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| - | ====== Preface ====== | ||
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| - | Welcome to //Tales from the Yawning Portal//. Within this book you will find seven of the deadliest dungeons from the history of D&D, updated for the current edition of the game. Some are classics that have hosted an untold number of adventurers, | ||
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| - | Just as these dungeons have made an impression on D&D players, so too have tales of their dangers spread across the D&D multiverse. When the night grows long in Waterdeep, City of Splendors, and the fireplace in the taproom of the Yawning Portal dims to a deep crimson, adventurers from across the Sword Coast-and even some visiting from other D&D worlds-spin tales and rumors of lost treasures. | ||
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| - | * A wanderer from the distant Shou Empire speaks of strange, leering devil faces carved in dungeon walls that can devour an explorer in an instant, leaving behind not a single trace of the poor soul’s passing. | ||
| - | * A bald, stern wizard clad in blue robes and speaking with a strange accent tells of a wizard who claimed three powerful weapons from a city on the shores of a lake of unknown depths, who spirited them away to a slumbering volcano and dared adventurers to enter his lair and recover them. | ||
| - | * A one-eyed dwarf spins tales of a castle that fell into the earth, and whose ruins stand above a subterranean grove dominated by a tree that spawns evil. | ||
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| - | These are only a few of the tales that have spread across the Sword Coast from the furthest reaches of Faerûn and beyond. The minor details change with the telling. The dread tomb of Acererak shifts its location from a dismal swamp, to a searing desert, to some other forbidding clime in each telling. The key elements remain the same in each version of the tales, lending a thread of truth to the tale. | ||
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| - | The seeds of those stories now rest in your hand. D&D’s deadliest dungeons are now part of your arsenal of adventures. Enjoy, and remember to keep a few spare character sheets handy. | ||
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| - | ==== Using This Book ==== | ||
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| - | Tales from the Yawning Portal contains seven adventures taken from across D&D’s history. | ||
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| - | The introduction of each adventure provides ideas on adapting it to a variety of D&D settings. Use that information to place it in your campaign or to give you an idea of how to adapt it. | ||
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| - | These adventures provide the perfect side quest away from your current campaign. If you run published D&D campaigns, such as //Storm King’s Thunder//, the higher level adventures presented here are an ideal way to extend the campaign beyond. | ||
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| - | ==== About the Adventures ==== | ||
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| - | === The Sunless Citadel === | ||
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| - | //The Sunless Citadel,// written by Bruce R. Cordell, was the first published adventure for the third edition of the D&D game. It is designed for a party of four or five 1st level player characters. | ||
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| - | Ever since its publication in 2000, The Sunless Citadel has been widely regarded as an excellent way to introduce new players to the game. It’s also a great starting experience for someone looking to be a Dungeon Master for the first time. | ||
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| - | === The Forge of Fury === | ||
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| - | //The Forge of Fury,// written by Richard Baker, was published in 2000 shortly after The Sunless Citadel. Characters who succeeded in that mission and advanced to 3rd level were now ready to take on the challenges of a ruined dwarven fortress. | ||
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| - | Like its predecessor, | ||
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| - | === The Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan === | ||
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| - | //The Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan,// | ||
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| - | The updated version of the adventure presented herein is designed for a group of four or five 5th-level player characters. | ||
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| - | === White Plume Mountain === | ||
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| - | Lawrence Schick, the author of //White Plume Mountain//, related in the 2013 compilation Dungeons of Dread that he wrote the adventure as a way of persuading Gary Gygax to hire him as a game designer. Not only did he get the job, but //White Plume// became an instant favorite when it was first published in 1979. | ||
