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Tales from the yawning portal
Tales from the yawning portal








tales from the yawning portal
  1. #Tales from the yawning portal how to#
  2. #Tales from the yawning portal full#

The classic adventure is a thinking man’s dungeon. The shortest dungeon in the book is White Plume Mountain, but it’s not exactly a short play.

tales from the yawning portal tales from the yawning portal tales from the yawning portal

#Tales from the yawning portal full#

It’s full of traps and puzzles as well as a massive amount of treasures, a giant slug god, lightning eels, wights, zombies and wild animals. Hidden under a toppled city and a pyramid, the 5th level adventure is a basic dungeon raid with three small levels and an expansive lower dungeon. If you’re into raiding ruined underground temples dedicated to vampiric gods, raid The Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan. The adventure takes players through five separate levels of dungeon filled with orcs, a brutal ogre, troglodytes, gricks, lizards, duergar, oozes, a roper, a host of traps and Nightscale, a young black dragon lurking deep underground. Adventurers come to find dwarven weapons, and find a host of monsters occupying the former stronghold. Long ago, dwarves founded the Khundrukar stronghold underneath a mountain, but orc raiders devastated the dwarven defenses. The adventure takes players to the village of Oakhurst then to the fortress, which has become infested with kobolds and goblins. Eventually, characters find the Twilight Grove, where the evil druid has been lurking.įor 3rd level characters, The Forge of Fury presents a somewhat lengthier dungeon crawl. A twisted druid has taken up residence in a fortress that was swallowed up by the earth. The druid has allowed the vile creatures and evil forces to prosper. The first is The Sunless Citadel, which is known for being a great introductory adventure for new players as well as those DMing for the first time. The modules are presented in the book by level. (Since most of the published D&D 5e hardcovers run from levels 1 to 10, it’s nice that about half of the modules in the book are for higher level characters.) And the maps for Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan come straight from its 4th edition version, which was published in Dungeon magazine.Įach adventure stands on its own, so you can run these as one-off adventures or drop the modules into whatever campaign you’re already running. Maps from The Forge of Fury, for example, are the exact same layouts as they were in the original just updated, colored and far more detailed. Like a classic album is retouched here and there for modern stereos, these classics were updated to the 5th edition ruleset and given some updated presentation.Īs for the maps, I’ve compared the maps from the original adventures and those in the new book, and they’re exactly the same. The classic dungeon crawl has simply been converted to 5th edition. It’s still only 17 pages in the book, and it’s map is still a standard poster map. (Buy Tales From the Yawning Portal on Amazon.) They didn’t “improve” upon Tomb of Horrors to make it bigger or scarier. But that’s the thing: The didn’t need to make it bigger or scarier. There are a few adventure hooks, such as the standard strange individual who enters the bar and recruits adventurers to retrieve an artifact from one of the dungeons.īut otherwise, the further 240 pages are simply the seven adventurers one after the other with a few appendices detailing the magic items and monsters contained therein. The book spends four pages setting up The Yawning Portal and its owner, Durnan. The premise of the book and it’s somewhat wonky title is the Waterdeep tavern, The Yawning Portal, where colorful adventurers share stories of their times slaying dragons, raiding dungeons and bringing home loot. Tales From the Yawning Portal collects several old adventures updated to D&D’s 5th edition.

#Tales from the yawning portal how to#

It’s extremely adaptable to whatever you’re running, and every module has advice on how to place it in your world, whether you’re running Forgotten Realms or Greyhawk. If you need an adventure to run, Tales From the Yawning Portal has it. There are short pieces, the 14-page White Plume Mountain, and long dungeon crawls, the 56-page Against the Giants. They range from the 1st level Sunless Citadel through the “high level” Tomb of Horrors. The book offers a variety of adventures that reach all the way back to 1975. Tales From the Yawning Portal does that for you.Īll in all, it’s a pretty slick book that updates some classic adventures and, for the first time in D&D 5e, gives Dungeon Masters shorter, dungeon-delving adventures to run rather than campaigns that last 10 or more player levels. If you’ve been wanting to slaughter your new D&D players in the old-school Tomb of Horrors, now’s your chance.Īnd there’s no need to convert classic dungeons to the latest Dungeons & Dragons edition.










Tales from the yawning portal