The mist beckons. It's time to face your fears.
D&D’s newest sourcebook is Van Richten’s Guide to Ravenloft, a massive expansion of one of the most popular D&D adventures of all time! It’s available for preorder now in the D&D Beyond Marketplace, and you’ll gain access to all the horrors within its pages when it’s released on May 18th, 2021. Let’s take a look at all the dark details we’ve learned about this upcoming book...
Beyond Strahd
While the creeping mist of Bavoria will be further explored in Guide, the 'boundaries' of Ravenloft are being massively redefined with the introduction of 30 different Domains of Dread- all different horror-themed settings to test the mettle and morals of your players! Like Strahd and his kingdom, each Domain will feature its own twisted Darklord with goals and machinations of their own.
Domains announced and discussed so far by the lead designer of Van Richten’s Guide to Ravenloft, Wes Schneider, at the book’s recent press event include Lamordia, a frigid vision of mad science gone wrong; the surreal, dark fairytale masquerades of Dementlieu; treachery and intrigue in the encounters in the dark rain forests of Kalakeri; and the endless zombie nightmare of Falkovnia. Further teased and suggested were even more flavors of horror: from most dangerous games to traditional ghost stories, and even D&D’s spin on cosmic dread.
“I’m a huge fan of all things horror, so it was an absolute thrill to frame this book around bringing frightening elements like mummy lords, cosmic terrors, and urban legends to more D&D tables,” said Schneider. “Working with exciting new voices in horror and visual artists like D&D concept artist Shawn Wood was essential to make sure we’re updating the aesthetic for today’s fans while staying true to the roots of Ravenloft.”
Old Enemies and New Faces
With Ravenloft in the title, old favorites like Strahd are to be expected--in fact, while the book is aimed at new players (who never had their copy of I, Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampire taken away by their parents in middle school) that may be completely new to the setting, there are plenty of promised nods for long time fans--including the return of Ezmerelda d’Avenir, a fresh take on the Vistani, as well as a new generation of monster hunters in the Weathermay-Foxgrove Twins. And it’s good to have allies in horror, lest your party’s body parts be sewn together and reanimated by Darklords like Dr. Viktra Mordenheim.
Saving Throws to Save Your Soul
Players will also get an opportunity to explore their characters’ dark sides with two all-new character subclasses: the College of Spirits Bard, powerful storytellers who control and manipulate the power and spirits of stories and folklore that shape the past, and the Undead Pact Warlock, for magic-users that want to make a deal with something truly horrific... at the cost of their soul.
Additionally, as recently explored in Unearthed Arcana, players can also create a dhampir, hexblood, or reborn character, which offer vampire, hag, and undead lineages, respectively. Schneider also challenged players with the idea that in Ravenloft, “death isn’t the end,” pushing the horror theme with ideas of reanimation, inherited mantles, and bloodlines to further explore the idea of lineage.
Especially intriguing is the addition of Dark Gifts--benefits bestowed with a deadly cost that provide even more role-playing ties to the Domains of Dread.
Monster Mash
Van Richten’s Guide also includes what Schneider describes as a “meaty” bestiary, with about 40 pages worth of horrific monsters---including classic Ravenloft favorites. He also discussed the book's guidance in taking existing monsters in D&D and approaching them from horrifying new angles. From single goblins to shambling zombies that first-level players would typically yawn at, this could change the way we approach encounters in the game.
If monsters are your horror flavor of choice, the book certainly seems to have captured them all, from D&D spins on pop culture classics, cosmic madness, and even plenty of creepy nautical nasties in the Sea of Sorrows.
Whatever Walked There Walked Alone…
Of course, no sourcebook would be complete without an all-new adventure, and Guide features a 20 pages D&D spin on the classic haunted house genre, The House of Lament. It’s an atmospheric adventure of spirits, seances, and things going very, very badly.
The book, worked on by a who’s who of horror writers, also contains plenty of story hooks and guides for breaking out your own Tarokka decks and spirit boards for creating your own horror stories- and even your own Domains of Dread.
You can preorder Van Richten’s Guide to Ravenloft on the D&D Beyond Marketplace right now! You’ll get special goodies for pre-ordering, and instantly have access to the book when it releases on May 18, 2021.
Yes, but in the new subclass section it mentions that it will be including them, but not in races
Isn’t this the fourth book they’ve done about Ravenloft and Strahd must die? Forgive me if this looks a little overkill. Also the second horror based book this year. Couldn’t y’all do a nostalgic book, like a throwback to when dwarves and elves were classes, and you would just run around in a dungeon because it was there? I’m getting a little tired of all the horror/pop culture stuff.