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| - | The version of the adventure in this book is tailored to a group of characters of 8th level. | ||
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| - | === Dead in Thay === | ||
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| - | //Dead in Thay,// written by Scott Fitzgerald Gray, was created when the fifth edition D&D game was in the testing stages. In its original form, it was used as the story of the D&D Encounters season in the spring of 2014. Featuring an immense and lethal dungeon known as the Doomvault, the adventure serves as a tribute to //Tomb of Horrors, Ruins of Undermountain//, | ||
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| - | The version of //Dead in Thay// presented here is modified for use in home campaigns. It is designed for characters of 9th to 11th level. | ||
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| - | === Against the Giants === | ||
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| - | The three linked adventures that make up //Against the Giants// were created and originally released in 1978, during the time when Gary Gygax was still writing the // | ||
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| - | The compilation of //Steading of the Hill Giant Chief, Glacial Rift of the Frost Giant Jarl//, and //Hall of the Fire Giant King// was published in 1981 as //Against the Giants//. The version presented here is designed to be undertaken by characters of 11th level. | ||
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| - | === Tomb of Horrors === | ||
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| - | Before there was much of anything else in the world of the D&D game, there was the //Tomb of Horrors//. | ||
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| - | The first version of the adventure was crafted for Gary Gygax’s personal campaign in the early 1970s and went on to be featured as the official Dungeons & Dragons event at the original Origins gaming convention in 1975. The first publication of //Tomb of Horrors//, as a part of the Advanced D&D game, came in 1978. | ||
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| - | As a proving ground for characters and players alike, fabricated by the devious mind of the game’s co-creator, Tomb of Horrors has no equal in the annals of D&D’s greatest adventures. Only high-level characters stand a chance of coming back alive, but every player who braves the Tomb will have the experience of a lifetime. | ||
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| - | ==== Running the Adventures ==== | ||
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| - | To run each of these adventures, you need the fifth edition // | ||
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| - | > Text that appears in a box like this is meant to be read aloud or paraphrased for the players when their characters first arrive at a location or under a specific circumstance, | ||
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| - | The //Monster Manual// contains stat blocks for most of the monsters and NPCs found in this book. When a monster’s name appears in **bold** type, that’s a visual cue pointing you to the creature’s stat block in the Monster Manual. Descriptions and stat blocks for new monsters appear in appendix B. If a stat block is in that appendix, an adventure’s text tells you so. | ||
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| - | Spells and nonmagical objects or equipment mentioned in the book are described in the // | ||
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| - | ==== Creating a Campaign ==== | ||
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| - | While these adventures were never meant to be combined into a full campaign-over 30 years separates the newest from the oldest-they have been selected to provide play across a broad range of levels. With a little work, you can run a complete campaign using only this book. | ||
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| - | Starting with The Sunless Citadel, guide your players through the adventures in the order that they are presented in this book. Each one provides enough XP that, upon completing the adventure, the characters should be high enough level to advance to the next one. | ||
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| - | The Yawning Portal, or some other tavern of your own invention or drawn from another D&D setting, provides the perfect framing device for the campaign. The characters hear rumors of each dungeon, with just enough information available to lead them to the next adventure. Perhaps a friendly NPC drawn from the upcoming adventure visits the tavern in search of help, or some element of a character’s background pushes the group down the proper road. In any case, these dungeons are designed to be easily portable to any campaign setting. | ||
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| - | ==== The Yawning Portal ==== | ||
