Questions tagged [dungeons-and-dragons]

For questions primarily relating to Dungeons & Dragons (D&D), a popular fantasy tabletop role-playing game which has gone through several editions since its initial publication in 1974. The 5th edition of D&D, the most recent edition of the game, was released in 2014.

From Wikipedia:

Dungeons & Dragons (commonly abbreviated as D&D or DnD) is a fantasy tabletop role-playing game (RPG) originally designed by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson. It was first published in 1974 by Tactical Studies Rules, Inc. (TSR). The game has been published by Wizards of the Coast (now a subsidiary of Hasbro) since 1997. It was derived from miniature wargames, with a variation of the 1971 game Chainmail serving as the initial rule system. D&D's publication is commonly recognized as the beginning of modern role-playing games and the role-playing game industry.

D&D departs from traditional wargaming by allowing each player to create their own character to play instead of a military formation. These characters embark upon imaginary adventures within a fantasy setting. A Dungeon Master (DM) serves as the game's referee and storyteller, while maintaining the setting in which the adventures occur, and playing the role of the inhabitants of the game world. The characters form a party and they interact with the setting's inhabitants and each other. Together they solve dilemmas, engage in battles, explore, and gather treasure and knowledge. In the process, the characters earn experience points (XP) in order to rise in levels, and become increasingly powerful over a series of separate gaming sessions.

The early success of D&D led to a proliferation of similar game systems. Despite the competition, D&D has remained as the market leader in the role-playing game industry. In 1977, the game was split into two branches: the relatively rules-light game system of basic Dungeons & Dragons, and the more structured, rules-heavy game system of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (abbreviated as AD&D). AD&D 2nd Edition was published in 1989. In 2000, a new system was released as D&D 3rd edition, continuing the edition numbering from AD&D; a revised version 3.5 was released in June 2003. These 3rd edition rules formed the basis of the d20 System, which is available under the Open Game License (OGL) for use by other publishers. D&D 4th edition was released in June 2008. The 5th edition of D&D, the most recent, was released during the second half of 2014.

In 2004, D&D remained the best-known, and best-selling, role-playing game in the US, with an estimated 20 million people having played the game, and more than US$1 billion in book and equipment sales worldwide. The year 2017 had "the most number of players in its history—12 million to 15 million in North America alone". D&D 5th edition sales "were up 41 percent in 2017 from the year before, and soared another 52 percent in 2018, the game's biggest sales year yet". The game has been supplemented by many pre-made adventures, as well as commercial campaign settings suitable for use by regular gaming groups. D&D is known beyond the game itself for other D&D-branded products, references in popular culture, and some of the controversies that have surrounded it, particularly a moral panic in the 1980s falsely linking it to Satanism and suicide. The game has won multiple awards and has been translated into many languages.

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Was the trident (named Wave) in the AD&D "White Plume Mountain" adventure a reference to anything specific?

The first edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons adventure "White Plume Mountain," by Lawrence Schick, was a quest to recover three extremely powerful magical weapons. Since its original 1979 release, it has been reprinted and updated a number of…
Buzz
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Is the origin story told in The Unbroken Circle of Zerthimon true?

In the 1999 RPG videogame Planescape: Torment, based on D&D's Planescape setting, there's an NPC named Dak'kon who is a zerth, a subfaction of the githzerai race, themselves a splinter of D&D's gith/githyanki race. Dak'kon is a "zerth" because he is…
Andres F.
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Was the creature guarding the camp in the Dungeons and Dragons movie a beholder?

In the 2000 movie Dungeons and Dragons we see a creature that looks like a floating meatball with eye stalks. While at first glance, it looks like a beholder. But did the script say that's what it really was? Or was it actually a spectator Here is…
CBredlow
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What exactly happens when one attempts to "turn undead?"

From my (exceptionally amateur) understanding of D&D, turn undead basically allows you to turn the undead away by making them run or cower or otherwise lose their morale. Simplified, only good clerics and paladins can accomplish this. What I don't…
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What is the purpose of beholder blood?

Beholders are large aberrations which supply their body with nutrients and oxygen by means of a network of tubes somewhere between a tracheal system and a set of digestive tubules. They also have blood which is pumped in and out of their heart,…
Ichthys King
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Do D&D dragon scales have any lore?

Is there any lore within D&D relating to the nature/structure of dragon scales? Particularly I am interested in how their scales are distinct from the scales of various types of reptiles in terms of materials and physical structure
Ichthys King
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