February of Magic and Wonders

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Gathering Magic

Over the past few months I have come to realize that my relation with Fantasy has been shaped by Magic: The Gathering more than I would think. Possibly more than by Dungeons & Dragons. It makes sense, Magic influenced other works for decades as well. Nothing exists in isolation and everything is influenced by something.

While not a TTRPG itself, Magic: The Gathering is a game into which tremendous creative effort has been poured over the years. You may not like every set, particularly the newer ones are questionable at times, but there’s a lot worth it about Magic. It took quite long before Wizards realized they could cross-over with Dungeons & Dragons, but now we have supplements for whole nine planes! Ravnica, Theros, and Strixhaven have their own physical sourcebooks you can buy. You can find older stuff for Ixalan, Kaladesh, Innistrad, Zendikar, Dominaria, and Amonkhet in the Planeshift series available on DM’s Guild for free.

Jesper Ejsing’s art from the upcoming Lorwyn-Shadowmoor D&D Supplement! All rights reserved to Jesper Ejsing, Wizards of the Coast, and/or other respective owners.

Now we’ve been promised another supplement taking place in the Lorwyn-Shadowmoor dual plane! I am both excited and frustrated. The Lorwyn and Shadowmoor blocks were the first ones that got caught my attention for real when they came out. I didn’t collect Magic back then, and only read the lore and oggled the art, but I was captivated by the setting. It’s a fey setting that doesn’t scream “FOLKLORE” in every sentence. Many settings I see being advertised these days are trying real hard to convince us they are full of folklore. I believe they are, and that they will be great when they’re finished. I just don’t need it so explicitly stated, subtlety works wonders sometimes. Lorwyn did this well in my opinion. You can see the British Isles folklore clearly, but nobody is forcing it onto you.

A Shadowmoor elf shaman. All rights reserved to Wizards of the Coast and/or other respective owners.

But as I said I am also frustrated. Remember my last post, where I advertised an exciting new series? I meant to start writing commentaries on various Magic: The Gathering cards, and their potential for your TTRPG needs. With an emphasis on the plane I liked the most. You already guessed which one it is, didn’t you?

The cinders of Shadowmoor should not be messed with. All rights reserved to Wizards of the Coast and/or other respective owners.

So what I’m going to do is probably go for it anyway. We will be getting a supplement with lots of lore, stats for various monsters, place descriptions, etc. done by professionals with access to the original notes (hopefully). In the meantime I can offer my take on the already published stuff, and speculations about what will be in the sourcebook. That should not be seen as anything wrong by Wizards; if anything, it would be a warm up before the release. There’s no date, yet, so I might be able to put out a few articles before then. We’ll see.

A beauty-obsessed elf tending to a bloom. All rights reserved to Wizards of the Coast and/or other respective owners.

Hope you enjoyed those original wallpapers I saved from the Shadowmoor and Eventide releases back in 2008. Are you excited for the new Lorwyn/Shadowmoor sourcebook? Leave a comment and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the upcoming articles!

JAGS Wonderland

While writing about Lynchian gaming in the last month’s post I found out about JAGS Wonderland by Marco Chacon. It’s a free TTRPG about descending into madness and transcending reality. Or at least so it seems after some fifty pages. I have to say the book is wild. Though I consider myself not easily shaken, Wonderland made me quite uneasy. Well done. The rulebook references Lewis Carrol’s works heavily and combines it with secret agencies, aliens, cults, and conspiracies.

The cover for JAGS Wonderland. All rights reserved to Marco Chacon and/or other respective owners.

There’s a lot of thought behind the rulebook. It’s a game more suited for experienced players wanting a different sort of game than dungeoneering and monster slaying. It should be possible to do that in JAGS Wonderland as well, if anyone was so inclined. And vice versa you could probably use some worldbuilding elements and game mechanics from Wonderland in your game regardless of the system. Imagine Dungeons and Dragons with the “traditional” cosmology of planes replaced with that of Wonderland. Would you be interested in a setting like that?

I still have over a half of the first book and then the Book of Knots sourcebook to go through.There’s a lot of interesting stuff in this game and I will probably mention it from time to time in these summaries. And if there’s anyone with experience with JAGS Wonderland (or JAGS in general), leave a comment below!

Kickstarter

There are some new campaigns on Kickstarter that caught my eye. I will have to think some more before I pledge, but the least I can do is spread the word.

Firstly there’s the Blades of Gixa campaign by Quadra. It is the result of #Dungeon23 challenge by a person who actually managed to finish it. Those are quite rare, and from what I’ve seen on social media, Quadra’s work both looks great and is captivating to explore. The product should be system agnostic with some stats etc. provided by the author. Definitely worth a look.

Another campaign I am watching is the Heavy Metal Monster Manual by Greedy Gorgon Press. You might recall their earlier works, all of them with catchy names showing heavy influence by rock and metal bands and songs. What I’ve seen so far was funny and with lot of appeal to rock and metal fans, so don’t forget to check it our, if you’re so inclined. 

Miscellanea

I’m still working on the class options mentioned earlier, and the Arco review. Regrettably I’ve been neglecting both due to life and recently the spur to action caused by the Lorwyn announcement.

One thing I should not forget to state – I am in no way affiliated with any creators mentioned in this article. I am simply sharing my enthusiasm and there’s no compensation I get for this. That being said, I am waiting for your move, Wizards, I want in on Lorwyn!

As always, thanks for reading this far, and I’ll be glad for your thoughts in the comments section. Also please share this post on your favourite social media if you liked it, it means a lot!