Ravenloft's Domains of Dread are some of the most terrifying locales in the entire multiverse, but they're not simply pocket planes full of jump scares and disfigured monstrosities. Each Domain of Dread exists to imprison a Darklord—a villain whose crimes were so profound that they drew the attention of the Dark Powers and were bound within a pocket dimension that twists and torments their darkest desires.
In this article, we explore five infamous Darklords from the 17 included in Ravenloft: The Horrors Within, examining their pasts, the nature of their domains, and the powers that make them deadly and unique threats.
![]() Strahd von ZarovichPast. Strahd von Zarovich is the quintessential and most infamous Darklord. Once a ruthless warlord whose campaign conquered the land now known as Barovia, Strahd’s envy and desire drove him to murder his brother Sergei and attempt to claim Sergei’s beloved, Tatyana. His pact with dark forces transformed him into the first vampire and empowered him to slaughter his entire family and retinue of followers. Present. After Barovia was claimed by the Dark Powers and turned into the first Domain of Dread, Strahd has brooded within Castle Ravenloft, eternally pursuing reincarnations of Tatyana to no avail. Though he occasionally toys with adventurers, he is relentlessly cruel to those who deny him his desires. Domain of Dread. Much like Strahd, Barovia exudes classic gothic horror. Isolated settlements are dotted amongst perpetual mists, deadly monsters roam the countryside, and all who try to scrape a meager living are assaulted with a constant, repressing atmosphere of dread. Signature Abilities
|
![]() CthulhuPast. Cthulhu is unlike most Darklords. Instead of a mortal twisted by ambition, it is a primordial cosmic force from beyond reality. For eons, Cthulhu has warped worlds by invading dreams, unraveling minds, and shattered the boundaries between reality and the Far Realm. Present. Now imprisoned within the Domains of Dread known as Innsmouth, Cthulhu can only wield a fraction of its terrible might. Even while bound, Cthulhu sends its dreams to seep from its prison and into realms beyond, guiding its cults and manipulating weaker minds toward rituals that might free it. Domain of Dread. Innsmouth is a domain suffused with elements of cosmic horror. It is an inhospitable expanse of alien mountains, drowned ruins, and what remains of the cult-infested community that lends the domain its name. These bleak expanses are home to twisted creatures and warring cults. Signature Abilities
|
![]() Viktra MordenheimPast. Dr. Viktra Mordenheim is Ravenloft’s resident mad scientist. Driven by her obsession with anatomy and reanimation—as well as a lack of conscience for the living—she was able to resurrect her deceased partner through science rather than magic. Present. In Lamordia, Viktra’s relentless experimentation continues in her castle-laboratory: Schloss Mordenheim. Aided by constructs and chemically animated Undead, Viktra toils endlessly to replicate her greatest invention, the Unbreakable Heart, which allowed her to reunite with Elise. Domain of Dread. Thanks to Viktra’s industrial influence, Lamordia is a domain of body horror and environmental destruction: Toxic byproducts run off into streams and are dumped in forests, all while abominations born from unchecked experimentation roam the icy landscape. Signature Abilities
|
![]() AnkhtepotPast. Once a high priest who betrayed his pharaoh out of ambition, Ankhtepot was cursed by the gods with undeath and stripped of his ka, the vital essence of his soul. Present. Now ruling Har’Akir as an immortal pharaoh, Ankhtepot is indifferent to power for its own sake. His sole obsession is recovering his lost ka, so that he may die and face the gods that cursed him for eternity. Domain of Dread. Har’Akir is a land of obsidian sand, ancient tombs, and relentless heat. The lone city is ruled by an authoritarian priest in Ankhtepot’s name; meanwhile, below the sands, a labyrinth of interconnected tombs rife with traps and terrors spreads for miles. Signature Abilities
|
![]() EbonbanePast. Ebonbane is a sentient weapon forged from the collective malice of evils vanquished by the hero, Kateri Shadowborn. As Shadowborn and her retinue destroyed darkness, lingering evils imbued the shards of her shattered blade which her foes reforged into a conscious, evil weapon intent on corrupting its wielder. Through manipulation and whispered promises, Ebonbane ultimately orchestrated the downfall of Shadowborn and her allies. Present. Now confined to the Shadowlands, Ebonbane is bound to Shadowborn Manor unless carried forth by a mortal wielder. Ebonbane seeks to dominate those who wield it, using them as instruments to destroy its ancient enemies and any lingering ideals of heroism. Domain of Dread. The Shadowlands is a realm of corrupted heroism and lost ideals, divided between haunted Avonleigh and zealous Nidala. Here virtue is often a mask and excuse for cruelty. Signature Abilities
|
Face the Darklords of Ravenloft
The Darklords of Ravenloft are among the most dastardly villains in the multiverse. Each has committed atrocities so great that they are imprisoned within domains that reflect their crimes and transform their deepest desires into endless torment.
