D&D 5E Vecna: Eve of Ruin's Table of Contents Leaked (Spoilers!)

Check out Vecna: Eve of Ruin's full table of contents! Warning--spoilers are to be found below! YouTuber 'GameMasters' posted this leak in a video earlier today (you can see the video below the contents image), saying that the image was sent to him via email, but is not disclosing the identity of the sender.

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It's annoying that many of the "new" monsters are just reprinted from Ravenloft, Spelljammer, Eberron or MToF. I wish WotC would just put these older releases up in the main Monster Manual and make them accessible to all, so they can save on reprinting.
Nice to see the Spyder-Fiends back, and given that they get 3 pages, likely multiple types!
I have no idea what Borthak, Degloth, Hazvongel and Vlazok are - they sound like names, but Degloth might be a new type of Yugoloth?
Despite some of the adventure taking place on Pandemonium, no Howlers, or Achierai? Pity.
Howlers are in Mordenkainen Presents: Monsters of the Multiverse! Weird that they aren't included here, but I'm sure they could be included in the adventure.
 

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The big reveal in Chapter 9 is the biggest spoiler. If that gets out of the bag you couldn't run it. It's quite a cliche actually. I hope there's some details on how it was pulled off.
 

Howlers are in Mordenkainen Presents: Monsters of the Multiverse! Weird that they aren't included here, but I'm sure they could be included in the adventure.
If they were, they would have a stat block here - since it seems they included stat blocks of the Abishai and Sorrowsworn who are also in that book.
 



It should be interesting to find out whether the chapters are in strict order (a "railroad") or if the intent is to let the PCs do them in whatever order they prefer except for the start and end.
I would imagine the former. Not only does it allow for planning level appropriate encounters, but it fits the established function of the Rod of Seven Parts. Each piece points at the next connecting one, not all of them at once.
 

I would imagine the former. Not only does it allow for planning level appropriate encounters, but it fits the established function of the Rod of Seven Parts. Each piece points at the next connecting one, not all of them at once.
Somewhere around here I have the old 2E Ro7P adventure, but I can't recall whether it needed to be collected in order.
 



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