Justin Alexander Profile picture
Jul 15, 2022 21 tweets 6 min read Read on X
The Tower of the High Clerist, from DL8 Dragons of War, is a HUGE wedded directly to a mass combat scenario.

This is a major turning point in the War of the Lance and the #Dragonlance Saga adventures.

Let's break it down. Image
We're continuing our Let's Read of #Dragonlance.

You can find the start of the Let's Read over here if you'd like to begin at the beginning.

We are here. The advance of the dragonarmies is shown here by the orange arrows: They have swept over western Solamnia, but their advance through the Vingaard Mountains has been brought to a halt by the fortress of Thelgaard. Image
You have to massage the text a bit here to get the full picture, but my understanding is that:

- The blue dragonarmies (led by Kitiara, aka the Dark Lady) rapidly swept over western Solamnia, but were stopped by the citadel of Solanthus.
- While the Knights rallied their defenses, an attack wing from the red dragonarmy in conquered Abanasynia crossed the channel, outflanked the knights, and sacked Solanthus.
- The dragonarmy advance, however, was stopped again by Thelgaard where the knights now hold the pass.
- The blue dragonarmy, however, has sent the 5th and 6th Dragon Flights north to punch through the weakly defended Tower of the High Clerist, sack Palanthus beyond, and end-run Thelgaard.
If the Tower falls, Solamnia falls, and all of western Ansalon will lie open to the dragonarmies.
This is the Tower.

Once known a Dragondeath, it was built during the Age of Dreams within a narrow cleft of the mountains, its walls flush with sheer cliffs to either side. Image
On the east side we have the Knights Spur, a mini-keep which -- along with the walls and courtyards -- is the only part of the Tower currently occupied. Image
The main Tower is sealed and entrance is forbidden because (pick one):

- The Knights consider it a holy site.
- We couldn't justify exploring a bunch of tableau ruins from the Calamity if people were actually using the place.
(Tableau ruins are the dungeons where everyone has politely died sitting down or with their skeletons pointing enigmatically at secret lore so that the PCs can explore history as if it were a diorama at a museum / puzzle room. They crop up all the time in D&D.)
(Super excited about that typo I just noticed in the first tweet of today's thread. Huge DUNGEON wedded to a mass combat scenario in case you were wondering.)
The Tower is large enough that not every chamber is uniquely keyed.

N = Officers' Quarters
T = Temple
C = Corridor (with tapestries)
AB = floor trap Image
Here's the dragontrap we discussed earlier: A dragon orb in Area 35 draws dragons into the Tower.

It's easy for them to enter, but the angled walls make it more difficult for them to pull out or turn around. When their head enters Area 32C, portcullises at 31 and 32A slam shut. Image
With the dragon now trapped, knights can swarm from the sides and butcher it.

Really cool concept. Very big reward for PCs who puzzle it out (in the form of absolute epic awesomeness).
The attention to detail on the map is exceptional, with side views and other details clarifying the already beautifully isomorphic map.

The cartography here is by David Sutherland III. ImageImageImage
If you've watched my Let's Read 1974 D&D videos, you may recognize Sutherland's name from his early work at TSR, including the revised cover of the original White Box edition of D&D.

Sutherland and D&D had both come a long way in 10 years. Image
Probably Sutherland's most famous pieces is A Paladin in Hell.

He also apparently did the original, uncredited Castle Ravenloft maps (which are sometimes erroneously credited to Diesel, including by me earlier in this thread). Image
Sutherland worked for TSR, including as an art director, until 1997.

When Wizards of the Coast bought the company, however, Sutherland was not rehired.

He died in poverty 8 years later from liver disease.

But I digress.

The Tower itself narrows as it rises, eventually topping out at Level 16.

This pinnacle is also one of the possible locations of the Goal Artifacts. (Which, if you recall, are randomly distributed.) Image

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More from @hexcrawl

Oct 10
Step 1: When you place a secret, you have to be at peace with the idea that the PCs may never find that secret.

If you're not, then the secret isn't really a secret. It's a pantomime.

(This thread will make more sense if you read James' full tweet.)
"I then decide to elaborate about the dust, so they don't miss the secret; now I'm the one deciding whether they find the secret!"

Right. So don't do that.

That's going to solve a bunch of your problems.
First decision you make is how obvious the secret is. This is roughly a spectrum:

- No clue at all; they'd need a blind search to see it.
- Indication only noticed with examination.
- Indication that could be noticed in the initial room description.
- Big sign pointing at it.
Read 27 tweets
Jun 7
Hypothesis: The beholder's mouth gets larger with each new edition.

Let's start with the original 1975 appearance on the cover of Supplement I: Greyhawk. Image
Okay, let's compare AD&D 1E (Tom Wham) to AD&D 2E (Jeff Easley).

Here I think you could argue that the 1E beholder has a wider mouth, but I definitely think the 2E has more maw.
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Now AD&D 2E (Jeff Easley) to D&D 3E (Scott Fischer).

Bigger teeth. Bigger mouth.
Beholder, AD&D 2e (Jeff Easley)
Behlder, D&D 3e (Scott Fischer)
Read 9 tweets
Jan 22
This article was removed because it was attracting transphobes and its original purpose was also defunct.

Core claims from the article and the discussion at the time it was written:

1. You shouldn't deadname people.
2. However, the ethics of re-editing material written before a name change is complicated.

3. If Jennell requested a change to the original article, I would change it.

(She did, and I did.)
For better or for worse, I stand by those claims.
Read 8 tweets
Jan 22
I have been asked to respond to this post.

Short version: The post is not only lying about what I said, it's also wrong about what Jennell said and what Jennell's wife has said.

diyanddragons.blogspot.com/2024/01/xander…
For one example completely out of my control, the post claims Jennell's wife said she was in a coma on November 1st in the GoFundMe updates.

You can go look: That's not true.

(Make a donation while you're there.)

gofundme.com/f/jennell-jaqu…
The post is, IMO, deceptive in countless ways, for example by claiming that my descriptions of private messaging in the spring of 2023 is actually describing a public comment on a deleted blog post from 2018.
Read 7 tweets
Jun 20, 2023
When I did theater, we would periodically run into "my significant other is uncomfortable with my character (me) kissing someone onstage."

Never once had someone's significant other get concerned about their significant other getting stabbed or haunted by a ghost on stage.
Remove the script and the formality of the stage and... well...
I'm not even saying "it's because people will get concerned." I'm saying human emotion is complicated and personal comfort with emotion, particularly in Puritanical America, is varied.
Read 16 tweets
Jun 19, 2023
Re: 5E DMG. #dnd

A lot is made of chapter order (start by creating a pantheon of gods!). That's easy to point to, but is really only representative of the more fundamental problem:

The designers didn't have a clear vision for the structure of play. Cover of 5E Dungeon Master'...
So there's a bunch of stuff, but very little of it is actually connected to any clear function. It seems mostly sourced from other D&D books and a vague sense that this is "cool" or "should be there."

Which makes it tough for the reader to come to grips with it.
It's like a hoarder's garage. If you dig through it, you're occasionally like, "Holy crap! There's a 3D printer in here!"

The print head is missing and you'll need to track down some filament before you can use it, but... 3D printer! Wow!
Read 6 tweets

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