So MtG and D&D have several PDFs for their Plane Shift 5e doc. (links below)
Does DnDBeyond have any plans to add the races, subclasses, campaign material and/or monsters from these PDFs?
I have had to use the homebrew feature to allow three of my players to play races from the Plane Shift material already. It would be nice if these Wizards of the Coast PDFs were added.
I know they have a cut off date for how far back they can go to add UA stuff, Plane Shift may be under that rule as well. Or perhaps they aren't allowed to at all, which would be kind of odd since they are free supplements, but I don't claim to know anything intricate about IP distribution. For now, you could always homebrew the races.
We're running a campaign that includes my Plane Shift: Amonkhet character. Putting my character together on D&D Beyond really doesn't work if I don't have access to Amonkhet race et al.
I don't think they are going to add those as none of them are considered official D&D rules they are just published to enjoy. But that does not mean you cannot do them up as private homebrew as you cannot publish them due to not being origional works by you.
I thought the same as sonofamitch: now that partnered content is a feature that is going to be built upon in the future, it'd be very nice to see access to these supplements through it.
Ok, but where did it come from? I can't find any articles or announcements about it. Was it made by DDB, WotC, or a 3rd party? This source just suddenly existed and I don't know why.
Planeshift is basically homebrew made by WotC staff (from the MTG team I think, not the D&D team). It is not official, and not intended to be official. And it is 100% up to WotC to allow it to be added to DDB or not.
My guess is that Runeterra is closer to what the bloodhunter is, closely related to DDB and having little to do with WotC.
Ok, but where did it come from? I can't find any articles or announcements about it. Was it made by DDB, WotC, or a 3rd party? This source just suddenly existed and I don't know why.
Planeshift is basically homebrew made by WotC staff (from the MTG team I think, not the D&D team). It is not official, and not intended to be official. And it is 100% up to WotC to allow it to be added to DDB or not.
My guess is that Runeterra is closer to what the bloodhunter is, closely related to DDB and having little to do with WotC.
Ok, but where did it come from? I can't find any articles or announcements about it. Was it made by DDB, WotC, or a 3rd party? This source just suddenly existed and I don't know why.
Planeshift is basically homebrew made by WotC staff (from the MTG team I think, not the D&D team). It is not official, and not intended to be official. And it is 100% up to WotC to allow it to be added to DDB or not.
My guess is that Runeterra is closer to what the bloodhunter is, closely related to DDB and having little to do with WotC.
Well that certainly acknowledges that it exists (which is more than their ACTUAL WEBSITE does), but it answers 0 of my questions.
And brings up new ones: so is Runeterra a mobile game? It says "play store" but there was no link or further information.
Anyway, this isn't the place for this (I made a thread where we can continue this questioning). Like I said, it's existence probably does not impact future inclusion of planeshift.
Which was released one full year after the post above. They are all interesting options that would not look bad. From the pyromancer option that might actually make fire spells something not to forget about at high levels to several racial options which were quite nice.
I guess this is a Dev Update question.
So MtG and D&D have several PDFs for their Plane Shift 5e doc. (links below)
Does DnDBeyond have any plans to add the races, subclasses, campaign material and/or monsters from these PDFs?
I have had to use the homebrew feature to allow three of my players to play races from the Plane Shift material already. It would be nice if these Wizards of the Coast PDFs were added.
I would also love an answer to this as I also allow these races in my games. I can't seem to find a statement from dnd beyond on this issue, anywhere.
I know they have a cut off date for how far back they can go to add UA stuff, Plane Shift may be under that rule as well. Or perhaps they aren't allowed to at all, which would be kind of odd since they are free supplements, but I don't claim to know anything intricate about IP distribution. For now, you could always homebrew the races.
Me too.
We're running a campaign that includes my Plane Shift: Amonkhet character. Putting my character together on D&D Beyond really doesn't work if I don't have access to Amonkhet race et al.
I don't think they are going to add those as none of them are considered official D&D rules they are just published to enjoy. But that does not mean you cannot do them up as private homebrew as you cannot publish them due to not being origional works by you.
With the new Bilgewater content, I hope they reconsider adding these now.
"Bilgewater" content?
https://www.dndbeyond.com/sources/lrdtob
I thought the same as sonofamitch: now that partnered content is a feature that is going to be built upon in the future, it'd be very nice to see access to these supplements through it.
Ok, but where did it come from? I can't find any articles or announcements about it. Was it made by DDB, WotC, or a 3rd party? This source just suddenly existed and I don't know why.
Planeshift is basically homebrew made by WotC staff (from the MTG team I think, not the D&D team). It is not official, and not intended to be official. And it is 100% up to WotC to allow it to be added to DDB or not.
My guess is that Runeterra is closer to what the bloodhunter is, closely related to DDB and having little to do with WotC.
https://twitter.com/DnDBeyond/status/1270857670694559744
Well that certainly acknowledges that it exists (which is more than their ACTUAL WEBSITE does), but it answers 0 of my questions.
And brings up new ones: so is Runeterra a mobile game? It says "play store" but there was no link or further information.
Anyway, this isn't the place for this (I made a thread where we can continue this questioning). Like I said, it's existence probably does not impact future inclusion of planeshift.
To be fair, with the recent acquisition by WotC i wonder if this will be explored. There was, aside from the OP mentioned
Also:
Which was released one full year after the post above. They are all interesting options that would not look bad. From the pyromancer option that might actually make fire spells something not to forget about at high levels to several racial options which were quite nice.