You can't forget House On Haunted Hill, the best worst movie of all time. Or the Comedy of Terrors, which frankly deserved to be forgotten by history
No? Its only the second, after Curse of Strahd, which was released five years ago. They released a revised version of CoS last year, but that was just that. A rerelease
Also, Candlekeep isn't horror, its mystery. Its literally half of the title
The rest of the paragraph is amazing too. Truly one of the most chilling things ever written
This looks fuggin great!
So excited for this I love the horror genre and was hoping for something exactly like this.
Hell yes this is the the stuff I am looking forward too
Reading this makes me want to illegally pirate this book for the rules stuff and completely ignore the actual background information. And I’m someone who for decades has been glad to spend money on D&D product. This, however, all reads like The Last Jedi version of Ravenloft. Scratch that, The Last Jedi was still somewhat Star Wars, just done badly. This is a complete mutilation of the Ravenloft setting.
First, what’s the point of gender swapping pre-existing darklords? There are already female darklords, and new ones, along with new domains, can easily be introduced. Dr. Viktra Mordenheim? It’s Dr. Victor Mordenheim, who’s based on Dr. Frankenstein, who was made a male character by Mary Shelley because part of the point of the character is that he’s violating the natural order by attempting to create life in an unnatural way rather than through natural birth. The character being female completely defeats the point of the character.
Falkovnia as an “endless zombie nightmare”? The point of Falkovnia is to be an oppressive military dictatorship, not the umpteenth zombie apocalypse. There already WAS a zombie apocalypse domain in Ravenloft. It was called Necropolis. If you’re so desperate to have a second, again, it could have easily been added into a new domain and become the second domain to do the same exact thing that another domain already does, rather than erasing a domain which does something no other domain does.
People, stop giving money to WOTC. They’re a terrible company actively trashing their IP when it was in the hands of more talented creators. If you really want their stuff, just pirate it. They don’t deserve the money.
I've never been into Horror much, so this might be a great way to start!
...I feel like they know that I'm going to be running Strahd for my group in a couple of months...
If Wes Schneider is doing this, it will be greatness. What he did in Pathfinder 1e with the Carrion Crown and Ustalav/Land of Fear will only fuel this and make it extra great!
RicMTheGM
Led through the mist,
By the milk-light of moon,
All that was lost, is revealed.
Our long bygone burdens, mere echoes of the spring,
But where have we come, and where shall we end?
If dreams can't come true, then why not pretend?
How the gentle wind,
Beckons through the leaves,
As autumn colors fall.
Somewhere lost in the clouded annals of history,
Lies a place that few have seen.
A mysterious place, called The Unknown.
Where long-forgotten stories are revealed to those who travel through the wood.
Dancing in a swirl,
Of golden memories,
The loveliest lies of all,
The loveliest, lies of all.
Stay tuned, readers, for I will create an over the garden wall domain of dread.
I definitely am. Might be good for Eris' backstory.
What about Lord Soth, The Death Knight? Back in the day he had his own Ravenloft realm, after the shadows grabbed him away from Dragonlance. I've been out of the loop of D&D for a long time now but I do remember some of the old AD&D 2ed worlds to game in. Ravenloft was always a favorite
Looks great, only 2 concerns. The lineages have better been seriously revamped from the UA versions (especially the dhampir bite), & the introduction of 30! different Domains of Dread. I doubt they did 30 domains with a consistent high level of quality. I'd much prefer 10 Domains with 3x the thought & development. Not to mention, can 30 (31 if they aren't counting Barovia) really be distinctive? Again, seems very unlikely to me. "It's like Barovia, but these vampires SPARKLE!!!" No thanks.
The rest though, looking forward to it. Hopefully Dark Powers can be used as a path to bargain away your soul for temporal power, without having to multiclass into Warlock.
While I don't mind gender flipping that much (you don't have to be a man to violate the natural order of impregnation and birth), I do find Falkovnia change unsettling.
I can only hope that those zombies are some sort of soldiers stuck in an eternal war under the fascist rule. Then, this domain would still do its job... I guess :)
I'm intrigued. Personally I don't have any experience with the Ravenloft campaign setting but it seems as many people really like it. Though I'm not sure if my D&D group will have any use for this so maybe this will be a pass for me. We'll see if I'll be somehow convinced before the release.
The first sentence of your "Beyond Strahd" section has a typo/misspelling... Strahd's domain is Barovia, not Bavoria :)