Difference between revisions of "Dungeonomicon (3.5e Sourcebook)/Favorite Blurb"

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[[File:Dungeonomicon.jpg|thumb|Sure it's dark and gloomy, but how does it fit into the rest of the world?]] This is the third installment of Frank and K's Tome series exploring and updating portions of the D&D experience. This work focuses on one of the most central of perplexing legacies, The Dungeon, and hopes to resolve some of the inconsistencies present in the game world that revolve around them.
 
[[File:Dungeonomicon.jpg|thumb|Sure it's dark and gloomy, but how does it fit into the rest of the world?]] This is the third installment of Frank and K's Tome series exploring and updating portions of the D&D experience. This work focuses on one of the most central of perplexing legacies, The Dungeon, and hopes to resolve some of the inconsistencies present in the game world that revolve around them.
  
This work hopes to help resolve those problems, with essays on dungeons themselves and the creatures that populate them, as well as the social, economic, and linguistic aspects of the game. There is a strong focus on how living underground even works in the Dungeons and Dragons multiverse, complete with writeups on some of the most common races that spend their time hiding from the sun beneath the ground.
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The Dungeonomicon contains essays on dungeons themselves and the creatures that populate them, as well as the social, economic, and linguistic aspects of the game. There is a strong focus on how living underground even works in the Dungeons and Dragons multiverse, complete with writeups on some of the most common races that spend their time hiding from the sun beneath the ground.
  
 
Also included are new and updated base and prestige classes, including a version of the Monk that fails to live up to its balance point (in a good way). There are even updated rules for a number of problematic magic spells and effects, notably the entire polymorph line, and a revised way to deal with the hide skill. It's all rounded out with a set of adventuring locations that help tie all of the articles and material together.
 
Also included are new and updated base and prestige classes, including a version of the Monk that fails to live up to its balance point (in a good way). There are even updated rules for a number of problematic magic spells and effects, notably the entire polymorph line, and a revised way to deal with the hide skill. It's all rounded out with a set of adventuring locations that help tie all of the articles and material together.

Revision as of 04:42, 8 October 2011

Dungeonomicon

Sure it's dark and gloomy, but how does it fit into the rest of the world?
This is the third installment of Frank and K's Tome series exploring and updating portions of the D&D experience. This work focuses on one of the most central of perplexing legacies, The Dungeon, and hopes to resolve some of the inconsistencies present in the game world that revolve around them.

The Dungeonomicon contains essays on dungeons themselves and the creatures that populate them, as well as the social, economic, and linguistic aspects of the game. There is a strong focus on how living underground even works in the Dungeons and Dragons multiverse, complete with writeups on some of the most common races that spend their time hiding from the sun beneath the ground.

Also included are new and updated base and prestige classes, including a version of the Monk that fails to live up to its balance point (in a good way). There are even updated rules for a number of problematic magic spells and effects, notably the entire polymorph line, and a revised way to deal with the hide skill. It's all rounded out with a set of adventuring locations that help tie all of the articles and material together.

Read more at: Dungeonomicon

Facts about the Dungeonomicon