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| - | Amid the bustle of Waterdeep, within the Castle Ward where barristers, nobles, and emissaries battle with word and contract, stands an inn not quite like any other. Before there was a Castle Ward or even what could be recognized as an ancestor of the City of Splendors, there was a dungeon, and in that dungeon begins the tale of the Yawning Portal. | ||
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| - | In ages past, the mighty wizard Halaster built his tower at the foot of Mount Waterdeep and delved deep into tunnels first built by dwarves and drow in search of ever greater magical power. Halaster and his apprentices expanded the tunnels they found, worming out new lairs under the surface for reasons of their own. In time, their excavations grew into the vast labyrinth known today as Undermountain, | ||
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| - | For untold years, the secrets of Undermountain remained hidden from the surface world. Everyone who entered its halls failed to return. Its reputation as a death trap grew to the point that criminals in Waterdeep who were sentenced to die were forcibly escorted into the dungeon and left to fend for themselves. | ||
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| - | All of that changed with the arrival of two men, a warrior named Durnan and a ne’er-do-well named Mirt. The duo were the first adventurers to return from Undermountain, | ||
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| - | Some of the magic Durnan looted on his successful foray into Undermountain granted him a life span that exceeds even that of an elf. And for decades Durnan left delving into Undermountain to younger folk. Yet one day, something drew him back. Days of waiting for his triumphant return from the dungeon turned to months and then years. For nearly a century, citizens of Waterdeep thought him dead. But one night, a voice called up from the well. Few at first believed it could be Durnan, but folk as long-lived as he vouched it so. The Yawning Portal had passed into the hands of his ancestors, but Durnan returned with enough riches for them to quietly retire. Durnan took his customary place behind the bar, raised a toast to his own safe return, and then began serving customers as if he’d never left. | ||
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| - | Adventurers from across Faerûn, and even from elsewhere in the great span of the multiverse, visit the Yawning Portal to exchange knowledge about Undermountain and other dungeons. Most visitors are content to swap stories by the hearth, but sometimes a group driven by greed, ambition, or desperation pays the toll for entry and descends the well. Most don’t survive to make the return trip, but enough come back with riches and tales of adventure to tempt other groups into trying their luck. | ||
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| - | === The Green Dragon Inn === | ||
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| - | The Yawning Portal is not the only renowned tavern in D&D lore. In the Free City of Greyhawk stands the Green Dragon Inn, which has been the starting point for some of the most successful expeditions to Castle Greyhawk and beyond. The place is crowded and smoke-filled. Patrons talk in low voices, and anyone attempting to strike up a conversation without making a clear intent to pay can expect a cold reception. Paranoia and suspicion run rampant here, as befits a free city that stands at the nexus between a devil-haunted empire, a vast domain locked in the iron-tight grip of a demigod of evil, and a splintered, bickering host of kingdoms nominally committed to justice and weal. In the battered, weary world of Greyhawk, profit and power take precedence over heroics. | ||
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| - | ==== Features of the Yawning Portal ==== | ||
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| - | The Yawning Portal’s taproom fills the first floor of the building. The 40-foot-diameter well that provides access to Undermountain dominates the space. The “well” is all that remains of Halaster’s tower, and now, devoid of the stairways and floors that formed subterranean levels, it drops as an open shaft for 140 feet. Stirges, spiders, and worse have been known to invade the Yawning Portal from below. | ||
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| - | Balconies on the tavern’s second and third floors overlook the well, with those floors accessed by way of wooden stairs that rise up from the taproom. Guests sitting at the tables on the balconies have an excellent view of the well and the action below. | ||
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| - | === Entering the Well === | ||
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| - | Those who wish to enter Undermountain for adventure (or the daring tourists who just want to “ride the rope”) must pay a gold piece to be lowered down. The return trip also costs a piece of gold, sent up in a bucket in advance. Once the initial payment is made, a few stairs takes one to the top of the waist-high lip of the well. The rope that hangs in the center of the well is levered over to the lip by a beam in the rafters, and when those who have paid are ready, they mount the rope and take the long ride down. | ||
