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T O P I C    R E V I E W
questing gm Posted - 05 Nov 2023 : 14:05:37
Since starting up his own Discord server (https://discord.onl/greenwoods-grotto/), Ed Greenwood has been answering Realms-related questions in the #q4ed channel. Although it's free to join the Discord and view his answers, but I believe it requires a subscription to Ed's Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/EdGreenwood) to be given access to ask him questions there.

So since his answers are free to view by anyone on his Discord and for the benefit of those who are not on Discord, I'm starting and updating my compilation of his answers in this scroll. I'll leave it to the wisdom of moderating scribes if anything should be changed or removed.

I won't be able to put down everything (I already have 300+ answered questions to put down), so consider updates here will be intermittent, and will take a while before it catches up to the latest questions answered. (Or just join the Discord if you want the latest )

30   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 05:39:51
On deities allowing couples to be together in the afterlife

Zeph — 03/29/2024 12:11 AM

@Ed Greenwood it was something that was brought up during discussions on another server so I'm curious what your take is on it.

For couples who follow different deities or are claimed by different ones, would deities who are on friendly or good terms with each other, allow couples to be together in the afterlife as petitioners. And on a similar note, is it rare in the realms for families in one way or another to be together in the afterlife? do animal companions or pets go to the plane of their owner/friend?

Thanks for your time!

Ed Greenwood — 03/29/2024 10:04 AM

Aside from clergy and paladins, no one in the Realms except the occasional zealot would consider "allowing" a deity to dictate their relationships. The Realms is polytheistic, with everyone believing in all of the gods and worshipping most of them. Afterlives are influenced by gods but even more by the hearts and minds of mortals...but there's also a random factor (see other answers from me on this server). So it might be "mildly unusual" but not rare.
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 05:14:39
On collaborations or chats with authors/writers from the other worlds

Reedhalloran Duskfellow — 03/24/2024 5:57 AM

@Ed Greenwood this is more of a D&D history question but I'm curious if you have any stories to regale us with about your collaborations or chats with authors/writers from the other worlds. Particularly wondering about Krynn. How would you guys talk about world building or cross pollination? Are there untold stories of Elminster visiting these locales?

Ed Greenwood — 03/28/2024 11:59 PM

Yes, there are many untold tales of El visiting the other "D&D Worlds," and if you tune in to the Six Sides of Gaming channel on YouTube on Tuesday evenings, you'll see his current jaunts in LEGACY OF WORLDS. Check out Jay Scott's channel (as LordGosumba) for his Gabbin' series (currently there are 293 episodes) for my rare appearances to discuss Greyhawk and Realms lore with Anna Meyer and Jay. I've also written Krynn lore. This is a huge topic, so more later, when I have time (if I ever have time!).
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 05:10:51
On what module/adventure is on Ed's wish list to get an update/upgrade

Reedhalloran Duskfellow — 03/25/2024 11:46 AM

@Ed Greenwood for D&D's 50th anniversary, what module/adventure is on your wish list to get an update/upgrade that we should all play?

Ed Greenwood — 03/28/2024 11:43 PM

Heh. The Haunted Halls of Eveningstar, compelte with the entire village of Eveningstar, the temple, and the outlying Caverns of the Claws all detailed. The way I wrote it. Won't happen in this year, as budgets and schedules are already set. Next year? There Are Plans, but NDAs forbid...
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 05:08:42
On inspiration for cuisine of the Realms

Ilabode — 03/15/2024 9:51 PM

Where do you draw inspiration for your cuisine of the realms. You talk a lot about what the cuisine is but what is the process to come up with those answers and inspiration for some of the dishes?

Ed Greenwood — 03/28/2024 11:40 PM

The inspiration is a lifetime of cooking and eating widely (many cultures, many cuisines) across the real world. I then imagine what fantastic ingredients (dragon meat, basilisk tongue, umber hulk liver) might taste like, and use my experience to concoct seasonings and preparations to invent dishes that I think “fit” locales, peoples, and lifestyles in the Realms.
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 05:04:38
On any descendants of Florin Falconhand alive in the 15th century

DMeyer33 — 03/28/2024 5:33 AM

Greetings @Ed Greenwood! I was hoping if you could tell us if there are any descendants of Florin Falconhand alive in the 15th century and what they might be up to?

