The Astromundi Cluster

The Astromundi Cluster is a 1993 boxed set accessory for the Spelljammer campaign setting, part of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game.

The Astromundi Cluster
GenreRole-playing game
PublisherTSR, Inc.
Publication date
1993
Media typeBoxed set

Contents

The Astromundi Cluster described a unique crystal sphere composed of free-floating asteroids. The sphere's weak barriers encourage free passage between the Prime Material Plane and the Inner Planes, resulting in a bizarre and potentially explosive mix of creatures.[1] The "Celestial Almananc" lists dozens of locales, from the outcast colony of Chakarak to the orchard-laden Boyarny.[1] The "Astrogator's Guide" provides game statistics for the Doombat and other new ships.[1]

Publication history

The Astromundi Cluster was designed by Sam Witt, and published by TSR in 1993. The box cover painting and interior art was by David O. Miller, with the booklet cover painting by Jeff Easley.

Reception

Rick Swan reviewed The Astromundi Cluster for Dragon magazine #203 (March 1994).[1] He felt that this "lavish boxed set" was "Intended to jump-start sleepy Spelljammer campaigns".[1] He had two gripes about the boxed set, one being that some of the names "are more silly than sinister, like the mist-covered bodies called Gasteroids, and the shadowy lands known as the Grim Regions", and the other being that with 192 pages to work with, "couldn't the designer have found room for at least one fully-developed adventure?"[1]

gollark: Object recognition is already a... capability which exists.
gollark: I think you can detect children and balls without massively advanced "AI" stuff now.
gollark: As long as they can automatically drive through big urban centers, and they can get cities on board, it would probably do the job.
gollark: Instead of trying to make them work *everywhere*, and having massively overspecced batteries for most journeys.
gollark: I think a much better approach for self-driving cars would just be to have rentable self-driving short-range electric cars in big cities and stuff, which would use only whitelisted roads where you can make sure to apply necessary standardization and add whatever infrastructure is needed.

References

  1. Swan, Rick (March 1994). "Role-playing Reviews". Dragon. Lake Geneva, Wisconsin: TSR (#203): 86.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.