Angel Tarragon
Dawn Dragon
I'd love to see new Al-Qadim, Great Glacier and Heartlands material.
Whisperfoot said:Shakes head sadly.
I think Mysteries of the Moonsea is a fine book for what it is, which is an adventure book in a similar vein to Ruins of Adventure. I do not think it does an adequate job conveying the entire Moonsea area, however. If you were new to the realms and bought this book, you would be left with little more than a thumbnail sketch of the region and four cities. If you were serious about running this region , you would need to go back to the 1E and 2E supplements that detailed it in much greater detail.
I feel that as a collection of short adventure locations, it succeeds just fine, and shows how a campaign frequently shifts gears, leads you from one place to another, causing you to deal with one organization or another. In that respect, I think it's a great book.
Do I want to see the rest of the upcoming regional books follow this format? No way. Would I mind seeing more books of this nature set in the Forgotten Realms? Sure, I'd happily buy them. Just call them something other than regional sourcebooks.
d20Dwarf said:Quite true, my copy hasn't arrived yet, so I haven't read the entire thing. I do like the format, though, and with a few tweaks I think it should be the standard format for FR regional books from here on out. I'd include a little more lore, but not necessarily as much as a lot of people are asking for.
d20Dwarf said:I dunno, I don't particularly think the 2e Moonsea sourcebook was that great. I don't see how detailing four cities and their surroundings, plus a regional history and overview, isn't enough information to run a campaign there. Like I said, I'd add a bit more lore than we were able to, and talk about the central conflicts of the region in a more expository fashion, so that people could compare that to the adventures presented and go "aha! That's what the Moonsea is all about!" Do that with several regions and you'd really have a living, breathing *adventuring* environment in Faerun, as opposed to a catalog of crap you're never going to care about, like what the local elf tribe eats for breakfast.
Whisperfoot said:Shakes head sadly.
I think Mysteries of the Moonsea is a fine book for what it is, which is an adventure book in a similar vein to Ruins of Adventure. I do not think it does an adequate job conveying the entire Moonsea area, however. If you were new to the realms and bought this book, you would be left with little more than a thumbnail sketch of the region and four cities. If you were serious about running this region , you would need to go back to the 1E and 2E supplements that detailed it in much greater detail.
I feel that as a collection of short adventure locations, it succeeds just fine, and shows how a campaign frequently shifts gears, leads you from one place to another, causing you to deal with one organization or another. In that respect, I think it's a great book.
Do I want to see the rest of the upcoming regional books follow this format? No way. Would I mind seeing more books of this nature set in the Forgotten Realms? Sure, I'd happily buy them. Just call them something other than regional sourcebooks.
Razz said:Same old rant.
Banshee16 said:It's honestly the first FR release that I have had no desire to purchase in a few years....
Hopefully WotC isn't going this way with all their books for FR..
Banshee