Dungeons & Dragons Expands Its Line with Three New Releases
All images courtesy of Wizards of the Coast
The past couple months have seen a smattering of new Dungeons & Dragons products, some in a classic mode and one that is decidedly not, and it’s probably the strangest sequence of three things to come out of the tabletop division of Wizards of the Coast in a while.
The most recent, Essentials Kit, is truly excellent. Billed as a sort of sequel or complementary box to the Starter Set for D&D’s 5th Edition, it’s a small cardboard box that contains everything you need to get started with the game. An abbreviated rulebook, some character sheets, one set of dice, a map of the Sword Coast (with a reverse map of a town called Phandalin), some other tchotchkes, and an adventure called Dragon of Icespire Peak are contained in the box. The general idea here is that this is all you would need to begin playing D&D if you just got together with your friends and wanted to get down and dirty with some adventures in a far away fantasy realm.
It’s good! It is very clear that Wizards has thought quite intently about what the bare minimum amount of information and content you can give a new play group is, and the Essentials Kit is basically a limited sandbox for players to explore and figure out what they find compelling in a game of D&D. The adventure has a good mix of different types of dungeons, from the industrial Gnomegarde to the strange Woodland Manse, and while there’s a “main quest” for players to follow, the adventure also contains a number of smaller locales and fleshed-out locations for Dungeon Masters to put in front of players. If you’re getting your feet wet with D&D in 2019, then this is where you’d want to do that.
In the realm of more traditional sourcebooks, Ghosts of Saltmarsh is another recent release from Wizards that gives players a wide array of things to do. Geared at more veteran players, Ghosts is a big book of adventures that take the sea, coves, boats, and ocean creatures as their core. Comprised of seven classic adventures from the game’s past updated for 5th Edition, it runs the gamut of things you might expect: sailors and sea hags and sahuagin and holy hell, that’s right, even aboleths and krakens.