From the stat blocks of 17 infamous Darklords to ready-to-play adventures in the domains warped by their obsession, Ravenloft: The Horrors Within equips you with everything needed to terrify your players with their own personal nightmare-infused campaign.





-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026This is really cool, and I'm honestly excited for this book; But I have to admit it feels weird to put Cthulhu in the same category as these other beings.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026Strahd isn't the first vampire.
He met Jander Sunstar when Jander was a vampire for 500 years, and Strahd only for 100 (see Vampire of the Mists).
There are other canon vampire that are older than him, too.
And Jander is even still canon in 5e (he was in Descent into Avernus).
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026I'm not the biggest on the timeline, but isn't Kas even older?
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026Tacking on: I really don't know how I feel about the idea that there are living elves, just regular living elves, older than Vampirism itself?
It feels like something Strahd would make up to fail to impress a girl, but it doesn't feel accurate.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026holy shit, either cthulhu lost some power since his last listing back in 1e or 2e or the dark powers stepped up their game
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026strahd being the first vampire is an in universe theory and belief, it is not ment to be taken at face value or be infallibly true, plus time in the shadowfell and potentially the domains of dread can get a bit weird
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026plus strahd is from a specific world we never knew the name of and that is lost to time, so this could simply mean he was the first vampire on the world his domain was pulled from
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026This feels pretty uninspiring. They need really unique abilities not just spells.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026A quick thing I'd like to point out is that Ravenloft (and Lamordia specifically), would pair really well with that 3rd party Monsters of Drakkenheim book. It's got a whole chapter about different patchwork horrors of flesh and steel shocked to life on the slab of a heartless doctor.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 19, 2026I feel like making Cthulhu and Viktra Mordenheim both Darklords kind of errodes the term. Like, don't get me wrong, I think Viktra is an interesting character and Lamordia is neat, but we have "vampire", "mummy", "mad scientist", "evil sword", and "incomprehensible force of chaos that warps reality by existing" and those feel like one of those doesn't belong here. Like, is Tiamat a Darklord next? (No, because Tiamat isn't silo'ed away in a Domain of Dread... but Innsmouth isn't historically a Domain of Dread anyway, despite having many similarities in its narrative in its source material.) It just feels like trying to crowbar in Lovecraft because it worked for Chaosium who, in fact, did make a supplement for 5e with Cthulhu already and one that doesn't feel nearly as contrived as slapping it into a *Ravenloft* book. I mean, Viktra has mad science which is inherently fictional but is fundamentally just an ordinary person with a bargain with the Dark Powers, while Cthulhu is described as an ancient, ineffable entity that distorts reality by existing.
