You’re thumbing through your copy of Candlekeep Mysteries, and your DM brain is starting to feel gears click into place. Already you imagine how you’ll present certain NPCs, the way you’ll milk the suspense of discovery for your players. There’s just one problem. You’re already deep into a campaign set in Wildemount, and there’s just no room in your schedule to run another game.
But suddenly, a burst of inspiration. Candlekeep is a massive library amassing knowledge from throughout the world. But, wait, there’s a massive, knowledge-thirsty library in Wildemount, the Cobalt Soul! So instead of waiting for a whole new campaign, why not just send this current crew to the archives in Zadash to uncover the secrets of a strange book with a mirror on it à la The Price of Beauty? Congratulations, you are now on your way to creating a D&D sourcebook mashup.
Why Mash-up?
It can be easy to look at a published adventure book and think of it as having a locked-in story. But, a lot of fun can be had by mixing and matching adventures with the same modularity as optional rules found in a sourcebook like Xanathar’s Guide to Everything. This practice of mashing D&D books together can be an excellent way to achieve the versatility of a homebrewed campaign, with the guided hand that makes using published adventures so appealing.
On top of providing additional versatility, experimenting with sourcebook mashups can allow for breaks in the campaign’s main story arc, thereby creating a player-driven sandbox campaign. There are plenty of one-shot-style adventures that can be pulled from other sources and used as side quests, which can be a lifesaver if you aren’t the kind of DM who has a bunch of different story threads prepped and ready to go.
Mashups also serve as a way of surprising players. A party who has built characters for a Strixhaven-based campaign likely won’t be expecting a storyline pulled from Waterdeep: Dragon Heist in which they need to investigate the cause of a murder on campus. With just a little imagination, you can keep your party on their toes with storylines from various worlds without them even knowing!
How to Start Mashing-Up
When looking for sourcebooks to mashup, it’s best to start small. Reskinning an entire adventure to fit the backdrop of your current campaign can sometimes require more work than simply writing your own plot. By this logic, it’s easiest to add content to your existing campaign that is already self-contained. Dungeons, being self-contained by nature, are the best example of this. For instance, if your party is heading for a temple devoted to a particularly evil deity, the Betrayer’s Rise dungeon crawl in Critical Role: Call of the Netherdeep is a perfect source of vile ideas.
Once you’ve successfully mashed up self-contained content, you can start looking for content that might take more legwork to fit into your campaign. These instances take more reworking than self-contained content but can provide huge payoffs when it results in multiple sessions worth of prewritten material. We cover some examples of more advanced mashups in this article’s Examples of Mashups section. Before we get to that, let’s discuss some elements to look out for when deciding to combine prewritten content from sourcebooks with a campaign you’re running:
- Mood: Does the setting you’re pulling inspiration from fit the mood or vibe of the adventure you’re already running? Is there a particular region or city in that setting you feel could substitute or be used in addition to your current locations?
- Characters: Are there characters or organizations that can work in your current setting? How would they fit into your current campaign, and what existing characters or organizations would be impacted by their inclusion?
- Antagonists: How do the creatures from the new setting fit into your current campaign? How much will you have to change their lore and game statistic to make them work?
- Stakes: One of the major challenges when bringing a story to a new setting is making sure the stakes don’t get lowered in the translation. For example, the adventure in Baldur’s Gate: Descent into Avernus might not feel as intense if removed from the fiery wasteland of the Nine Hells. Similarly, removing Curse of Strahd from Barovia might make it feel decidedly different than a typical Strahd game. Both may be rewarding challenges if you feel like accepting them, however.
Examples of Mashups
With some exceptions, most of D&D’s most popular adventures can be moved to other settings and fit fairly seamlessly. Here are just a few examples of some settings and adventures that could be easily tossed together for a campaign:
Waterdeep: Dragon Heist and Guildmaster’s Guide to Ravnica: The planet-sprawling megacity vibe of Ravnica combined with the built-in faction intrigue of the city’s ten guilds layers perfectly with the urban vibe of this treasure hunt story. Any of the four possible villains in Dragon Heist could be rewritten as a member of a guild or could be replaced with an important guild dignitary from the world of Ravnica.
Storm King’s Thunder and Mythic Odysseys of Theros: The Ancient Greece-inspired world of Theros was once ruled by primordial titans who were overcome by the current pantheon of gods. Some of these titans rising up could easily take the place of the giants of your Storm King’s Thunder campaign. The world of Theros is smaller than Faerun, but there are still plenty of areas to make your players explore before the end of the campaign.
