Category Archives: DnD

Waiting on UPS

Expected route of my new booksA couple hours after publicly expressing my impatience about getting the new v3.5 D&D books, word came through that they have actually shipped. Apparently they’re sitting in a UPS distribution hub in San Fransisco at the moment, having arrived there from Sparks, Nevada at 4:13 this morning. Expect v3.5 Rogue updates as early as tomorrow afternoon.

Earlier I had reported ambivalence towards the new Dungeons & Dragons release, but waiting a month or two for a preorder to show up has a way of whetting the appetite. Somebody please remind me in the future not to preorder anything again.

Waiting on Amazon

Little Gimble has a new favored classI was hoping to have some some rather detailed looks at changes (especially to Fighter feats and Rogue skills) up by now, but it looks like Amazon.com, in their infinite wisdom, hasn’t deigned it necessary to ship my preorder of the v3.5 D&D core rulebooks. We are told to expect significant changes to Gnomes, Bards, Barbarians, Druids, Monks, and Rangers, and well as some resettlings of numerous skills, feats, and spell descriptions.

Though I’d hate to sound like an AO player crying “nerf!” at the slightest hint that some other character class has been improved, I have seen little from the WoTC folks to allay my concerns that Rogues are getting the proverbial shaft here. The only skill changes that I am presently aware of (in my pitiable, bookless, misery) are the elimination of Animal Empathy as a skill, and the merging of Intuit Direction and Wilderness Lore into a new, more semantically correct “survival” skill. Fighters will be getting a new set of feats with the intention of keeping the class indispensable as it progresses in levels, all the spellcasting classes have changes to their spells, and all the mongrel classes got a hefty rework.

Expect an update on Rogues within a few hours of my package showing up (whenever that is). I just hope they had enough stocked and I won’t be left waiting till December. Is it unreasonable to expect shipment withing 6 days of initial distribution? Ok, it is, but this is a longstanding hobby of mine and I get impatient.

IKCG Preview Breakdown

I know that the publishing world isn’t a democracy, but some thoughts about the IKCG sneak peek have been percolating in my head since I first read it:

  1. The book will be starting on what is, for me, a low point: character creation excesses. By this I mean there will be additional Prestige Classes, variant class versions (such as the Fellcaller adaptation of the Bard class) and my personal favorite, more feats. Prestige Classes and additional feats have padded d20 material since the inception of the OGL, and I can only hope that the folks at Privateer Press were able to keep it in their pants.

    Considering that the Lock & Load Character Primer already details much of the Iron Kingdoms variations from D&D canon, so this section should be mercifully brief.

  2. The second section is to be a “tour of Western Immoren,” exactly the kind of information a Campaign Guide needs. They promise “everything a manky git should know…” about a variety of places and ethnicities of the IK. I very much look forward to this content, as this is the kind of data a DM really needs in a pre-fab gameworld. Without information such as this, why run another person’s campaign setting at all?

  3. Continuing on this line, the third section entails daily life in the Iron Kingdoms. I am a bit concerned that this will ammount to a big equipment listing, but every campaign setting has a place for such things. If this turns out to be 30 pages of equipment tables, I certainly hope that it is exhaustive and I won’t have to go flipping through multiple books to determine the market price of a Scimitar vs. a Greatsword vs. a Military Pistol.

  4. The fourth section again is a great cause for hope: details on the Enkheiridion, creation myths, and other religious details that’ll make running a Cleric more productive (both from a roleplaying and a roll-playing perspective). In the Iron Kingdoms game I presently participate in, the details of Morrowan religious observation are possibly the biggest hangup around.

    I just hope that Cyriss doesn’t get shorted. I see that cult as having huge possibilities.

  5. Additional information about Cryx, Rhul, and Ios will be welcome additions, and more details about each individual kingdom will be in there. Just some basic information about the political structures of Khador, Ord, Llael, and Cygnar will be very welcome. Although direct participation in political mischeif may not be every player’s cup of tea, it is always good to have a firm understanding of the foundations of whatever the current political (and thereby military) situation is.

    Good info on the Protectorate of Menoth, Cryx, Cygnar, and Khador can be found in the Warmachine: Prime book as they relate to purely military matters, though some interesting insight can be found in Cygnar’s political structure there as well. Though as a rule I don’t care for lots of repetition between sourcebooks, I look forward to the IKCG having a solid, coherant picture of each kingdom and Western Immoren as a whole.

  6. Then they will be moving on to History. If you don’t know where you’ve been, you’ll have a heck of a time telling where you’re going. A good grounding in what lead to what over the years can provide additional insight into the mindset of typical NPCs from most areas (you’ll never understand how the French and English feel about each other without some solid history lessons, and it probably holds true in the IK as well).

    I fear that if equipment, feats, and prestige classes are out of hand elsewhere in this book, the history is most likely to receive the brown end of the stick.

  7. The book will wrap up with the part I’ve really been waiting for before launching my own Iron Kingdoms campaign: Magic. I don’t particularly care about the 20 new clerical domains, 15 tweaked domains, and so forth: unless they’ve really pulled a rabbit out of their collective hat I’ll read that part last after a quick skim

    The real meat of the magic changes that I look forward to revolve around how, at least among Humans, arcane magic is new and in serveral ways untested. Knowledge of an Astral or Ethereal plane are non-existant (there may not even be such things, but no mortal knows). Planar travel is limited to a generally-accepted one-way trip to Urcaen (upon death, no return flights available). How severely do the Privateers think this should affect arcane spells? How do summoning spells work? Has any wizard even bothered creating the “dimensional anchor” spell? Do Gates, Dimension Door, or Teleport work? How about Blink? Inquiring minds want to know.

    Additionally, we’ve been told that magic item creation is a bit more difficult in the IK than other gameworlds, but have had no hard and fast rules to rely upon. The addition of mechanikal elements supposedly facilitates the process, and we’ll finally have some more complete explanations and guidelines to this effect. I personally envision of a more magic-poor realm than that depicted in Warmachine (I figure some dramatic liscense was in order for a tactical wargame), but having some solid guidelines for when a character wants to “trick out” his rifle or whatnaught would come in handy.

Overall I’m quite looking forward to this book, and will certainly be purchasing a copy for myself. With no solid assurances that this 300+ page tome will have its content properly distributed (light on feats, heavy on campaing setting), and with no solid credibility in the publication timeline (they’re only human, but it is about 2 years overdue now), I see this as a great opportunity for Privateer Press to really come into its own, and with our support, they may be able to quit their day jobs.