Ed Greenwood — 03/28/2024 10:49 AM

The short answer: yes. This has been answered before, and I will skate around some NDAs and see what can be added. (This will take time.)
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 05:02:15
On airships and their prevalence in the 1490s DR

Reedhalloran Duskfellow — 03/27/2024 6:47 AM

Dearest @Ed Greenwood, I hope Gary Con treated you well. I'm wondering if you can provide some guidance regarding airships and their prevalence in the 1490s DR. I imagine with Halruaa gone for so long that put a serious damper on their availability for much of the 1400s. Were there others that successfully made sky ships?

It also sounds like from your awesome Patreon update about Halruaa that getting those Wiley wizards back doesn't necessarily increase the supply more recently.

How would your average adventuring party based out of Waterdeep go about requisitioning an airship? Could they have one custom built? If so, who/where would they go?

Ed Greenwood — 03/28/2024 2:32 AM

I survived Founders & Legends and GaryCon and had a GREAT time seeing old friends and making new ones. Hopefully the pics are neither too numerous nor too incriminating. ;} Yes, others have made skyships, some of them spelljamming vessels (notably the elves), and I've even answered questions at Candlekeep about where the operating ports for such ships are, in Faerûn. However, the makers and maintainers of such craft tend to keep such work secretive, and they are few. You're correct about Halruaans not leaping to fill any "sales void" when it comes to skyships, in the Realms recently. I will do a non-exhaustive video about where and who to see to get a new skyship, or get one repaired or refitted. The elves would seem to be the most reliable source of supply, but are adamantly against supplying any non-elves with skyships, or even selling them transport on elven skyships. So, think criminal, and think: how might beholders make money, when they wanted funds for some purpose?
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 04:59:27
On Lake Thaalmir

Lucio — 03/27/2024 6:01 AM

@Ed Greenwood Is there any info on Lake Thaalmir? I am curious about Sschindylryn but I'd like to know more about its surroundings as well.

Ed Greenwood — 03/28/2024 2:25 AM

It's on my list. Expect lore in a video, some time this year.
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 04:57:25
On the significance of drawing blood have for followers of Eilistraee

Claire — 03/27/2024 4:14 AM Hello @Ed Greenwood ! I had a quesiton about my favorite goddess of the Realms, Eilistraee.

I was reading about her rites and rituals, specifically the Sword Dance rite – this rite involves dancing around a blade and drawing blood form each limb in order to bless the sword, as described in Demihuman Deities. Additionally, in Larian's Baldur's Gate 3, Phalar Aluve – a sword of Eilsitraee – is drawn by shedding your own blood. What I wanted to ask is, what significance (if any) does drawing blood have for followers of Eilistraee? Do any other Eilistraeean rites involve bloodletting?

Thank you!

Ed Greenwood — 03/28/2024 2:23 AM

TSR's Code of Conduct cut back on many magical (and especially ritual, involving worship of the gods) instances of human fluids (tears, blood, and even earwax) being used to work magic. Originally, many rituals for many deities involved the shedding of one's own blood, as part of tying the magical effect directly to a specific worshipper, or infusing something (like a sword) with magical borne by the blood-shedder, or creating a link between that entity and the item. So it's not unique to Eilistraee, but "her instances" survived into print. In Eilistraeen rites, it's creating a link between worshipper and item, or infusing an item with magic or intent (alignment, ethos, purpose) from the worshipper.
questing gm Posted - 22 May 2024 : 04:50:32
On Kuldahar in Klauth Vale

n00b — 03/16/2024 4:54 AM

Im gonna bootlick here... AND again ask controversial question

OH GREAT AND POWERFULL SAGE @Ed Greenwood Father of Forgotten Realms, bless this ignorant fool with You knowledge and answer me one question that only YOU as author of Dragons of the North have:

IS KULDAHAR IN KLAUTH VALE?