Also, I know that it's technically not the worst abuse of the term because Strahd probably fits into the concept of a "first" vampire being that he has no direct vampiric progenitor, being made into a vampire through the Dark Powers instead, but he is not the first canonical vampire in D&D lore chronologically. Orlak was the first Night King of a brood of vampires that continues until present day as far as I'm aware with the title being passed on to at least the 14th century DR. To compare, the unwillingly turned Jasper Sunstar was turned in ~598 DR and actually mentored Strahd for a time, and Jasper was turned by a vampire named Cassiar (with no origin, to my knowledge, for his vampirism- though it's unlikely that he was an "original" vampire). Jasper didn't enter Barovia until after 1098 DR, at which point he was described as a more experienced vampire than Strahd. Even with the unusual chronological influences of Domains of Dread, it seems unlikely that Strahd is truly the first vampire chronologically.
I know that 5.5e and 5e in general is less concerned about timelines and canon and stuff but there's no need to say stuff like "Oh his pact turned Strahd into the first vampire!" There are already other vampires, not all vampires are descendants of Strahd, and it doesn't matter if Strahd is the first or not. The point is the pact. I hope that this is just a case of these hype articles before release being sloppy and hyperbolic because it's really pretty slapdash to, for example, destroy the relationship between Jasper and Strahd that a DM could use in their campaigns because of a desire to throw a superlative in there. And if WotC has no interest in actually building a canonical world or timeline for the game, they should at least stop tearing up all the lore that DMs can use to participate in discourse. It's hard for me to sell my players on a grounded, rooted world when the timeline is spaghetti and that's why I've basically stopped running anything resembling canon Forgotten Realms based on 5e+ lore because it's full of weird inconsistencies.
I'm not trying to simp for some of the older lore, there's some terrible, dated, obtuse, or just absurd stuff that I happily cut because it's just not what I want to run at my table, but at least up until 4e there was an attempt to build a canon, avoid superlative claims, and build worlds where if you really wanted to dig there was room to do so. 5e lore's weakest point was its unwillingness to commit to any amount of detail about the world, and it led to a bunch of source books where monsters might have a paragraph or two describing them with about half the length being "might" statements instead of cultures, lore, history, or personal touches that make those creature types feel grounded. And while as an experienced DM I can either use what I know from earlier editions or just ground those creatures differently in my own world, none of it sparks the same creativity as having an actual example instead of a writing prompt.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026They really landed on the wrong foot with Innsmouth by making the Darklord Cthulhu instead of Obed Marsh.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026Oh, I can definitely agree with that. It would be like making the Amber Sarcophagi the Darklords of Barovia, or the Gnawing Plague the Darklord of Richemulot.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026Agree. I wonder if they were part of the inspiration for the Dungeon Dudes to create their Drakkenheim content.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026I think it's just an avatar or aspect? The actual Cthulhu is still out there in the F.R.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026Did you not read the article at all?
There's a LOT of unique abilities mentioned.
Like, I have my issues with this product being mostly a retread of areas already described in Van Richtens when there's so many other domains that could have used more fleshing out instead of retreading Barovia, Lamordia, Falkovnia and all again, but complaining about them not doing a thing they do several times in the article is just silly.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026sad no Death knight Soth. No, obscure Knight of the Black-rose references. sad Dragonlance gets forgotten again.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026Soth is in this book, he just wasn't mentioned in the article.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026Surely it should be Dagon who is associated with Innsmouth.
I get Cthulhu is the posterboy for the mythos but there's precious little connection.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026To anyone who thinks Cthulhu is too strong or strange to be bound to a domain of dread, that’s basically its entire role in The Call of Cthulhu (the original short story he appeared in.)
Spoilers for a century old short story that has been adapted countless times.
Cthulhu was immeasurably and incomprehensibly powerful, but its power was bound to the stars. As the eons moved along, its power waned, and it chose to imprison itself and its kin in a dead but dreaming slumber in the vaults of its ancient city. Eons passed again, and that city sunk into the ocean.
So Cthulhu is a prisoner there, but one of its own making, and its servants still cultivate cults among humans that will one day reawaken it.
-
View User Profile
-
Send Message
Posted May 20, 2026This is good, but could you give us at least one early access full stat block?