Hey adventurers! As the real world begins to string faerie lights across the snow-speckled landscape, I am often reminded of nostalgia, community, and how much I would like to retreat into a fantasy world where fewer things catch on fire due to faulty faerie light wiring.
But if you're like me, you escape into the world of Dungeons and Dragons still hoping to find new versions of nostalgia, community, and arson. You want to celebrate the occasional holiday while immersed in D&D, one that further paints the details into D&D's elaborate realm of Faerûn.
Well good news! I spent dozens of years in a mage tower (I rolled a 1d12 a few times while eating Trader Joe's Pumpkin O's cereal) and came out the other side with this list of terrible holidays you can insert into your own fantasy realm. Honestly, it's probably better than you didn't because at least a couple of them are rather violent, but some people like their D&D to contain violence for some reason, so who am I to tell you what to do?
Selûne's Sick Day
Once per calendar year, the Moon Maiden Selûne decides she is tired of providing her light in the afterglow of day and goes and bails on showing up, so she can go party with her friends. There is no noticeably difference to creatures other than a slightly darker night sky, an inability for druids to cast moonbeam, and the sound of a gigantic margarita blender mysteriously whirring in the great distance.
Blibdoolpoolp's Loopadoop
This kuo-toa holiday is not confined to any particular day on the Calendar of Harptos, instead it was invented by the insane fish-folk as a way of paying tribute to their goddess Blibdoolpoolp, a giant naked lady with a crayfish head, and they only remember the holiday if they are exposed to sunlight for over a period of an hour.
Yeah, um, also I didn't make her up. That's her on the left, being summoned and looking fabulous at a particularly festive Blibdoolpoolp's Loopadoop barbecue. The kuo-toa believe there is only one way to please Blibdoolpoolp: find a way to flip one's self in a circle so that you hang upside down. Unfortunately the lack of rollercoasters in Faerûn makes this incredibly complicated, and many kuo-toa die as they roam the beaches searching for way they may hastily assemble contraptions that will flip them around, often maiming or decapitating them. Do not try to stop them for fear of them hurting themselves, they will bite you as often as they can without it interrupting whatever trebuchet-self-launch they are attempting to rig with a palm tree and seaweed.
The polite thing to do if you find a pile of kuo-toa heads and limbs is to kick them into the shade with your boot and not look directly into their dead eyes. It's not so much a cultural kuo-toa thing as a way to make it less gross for the next humanoid to walk down that beach. (It's good hygiene and less likely to ruin your date.)
If you would like to celebrate Blibdoolpoolp's Loopadoop with the kuo-toa in your life, but in a safe and responsible way, simply buy a fish at the local market and throw it high in the air while screaming nonsense words. Most fish-mongers will understand the sentiment.
Ride A Walrus To Work Day
Exactly what it sounds like—but not as eco-friendly as it sounds, given that all D&D transportation either spends spell components or requires feeding an animal. This holiday requires several metric tons of fish, a DC 20 Wisdom (Animal Handling) check, and a workplace with coworkers who don't look like appetizing fish. Note this handy illustration for some of the less common, but still appetizing examples of crustacean-y and cephalopod-y humanoids who might normally be good at taming a giant walrus, but if they are your unwitting office-mate they may also look like walrus food. Though this holiday always takes place on Marpenoth 2nd, it is much easier to take part in if it falls after a Blibdoolpoolp's Loopadoop as there will be free kuo-toa parts everywhere for your walrus mount to scavenge.
For those who are allergic to walrus dander, fret not, no workplace openly supports this holiday. It's just one of those weird holidays invented by some Faerûn social media influencer who wanted to sell a bunch of their walrus crafts on Fantasy Etsy.
Bring Your Almiraj To Work Day
It's impossible to deny that an almiraj fits the traditional definition of adorzable, but it is also hard to deny that "blood loss due to artery ruptures caused in almiraj accidents" is becoming an increasingly common cause of death.
Originally this holiday was invented by managers who thought their employees needed something to counteract working long hours in the dark of Nightal. They did not, however, take into account just how skittish and untamable most almiraj are, and how good they are at aiming their deadly horn with deadly accuracy when they feel threatened. They'll carve you up more than a narwhal going after an unfriendly ice floe. On the bright side, most almiraj attacks are covered by insurance, as long as you weren't subject to pre-existing almiraj attacks and are considered high-risk.
Unsure if your workplace celebrates Bring Your Almiraj To Work Day? Look for dried blood under the desks. The wounds may be close to the ground but they tend to spray upwards.
Dan Telfer is the Dungeons Humorist aka Comedy Archmage for D&D Beyond (a fun way they are letting him say "writer"), dungeon master for the Nerd Poker podcast, a stand-up comedian, a TV writer who also helped win some Emmys over at Comedy Central, and a former editor of MAD Magazine and The Onion. He can be found riding his bike around Los Angeles from gig to gig to gaming store, though the best way to find out what he's up to is to follow him on Twitter via @dantelfer.