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| - | === Oddities on Display === | ||
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| - | A staggering variety of curios and oddities adorn the taproom. Traditionally, | ||
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| - | == Yawning Portal Taproom Curios == | ||
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| - | ^ d20 ^Item ^ | ||
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| - | | 10 |A gold coin stamped with a worn, hawk-wing helm crest | | ||
| - | | 11 |A troll finger, still wriggling | ||
| - | | 12 |A silver coin that makes no noise when dropped | ||
| - | | 13 |An empty jar | | ||
| - | | 14 |A clockwork owl | | ||
| - | | 15 |A blue, glowing crystal shard | | ||
| - | | 16 |A statuette of a panther, wooden and painted black | | ||
| - | | 17 |A piece of parchment, listing fourteen magical pools and their effects when touched| | ||
| - | | 18 |A vial filled with a dark, fizzy liquid that is sealed and cannot be opened | ||
| - | | 19 |A feeler taken from a slain rust monster | ||
| - | | 20 |A wooden pipe marked with Elminster’s sigil | | ||
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| - | (See also Template in the next Story) | ||
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| - | === A Typical Evening === | ||
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| - | On quiet nights, guests in the Yawning Portal gather around a large fireplace in the taproom and swap tales of distant places, strange monsters, and valuable treasures. On busier nights, the place is loud and crowded. The balconies overflow with merchants and nobles, while the tables on the ground floor are filled with adventurers and their associates. Invariably, the combination of a few drinks and the crowd’s encouragement induces some folk to pay for a brief trip down into Undermountain. Most folk pay in advance for a ride down and immediately back up, though a few ambitious souls might launch impromptu expeditions into the dungeon. Few such ill-prepared parties ever return. | ||
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| - | Groups seeking to enter Undermountain for a specific reason generally come to the tavern during its quiet hours. Even at such times, there are still a few prying eyes in the taproom, lurkers who carry news of the comings and goings from Undermountain to the Zhentarim, dark cults, criminal gangs, and other interested parties. | ||
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| - | ==== Starting the Story ==== | ||
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| - | Kicking off a dungeon adventure can be as simple as having a mysterious stranger offer the characters a quest while they are at the Yawning Portal (or some other tavern). This approach is a cliché, but it is an effective one. Use the following two tables to generate a couple of details, then tailor the particulars of the quest and the quest giver to suit the adventure you plan to run. | ||
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| - | == Mysterious Stranger Quest == | ||
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| - | ^ d8 ^Objective | ||
| - | | 1 | ||
| - | | 2 |Find and return with an NPC or monster | ||
| - | | 3 |Slay a terrible monster or NPC | | ||
| - | | 4 | ||
| - | | 5 | ||
| - | | 6 | ||
| - | | 7 | ||
| - | | 8 | ||
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| - | == Mysterious Stranger Secret == | ||
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| - | ^ d8 ^Secret | ||
| - | | 1 | ||
| - | | 2 | ||
| - | | 3 |Has a secret agenda (roll another quest)| | ||
| - | | 4 |Is a devil in disguise | ||
| - | | 5 |Has led other parties to their doom | | ||
| - | | 6 |Is the charmed thrall of a mind flayer | ||
| - | | 7 |Is possessed by a ghost | | ||
| - | | 8 |Is a solar in disguise | ||
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| - | (See also the Template below) | ||
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| - | === Durnan === | ||
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| - | The proprietor of the Yawning Portal is something of an enigma. Blessed with a seemingly limitless life span by treasures he brought back from his expedition nearly two centuries ago, he is as much a fixture in the tap room as the well. | ||
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| - | Durnan is a man of few words. He expects to be paid for his time, and will offer insight and rumors only in return for hard cash. “We know the odds and take our chances,” he says, whether he is breaking up a card game that has turned violent or refusing the pleas of adventurers trapped at the bottom of the well who are unable to pay for a ride up. Despite his stony heart, he is an excellent source of information about Undermountain and other dungeons, provided one can pay his price. | ||
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| - | {{: | ||
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| - | **// | ||
