View over the Milieu 08 - Dark Sun

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 93

  • @goodbuddy7607
    @goodbuddy7607 Год назад +11

    The original Dark Sun Box Set (and Brom's art) drew me to 2e. My friends and I played 2e Dark Sun from 1994-2000. Then they went on to play 3e DS* for another 5 years without me! We tried 4e Dark Sun back in 2009 but didn't like it. So now, we plan to revisit 2e Dark Sun next year. It's still my favorite to this day.
    *As an aside, Dark Sun was officially - albeit, unceremoniously if not covertly - supported in 3e.
    Dungeon #110 / Polyhedron #169 contained the 3e Dark Sun DMG and Dark Sun MM1
    Dungeon #111 / Polyhedron #170 contained the Dark Sun MM 2
    Dragon #319 contained the 3e Dark Sun PHB

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +3

      Those were the periodicals I mention in the video - thanks for listing them! 🙂

  • @jackprutsman821
    @jackprutsman821 Год назад +35

    I love this setting, and it’s a shame that it’s not likely to get any more official love. It’s not as though slavery was depicted as GOOD, just commonplace. Nobody complains that murder is a way of life in other settings.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +11

      Yeah, I'm not 100% sure of what elements are "problematic" as noted by WotC. Very good point about murder, too!

    • @TwilightxKnight13
      @TwilightxKnight13 Год назад +15

      Its mostly just woke outrage over perceived offenses as if the material was written with the intention to offend "you" personally. It is ridiculous. Dark Sun is one of the best settings in all of TTOPRPGs

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +6

      @@TwilightxKnight13 Well... I've come to perceive the word "woke" as a trigger for the US culture wars that seem to actually be dying out, thank grief - it's tedious.
      Personally, I don't see any outrage from anyone - I think it's WotC being overly cautious given that they are caught up in a corner of the culture wars.
      Anyway, daft culture warring and so on aside - yes, wholeheartedly agree that it's one of the best settings out there.

    • @DemonPrinceofHell
      @DemonPrinceofHell Год назад +4

      @@TwilightxKnight13 its definitely the wokies that would get pissed off over dark sun. Ironically, I didn't see any connection of it being seen as problematic up until the wokies pointed it out!!

    • @thedruski85
      @thedruski85 Год назад +2

      I don't think it's an issue of 'wokeness' which is just a trigger word that means only what the person using it thinks it means, not some actually defined concept. I believe WotC sees it as problematic to their bottom line, which is the only thing Hasbro seems to care about.
      Athas is not for the feint of heart. Much of the modern ttrpg fan base are softer and kinder of heart than old fogies like me that played their very first D&D adventure in this harsh world.
      Honestly, I'm glad WotC isn't trying to bring it back. They already did my second favorite setting dirty with Spelljammer. That boxed set was the worst excuse for a product they've ever put out and I'm just thankful Dark Sun won't be getting the same lazy treatment.

  • @lloydbrown2713
    @lloydbrown2713 Год назад +15

    I loved Dark Sun. It's my go-to guide for how to establish a setting. The flavor is so rich, and you can tell when something doesn't fit...like Mind Lords of the Last Sea.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +2

      It is definitely one of those that feels like it's been around forever right from that first box release - totally agree, it's one of the best TSR ever did.

    • @Arvaniz
      @Arvaniz Год назад +8

      Actually, Mind Lords of the Last Sea totally fits in the setting and its themes. It contrasts the classical physical slavery in most parts of the Tyr Region with the mental slavery of the inhabitants of the Last Sea (and the false imperative of "happiness"). It shows that a vivid and lush ecosystem (as that of the Last Sea) is not enough to warrant freedom and utopia.
      Mind Lords of the Last Sea has a "Logan's Run" or "The Time Machine" (what with the morlocks and eloi), and other sci-fi false utopias, feel to it. And that's what makes it feel right at home within Dark Sun... as it is a setting modeled much more on sci-fi themes (Dune, Mad Max, etc.) than fantasy ones.
      You can make a whole campaign with the PCs learning about a mythic paradise on the shores of a so called Last Sea, with the massive journey from the Tablelands... with the plot twist that it's only a different kind of hell. Perhaps worse than the barren wastes and the tyrants of the city-states they knew.

