Let’s talk shop and jump into it. As mentioned, you can find our Discord Channel here, and the world map here. You’ll find that we lay our scene at Orzamar, which you may find by following the road from the dwarven city of Khazadram east, to the Eastern Gap in the Forgewall Mountains. This ancient place, once an orcish fortress, is now a bustling town, a trade hub and haven for all peoples traveling east and west along the Stone Road.
But who are you? You are adventurers, local folk who deal with goblins, orcs, and other monsters of the forests, protecting the locals and their livelihood in exchange for gold. You may come from the farthest reaches of Yvenlond, or the farm just down the way by Old Man Cobb’s mill, but what matters is that you are here, and you bear witness to the beginning of an epic saga.
That saga began yesterday, from your character’s perspective, though the dramatic importance of the event may have been lost on them. A hobgoblin herald, the self-proclaimed Voice of Vaul, the Great Khan of the Eastern Steppe, arrived at the gates of Orzamar and announced that in Vaul’s name, this city would be his. As fear spreads among the locals, and the local lords debate what steps to take next, however, the goblins have struck.
A trading caravan bound for Orzamar from Hillcross, to the west, was sacked by the greenskins, and a number of citizens of the Empire and the Underkingdom of Khazadram have been taken into the depths of the Great Forest. Tracking the movements of the goblins through the forest, you and your fellow adventurers have discovered their lair, an ancient priory of Gyaal hidden in the woods, lost long ago to the overgrowth of the forest.
What will you do next? The choice is yours.
Now, for a quick crash course on what this is all about…
Orzamar Orzamar is a small, fortified town home to about eight hundred people, and sits squarely on the frontier of the Empire. Just under a hundred years ago, Orzamar was an orcish settlement, but during the last war against the orcs and hobgoblins of the east, the Iron Dwarves took Orzamar by force and routed them, banishing the greenskins across Forgewall and into the forests of the northern empire. The Iron Dwarves, far more accustomed to living under the earth than on its surface, ceded Orzamar to the Hill Dwarves of the Forgewall’s foothills, and Orzamar has since become a haven and trading post, home to many varied peoples.
The Great Eastern Forest, the greatest stretch of woods on the continent, teems with goblin tribes, which have harried and harassed the citizens of the empire for years. In your first foray into Lost Realms of Arann: Orzamar, you will find yourself squaring off against these local enemies, though there may be more to them than you might expect.
Now, let's talk about the races, religions, and languages of the world, just to give you sense of what this place is all about.
Arann’s humans are an immensely diverse group, and the largest single race. They live and rule on every continent of the world, with their civilizations taking all shapes and forms.
The Adean Empire is the cradle of humanity, and the Emperor of Adea rules over the kingdoms of Adea, Medea, and Valador, and maintains the fealty of the thanes of Terland and a nigh-unbreakable alliance with the Kingdom of Arleon. Adean, Medean, and Valadorian humans are all the same, more or less, falling under the category of Adean.
This is not the full catalogue of Arann’s humanity, however. To the north, the barbaric, tribal Viers of Northmarch make their home. Across the sea on the continent of Yvenlond an explorer will find the twin kingdoms of Ciathay, the Celestial Empire of Jivan, and the Six Cities. At the center of the World Sea, the archipelagic continents of Manzannobar and Ghirducania are ruled by the monolithic Ghirducanian Empire, whose legions are locked in a century’s long conflict with the Six Cities. To the south, beyond the Kingdom of Trepanto and the city-states of Etryca and Corsciva, there are the Three Gems of Shayar, and beyond that the kingdoms of Onangal and Nuberia.
The Dwarves of Arann have two variants: the Iron Dwarves and the Hill Dwarves.
Iron Dwarves are those dwarves that dwell beneath the mountains of the Forgewall. Their Underkingdom, which stretches across the mountain range from Dun Boldir in the north to the mines under Adea to the south, is the oldest standing civilization in the world, having been founded thousands upon thousands of years ago, when the world was young. Iron Dwarves are strong senses of honor, duty, and faithfulness, which can perplex men and elves. Mechanically, the Iron Dwarves of the Forgewall are Mountain Dwarves.
The Iron Dwarves’ cousins, the Hill Dwarves, are those dwarves that left the Underkingdom to live under the sky above ground. Dark skinned than their pale cousins, the hill dwarves are considered queer by their subterranean relations, and as far more relatable by humanity and elvenkind. Mechanically, Hill Dwarves are Hill Dwarves.
The Elves of Arannn are divided into four primary categories: the Sun Elves of Bastion, the Moon Elves of Luthin, the Dark Elves of Nocturne, and the Wood Elves of the havens.