Ed Greenwood — 03/27/2024 2:01 PM

No, Kuldahar is outside the Vale.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 15:54:57
On the history of the Blackstaff

mark630 — 02/28/2024 8:51 AM

Hey, can we possibly get a video on the history of the Blackstaff (both the personage and the magic item)? I just watched the water deep video and it made me interested in some of the gaps in my information

Ed Greenwood — 02/29/2024 1:34 AM

It's on the list!

George Krashos — 02/28/2024 3:54 PM

He’d need about a dozen YouTube clips.

Ed Greenwood — 02/29/2024 1:34 AM

True!
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 15:25:12
On common expletives heard in Cormyr or the Sword Coast

Chris L — 03/12/2024 8:19 AM

@Ed Greenwood We need a list of common expletives! my players figured out that saying "Jesus Christ!" with intensity wouldn't mean a thing in the FR! What are some common expletives heard in Cormyr or the Sword Coast? I suggested "Ilmater's balls!" as one but then again, I might have stolen it from BG3...

Ed Greenwood — 03/13/2024 1:00 AM

Check Candlekeep (the site, online, Questions For Ed Greenwood) and "Ed Greenwood Presents Elminster's Forgotten Realms" (the hardcover sourcebook) for literally pages of them.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 15:22:08
On dumplings

Juniper Churlgo — 03/06/2024 2:57 AM

a quick food Q for Ed. Seeing how im making dumplings this weekend and how very few types of dumplings actually appeared in print, what are some regional varieties? There are kozakuran, amn's boar dumplings, cormyr's sweet, and occasional pork, as well as some dough dumplings. What else? in the real world, there are hundreds of types from all over the world, i'm sure FR is the same.

Ed Greenwood — 03/06/2024 3:23 AM

Indeed.

In the Tashalar and all around the Shining Sea coasts, there are water-boiled dumplings (like real world shui jiao), usually filled with leek-dominated vegetable and herb mixes (dill, peas, waterchestnuts and other edible shoots), but also with lamb and braised goat, ox-meat (they are THE best method of eating “old ox,” the toughest meat, after it’s been marinated in wine vinegar for a tenday or a month), and rothé.

Pan-fried dough dumplings (like guo tie or “pot stickers”) in the Realms are eaten everywhere the caravan roads run, having spread from Murghôm and Durpar centuries ago, and can now be found in all Sword Coast and Sea of Fallen Stars port eateries (usually cheap/lower class, sailors’ and laborers’). They tend to be filled with ground meat (all the meat sources I just listed, above) mixed with diced pickled vegetables, and cooked in a rich gravy that’s drained off (for other cooking purposes) but of course leaves its flavor behind).

What the real world calls “wonton dumplings” are typically found up and down the Sword Coast and all along the Great Sea coasts, and are filled with fried and sauce-seasoned diced shrimp, prawns, scallops, and clams. Note: real world “heavy-salt” sauces like soy, and fermented hot sauces like Thai fish sauces, aren’t popular in the Realms and are found only rarely (as this or that cook experiments). The Realms alternative is to fry fillings with various spices and pork belly.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 15:18:21
On an alliance between Eilistraee and Vhaeraun posing a threat for Lolth

Ninjanurse29 — 03/01/2024 1:11 AM

@Ed Greenwood In current DR would an alliance between Eilistraee and Vhaeraun pose a legitimate threat for Lolth?

Ed Greenwood — 03/01/2024 1:24 AM

So it's another "it depends" answer from me. For drow on the surface, very much yes. For drow of the Upperdark who trade with the surface regularly, yes. For some Lolth-venerating drow cities, isolated from drow who openly worship anyone other than the Queen of Spiders, not at all. And so on. But if you're really asking if such an alliance affects Lolth's personal power and reach worldwide, yes. Lolth, like Shar, has had great luck in her divine career despite loss and setback after loss and setback, but she's made many divine and mortal foes and nigh no friends, so she's outnumbered and overextended (ripe for an overreach fall).
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 15:15:47
On Azoun IV's adventuring party The King's Men

Joe Chang — 02/28/2024 3:02 PM

Another video suggestion: how about Azoun IV's adventuring party The King's Men? I mean, their story must have been EPIC for Azoun to have leveled to 20 as a fighter.

