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Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide, 4th Edition

Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide, 4th Edition

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Authors: Bruce R. Cordell, Ed Greenwood, Chris Sims, Philip Athans
Publisher: Wizards of the Coast
Category: Book

List Price: $39.95
Buy New: $22.85
You Save: $17.10 (43%)



New (33) Used (7) from $22.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 59 reviews
Sales Rank: 2558

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 4th
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3
Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 8.5 x 0.8

ISBN: 0786949244
Dewey Decimal Number: 793
EAN: 9780786949243
ASIN: 0786949244

Publication Date: August 19, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Dark perils and great deeds await!

Welcome to Faerun, a land of amazing magic, terrifying monsters, ancient ruins, and hidden wonders. The world has changed since the Spellplague, and from this arcane crucible have emerged shining kingdoms, tyrannical empires, mighty heroes, and monster-infested dungeons. The Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide presents a world of untold adventure; a land of a thousand stories shaped by the deeds of adventurers the likes of which Faerun has never seen before.

This book includes everything a Dungeon Master needs to run a D&D campaign in the Forgotten Realms setting, as well as elements that DMs can incorporate into their own D&D campaigns. The book provides background information on the lands of Faerun, a fully detailed town in which to start a campaign, adventure seeds, new monsters, ready-to-play non-player characters, and a full-color poster map of Faerun.



Customer Reviews:   Read 54 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Pretty much useless if you're new to the Realms   October 9, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Just to be clear-this is my first real exposure to running an FR campaign. I always avoided it for all the baggage it seemed to carry. How ironic then that I'm so disappointed with the lack of information I found in the new book.

To put it mildly, the book is seriously light on content. I'm on the fence about returning the book. The only reason I'm considering holding onto it, is because I'm waiting to see how much they add via Dragon. (The Cormyr piece in Dragon is the only reason I didn't immediately return the book. I'm willing to give this a little time to shake out.)

I'd say this book is a 50K foot view of FR. But I would have preferred a 1K foot view of at least ONE of the "classic" adventuring areas (i.e. Dalelands or Cormyr). The feeling I'm left with is one of casual knowledge. I really don't feel I have enough information to run my own detailed campaign in any of these settings.

The capital city of Cormyr has 4 paragraphs! I can't run an adventure in a capital city described in 4 paragraphs. If I wanted to "fill in the details," I wouldn't have bought a "Campaign Setting Guide."

It really seems unclear who this book is for. It seems to me; all you've done is ticked off your fan base, and confused new readers.

I'm not looking for something on the scale of Monte Cook's Ptolus campaign setting (though PLEASE let him convert that to 4E!-I'd return this in a heartbeat).

Also, the introductory adventure took up way too much space that could have been better served adding much needed depth to this book. The 'starter adventure' should have been saved for Dungeon. Really pointless.

In summary: Careful what you wish for, you just might get it.
I wanted a "fresh start" on FR. Not a blank slate with a few scratches.
Overall, I'm very disappointed and wouldn't recommend this product.



4 out of 5 stars Let's Get the Facts Straight   October 7, 2008
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

The new FRCG is not perfect. Far from. But let's get the facts straight here people.

The Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide is not a "travesty" nor is it "the end of the Realms." A quick look at the people writing the book will reveal as much, many of whom have worked in the Realms for years and love it as much as most fans. Unlike those who post a review before reading the book, however, these people aren't hung up on maintaing the Realms exactly the same way for decades on end. Change comes eventually and in this case, I think most of the changes are done well.

Let's get to what the guide does well. First off, lore. This book is almost nothing but. There's a little crunch in here but what the book is really about is the fluff and most of it is well-written and with a set of details that makes the Realms come alive as a world again - just a century later and with some changes. It doesn't have as much lore as 3e Realms has, but let's remember that 3e Realms had seven years of support, whereas 4e Realms has been out for only a few months. Likewise, 3e Realms built heavily upon the foundations of 1st and 2nd edition Realms, whereas 4e Realms is more than a century after the base year for 3.5

The book also posseses a nice, readable format as well as a nice set of new enemies to play with at the end of the book. Many of the new countries to explore are interesting and while places like Neverwinter, Luskan, Unther, Mulhorand, and Halruaa will be missed new locations like Tymanther, Returned Abeir, or Akanul have the potential to be just as interesting, as does the new Shadow Empire of Netheril if the writers play it right. Overall, this is an interesting fantasy world to explore all on its own, without even taking into account the planes, which also get some attention in this book (though less than I would have liked).

Now let's get down to some of the major criticisms of the book. First of all, alot's changed. But not quite as much as you might expect. Though every region has been transformed in some manner, many have only endured only marginal changes. Take Waterdeep, Baldur's Gate, or Amn, the three great coastal cities of 4e Realms. All three are instantly recognizable from their original renditions, though with a few alterations. BG, for instance, is now much larger. But other than minor changes like these they remain much the same. The same goes for many other regions, including Cormyr, Chult, the Silver Marches, and the Underdark.

As for whether or not Ed Greenwood has forsaken the 4e realms - he has not. In fact, if anything, he shows more enthusiasm for it than 3e. He loves the new ruleset (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yXvq4-GbuNI) and, if the fact his name is on the book cover doesn't convince you, keep in mind that he wrote up the lore for an entire continent on his own - Returned Abeir, which is certainly a major change in Realms lore. Naysayers who want to shout about Greenwood hating the new Realms just don't have anything to base their claims on.