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| - | **//Ideal: Independence.// | ||
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| - | **//Bond: The Yawning Portal.//** This place is my only home. My friends and family are long gone. I love this place, but I try not to get attached to the people here. I’ll outlive them all. Lucky me. | ||
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| - | **//Flaw: Heartless.// | ||
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| - | === Other Denizens === | ||
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| - | The Yawning Portal is host to a variety of regular visitors, most of whom offer services to adventurers. Chapter 4 of the //Dungeon Master’s Guide// provides plenty of resources for generating nonplayer characters. The following table provides some possibilities for why an individual is visiting the Yawning Portal. | ||
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| - | == Denizens == | ||
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| - | ^ d10 ^Denizen | ||
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| - | | 10 | ||
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| ====== White Plume Mountain ====== | ====== White Plume Mountain ====== | ||
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| This version of //White Plume Mountain// is designed for a group of 8th-level player characters. Your players will need both brains and brawn to successfully complete their mission, as there are situations here which cannot be resolved by frontal assault. If your players are unused to hack-proof dilemmas, they may find this adventure frustrating or even boring. But if your players are used to using their wits, they should find this an intriguing balance of problems and action. Unless you are used to mastering lengthy adventures, it will probably take more than one session for a party to investigate all three branches of the dungeon. If this is the case, it would be best if the party were required to leave the dungeon and reenter upon resumption of the game. If they stay in the nearest village (several miles away) they will be relatively safe, but if they camp near White Plume Mountain it would be a good idea to roll for //random encounters// | This version of //White Plume Mountain// is designed for a group of 8th-level player characters. Your players will need both brains and brawn to successfully complete their mission, as there are situations here which cannot be resolved by frontal assault. If your players are unused to hack-proof dilemmas, they may find this adventure frustrating or even boring. But if your players are used to using their wits, they should find this an intriguing balance of problems and action. Unless you are used to mastering lengthy adventures, it will probably take more than one session for a party to investigate all three branches of the dungeon. If this is the case, it would be best if the party were required to leave the dungeon and reenter upon resumption of the game. If they stay in the nearest village (several miles away) they will be relatively safe, but if they camp near White Plume Mountain it would be a good idea to roll for //random encounters// | ||
| - | < | ||
| == Placing the Adventure == | == Placing the Adventure == | ||
| - | White Plume Mountain is located in the Greyhawk campaign setting, in the northeastern part of the Shield Lands, near the Bandit Kingdoms and the Great Rift. Here are suggestions for where you can place the mountain in another world. Wherever you place it, the party may be required to journey to the vicinity through the wilderness. How they get there is up to you. | + | **// |
| - | + | ||
| - | **// | + | |
| - | </ | + | |
| - | > **// | + | |
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| - | > **// | + | |
| ==== Adventure Start ==== | ==== Adventure Start ==== | ||
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| Directly beneath the door is a 20-foot-square vertical shaft and the beginning of a spiral staircase that leads down. | Directly beneath the door is a 20-foot-square vertical shaft and the beginning of a spiral staircase that leads down. | ||
| - | > **ABOUT THE ORIGINAL** | + | |
| - | > | + | |
| - | > //White Plume Mountain//, by Lawrence Schick, was originally published in 1979 as an adventure for the first edition of the D&D game. | + | |
| - | > | + | |
| - | > Schick related in the 2013 compilation //Dungeons of Dread// that he wrote the adventure as a way of persuading Gary Gygax to hire him as a game designer. | + | |
| - | > | + | |
| - | > {{: | + | |
| ==== Dungeon: General Features ==== | ==== Dungeon: General Features ==== | ||
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| * //Waythe// | * //Waythe// | ||
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| - | ====== Appendix B: Creatures ====== | ||
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| - | This appendix details creatures and nonplayer characters that are mentioned in this book and that don’t appear in the //Monster Manual//. That book’s introduction explains how to interpret a stat block. | ||