  • @MrNetWraith
    @MrNetWraith Год назад +2

    Two things I feel obligated to point out. Firstly, the dray (as dragonborn were reflavored) actually WERE a part of the 2nd edition iteration of Dark Sun, debuting in the adventure module "City by the Silt Sea", which goes extensively into their history, lore and culture, and even offers rules to play them - the primary difference between the 2e and 4e iterations is whether they were made after or before Dregoth became the Athasian Dracolich. Secondly, the concept of Athas being locked away from the rest of the multiverse was itself something of a retcon; it was first mentioned in "Defilers & Preservers: The Wizards of Athas", and had never been referenced in any books prior to or subsequent.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад

      Your points are well-taken. However, dragonborn (as we know them today) owe more conceptual links to the draconians of Krynn than Dregoth's transformative creations. The recon in 4E moves the Athasian dragonborn closer to the core race, rather than something different and unique to Athas. Prior to that, the similarities to 2nd Ed. Dray and 4E dragonborn are more or less in name only.
      With respect to Athas being locked away - you can look to more than Defilers and Preservers for reference, although that source describes the impenetrable nature of Athas's sphere (one source is still a source). The Spelljammer sources hint at the sphere being uncharted (and, indeed, it is consistently uncharted in official sources, and at best tucked away on its own in unofficial ones. There has been no reason to doubt that Athas is "closed", other than the planar shenanigans of Black Spine etc., and connections to the Inner Planes. From the Prime, it is uncharted and impenetrable.

  • @themightypen1530
    @themightypen1530 10 месяцев назад +2

    I have been playing Darksun since it came out and I actually learned a few things I didn't know from this video. Well done and much appreciated.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank-you - glad you found it useful!

  • @brandontaylor3252
    @brandontaylor3252 Год назад +2

    Dark Sun has always had a special place in D&D for me. Mr. Brom is a 3rd or 4th cousin and when I was a kid he would send me leftover D&D merchandise from the TSR art studio. Lots of Dark Sun stuff and a few calenders of paintings signed by him and the other artists. Of course as a kid it was Incredibly cool and made me love Athas and the whole vibe of Dark Sun. Unfortunately I found that all the things that make it an awesome setting can be part of why it doesn't make a great setting for most casual players. Modern 5e is pretty much a power fantasy where you build superheroes that become almost demi gods at high levels. Dark Sun kicks sand in the face of that idea and kills your character while you are still clearing your eyes. Daily checks for finding water, constant exhaustion, unforgiving monsters, these things work against what modern DnD is designed to be. I think this is really the issue but it's a lot easier for Wotc just say slavery is problematic than try to explain that Dark Sun just really isnt in the wheelhouse of what they do anymore.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад

      You may well be right - interesting perspective. And my regards to your 3rd/4th cousin - his art really made the setting pop for me. Good match for the subject.

  • @luziankrieger8370
    @luziankrieger8370 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great Video.
    Love the art of Brom so much!

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  10 месяцев назад

      Thank-you, and yes - he has a very evocative style. He was a good choice for Dark Sun.

  • @gajukes
    @gajukes 11 месяцев назад +1

    This was fantastic Athas will always be a favorite of mine. . . A few minutes in and I knew I needed to subscribe thank you for the excellent video

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  11 месяцев назад

      Thank-you! Hopefully you'll find other corners of this little RUclips space of mine interesting, too!

