purpose of this book would be to explore the bottom tiers of Amazon's sales charts??
 

vecna00

Speculation Specialist Wizard
"Your first look at the next Dungeons & Dragons title comes on January 12! Keep an eye on wherever you get your D&D news for a preview of the book." - This reads like the knew it would be leaked!

It'll probably be that adventure anthology or a campaign setting. My guess is Dragonlance!
 

ccs

41st lv DM
The one book that comes to mind that models what Im thinking is the Magister by Ed Greenwood that came out in the late 90s. Sure there was spells in there and magic items but the majority was fluff/story based. Tashas and Xanathars to me is purely a rules expansion as to a book like I suggested may have some new rules but its not to the main focus.
You mean this one? That came out in the late '80s?
 

R_J_K75

Legend
So the purpose of this book would be to explore the bottom tiers of Amazon's sales charts??
Yeah thats the intent.
You mean this one? That came out in the late '80s?
Sorry...Secrets of the Magister, but I think you get my point...or maybe not.
 

ccs

41st lv DM
Sorry...Secrets of the Magister, but I think you get my point...or maybe not.
Ah. They've released too many similarly titled books AND I wasn't buying D&D books in the late '90s. So if you use the wrong title is it any wonder I can't parse what you meant?
 


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