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| - | Some of these creatures are available in //Volo’s Guide to Monsters// but are reproduced here for your convenience. | ||
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| - | The creatures are presented in alphabetical order. | ||
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| - | * **Animated Table** | ||
| - | * **Barghest** | ||
| - | * **Centaur Mummy** | ||
| - | * **Champion** | ||
| - | * **Choker** | ||
| - | * **Conjurer** | ||
| - | * **Deathlock Wight** | ||
| - | * **Dread Warrior** | ||
| - | * **Duergar Spy** | ||
| - | * **Enchanter** | ||
| - | * **Evoker** | ||
| - | * **Giant Crayfish** | ||
| - | * **Giant Ice toad** | ||
| - | * **Giant Lightning eel** | ||
| - | * **Giant Skeleton** | ||
| - | * **Giant Subterranean lizard** | ||
| - | * **Greater Zombie** | ||
| - | * **Illusionist** | ||
| - | * **Kalka-Kylla** | ||
| - | * **Kelpie** | ||
| - | * **Leucrotta** | ||
| - | * **Malformed Kraken** | ||
| - | * **Martial Arts Adept** | ||
| - | * **Nereid** | ||
| - | * **Necromancer** | ||
| - | * **Ooze master** | ||
| - | * **Sea Lion** | ||
| - | * **Sharwyn Hucrele** | ||
| - | * **Sir Braford** | ||
| - | * **Siren** | ||
| - | * **Tarul var** | ||
| - | * **Tecuziztecatl** | ||
| - | * **Thayan Apprentice** | ||
| - | * **Thayan Warrior** | ||
| - | * **Thorn Slinger** | ||
| - | * **Transmuter** | ||
| - | * **Vampiric Mist** | ||
| - | * **White Maw** | ||
| - | * **Yusdrayl** | ||
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| - | ---- | ||
| - | |||
| - | ====== Credits ====== | ||
| - | |||
| - | * **Compilers.** Kim Mohan, Mike Mearls | ||
| - | * **Lead Rules Developer.** Jeremy Crawford | ||
| - | * **Fifth Edition Conversion.** Chris Sims, Sean K Reynolds, Jennifer Clarke Wilkes | ||
| - | * **Managing Editor.** Jeremy Crawford | ||
| - | * **Editors.** Kim Mohan, Michele Carter | ||
| - | * **Editorial Assistance.** Chris Dupuis, Ben Petrisor, Matt Sernett | ||
| - | * **Art Director.** Kate Irwin | ||
| - | * **Additional Art Direction.** Shauna Narciso, Richard Whitters | ||
| - | * **Graphic Designer.** Emi Tanji | ||
| - | * **Cover Illustrator.** Tyler Jacobson | ||
| - | * **Interior Illustrators.** Mark Behm, Eric Belisle, Zoltan Boros, Noah Bradley, Sam Carr, Jedd Chevrier, Bud Cook, Olga Drebas, Wayne England, Lake Hurwitz, Izzy, Tyler Jacobson, Titus Lunter, Brynn Metheney, Scott Murphy, Claudio Pozas, Ned Rogers, Chris Seaman, Cory Trego-Erdner, | ||
| - | * **Cartographers.** Jason A. Engle, Rob Lazzaretti, Mike Schley, Ben Wootten | ||
| - | * **Producer.** Stan! | ||
| - | * **Project Manager.** Heather Fleming | ||
| - | * **Product Engineer.** Cynda Callaway | ||
| - | * **Imaging Technicians.** Sven Bolen, Carmen Cheung, Kevin Yee | ||
| - | * **Art Administration.** David Gershman | ||
| - | * **Prepress Specialist.** Jefferson Dunlap | ||
| - | * **Other D&D Team Members.** Bart Carroll, John Feil, Trevor Kidd, Adam Lee, Christopher Lindsay, Shelly Mazzanoble, Christopher Perkins, Hilary Ross, Liz Schuh, Nathan Stewart, Greg Tito, Shawn Wood | ||
| - | |||
| - | ==== Credits from the Original Adventures ==== | ||
| - | |||
| - | * **//Tomb of Horrors (1978).//** | ||
| - | * **Design.** Gary Gygax | ||
| - | * **//White Plume Mountain (1979).//** | ||
| - | * **Design.** Lawrence Schick | ||
| - | * **Editing and Suggestions.** Mike Carr, Allen Hammack, Harold Johnson, Tim Jones, Jeff Leason, Dave Sutherland, Jean Wells | ||
| - | * **Art.** Dave Sutherland, Erol Otus, Darlene Pekul, Jeff Dee, David S. LaForce, Jim Roslof, Bill Willingham | ||
| - | * **//The Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan (1980).//** | ||
| - | * **Design.** Harold Johnson, Jeff R. Leason | ||
| - | * **Able Assistance.** Dave Cook, Lawrence Schick | ||
| - | * **Editing.** Harold Johnson | ||
| - | * **Editing and Production.** Dave Cook, Jeff R. Leason, Lawrence Schick | ||
| - | * **Illustrations.** Erol Otus, Jeff Dee, Gregory K. Fleming, David S. LaForce, David C. Sutherland III | ||
| - | * **//Against the Giants (1981).//** | ||
| - | * **Design.** Gary Gygax | ||
| - | * **Editing.** Mike Carr, Timothy Jones, Jon Pickens, Lawrence Schick | ||
| - | * **Art.** David C. Sutherland III, David A. Trampier, Jeff Dee, David S. LaForce, Erol Otis, Bill Willingham | ||
| - | * **//The Sunless Citadel (2000).//** | ||
| - | * **Design.** Bruce R. Cordell | ||
| - | * **Editing.** Miranda Horner | ||
| - | * **Cartography.** Todd Gamble | ||
| - | * **Illustrations.** Dennis Cramer, Todd Lockwood | ||
| - | * **//The Forge of Fury (2000).//** | ||
| - | * **Design.** Richard Baker | ||
| - | * **Editing.** Miranda Horner | ||
| - | * **Cartography.** Todd Gamble | ||
| - | * **Illustrations.** Dennis Cramer, Todd Lockwood | ||
| - | * **//Dead in Thay (2014).//** | ||
| - | * **Design.** Scott Fitzgerald Gray | ||
| - | * **Editing.** Ray Vallese | ||
| - | * **Cartography.** Mike Schley | ||
| - | * **Illustrations.** Eric Belisle, Sam Carr, Tyler Jacobson, Miles Johnstone, Mark Winters | ||
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| - | ==== On the Cover ==== | ||
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