The campaign comes in two parts: Waterdeep: Dragon Heist and Waterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage.
I could not be more excited about this next release.
Let’s briefly delve into why this is!
What We Know
The former will take adventurers on an urban romp through the most splendid city in the Forgotten Realms and is levels 1-5. The goal of the PCs is to protect a hoard of gold, called dragons in Waterdeep (hence the name Dragon Heist), from a certain villain. In addition, the book will act as a sourcebook on Waterdeep and a resource for those who wish to run urban adventures. Chris Perkins designed the adventure around the idea of the dungeon master choosing one of four villains to drive the adventure forward. Each villain, supposedly, is connected to a season (spring, summer, fall, winter) and has an entirely different agenda than the others. The possible villains are Jarlaxle, a flamboyant drow mastermind, Xanathar, a psychopathic beholder gang boss, Manshoon, rather, a clone of Manshoon, a great archmage, and the Cassalanters, a noble house in Waterdeep. The different villains and seasons attached them give Dragon Heist replayability, or, if you’re crazy, a vast amount of villainy to include in a single campaign!
The latter and second part of the Waterdeep series will take adventurers below Waterdeep, into the massive dungeon of Undermountain and is levels 6-20. Yes, you read that correctly, this, two-part series will be the first official fifth edition campaign that takes PCs from level one to level twenty! Within Undermountain awaits an immense variety of vicious traps, drooling monsters, pompous villainy, and unimaginable treasures. We know that Halaster Blackcloak, the creator of Undermountain, resides within, but, other than that little tidbit, we’re unsure as to why the PCs will be delving into Faerun’s greatest dungeon. I'm eager to learn more!
Thoughts and Speculation
From what we’ve heard, in addition to both books being adventures, the books can serve as a resource to DMs and players, something I use all of the WOTC adventures as. Dragon Heist is set in the entire city of Waterdeep. Using that metropolis as an example, DMs will be able to deduce the mystery of running interesting urban adventures. Expansions on topics such as chase sequences, downtime, and combat and roleplaying in a pure city environment are to be expected. Dungeon of the Mad Mage will most definitely be a huge inspiration to those looking to run mega-dungeon campaigns or insert dungeons into their current ones. We’ve heard that each level of Undermountain has its own tone, environment, and villains. This aspect may be heightened because WOTC pulled in a plethora of freelancers to assist them with this massive undertaking. Whatever’s within Undermountain, I’m sure it will be fantastic; WOTC has not disappointed me thus far.
In Summary
- Waterdeep: Dragon Heist, an urban romp through the City of Splendors, in which the adventurers strive to keep a hoard of gold away from one of four villains, goes through levels 1-5 and focuses on roleplaying.
- Waterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage, a delve into Faerun’s greatest dungeon, designed by Halaster Blackcloak, spans levels 6-20, becoming fifth edition’s first module designed for PCs to hit the level cap.
Next week, we're finally returning to Legendary Lessons!
Until next time, farewell, friends.
Check out Villain Backgrounds Volume I, a supplement that crafts compelling villains.
Please send inquiries to rjd20writes@gmail.com.
Until next time, farewell, friends.
Eager for more RJD20? Begin here, subscribe to the RJD20 newsletter, and explore RJD20 videos on YouTube.
Check out Villain Backgrounds Volume I, a supplement that crafts compelling villains.
Please send inquiries to rjd20writes@gmail.com.
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