Lost Mine of Phandelver and Wayfinder’s Guide to Eberron: This mashup can work well if you want to use the Starter Kit adventure to introduce new players to D&D, but you also know your group would have more fun in the world of Eberron. You can simply place the small town somewhere in Khorvaire, adjust the history of the mine so that it was lost during the Last War, and pepper in some of the setting’s dragonmarked houses or introduce a group patron as you play. Then, once they’ve defeated the Black Spider, you can continue the story into other areas of the world.
Icewind Dale: Rime of the Frostmaiden and Explorer’s Guide to Wildemount: The Biting North, made up of the Greying Wildlands and the frozen region of Eiselcross, could serve as a fitting setting for the brutal survival horror adventures. The ruins of the pre-Calamity city of Aeor sub in well for the remote locations and story hooks of Rime of the Frostmaiden.
Ghosts of Saltmarsh and Baldur’s Gate: Descent into Avernus: You can even mashup two different adventure books. While Descent into Avernus is a self-contained adventure, it also provides DMs with a plethora of locations for characters to explore. Replacing Saltmarsh’s seafaring setting and vessels with the open wasteland and infernal machines of Avernus could give you a vast branch of new tales to tell in the Nine Hells. Likewise, you could do the exact opposite and turn the wasteland of Avernus into an ocean-sprawling pirate-war or lost-at-sea Odyssey-like adventure. It would have such a different vibe that your players might not even know what inspired it.
Let’s Get Mashing!
We hope this article has inspired you to try a mashup of your own! The examples provided are just a taste of ways that you can combine a pair of sourcebooks to tell a different kind of story. Hopefully, this gentle nudge can help you get the ball rolling to try something similar—or even more off the wall—in your own games.
Riley Silverman (@rileyjsilverman) is a contributing writer to D&D Beyond, Nerdist, and SYFY Wire. She DMs the Theros-set Dice Ex Machina for the Saving Throw Show, and has been a player on the Wizards of the Coast-sponsored The Broken Pact. Riley also played as Braga in the official tabletop adaptation of the Rat Queens comic for HyperRPG, and currently plays as The Doctor on the Doctor Who RPG podcast The Game of Rassilon. She currently lives in Los Angeles.
I've been using Hoard of the Dragon Queen & Rise of Tiamat as a backbone for my own story in the Forgotten Realms. I set it in a part of Faerûn lower down, beside the Lake of Steam, and replaced Tiamat and her cult with Bane, in a time when Bane has been destroyed and his cult are trying to resurrect him. So, I also mixed in some Avernus. I skip stages and adjust challenges, and sometimes I write my own plots and adventures, but it's been really useful having a structure to fall back on! I also throw in some dungeons and characters from other settings (Storm King, Phandelver) for personal character quests. Adapting the content can be as fun as writing it from scratch. So I heartily agree with this article!
When I read through Dragon Heist, I thought the gang war and city intirgue would be better suited for the grimy, rain-slick streets of Sharn, so I converted the whole thing into an Eberron Campaign. I also set it up so all four antagonists were working against each other and the PCs: corrupt nobles, a boromar sorceress, a rogue Thuranni master assassin and the eldritch-power wielding leader of a Daask cell.
I deeply recommend this approach!
Usage note: when you have a verb and a preposition ("Why Mash Up?" or "How to Start Mashing Up") there is no hyphen.
The hyphen only goes there if you are turning it into a compound adjective: "A mashed-up version of Storm King's Thunder and Mystic Odysseys of Theros".
Could the Frozen sick one shot be a good segway into Frostmaiden? I'm very interested in doing a mash up like that, I just recently go the book for frostmaiden and am so excited to run it
Ghost of saltmarsh + spelljammer setting.
Strixhaven and Icewind Dale. . . with students going on annual rangings, taking them north to Icewind Dale.
If someone made this a comic, I would read it.