Bastion’s Sun Elves are golden haired, green eyed arcanists, ruled over by a council of powerful mages, and are loathe to consider the younger races to be equal to themselves. They are largely irreligious, heeding the trinity of Elven gods, but there rarely a cleric or priest among them. They place their faith largely in magic and sorcery instead. Mechanically, Sun Elves are High Elves, without any edits or changes.
The Moon Elves of Luthin, called the Citadel in the common tongue of Adea, are quite different. Far humbler than their longer-lived cousins to the south, the silver haired, pale eyed Moon Elves work their own fields, tend to cattle, and worship the Lord-Maker Gyaal after the elven Saint Nimriel brought His word to Luthin. The Moon Elves, along with the dwarves, are humanity’s closest ally. Mechanically, Moon Elves are High Elves, but rather than receiving a cantrip from the wizard spell list, a Moon Elf receives a cantrip from the cleric spell list, and the Moon Elf’s Wisdom is her spellcasting ability for it.
The ebon skinned Dark Elves of Nocturne are not the classically repugnant drow of the Forgotten Realms, but they do have their similarities. Nocturne and its dark elven masters are champions of liberty. No spell is forbidden, no ritual profane, no intrigue illegal unless the will of the High Houses opposes it. At least, this liberty extends to dark elves themselves. Those dwarves, elves, orcs, and men unfortunate enough to find themselves clapped in the irons of the dark elves know no salvation but death in their chattel slavery. While the moon elves of Citadel and sun elves of Bastion may be ideologically opposed to one another, the dark elves of Nocturne are their mortal enemies, with a lurid history of violence against their brethren that predates recorded history. Mechanically, dark elves are Drow, but rather than Daylight Sensitive and Superior Darkvision, dark elves possess ordinary darkvision, and have no daylight sensitivity.
The Wood Elves of Arann are divided among a few political entities but are largely the same. Secluded from the world, they rule their domains and maintain strict treaties with their neighbors to prevent meddling in their affairs and with the forests in which they dwell. The wood elves of Sanctum and Haven maintain the most positive relationships with the outside world, but tread lightly in the woods of the moving city of Hallow, for those wild elves suffer no trespassers. The wood elves are not fervent practitioners of magic as their cousins, but their realms are protected by powerful enchantments that make them all but unfindable, save for by those who already know where they are. Mechanically, wood elves are wood elves.
Elves exist elsewhere in the world as well, ranging from Ciathay to Shayar to Ghirducania. For these, either the high elf or wood elf templates will suffice. The Dusk Elves of Jivan, for example, would use the wood elf template.
Dragonborn, as described in the Player’s Handbook, are humanoid descendants of dragons, or at least are thought to be. The Dragonborn are a disparate people with no home civilization of their own, but long ago, in ages past, a great Dragon Empire covered the entirety of Yvenlond. Long fallen in a titanic war, the dragonborn have since dispersed to the far corners of the world and can be found wherever civilization might be found. Few know of their ancient history, but some keep it still. The most stalwart of these traditionalists are the Yauviir, the Dragonborn paladins whose Oaths as Champions of the Light date back to the prehistory of the world.
Rather than being the offspring of man and orc, as popular belief and myth may have it, half-orcs are not half anything. Rather, half-orcs are a leaner, smarter, and more civilized subrace of orc. They are well integrated into society, though they frequently suffer prejudice and discrimination for their appearance and untrue but still popular tall tales of brutishness and violence. Half-orc tribes are peacefully nomadic societies, traveling traders and the like, though many half-orcs have abandoned this lifestyle and settled permanently across the Adean Empire.
Tieflings are popularly believed to be descendants of demons, but many scholars believe that such rumors are nothing more than legend based solely on an admittedly demonic appearance. Tieflings face great prejudice and discrimination in the world, and many cities have tiefling dominated slums. The rare exceptions are Shayar, where Tieflings are equal, and even often more socially valued than their fellow races, and Nocturne, where they are accepted by the dark elves as fellow citizens (if second-class, in the sense that there are no noble tiefling houses in Nocturne).
Faith is a matter of faith, so to speak. The gods do not speak to mortals, and clerics receive their powers through the power of their faith and conviction rather than through the favors of their gods, though they may believe otherwise.
Among humans, there are two primary religions—that of the Old Pantheon, and the nascent monotheistic religion that worships the Lord-Maker Gyaal.
The Pantheon is a loose assortment of gods, any of which from the various Dungeons & Dragons setting may exist. If you want to worship Kord, Pelor, etc., by all means. No list I could make would be all inclusive.
