![]() ![]() I may review the more popular ones in due time, but in focusing on the relative unknowns I’m hoping to find some rare gems that have been overlooked by the gaming community. In the Halloween spirit I’m reviewing a variety of such products, with an emphasis on the more obscure sourcebooks. ![]() Drawing from fans of the broader Demiplane of Dread to exclusive Barovian castle delvers, fan-made Ravenloft supplements are almost as numerous as that of Eberron’s. During the same year of Curse of Strahd’s release the Dungeon Master’s Guild came out, allowing third party publishers to use the explicit IP of Wizards of the Coast to make their own sourcebooks. ![]() Continuing a proud tradition nearly 4 decades in the making, the iconography of the Devil Strahd and his doomed obsession with Ireena is now something D&D gamers of all generations are intimately familiar with and in turn the broader setting of Ravenloft. It’s been nearly seven years since the highest-rated 5th Edition adventure was published. ![]()
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