11/5/2023 0 Comments Dnd forgotten realms racesVedalken, and Simic Hybrid because they are MtG races that don't appear in normal D&D settings (yet), and Centaurs for having four legs.I'd love to see MtG races appear in BG3 as I already have a sense of how they function. Despite coming from Magic the Gathering, the Campaign Books GMGtR, MOoT, and S:CoC are all written as if they occur in the main cosmology, Theros for example is mention as being in the Material Plane and Strixhaven has Tieflings, Halflings, Slaads, and Dragonborn for example.Īlso the Naiad from MOoT appeared in Candlekeep Mysteries with new art. I'll also add that there was that free adventure with AFR that had the Ravnican villian in the Forgotten Realms. Oh I forgot they already had something from the MtG Settings in the game.Īnd some of those creature types on your list like Azra were simply reprints for the Commander Decks, so they don't count (In CL sets Commander Decks are concidered apart of the main set, just not draftable, and don't get a seperate expansion symbol). You can potentially explore LotR or Elder Scrolls or Star Wars or Forgotten Realms or Rick and Morty or whatever in this medium, but they are still different settings. I wouldn't put it past them, but I think it would ultimately be a big mistake, as while the two IPs superficially share a lot of similarities, they are very different on a fundamental, world building scale. Maybe WotC will consolidate their two big fantasy multiverses in the future. Likewise, wotc published official 'Rick and Morty' for D&D. MTG also had a Lord of the Rings set just recently-it doesn't mean they are the same setting.
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