Ed Greenwood — 02/29/2024 1:35 AM

I have to dance around some NDAs, but that's already on the list.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 15:12:54
On Ed's favorite drow

Ninjanurse29 — 02/28/2024 11:51 PM

@Ed Greenwood who is your favorite drow character you created and why?

Ed Greenwood — 02/29/2024 1:34 AM

Eilistraee, because I got to step aside from Lolth's attitudes.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 10:13:47
On Szithlin

Melody — 02/23/2024 7:47 AM

@Ed Greenwood Is there anything you could tell us about the drow city of Szithlin? It's one in a list of drow cities mentioned in the 2E book Drow of the Underdark but I haven't been able to find anything else about it!

Ed Greenwood — 02/25/2024 1:44 PM

Sure.

Szithlin was a drow city ruled by rival noble houses who were a lot friendlier to each other than the vicious infighting we see in, say, Menzoberranzan. They worshipped ancestors (the individuals who’d led them in their earliest days in the Underdark), not Lolth, and Vhaeraun and Eilistraee, granted their clerics spells in the names of the Venerated, but the worship remained ancestor cults and not “revering Vhaeraun and/or Eilistraee.”

Szithlin was dedicated to progress in drow living standards by increasing mastery of alchemy, magic, farming of Underdark fungi for food and medicine, and hunting and capturing Underdark “monsters” for study and exploitation (both using body parts in alchemy and medicine, and as food).

It was this last field of endeavour that eventually led to Szithlin’s doom, and made it the abandoned city/many-monsters lair it is today: monsters they captured that were “lures” sent to them by aboleths erupted and overwhelmed the folk of Szithlin, who frantically fled (literally dropping everything and running, with no time for fighting or salvage) or perished. This befell in 1385 DR (yes, the same time as the Spellplague).

The aboleths were annoyed by the presence and increasingly wide-ranging explorative forays of Szithlar drow seeking Underdark flora and fauna—and occasionally harvesting or blundering into flora and fauna that were aboleth experiments, and wanted Szithlin eradicated. They succeeded.

What’s left of Szithlin may be found by going deep, below even ...the Lowerdark city colloquially known as Earth’s End. Locate Earth’s End on this map: https://www.realmshelps.net/faerun/underdark/geography.shtml …and imagine it as the center of a clock dial. Head away from Earth’s End along the 8 o’clock line.

Find the tag (label of written words) that reads “The Darkgulf” on the same map, not far away from Earth’s End, and draw a horizontal, east-west (3 o’clock to 9 o’clock) line from the “T” of “The” due west until it intersects the diagonal line from Earth’s End. Where they meet is where abandoned Szithlin lies, now a labyrinth of chambers and passages inhabited by all manner of Underdark monsters, but dominated by fungi colonies that daze, feed on, paralyze, or otherwise entrap those creatures.

The descendants of the few Szithlin survivors mostly made their ways to the surface, and dwelt in the most mountainous areas of the Tashtan Coast, SW of Procalith, and in the Wyvernwatch Mountains west of the Forest of Amtar (and east of the Bandit Wastes).
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 07:39:22
On taste of drow breastmilk

Goose Bolton — 02/24/2024 9:39 AM

Hello @Ed Greenwood big fan! I have specific lore I seek to ask you. It's very important to me on a personal level that this is answered for me: Since elven breastmilk tastes minty, does drow breastmilk also taste minty? If not, what would it taste like? Thank you for your consideration on my lore questions

Ed Greenwood — 02/24/2024 2:05 PM

Drow breastmilk, thanks to those who produce it having centuries of exposure to cave fungi and molds and the faezress, tastes a little more mushroomy than minty elven breastmilk. To any humans who sample it, the result is a little more chalky, and ever so slightly tart/hot (the same way those tiny cinammon heart Valentine's Day hard candies have heat), but to elves who sample drow breast milk, it tastes sweeter than it seems to humans (and far less minty than their own breast milk). Interestingly, to dwarves, both elven and drow breast milk taste a lot like (original, unsweetened) licorice.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 07:36:11
On title shift of Open Lord of Waterdeep according to holder's gender

Kannonball — 02/20/2024 10:28 AM

@Ed Greenwood a quick question

When giving formal address the Open Lord of Waterdeep, does the title shift according to holder's gender (i.e. would Laeral be addessed "Lord Silverhand" or "Lady Silverhand")?

