I am currently re-reading the basic rules of D&D as I'm going to DM soon for a group of players who have never played D&D before
and as I was reading it with attention, I'm noticing some mistakes, and I thought I should let you know.
(those are not significant errors and mistakes, I don't know rules well enough for that '^^)
the first one I noticed is: "peoples" people being already a plural (of person), there is no s (yay I know sorry, it's a grammar one ><)
the second one that I find more important is in the bard class description: you describe the "Bard Colleges" saying that there is the "College of Lore" and the "College of Valor" but then you have a section describing the college of Lore, and it seems like you forgot the college of valor as there is nothing about it
"Peoples" is a valid English word, showing up multiple times in D&D sources, with the following definition:
the men, women, and children of a particular nation, community, or ethnic group.
"the native peoples of Canada"
As for the Bard Colleges, I can confirm the error you found. The PHB has both those Colleges, so that's probably where it came from. However, it's not likely to be fixed until an errata is issued.
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Helpful rewriter of Japanese->English translation and delver into software codebases (she/e/they)
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I am currently re-reading the basic rules of D&D as I'm going to DM soon for a group of players who have never played D&D before
and as I was reading it with attention, I'm noticing some mistakes, and I thought I should let you know.
(those are not significant errors and mistakes, I don't know rules well enough for that '^^)
the first one I noticed is: "peoples" people being already a plural (of person), there is no s (yay I know sorry, it's a grammar one ><)
the second one that I find more important is in the bard class description: you describe the "Bard Colleges" saying that there is the "College of Lore" and the "College of Valor"
but then you have a section describing the college of Lore, and it seems like you forgot the college of valor as there is nothing about it
Thanks for your time :D
"Peoples" is a valid English word, showing up multiple times in D&D sources, with the following definition:
As for the Bard Colleges, I can confirm the error you found. The PHB has both those Colleges, so that's probably where it came from. However, it's not likely to be fixed until an errata is issued.
Helpful rewriter of Japanese->English translation and delver into software codebases (she/e/they)