Critical Role The New D&D Book Is 'The Explorer's Guide to [Critical Role's] Wildemount!' By Matt Mercer

It looks like Amazon has leaked the title and description of the new D&D book a day early (unless it's all a fake-out by WotC) -- and it's a new D&D setting book called The Explorer's Guide to Wildemount; it's the Critical Role campaign setting, penned by Matt Mercer!

Wildemount%2C_Version_20%2C1.png

image from Critical Role wiki

There's no cover image yet, so we're stuck with the "Coming Soon" image.

This book appeared without a title on Amazon last week, and a 'reveal' date of January 9th, which was then later delayed until January 13th. Amazon appears to have jumped the gun a day early.

Here's some information about Wildemount, which is a continent in the same world as Critical Role's other setting, Tal'Dorei. It is described by the official wiki has having "real-world Eastern European influence.... The Dwendalian Empire takes inspiration from 15th century Russia as well as Germanic nations in Central Europe (e.g., Prussia). Xhorhas has a more 13th-century Romanian flair. Outside of Wynandir, on the edges of the Dwendalian Empire, the cultures and peoples of those regions display a distinctly 14th-century Spanish flavor."

HOW DO YOU WANT TO DO THIS?

A war brews on a continent that has withstood more than its fair share of conflict. The Dwendalian Empire and the Kryn Dynasty are carving up the lands around them, and only the greatest heroes would dare stand between them. Somewhere in the far corners of this war-torn landscape are secrets that could end this conflict and usher in a new age of peace—or burn the world to a cinder.

Create a band of heroes and embark on a journey across the continent of Wildemount, the setting for Campaign 2 of the hit Dungeons & Dragons series Critical Role. Within this book, you’ll find new character options, a heroic chronicle to help you craft your character’s backstory, four different starting adventures, and everything a Dungeon Master needs to breathe life into a Wildemount-based D&D campaign…
  • Delve through the first Dungeons & Dragons book to let players experience the game as played within the world of Critical Role, the world’s most popular livestreaming D&D show.
  • Uncover a trove of options usable in any D&D game, featuring subclasses, spells, magic items, monsters, and more, rooted in the adventures of Exandria—such as Vestiges of Divergence and the possibility manipulating magic of Dunamancy.
  • Start a Dungeons & Dragons campaign in any of Wildemount’s regions using a variety of introductory adventures, dozens of regional plot seeds, and the heroic chronicle system—a way to create character backstories rooted in Wildemount.
Explore every corner of Wildemount and discover mysteries revealed for the first time by Critical Role Dungeon Master, Matthew Mercer.

Critical Role's other setting, Tal'Dorei, was published a couple of years ago by Green Ronin. This brings the list of settings in official D&D books to five: Forgotten Realms, Ravnica, Ravenloft, Eberron, and Wildemount.

UPDATE! Barnes & Noble has the cover (but not the title or description).

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Urriak Uruk

Gaming is fun, and fun is for everyone
E: RotLW is much bigger with far more details on various nations then the SCAG. The SCAG should have been the FRAG and been much larger, with the same great writing.

Reminder that E:RftLW has extremely little information in it beyond the continent of Khorvaire. Having a Forgotten Realms version of that book would still not cover the "non-European" areas of the world as you frequently pitch.
 

Weiley31

Legend
Reminder that E:RftLW has extremely little information in it beyond the continent of Khorvaire. Having a Forgotten Realms version of that book would still not cover the "non-European" areas of the world as you frequently pitch.

Keith Baker's new book and the Korrenberg Chronicles/Eberonimicon can fix that.
 


caudor

Adventurer
Anything is possible.

I surely wouldn't bet on a fully formed Nerath seperate from Exandria now that the latter is a canonical D&D setting.
Maybe we will find out more about this tomorrow. I'm really looking forward to getting more details. I think it could go either way at this point.
 



MarkB

Legend
I do like the Wildemount setting more than Tal'Dorei. The first season of CR had very explicit heroes and villains, but the second season feels far more nuanced - even though its backstory is the brewing war between a very straightforward human-centric nation and a nation ruled and populated by monstrous races, there's no definite right and wrong to the conflict - just a sense of age-old antagonisms resurfacing, and the inherent tragedy of nations moving inevitably towards conflicts that most of their citizens probably don't want.
 


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