Ed Greenwood — 02/20/2024 10:42 AM

She is "Lady Lord of Waterdeep" in verbal address. Formally, written, it would be:

To Laeral Silverhand, Open Lord of Waterdeep, these: ...and then separated below,: From XXXX YYYY, title if any...[and then the text of the letter, ending with something like "May all the gods smile upon thee, yours under their watchful eyes" followed by [[monogram, signature, or sigil]] and then the name of the sender.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 07:31:32
On singularly unique instruments that were never reproduced

Melody — 02/20/2024 5:49 AM

@Ed Greenwood Ed! I'd love to know more about some of the instruments of the Realms. Have there ever been any singularly unique instruments that were never reproduced? Any particularly intriguing ones not yet covered in lore?

Eric L. Boyd — 02/20/2024 5:54 AM

Not Ed, but I assume you mean in addition to the article in Dragon #123?

Melody — 02/20/2024 5:55 AM

Yes! Anything new beyond that. I'm always intrigued by new possibilities for instruments, the stories behind them, the plot hooks, etc! I use them in my campaigns and love knowing more.

Ed Greenwood — 02/20/2024 7:17 AM

Well, there is the roster (a sidebar) in the 2e Realms boxed set, and I've scattered some lore over the years at Candlekeep. And then there are the more mundane everyday ones, like the "janglepoles" used in many villages (festivals) and by clergy: wooden staff to which are affixed, via cords, old scraps of (usually rusty and bent) metal, so that when the staff is thumped on the ground (keeping a beat in music), all of these metal pieces clash and make a jangling sound, as if windchimes were acting as percussion in instrumental music. And there are also (everyday mundane) various curved animal horns that get their points cut off and sung through (humming but keeping tunes), and tend to get called "garands." As for unique instruments, there are enchanted handchimes that do things (akin to a Chime of Opening) but my notes for those are out in a container in the snowy forest right now.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 05:54:49
On proper term of venery for beholders

Eric L. Boyd — 02/20/2024 12:31 AM

Hi @Ed Greenwood. Critical question here, as I can't seem to find it in any of the sources I scoured (including the unpublished ones): What is the proper term of venery for beholders?

Ed Greenwood — 02/20/2024 4:28 AM

It's "a gaze of beholders," and 'always has been,' as in: lore from one of my 1986 Realms turnovers. But I LIKE "glare of."
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 05:51:24
On current gods of the Realms that were once player characters in D&D games

DMHWolf — 02/19/2024 1:26 PM

Hola @Ed Greenwood . Hope all's well. Quick question: how many of the current gods of the realms were once player characters in D&D games? If any, are you able to say which ones and who played them? I'm raising a tankard to your health while I ponder the faerunian gods... #128578;

Ed Greenwood — 02/20/2024 4:23 AM

Zero. No player characters have ascended.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 03:53:53
On marking the start of season in the Dales/Cormyr

rweston_DnD — 02/19/2024 3:49 AM

Hi Ed, hope you are doing well! #128578;

I was wondering when folks in the reals mark the start of season in the Dales/Cormyr. The Greengrass festival has been noted as the start of Spring, with Midsummer 3 month later... are Spring/fall short seasons, or is "Midsummer" the first day of summer, or are the festivals disconnected from the seasons?

Thanks!