You got me! I am also a rich, caucasian boomer on my way to Disney World!
I think you're taking this a bit too seriously. Dan is a comedic writer and stand up comedian. Look at his IMDB page, Or listen to "nerd poker," his podcast he DM's with other comedians as players. These articles aren't meant to be taken seriously. If you don't think its funny, then just skip them.
These are just funny ideas that he wants to share with the community. Its like stupid ideas you may have as a player that you think are funny then share with your fellow players at a table. Everyone gets a quick laugh, then maybe someone else chimes in with an extra layer to make it funnier. None of these ideas are meant to be put into the actual game, its just fun side content. Comic relief, if you will.
And sometimes these fun thoughts could lead to brainstorming, for something that could actually be good and fun for the game.
Just to add to the discussion, whoever accidentally clicks on these thinking it's serious content, just wait until another article is published and this one moves down the homepage. You can then clearly see the Dan Telfer thing as the image for the article.
(Do agree with what some people said, these are perhaps a little regular, but, having said that, could be useful for people playing a Warforged on the Bahamut's Butt plane in a town of Kuo-toa)
TIL kuo-toa live adjacent to beaches and not in the Underdark.
Great idea to put it in a blog. That's a great middle ground between those of us who want to keep D&D serious with the ones who like over-the-top random humor. We won't have to search for serious articles, and they won't have to search for Dan's stuff. Plus, frequency ends up no longer mattering.
Selune's sick day... clerics of selune should have no power.
stop posting these. i've had enough.
comedy is traumagenic... idk how many people were funny after JUST the birth trauma?
Other people enjoy it though. D&D isn't a super serious game all about rules and deep, intricate lore. Its about having fun and messing around with friends. I'm guessing from this comment that you look at D&D in a very different perspective then I do, but it doesn't need to be super serious, and the content on the D&D beyond homepage can reflect that. The way I see it, these different articles are meant for different people. Some people don't care about intricate rules/lore at all, and that's completely fine. Don't gatekeep D&D and act like its this super serious thing and that everybody needs to agree on that.
Also, calling him a "writer" in quotes feels very condescending. Comedy writers exist too you know.
I just went through your other comments sprinkled throughout the different articles, and I completely agree.
I don't typically use D&D Beyond just because I have all the physical books and I don't want to rebuy everything digitally. Anyways, I always loved the interesting articles that actually taught me more about this hobby I adore. The adventures, lore bits, and even class breakdowns are always a joy to read and even though I don't use this website for its mechanical use, I have come back time and time again just for its front page of articles.
I pretty much just repeated everything you said, but yeah I agree.
I forgot about Blibdoolpoolp and my life is richer now that you have brought it back into my life.
Wow, you are just a no-fun individual, aren't you. I followed your link on another post to this one, just to read what inane drivel you wrote up this time and holy shit. You listed 3 examples of good articles. Just read theirs. You don't have to read Dan's. No one is forcing you to. You can walk away and leave his hilariousness to those of us who enjoy it.
The whole reason there are holidays in Faerun is because of an extra day at the end of each month. Adding extra holidays adds days to the Faerun calender. So, either these holidays don't exist, or they are on days already in the D&D calendar. And those are bad options. Option three: they are extra days, but that's lazy writing. Option four: Dan wrote this article without knowing anything about the Faerun calendar, which is bad writing.
the celebration of juiblex is going to a campaign plot point.
Although I do agree that I want more, in your opinion, good articles, is it really Dan Telfer's fault that they do not post that often? It is only because they do not post as often as he that the front page is littered with memes. If all we had were four Shawn Merwin's then we would get 4 articles or less per month. I think that Dan Telfer, while not giving us useful content, gives us something to laugh at. It probably takes less effort than creating "Let's design an adventure" and so he can publish more. If you replaced Dan, you would not get that many articles seeing as James Haeck hasn't been posting at all recently. I think that this is a difficult problem to solve because silly content is harder to produce than useful content. Perhaps there could be a place where D&D beyond users could post their own articles. Then we could be getting useful info. Although it would be harder to sift through seeing as everyone will be filling it with junk, it would be a place where it would be possible to see some, very little but some, useful content.
I do not understand that comment. I agreed with some of your opinions but Iooked at the evidence for why we have so many of these articles. I really do think it is time for a change in the fact that we will get more lore and whatnot that we can use in our worlds. They no longer post any d&d lore or spell spotlights or any of that which is rather upsetting. I want there to be a way for players to post lore so that people who have interesting lore can share it with others and then we would be free to use it.
So does that mean you coped and pasted or wrote it out?
I just read this and was so confused, I knew that the Kuo-toa are complete idiots but I didn't know that they were THIS dumb
I beleve that I have a real comedic mindset. DO I???
fun using as a starting event