  • @nicklarocco4178
    @nicklarocco4178 Год назад +2

    In my mind 2e Athas is more like a survival setting. A harsh world in which, already vulnerable D&D characters, are made even more vulnerable. Heck you had to roll higher stats because you were expected to need them! A 24 strength half giant at level 3 wasn't out of the realm of possibility. But you could just as easily fall prey to a Rampager, or an Id Fiend early on in your career and perish. In a different vein the 4e version of Athas read more like a high adventure Swords and Sorcery setting. Something more out of Conan, in which the heroes wrestle with (and ultimately defeat) larger than life foes, before retiring to the grimiest pub in town (to avoid the servants of the sorcerer king) to drink away their wealth as soon as they had acquired it! Both are amazing ways to play, and I've run both. But even more 4e Darksun game was very lethal. We lost 6 characters in the first session, granted it was over about 14 hours at a library lock-in.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      I agree, on both counts. It's borne out by the rules given to water needs etc. in the Dark Sun setting rules.
      6 4E characters lost?! What were you doing!

    • @nicklarocco4178
      @nicklarocco4178 Год назад +2

      @WillyMuffinUK not pulling any punches lol. My favorite death was when one of the characters got grabbed by a giant trapdoor spider, and instead of helping everyone else just said "nope," and walked away.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      @@nicklarocco4178 Hah! Every man, woman, cannibal halfling, and escaped gladiatorial half-giant an mul for themselves!

  • @christopherdecator9742
    @christopherdecator9742 Год назад +1

    Darksun is one of the best examples of the genre innovations and system versatility of the 2nd Edition era. An extremely evocative setting. As a matter of taste, I never really approved of the psionics rules back then, both thematically and because they were, frankly awkward. But psionics feels like it belongs to this setting. I could be absolutely wrong here, but I believe the psionics rules packaged with the revised boxed set were an updated version of the rules presented in the psionics handbook. The revised rules were identical to the psionics rules presented in the Skills and Powers book.
    Also, the initial setting as a Battlesystem vehicle was quite surprising to me. Always entertaining and insightful! Thank you!

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад

      I think you're right on the Skills & Powers/Psionics bit - it's been a looooong time since I cracked open those Player's Options books!

  • @fedupN
    @fedupN Год назад +2

    My first exposure to Dark Sun was when my childhood buddies older brother had Dark Sun posters up in his room and my buddy played the computer game where ya played escaping from the pits. Still remember the half-giants and the bug folk and fighting the stone golem with a snake body.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      I maybe should have mentioned the computer games in the video, but... meh, whatever! They were part of the SSI releases, and were fun. Two releases in total - and, just after a quick check, both are available on Steam.

    • @fedupN
      @fedupN Год назад +1

      @@WillyMuffinUK Hah! You covered plenty. I was just sharing my experiences. 😄
      Also, thanks! I honestly didnt know there were two and didnt even think to check steam. 😆

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад

      @@fedupN I'm tempted - it's been a good while since I played them!

  • @aesculetum
    @aesculetum Год назад +4

    Dark Sun is my favorite 2nd Edition new settings along with Planescape. Unfortunately, it is more of a literary predilection for me, as I never managed to play either.
    I hope you get to Birthright. I know very little about that setting.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      There's still time to start up a Dark Sun game. Even if it's running one of the published series, I'd encourage you to give it a go.

    • @KabukiKid
      @KabukiKid Год назад +1

      I regret not scooping up Dark Sun, but I did get some Planescape stuff... and I am thankful for that. I'm in the same boat that I never played in either setting, though. lol

  • @DemonPrinceofHell
    @DemonPrinceofHell Год назад +1

    I've been really loving the overall lore of and aesthetics of Dark Sun! At first I didn't like the idea of a realm having no deities and no gods but the more I read about the world of Athas and mysterious dangers like the sea of silt, I immeditely fell in love with the world and the lore surrounding it! I already orded two versions of the prism pentad books (paper back and hard cover)!!! The muls (half dwarf half men) are also VERY interesting and unique to see, something different than the usual elf vs human vs dwarf that we always see in d&d worlds.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      It is one of the better official D&D worlds - mainly because it is so different. I'm also normally not a fan of half-breeds, but the Muls do make sense - they have an origin and purpose, in the Sorcerer Kings having bred them for workforce and gladiators, and that they are sterile ties into the mule base. Anyway, glad to hear that it's piqued your interest!

