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The forgotten realms5/15/2023 Chris Pine will belt out a tune or two as rakish Bard Edgin Darvis Greenwood’s mystical setting of supernatural phenomena, all-powerful deities, and dangerous beasts is the perfect place for Honour Among Thieves to lay its scene.Ģ. It’s a fantasy world that was once not so distant from our earth, but us lame earthlings forgot about its existence, hence its name. Released by game designer Ed Greenwood way back in 1987, the campaign setting Forgotten Realms has all the main components you’d expect of the D&D world-to the point where it serves as D&D’s official campaign setting for all its adventure materials in each updated edition of the role-playing game. Honour Among Thieves takes place in the hugely popular Forgotten Realms campaign setting Let’s grab our 20-sided die, our +2 Mace, and delve into some dungeons as we Adventure in the Forgotten realms.1. Also note, I intent to leave my remaining articles, including this one, on Medium as part of The Ugly Monster, as a courtesy to them (to The Ugly Monster, not to Medium).Īnyway, that gets the grim stuff out of the way. In particular I want to thank my editor Oscar, for being a great editor and being patient and tolerant with a babbling fool who never edits or goes over their own work. I was glad to be a part of it even though we never really interacted much, and I’m glad I was able to contribute. I will post the articles to be free for all to view (I think I can do that), so you will still be able to read them for free, and if you want to give me a little cash as a thank you for the work, well, do whatever feels right.įinally, I want to thank The Ugly Monster, the publication I have been a part of here at Medium. At the end of this article I will be posting a link to my Patreon, where I will be continuing Magical Thinking in the future. I felt like Medium has shown me a complete lack of respect in this situation, and I will respond in kind. I received no email, no forewarning of this change, from a company who discouraged me from plugging my own Patreon in my articles, limiting my ability to make money off of my own work to just them before they yank even that away from me. To be honest, it’s not even really about the money, it’s about the lack of respect. Obviously I don’t even have that many followers, so I’m out. As many of you already know, Medium has changed their policies on their Medium partner program where you need at least 100 followers to participate in the service. Last week, I logged in to Medium to check my earnings on my articles for the Medium Partner Program, only to find I could not access them. This article is special for another reason it will be the last one I write for Medium. The Magic the Gathering/DnD crossover set, at long last. The first is that we are covering the very first full-on crossover set for Magic: the Gathering, a set that people have been clamoring for since Wizards of the Coast bought the rights to Dungeons & Dragons way back in 1997: July 2021’s Adventures in the Forgotten Realms. This week is special for a couple of reasons. Welcome back to Magical Thinking, a look back at the cards and art of Magic: the Gathering, set by set, from the beginning, through the eyes of a casual fan. Dungeons & Dragons meets Magic: The Gathering
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