[UPDATED] Green Ronin Finds Religion In D&D 5E's BOOK OF THE RIGHTEOUS

Back in the early days D&D 3rd Edition, Green Ronin released two books for the game which I adored and still have to this day. One was the Book of Fiends: Legions of Hell (a supplement which was followed up by Armies of the Abyss). The other was Aaron Loeb's Book of the Righteous, an enormous 300+ page tome crammed full of religions to use in your D&D game. It detailed the churches, the rituals, the beliefs, and more behind a detailed pantheon of over 20 churches.

Back in the early days D&D 3rd Edition, Green Ronin released two books for the game which I adored and still have to this day. One was the Book of Fiends: Legions of Hell (a supplement which was followed up by Armies of the Abyss). The other was Aaron Loeb's Book of the Righteous, an enormous 300+ page tome crammed full of religions to use in your D&D game. It detailed the churches, the rituals, the beliefs, and more behind a detailed pantheon of over 20 churches.


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UPDATE: This Kickstarter is now live.

So the book is coming to Kickstarter soon, and the new rules material will be written by Robert J. Schwalb, one of D&D 5E's designers (Schwalb produces his own current RPG, Shadow of the Demon Lord). Green Ronin, of course, is the company which brought you Out of the Abyss for D&D 5E. This book definitely won't be lacking in 5th Edition pedigree!

The original version contained these religions, each detailed with a half dozen pages on myths, workings, churches, orders, and more.

The Old Gods. The Eyes of Urian, The Foundations of Rontra, The Basins of Shalimyr, The Druids of Eliwyn, The Followers of the Nameless One.

The Gods of the Tree. The Healing Halls of Morwyn, The Temples of Terak, The Vineyards of Zheenkeef, The Scriptoriums of Tinel, The Sacristies of Mormelcar.

The Gods of the Womb. The Courts of Maal, The Houses of Darmon, The Lyceums of Aymara, The Guildhalls of Korak, The Hearths of Anwyn.

The Three Sisters. The Dark Sister, The Red Sister, The Golden Sister.

The Evil Gods. Asmodeus, Canarak, Hellos, Naran, plus some evil and heretical cults.

The original book also contained an overall cosmology, using religions in a campaign, and a bunch of rules including feats, spells, domains, magic items, artifacts, and creatures.

Below is a peek at the D&D 3rd Edition version, detailing one of the churches in the book. You can look at the whole 11-page church here (PDF); below is just a couple of excerpts. Obviously the 5E version will be redesigned for the current game and if Kickstarter does it's usual thing might have awesome stretch goals for new colour art and cool stuff like that (just conjecture on my part).

More as and when I hear it!


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sidonunspa

First Post
I just wonder if they will have the same permissions to improve on what we have for 5e. It seems like the 5e OGL is more restrictive.

Umm, how so?

you can create new spells, feats, archetypes, and classes.

Hell, you can reprint the entire 5eSRD.. as long as you recreate a new character creation section...

and yes the 5eSRD is missing some spells (all the paladin smite spells for example) but nothing says you cant make you own variations on the theam...

I'm currently working on a set of unique smite spells for each one of the gods in Arcanis for the Arcanis 5e project we are currently working on. for rangers I'm creatiing a slew of combat spells as well....
 

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Aldarc

Legend
The Book of the Righteous was easily one of my favorite 3E-era 3rd Party books, providing one of the most robust plug-and-play mythologies and cultuses for D&D. I still adore reading this book for its unique mythos and fluff. I readily look forward to this Kickstarter and what contributions this new supplement will provide for 5th Edition.
 


Same, pretty much. Green Ronin's 3e products were among the most solid, rules-wise, and quite creative. Their Psychic's Handbook was one of the few cases that I actually liked psionics rules.

Looking forward to seeing this updated to 5e!

Though I usually either fully homebrew gods or use the setting-appropriate pantheons, this book might be a very nice addition for those times I want to run something quick and don't feel like making a whole new set of deities. And as a source for stea... inspiring stuff.

None of the books I've got from Green Ronin have disappointed, so I'll be certainly backing the KS.

As usual, thanks for the heads up, Morrus!
 

Curmudjinn

Explorer
It would be amazing to see an update of Faiths and Pantheons under a new title. Most of the material can be name-swapped, but it would be nice.
 



rhombism

Villager
Is the plan for this book to rewrite it in the same style and with the same sort of content, but for the pantheon of Faerunian (TM) gods? Or just to re-engineer this/these pantheons into the 5e mechanic? I'd really like the former, not so much on the latter.
 

arjomanes

Explorer
Is the plan for this book to rewrite it in the same style and with the same sort of content, but for the pantheon of Faerunian (TM) gods? Or just to re-engineer this/these pantheons into the 5e mechanic? I'd really like the former, not so much on the latter.

I'm sure it won't be the gods of Forgotten Realms, since that would need to be published through DMs Guild and Green Ronin usually likes to do their own thing (Out of the Abyss being an exception).
 


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