The Church of Gyaal, which has grown to be the dominant religion among humanity and among the Moon Elves of Citadel, is a monotheistic religion that holds that all of creation was made by one true god, Gyaal, who became mortal and spread word of His love and grace among his creations.
There are a number of other religions in the world. The Elven Trinity, for example, or the World Serpent of Jivanni lore, or Ashjatrayya of the Shayari. It’s a big world, but those two above are the most important.
Finally, here are a list of additional languages that exist in Arann: • Adean, the Common Tongue [If your character would receive the language Common, he or she speaks Adean] • Leosian, the Tongue of Arleon • Terlish, the Language of Terland • Low Vieric, the Tongue of the Viers • High Vieric, the Dead Language of the fallen Vieric Empire • Corscivan, the Tongue of the City-States of Corsciva • Etrycan, the Tongue of the City-States of Etryca • Pantoshi, the Tongue of the Petty-Kingdoms of Trepanto • Ghirducanian, the Tongue of the Ghirducanian Empire • Shayari, the Tongue of Shayar • Nuberian, the Lingua Franca of Onagal • Jivanese, the Tongue of Jivan • Ciathene, the Tongue of the Twin Kingdoms of Ciathay • Kindashi, the Tongue of the Six Cities • Telendi, the Tongue of the Sun and Moon Elves • Kelendi, the Tongue of the Dark Elves • Dwarvish, the Tongue of the Dwarves • Or’cat, the Tongue of Goblins, Orcs, Hobgoblins, etc. [Replacing Goblin, Orcish]
The most important of these is Adean, but you may find Terlish, Leosian, Or’cat, and High Vieric useful during your adventures.
As always in the Lost Realms of Arann, it's 27 Point Buy, First Level Characters, with max die health + CON at character creation. Use whatever character sheet format suits you, so long as it's accessible and readable.
Combat House Rule: Initiative One thing I've been mulling over is how to deal with the hopefully-not-inevitable disappearance of players. With a turn based system, a player dropping off the face of the earth in a play-by-post setting without informing the group can cause the game to grind to a halt (see Lost Realms of Arann: Northmarch). I very much hope we don't lose anyone, but to deal with that in the event we do, I'm instituting a house rule borrowed from Final Fantasy Games's Star Wars: Edge of the Empire role playing system.
When rolling for initiative, rather than players going in the order they roll, we will instead be using Player Slots. In essence, each player's initiative roll unlocks a Player Slot at that initiative value. There is no obligation for players to act on the Player Slot their initiative roll produced. So, to demonstrate, consider the following scenario.
A Fighter, a Wizard, and a Rogue are engaged in combat against the Voice of Vaul and his bodyguard. The Fighter, Wizard, and Rogue roll a 12, a 7, and an 18 on their initiative rolls, respectively, and the Voice of Vaul and his bodyguard roll a 13 and a 3, respectively. The order of combat is as follows:
18 - Player Slot 13 - Enemy Slot 12 - Player Slot 7 - Player Slot 3 - Enemy Slot
Any one of the players can choose to take that first initiative slot. Rather than the Rogue going first, the Wizard may choose to act during that first Player Slot instead, or the Fighter.
I'm not sure what the ramifications will be for the game with this system, so if it breaks it entirely I apologize, but I think this should combat the danger of the game grinding to a halt if someone leaves unexpectedly. Rather than waiting for that person to show up, we can have the fight continue smoothly.
Let me know if you have any comments or concerns on this house rule.
Torack has put forward another idea I rather like.
TorackToday at 4:05 PM I remember this one system that was employed on the DnDBeyond forums similar to this, but essentially what would happen is that everyone rolled for initiative and posted in random order despite the initiative and the DM would summarize everything that happened after a single round
I would couple this with a time limit to post, say 48 or 72 hours, to be adjusted as needed. If you guys are quick and responsive, we can resolve things more quickly, if not we can take a longer window. The point would be that only people who have dropped out of the RP would be skipped.
I am open to either one, please post here with your vote, either Option 1 (Player Slots) or Option 2 (Torack's Simultaneous Resolution).
I'll save us the time and fiat us into Option 2, actually. After further discussions, I think it's the better choice and will give us some flexibility and fix the need for me to be on hand to resolve every player's action after they take it. It'll be a much smoother experience for all of us, I think.
Thanks again to Tolack for the suggestions, I expect this will go over very nicely.
Also, general update (will be added to the Discord as well), we now have six characters. As soon as we round out enough for the two parties and you guys sort yourself out into two groups, I will post the encounter prompts. If we can get everyone's sheets up sooner than Sunday, I'm happy to kick the adventure off early.
As of right now our DM has not put anything in here or in the discord chat for several weeks now. I don't know if or when they will return to this game.