Ed Greenwood — 02/19/2024 6:18 AM

Spring and fall are indeed short seasons in most of Faerûn. In the Dales, Flamerule and Elesias are the hot heart of summer.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 03:47:55
On Realms terms for “snacks and appetizers” and for “desserts”

Juniper Churlgo — 02/19/2024 3:27 AM

I think I’ll need to add categories to my recipes. Ed, what are realms terms for “snacks and appetizers” and for “desserts?”

Ed Greenwood — 02/19/2024 3:33 AM

There are several, but "smallbites" is a widespread one for appetitzers, and "last kiss" is the haughty-menu term for desserts.
questing gm Posted - 20 May 2024 : 03:37:02
On variety of small settlements, buildings and villages that are connected economically to the City of Splendors

Reedhalloran Duskfellow — 02/17/2024 5:07 AM

@Ed Greenwood as I understand it there's a variety of small settlements, buildings and villages that surround the area of Waterdeep that are connected economically to the City of Splendors. Would you happen to have any info on these various hamlets and their inhabitants? Or if nothing specific just generally how should we think about these areas?

Ed Greenwood — 02/17/2024 8:36 AM

See my "Environs of Waterdeep" DRAGON article and the later Eric Boyd-penned "Environs of Waterdeep" web enhancement (that went with the 3e City of Splendors sourcebook). The latter is easily found online, the former with a few steps of digging.

Reedhalloran Duskfellow — 02/20/2024 4:03 AM

Thank you Ed! These are very helpful resources that flesh out a lot of what I'm looking for. It is quite helpful to think about the Dessarin Valley as connected to Waterdeep agriculturally/economically. If I was a citizen of the valley but not living in Waterdeep proper and were traveling to say Baldur's Gate...how far north could I get away with saying I'm "from Waterdeep" before Waterdhavians would take issue? Akin to the I'm "from SF Bay" when really I'm from Modesto as opposed to Fremont (yeah still technically SF bay but not what people generally think of SF Bay when you SF). Rassalanter, Amphail, Red Larch?

Ed Greenwood — 02/20/2024 4:25 AM

The answer to that is: it depends. On the Waterdhavian, in this case. Some don't even consider Field Ward to be "Waterdeep proper," and many distinguish between living within the walls and living in the environs. Most folk of Red Larch would answer, "I'm from Red Larch. Within sight of the walls of Waterdeep" (despite that NOT being literally true).
questing gm Posted - 19 May 2024 : 05:04:34
On psychedelics in the Realms

Reedhalloran Duskfellow — 02/09/2024 1:03 AM

@Ed Greenwood could you share any information about mind altering substances in the vein of psychedelics in the realms? Particularly plant medicines that might be available in Waterdeep (illicit or otherwise).

Ed Greenwood — 02/09/2024 3:39 AM

This may take a while, as there are NDAs (yes, this was a TSR-suppressed topic).
questing gm Posted - 19 May 2024 : 04:59:28
On appropriate terms of venery for silver dragons and bronze dragons

Eric L. Boyd — 02/06/2024 1:51 AM

@Ed Greenwood Hi Ed! In some long-buried lore, you worked out terms of venery for 8 of the 10 common species of dragons. What are the appropriate terms of venery for silver dragons and bronze dragons? Any other terms of venery you care to share for other species of dragons (brown? deep? fang? song? steel? rattelyr?)

Ed Greenwood — 02/06/2024 9:05 AM

A shield of silver dragons
A curiosity of bronze dragons
A sandburst of brown dragons
A lurk of deep dragons
A fury of fang dragons
A harmony of song dragons
A spark of steel dragons
A liveliness of rattelyr dragons
questing gm Posted - 19 May 2024 : 04:34:09
On three questions about bombards

Sundered_Ant — 02/04/2024 12:20 AM

Hey there Ed, long time editor on the Forgotten Realms Wiki here. During the last two to three years I wrote the wiki's articles on the Church of Gond, gunpowder, firearms, including individual articles for all of the firearms presented in 2nd edition's Forgotten Realms Adventures, and the "gunpowder wand" that was only mentioned in Volo's Guide to Cormyr (to which I once asked you about on Twitter).