  • @SimonAshworthWood
    @SimonAshworthWood Год назад +2

    Hey! My halfling does not have a “savage waistline”, thankyou very much! Eating elves & dwarves is quite civilised, I’ll have you know.

  • @Clem68W
    @Clem68W Год назад +1

    I didn't play dark sun and regret it. I flipped through the books from time to time and loved everything I saw, but alas, nobody else in my little coven was interested.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      Ah, a common tale of woe. If my groups could be interested in every wild thing I picked up and enjoyed reading through, I'm not sure we'd get anything run to completion!

  • @booksbricksandboards783
    @booksbricksandboards783 5 месяцев назад +1

    Love Dark Sun, and owned every version of it… I have dumped my 4E books many years ago, but still have the 2 boxes and have converted them to Savage Worlds… great setting, glad WoTC is ignoring it honestly!

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  5 месяцев назад +1

      In the light of Spelljammer and Planescape, I can't disagree with your WotC point.

  • @KabukiKid
    @KabukiKid Год назад +4

    I never was overly interested in playing Dark Sun when it came out, but I do sort of regret not buying it... if even just for the collectability of it now. lol I'd also honestly like to tuck into it now to read just for fun. :-)

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      For me, it was seeing the prospectus ahead of release that looked like D&D was doing Dune that made me get the initial set. And then it not being totally like Dune, but still a great setting, that led me to stick with it. I've never run a prolonged campaign in the setting, but have run the published ones a couple of times - and they are primeval fun.

  • @pappajudas9267
    @pappajudas9267 Год назад +3

    It's a shame wizards of the coast seems to be afraid of dark sun. It's strange because most of the themes that they're worried will trigger people exist in the forgotten realms to this day. It would be nice if WOTC would just sell it off to allow someone to develop the setting in earnest instead of squandering the material by hiding it away.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +1

      I can see why they're unlikely to sell - an IP in the hand is worth more than in the hands of someone else. But yes, I agree with you in that I can't see what they're afraid of. It's not like the setting promotes slavery.

    • @TwilightxKnight13
      @TwilightxKnight13 Год назад

      Just another example of how a tiny minority of loud progressives ruins things for the rest of us because if they don't like something, no one can have it. Its ridiculous.

  • @DerEwigeKodex
    @DerEwigeKodex Год назад +1

    Thanks for the great representation of Dark sun! The game world has always fascinated me, but I could never convince my fellow players to play a campaign there. The psi powers and magic system put them off, as did the harsh conditions there. Nevertheless, I still use the materials from the basic box for my own campaign and so dark sun has - in parts - found its way into our game world. And my players don't even know it.🤫

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад

      Sneaky!! 🙂

    • @DemonPrinceofHell
      @DemonPrinceofHell Год назад

      How could psi powers put anyone off? Have they never played shadowrun? LOL

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад

      @@DemonPrinceofHell The odds are, they probably haven't!

    • @DerEwigeKodex
      @DerEwigeKodex Год назад +1

      @@DemonPrinceofHell OK, I'll try. ✌

  • @J22k5J
    @J22k5J Год назад +1

    excellent video!😃👍

  • @davidlfort
    @davidlfort 10 месяцев назад +1

    You missed the Mind Lords of the Last (Lost?) Sea. Also, tge Dragon Kings book had Battle System rules incorporated into it, and was the second release for the setting, iirc.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, you're not the first to notice Mind Lords! Dragon Kings was a few releases way in, not the second. Good book, except that I feel it encouraged players - intentionally or not - to attempt the paths to Dragons or Avangions, which I felt broke things somewhat.