Are the gods reduced in number? Yes, and in some cases drastically so, though it's not as though there's only a dozen gods now (indeed - there's about a dozen greater gods ruling over pantheons of lesser gods). Also, consider that the book doesn't detail anything on Zakhara or Kara-Tur aside from a brief mentioning (much like 3e FR) and so whether or not the pantheons of that land remain intact is an open question. One does still have a right to complain in this department though, as more than a handful of important gods have taken the fall.

Now there are somethings worthy to complain about. Though the format for the chapters is alright the overall outline for the book itself is very badly done. The most interesting and detailed chapters are, oddly enough, placed at the BACK of the book rather than the front, where one would might expect them to be. Instead, the first three or four chapters, which are more or less glorified appendicies, are placed up front. This makes for a jarring format.

The map, while by most standards well-done and detailed, is less than what has come before for Realms fans and has substantially less detail. Furthermore, for all the promotion of the Underdark and of Returned Abeir a map for them does not exist in comparison.

The art, is, however, fabulous, much like most of 4e's art.

Bottom line: The book is well-written with lots of lore and ideas for DMs (players, however, need the FRPG companion). It's not a "rape" of the Realms, having, after all, been written by many of the minds behind the Realms for the best ten years. It is, however, a big change. If you can get past the 100 year jump and Spellplague buy the book. If you can't move on, don't - you'll only be wasting your money and fueling your frustration.

Personally - I enjoyed it.



1 out of 5 stars The Realms are Dead   October 6, 2008
 3 out of 5 found this review helpful

Forgotten Realms has been a favorite fantasy setting of mine forever now. This latest edition is an abomination of all previous incarnations of the Realms. Ed Greenwood - how could you possibly condone your name being associated with this farce in any way? I actually feel gutted, disgusted, lifeless - and oh those are 3 words that can summarize the 4th edition of the realms. But if you'd like more, read on.

All of the color, the mystery, the excitement, the lore, the flavor, the history, the peoples, the locations, the empires, the wondrous places - all - GONE! All because the Spellplague (a.k.a WOTC money plague) was created and WOTC decided that a complicated setting was too much for their new target audience - 9-12 yr olds. How is this justified? Well, Wizards say that now you have all the control, you create the lands as you see fit for your campaign, you populate them and decide what monsters and heroes are a part of them. If I wanted that, I wouldn't pay good money for it, I would just make my own generic world to be populated by cookie-cutter NPC's - oh wait a second - that's just what this is! So people like Lady Alustriel, Szass Tam, Manshoon, Kheben Blackstaff, and many, many others are now simply background material if mentioned at all. Supposedly this is to allow the PC's to be stars of the show without such high-level NPC interference. Let me tell you something - I have been in many Realms based campaigns. I have been in games where NO and I mean NO high level NPC's of Faerun EVER come in contact with the PC's. So, if you are in a campaign where the adventure party is constantly having to report to Elminster for every minor orc they defeat or track they find and he then tells them exactly what it means, or the adventurers are in Thay and come across Szass Tam (even though they are 4th level, out of heals/spells, no magic items and have just fought a army of wraiths, ghouls, zombies, and other undead fiends) and are total party killed/wiped out - or even sillier - Drizz't Do"Urden "mysteriously" appears in Chult where the party is to help the struggling PC's out - YOU HAVE A TERRIBLE DM WHO IS RUNNING THE GAME WRONG - don't blame the setting for your horrible experience!!!.

Many other posts have touched upon other numerous terrible attributes of this book - the pantheon makes no sense, deities gone for no reason, others ascended for even more obscure reasons, fewer pages but higher price, the map is terrible, etc.

Stay far, far, away from this. The Realms are Officially Dead! Product Suicide by WOTC. Do not spend one cent on any more of their 4th edition B.S. MMORPG wanna be product. I would give negative stars if I could. One is way too generous.

A setting that I once felt rivaled that of even Middle Earth in its wonder and creativity itself is no more. Thanks WOTC for ruining a beautiful world and taking advantage of your loyal fan base. For shame!



1 out of 5 stars Burn 4th Edition   October 4, 2008
 4 out of 6 found this review helpful

Not a fan of 4th edition. I bought this sourcebook for pure reading enjoyment of events and history of the Realms. But the format is disjointed and unorganized. This is proabaly the 2nd failure in the realms by Wizards, they try to cover too much, fail to provide any in depth, or new material.
Don't recommend it or the 4th core rulebooks



1 out of 5 stars This Book made me cry...   October 3, 2008
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Well, i guess I finally have a reason to stop playing D&D. I've been a gamer since I was in grade school, starting with the boxed D&D sets. I've played every edition of D&D up until this one, amazingly enough with the same group of friends I've had for years. 4th ED has been a real disappointment, this book drives the last nail into the coffin. This book butchers my favorite setting with weak descriptions, poor chapter organization, and frankly not enough value for the amount charged. Wizards is charging full price for 2 forgotten realms sourcebooks of lousy material. Maybe I've just gotten older and resistant to change, but D&D hit its peak with 3.5ed, the 4th ed rules are just a dumbed down, lowest common denominator attempt to woo the MMORPG/ADHD crowd back to pen and paper gaming. It made my inner child cry.

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