can you misty step when carrying a corpse? As DM, I'd allow it.
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) August 13, 2020
Sure thing!
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) August 13, 2020
can you misty step when carrying a corpse? As DM, I'd allow it.
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) August 13, 2020
Sure thing!
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) August 13, 2020
Good Master Ed, just out of curiosity, is there a discernible difference in the minds of Realmsfolk between a dungeon crawling adventurer and a tomb robber? Yes. Bards, minstrels, and good tavern taletellers keep very much alive the idea that "dungeons beneath our feet" are where all manner of monsters live, that will come boiling forth to maraud if not "kept down" by adventurers who have to fight them to get at treasure.#Realmslore
— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) May 22, 2020
can you confirm if Waterdeep and the North (1987) was the first published appearance of Xanathar? It’s for my homework. In published D&D, yes.
The Xanathar actually first appeared in 1967 in a chapbook of two of my fantasy short stories, 7 years before D&D appeared; the Xanathar was a mysterious floating, many-tentacled ruthless crime kingpin in lightless cellars, not yet a beholder.#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) March 28, 2020
Thanks Ed! You're welcome.
When first seen, the Xanathar had a deep, coldly hissing voice, a long reach (via servitor thugs and spying monsters), and the possibility was raised of "Xanathar" being a title assumed by one being after another (due to longevity).#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) March 28, 2020
What’s that rising, from behind yonder dark boulder?
Is it tentacled, or that mythical beast some call a beholder?
Time to hurl an all-ravaging spell, straight from the shoulder
And leave one more dead heap behind us, to smoke and smolder— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) August 22, 2020
Several dreadul eyes now gaze upon ye,
Several lies spun to bring you to me,
This ‘Beholder’ is naught more than a psionic fantasy
This illusion, this untruth – Just you and Yuan-ti. Bravo! (Bows, yields stage)— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) August 22, 2020
I played a great game of D&D for the first time in years last night (a campaign run by the amazing @TheEdVerse), and it really reminded me of all the D&D tricks and rituals that have fallen from my regular gaming vocabulary! It’s been ages since I’ve checked for traps, had 1/2 to solve puzzles in dungeon chambers to advance, and crack open my Forgotten Realmsisms ("Well met!" "Tempus' Shield!" "I knew a lady from Calimshan with desert hot lips…", etc.) It's been fun to revisit such sword and sorcery, and I'm sure I'll be returning again soon. 2/2
— Matthew Dawkins (@clackclickbang) January 28, 2020
We used my old Baron's Blades PCs from many TSR playtests and Milwaukee-era GenCons, which are 2e, but we ran edition-light roleplaying (storytelling) 5e. For years I've run games in a style that lets newcomers to the game relax alongside veteran gamers. It's basically acting.
— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) January 29, 2020
Certainly. Under Shadowdale and immediately NW is an underground lake and extensive caverns, and there are also Underdark drow settlements under Sembia itself.#Realmslore
— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) August 2, 2020
No, very few drow near Sembia venerate the Dark Dancer (or Vhaeraun); the vast majority worship Lolth.
There are relatively-nearby Eilstraee-worshipping drow to the west, in Cormyr; to the south, near Starmantle; to the northwest, W of Daggerdale; and in the Vast.#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) August 2, 2020
No, very few drow near Sembia venerate the Dark Dancer (or Vhaeraun); the vast majority worship Lolth.
There are relatively-nearby Eilstraee-worshipping drow to the west, in Cormyr; to the south, near Starmantle; to the northwest, W of Daggerdale; and in the Vast.#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) August 2, 2020
I have a question about Dragonmarked naming conventions as it seems inconsistent based on which book you’re looking at. For the families within houses (Vown for example), how does the prefix work? Is it d’Vown? Vown d’Cannith? Either? I know Sivis/Tharashk vary. How *I* handle it is that each house has multiple families, but most outsiders don’t know the names. So Elaydren Vown Cannith calls herself Elaydren Cannith to outsiders and Elaydren Vown in the house. The d’ (d’Vown or d’Cannith) indicates that the person has a dragonmark.
— Keith Baker (@HellcowKeith) December 16, 2019
Little Goblin Wizard & her salamander buddy. #dnd pic.twitter.com/7jrqIiRwas
— Max Dunbar (@Max_Dunbar) September 3, 2020