    • @davidlfort
      @davidlfort 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@WillyMuffinUK I'm not gonna disagree with that assessment. Sorry to pile on, I didn't see a mention in the time I allotted to reading comments.
      Still, actually playing a campaign to ascendant being levels would be kind of awesome.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  10 месяцев назад

      @@davidlfort All good - I'm the same, when it comes to comment threads. Only so much time!
      I think it would be awesome, but I feel it would need to be set up as a goal from the start. When we are first introduced to Athasian dragons, we are shown them to be unique (The Dragon), or, the few times we "see" Sorcerer Kings in dragon form, inherently self-serving and evil. To stat them out as a class progression made them too accessible - the mystery gone, the blueprint for "how to become" laid bare.
      I think an epic campaign where the goal is to ascend would be cool - but, who in the party ascends? Everyone? That puts a mockery on dragons and avangions being rare. One or two? Isn't that exclusionary towards the rest of the PCs?
      Not knocking the book or it's place - it was a useful volume for the setting. I just feel that handling dragons and avangions outside of the class system might have worked better. Of course, just my opinion!

  • @wbbartlett
    @wbbartlett 9 месяцев назад +1

    1:45 You can make a convincing argument that with 5e, DnD has evolved back into a miniatures wargame.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  9 месяцев назад +1

      I don't disagree with that statement. I think that had a soft start in 3.5E, and took off in 4E. Personally, I see 4E and 5E as, at heart, miniature skirmish games with a bit of storytelling.

  • @midnightgreen8319
    @midnightgreen8319 Год назад +1

    Ohhhh I'm excited for this one!

  • @MarshalTennerWinter
    @MarshalTennerWinter Год назад +4

    This was good.

  • @rosskwolfe
    @rosskwolfe 4 месяца назад

    This is the first video of yours I have seen. I quite enjoyed it. Due in no small part to your voice, which is extremely pleasant to listen to.
    Do you voice audiobooks? If not, then the world is poorer for it.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  4 месяца назад +1

      Thank-you! And no, I don't, although I've narrated some stories here on my channel. The compliment is appreciated, more so than some suggestions that I'd be good at ASMR 🤣

  • @stevenkennedy4130
    @stevenkennedy4130 8 месяцев назад +1

    A harsh, untamed wasteland...

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  8 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed. Dangerous place to get a tan!

  • @guyopitz
    @guyopitz Год назад

    I still play Dark Sun. I think the main problem WOTC has is the racism in the setting. Humans, Halflings and Elves are all depicted as racist in Dark Sun. The halflings are so racist they orchestrated hundreds of successful genocides of various fantasy races. Then there is the matter of Mul's and Half-giants and how they are made and it's fairly horrific, and could seriously trigger rape survivors. I like grimdark though and I think the setting is kino.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +2

      Does it count as grimdark? And what is kino?
      Anyway, the racial stuff... Maybe. But it is the context of the setting. I do get a bit weirded out when people. get upset by fantasy depictions of fantasy races not liking each other. But hey ho. We are where we are.
      The setting is a harsh one, and the depictions of the races within it are accordingly harsh. To remove that harshness is to diminish the setting. Maybe that's why it has been left, given the current social environment.

  • @johnherkert9895
    @johnherkert9895 Год назад +1

    Everything gets weird beyond the Prism. Marauders shouldn't be hassling pacifists.

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад +2

      I'm not sure marauders care who they hassle!

    • @rosskwolfe
      @rosskwolfe 4 месяца назад

      Isn't the point of being a marauder to... maraud? Pacifists seem like they they would be incredibly easy to plunder. Seems to me marauders would prefer to attack pacifists.

  • @danthewatcher9681
    @danthewatcher9681 Год назад +2

    I trully want a Dark Sun RPG the likes of BG 3, preferably made by Larion or the guys that made Solastra, Owl cat did not deliver much in pathfinder!

    • @WillyMuffinUK
      @WillyMuffinUK  Год назад

      No idea about Owl Cat, nor Pathfinder really (far too many D&D clones as it is) - but totally agree with having Larian do Dark Sun could be awesome. They've certainly pulled no punches with BG3.