D&D General WotC: Novels & Non-5E Lore Are Officially Not Canon

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At a media press briefing last week, WotC's Jeremey Crawford clarified what is and is not canon for D&D.

"For many years, we in the Dungeons & Dragons RPG studio have considered things like D&D novels, D&D video games, D&D comic books, as wonderful expressions of D&D storytelling and D&D lore, but they are not canonical for the D&D roleplaying game."


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"If you’re looking for what’s official in the D&D roleplaying game, it’s what appears in the products for the roleplaying game. Basically, our stance is that if it has not appeared in a book since 2014, we don’t consider it canonical for the games."

2014 is the year that D&D 5th Edition launched.

He goes on to say that WotC takes inspiration from past lore and sometimes adds them into official lore.

Over the past five decades of D&D, there have been hundreds of novels, more than five editions of the game, about a hundred video games, and various other items such as comic books, and more. None of this is canon. Crawford explains that this is because they "don’t want DMs to feel that in order to run the game, they need to read a certain set of novels."

He cites the Dragonlance adventures, specifically.
 

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Tales and Chronicles

Jewel of the North, formerly know as vincegetorix
FR depth of lore is part of the appeal of the setting, that its a living setting, dumping 90% of lore kills that and also means that current FR lore makes no sense because the context of the past lore when acted as the foundation for the 5e lore.
They did not dump anything.

They are just saying that what happened before may or may not be used in future publication as is. Not that everything that came before 5e was false!
 


Rabulias

the Incomparably Shrewd and Clever
A fair and reasonable stance. 40+ years of content is too much to manage, for the game's producers/writers/designers as well as for players! Not to mention so much of it being out of print; how fair would that be? Heck, there have already been a few minor inconsistencies within 5e's canon itself, and that's just 7 years of (slow) content.

But all that rich D&D history and lore is still out there for any DM who wants to use it in their own game, as well as the D&D team to adapt and utilize in new products. Despite those who think it will happen, Wizards of the Coast still refuses to hire Seal Team Six for a Game Police Division. :)
 


Wolfram stout

Adventurer
Supporter
Within the context of 'current setting' no, it's no longer canon, and is irrelevant.
Honest question, as I don't understand the issue:

Can you give an example (even hypothetical) of how this makes anything irrelevant? As a DM prepping for an upcoming session or a player sitting at the table, how would making the prior literature non-canon change your experience?

Or is it that it opens the door for them to make future changes that causes the issues (ie Elminster is now a halfling paladin) ?

Thank You,
 


I think it's more likely they're going to reboot the series to the War of the Lance era, keep Tika and the others as NPCs, and just start over with how things go from there, rather than keeping all the old Novels and stuff as "This is how things go in the modules and setting."

Same thing with Athas. Probably gonna see a complete retcon of Rajaat and the Cerulean Storm storyline in favor of a "New Mystery" of what really happened in the world.

Something that ties into the core spirit of the setting without being beholden to what came before, even when it uses some bits of what was previously written.
Probably for the best as far as Dragonlance is concerned. The original novels are remembered fondly, but haven't aged all that well, and then the series just went downhill from there as far as I'm concerned...

I'm curious as to why you think they'd retcon Rajaat. The Sorcerer Kings in the present day of Tyr, yeah maybe tone down the more gratuitous aspects of the whole slavery thing, but do people have issues with the Dark Sun backstory, and Rajaat specifically? And how much do you think they might change?
 


This is almost certainly being stated now in advance of the revised and heavily altered Dragonlance campaign

Emphasizing the old novels (and likely the new ones) are not canon
As they completely rework the setting like they did to Ravenloft

Since they're also likely doing a new Forgotten Realms book as well, they might be revising and updating that setting again. Making changes to parts of that world to match the current author's likes, removing disliked elements, and adjusting lore to better fit their upcoming adventures
 

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