Placed Saltmarsh on the north end of the Menagerie Coast, in Gwendon, and the Sea Princes become the Revelry. Rather than having a huge library, I've been tying individual Candlekeep Mysteries into the PCs' backstories and they've been coming up as character-driven subplots between the GoS main story: the Dwarf Rogue with a mysterious past was a child refugee from Vermeillon, the Druid's mother (a traveling celebrity) disappeared from the Restful Lily, stuff like that.
i love doing this - when I did mines of phandelver into storm kings thunder, I pulled a temple from icespire peak that was in the region between phandelver and tribosr as we transitioned from the two books.
then later when skt gets nautical, I added a bunch of interludes through some of the chapters in salt marsh and it worked really well.
we are plagjng dungeon of the mad mage now after having gone through dragon heist, and when we went to skullport I pulled threads back in from dragon heist in the xanathars hideout
Same here! GoSM in Wildemount feels like a natural fit. The Menagerie Coast had some empty space in the Central-Northern half, near a small river that empties from the Cyrios Mtn.s and it's intersection with the Gilded Roadway.
Instead of Candlekeep, I'm including the Sunless Citadel from TotYP. I'm also assimilating the Runeterra Content regarding Bilgewater, to add more color & dimension to the Revelry and it's effect on the regional politics and economy of the factions within & outside of Saltmarsh proper.
Also looking forward to MCDM's release of "Flee Mortals!", to add more tactical options to the monstrous encounters they will face throughout GoSM.
Ravenloft adventures work best when done in tandem with Greyhawk because Ravenloft was written mostly around the time when Greyhawk was (rightfully) the primary campaign setting. Bring back Greyhawk, goddamit!
What is captain Kirk doing at Amberdune Books? (Image 2)
Plus I like the idea of an Ebberon/Decent To Avernus. Who doesn't want to be a warforged artificer mechanic with a tricked out flame throwing motorcycle of doom?
There are two mash-ups I really want to run in the future:
1. Tales from the Yawning Underdark: A campaign based Tales from the Yawning Portal set in the Underdark, using setting information from Out of the Abyss and other books, and replacing the Tomb of Horrors with a finale that ties everything together.
2. Waterdeep: Descent into Avernus: Descent into Avernus, but the Baldur's Gate portion is replaced with an altered Dragon Heist. Replaces the weakest part of one of the best adventures with another great adventure.
I throw elements of Curse of Strahd into just about everything. My group have been playing D&D since the 80s so there is no way we could just do that adventure without it being a meta-gaming extravaganza, but it is great for any time you want to throw in some horror or really sick minded NPCs. ALSO, I tend to take published adventures as a basis often then just warp them to my preferences in my homebrew world.
I've been looking to rerun Tomb of Annihilation - but to retheme and possibly overwrite the final dungeon into something that fits the rest of the story better.
I once planned a mashup that combined Lost Mine of Phandelver + Dragon of Icespire Peak; unfortunately, scheduling conflicts killed that off. The Redbrands would be using the threat of the dragons and orcs to extort Phandalin, and once the heroes chase them out of town, they would have to do the other quests to prove that the Redbrands weren't a necessary evil. I had also given the Black Spider a backstory where he stayed on the surface after a failed Drow raid, and he wanted to gain power by becoming an arms dealer; and what better way to make money as an arms dealer than a magic forge? And finally, I gave all the bad guy groups relations with each other; The Black Spider could hire the Stone-Cold Reavers & the Mountain Toe Wererats to work with the Redbrands & Cragmaw Goblinoids, the cultists from Thundertree would be trying to recruit both dragons in the name of Tiamat (and have larger numbers), and the Orcs would be disliked by everyone -- though, depending on the DM, they might be open to an alliance with Phandalin against the dragons.
I also have ideas for a Curse of Strahd + Van Richten's Guide to Ravenloft mashup, as well as a Tyranny of Dragons + Fizban's Treasury of Dragons mashup
where did they promise this?
Death House (Curse of Strahd) and Prisoners of the Draw (Out of Abyss Chapter 1) are two starting points I've used for different campaigns. The Death House can be put in any setting and when the PCs leave the house they are suddenly in another setting.
For the latter, the Drow could easily be made into jailors in any setting. In our campaign, one of the jailed NPCs befriended by the PCs became their manager loosely based upon the rules in Acquisitions Incorporated.
The planar beacon in Thalivar's tower (Divine Contention) can teleport the party to the entrance of the Tomb of Horrors, wherein the Ruinstone can be placed or substituted for any other loot, such as the "wish" gem.
Any of the Against the Giants strongholds can easily fit into Storm King's Thunder.
The examples above are pretty basic and not as well thought out as the author's campaign setting / adventure mashups, but the episodic nature of many official adventures really makes these mashups doable.
Don't limit yourself to 5e, or even D&D.
I always thought the Beholder would be cool levitating out of a flying saucer in a 50's sci fi adventure.