Drow of the Underdark

Drow of the Underdark is the name of two supplemental rules books for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, providing supplementary game rules focusing on drow culture, equipment and folklore for both players and Dungeon Masters.

Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd edition

The Drow of the Underdark
AuthorEd Greenwood
PublisherTSR, Inc.
Publication date
July 1991
Media typesoftcover
Pages128
ISBN1-56076-132-6

The Drow of the Underdark was written by Ed Greenwood for use with AD&D (2nd Ed.), and focuses primarily on the drow of the Forgotten Realms campaign setting.[1] The book features cover art by Jeff Easley, and interior art by Tim Bradstreet and Rick Harris.

This book details the nature of dark elves, dark elven society, drow religion (including Eilistraee, Ghuanadar/The Elder Elemental God, Lolth, and Vhaeraun), the high history of the drow, drow spells, drow magical items, drow craftwork, drow languages, drow nomenclature, and dark elven runes. This book also details the Underdark of the Forgotten Realms, as well as several monsters of the Underdark (including the myrlochar and the yochlol).

Dungeons & Dragons 3rd edition

Drow of the Underdark
AuthorAri Marmell,
Anthony Pryor,
Robert J. Schwalb,
& Greg A. Vaughan
PublisherWizards of the Coast
Publication date
May 2007
Media typehardcover
Pages224
ISBN978-0-7869-4151-3
OCLC126839306
LC ClassMLCM 2007/44945 (G)

Drow of the Underdark was written for use with D&D (3rd ed.), and is not tied to any specific campaign setting. The book's format and contents are similar to that of Draconomicon, Libris Mortis, and Lords of Madness.

Although primarily intended for DM use,[2] players can use information from the book to play as a drow character or half-drow character, as well as to fight against drow, or to adventure in the Underdark in general.

This book was designed by Ari Marmell, Anthony Pryor, Robert J. Schwalb, and Greg A. Vaughan. It features cover art by Francis Tsai, and interior art by Steve Ellis, Wayne England, Lars Grant-West, Tomás Giorello, Jackoilrain, William O'Connor, Richard Sardinha, Beth Trott, Francis Tsai, Franz Vohwinkel, Eva Widermann, and James Zhang.[2]

Contents

"All About Drow"

The first chapter contains general information about drow and contains few rules other than drow racial traits. A guide to drow names and their meanings is also included.

"Drow Options"

This chapter contains new uses for various skills, new feats (including general, metamagic, ambush, divine, vile, and weapon style feats), alternate class features for many classes, and new spells and invocations (some of which require the user to be a drow).

"Prestige Classes"

New prestige classes in this chapter include Arachnomancer, Cavestalker, Demonbinder, Dread Fang of Lolth Eye of Lolth, Insidious Corrupter, and Kinslayer. Each prestige class also contains a sample NPC ready for quick use.

"Drow Equipment"

This chapter contains new mundane, alchemical, and magic items, along with poisons, magic-infused poisons, and artifacts

"New Monsters and NPCs"

Numerous new monsters are presented in Drow of the Underdark, including the deep dragon, trolls, goblins, and draegloth. There are also numerous ready-to-use drow NPC statistics, both for "generic" NPCs (such as "drow slaver") and "specific" NPCs (like Xil'Etha Dhuvvaryl). Statistics for one monster, the vril, were accidentally left out of the book.[3]

gollark: They have cameras (although not IR-seeing ones), networking (wirelessly, which is kind of bad, but whatever), and technically usable software.
gollark: Well, if you want really low-budget, get some old phones!
gollark: Also, I assume you want multiple cameras.
gollark: It doesn't have a CSI port.
gollark: You'd then need a server with some big hard drives for historical bee neuron data™.

See also

References

  1. Greenwood, Ed (1991). the Drow of the Underdark. TSR, Inc.
  2. Marmell, Ari; Anthony Pryor; Robert J. Schwalb; Greg A. Vaughan (2007). Drow of the Underdark. WotC. p. 5.
  3. "Drow of the Underdark Errata: The Vril Warrior". 2007-05-04. Archived from the original on 2008-05-18.
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