As we speak, I am in the process of writing a much needed article on "bombards" and have three questions regarding them. Technically I could ask more, but these seem the most pressing.

#1. The book The Code of the Harpers states that light bombards are also known as "firesticks", so what is the Realmsian term for heavy bombards?

#2. We know the exact (recorded) year that the Lantanna first used bombards, 1246 DR, but what year did the Red Wizards develop their Thayan/Thayvian Bombard? The accompanying prose in Grand History of the Realms has Elminster and Storm Silverhand both concerned by their development, which leads me to believe the Red Wizards developed theirs later.

#3. If they in fact were developed later, were the Thayan bombards inspired by the Lantanna developments or were their inspirations more from the stars above (spelljammers).

Oh and I guess a 4th question, if you choose not to answer the 3rd one, as it really is the least important of the three -

When did the Thayans move on from their simple "huge hollow stone balls filled with [fire]-fluid", as described in the first Campaign Setting box-set and later almost verbatim in Pirates of the Fallen Stars, and onto the wide variety of glass bombs described in Unapproachable East that mimic various spell effects? That's a period of 1359 DR and 1372 DR between the two books.

Ed Greenwood — 02/06/2024 8:57 AM

1. Heavy bombards are colloquially “hurlpits,” because they hurl things (often rounded stones) that create pits when they (crushingly) land. A little more formally, they are “farhurlers.”

2. First experiments were in 1312 DR and were disastrous (explosions that made shredded bits of Red Wizards fly far), and first successful ones were in 1314 DR. First “in anger” uses were in 1316 DR, against targets that the Red Wizards had surrounded and were confident they could exterminate so no word could get out of their “new secret.” The same “there must be NO survivors of any deployment” thinking kept their battlefield uses sparse until the 1360s DR.

3. Thayan bombards were inspired by Thayan spies seeing bombards of Lantan in action (far from Thay), and reporting back what they did to Red Wizards who determined that Thay must command such armaments.

4. That would be two decades of experiments (on inanimate internal Thayan targets and later on targets, such as brigands, along Thay’s border with Mulhorand) beginning in 1349 DR that culminated in the closest thing to assembly-line manufacture that Thay could manage (on the plateau of Thaymount, where outlanders could not reach) of the wide variety of enchanted-effects glass projectiles.
questing gm Posted - 19 May 2024 : 03:33:46
On lore about these three individuals

Juniper Churlgo — 02/02/2024 9:32 PM

Hi Ed. I have some old lore-less cards from Spellfire. Do you have some lore about these three handsome named individuals?

Arden Glimrock
Malleyahl
Borin Moradinson

Ed Greenwood — 02/03/2024 9:07 AM

Arden Glimrock: This was the “professional name” (pseudonym, as a mercenary for hire) for a berserker war-leader dwarf by the name of Thult Oldstone, who flourished in the 1200s and 1300s DR in the Underdark beneath Sembia, the Dragonreach, and the Vast. The “Oldstones” were a traveling band of outcast dwarves from many clans who won acceptance by other dwarves by showing up when dwarves were beset by drow attacks, and attacking the drow savagely, striking tirelessly and using explosives of their own making to collapse caverns atop any drow whose magic they couldn’t handle. Thult was their spearhead, the dwarf who led every charge, and his long career is a testament to his toughness, his swift healing, and his skill in battle. He defied the odds for two centuries, but then vanished in 1377 DR, fate unknown. The Oldstones dwindled, with battle-losses outstripping new outcasts joining them for the second half of the 1300s DR, and were heard of no more after 1420 DR.

Malleyahl: I have no lore on her (not my creation), so I’ll defer to Eric.

Ed Greenwood — 02/03/2024 9:07 AM

Borin Moradinson: Borin is not a son (or any sort of direct descendant) of Moradin, but believes he is, because of what he misunderstood of what a Hammer of Moradin (a fighting cleric of that elite order) told him. However, he’s one of seven dwarves (widely scattered, and not knowing their own status or the status of any of their fellows) whom Moradin favors, and works through (by subtly feeding them power) when the Soul Forger thinks neither a manifestation nor a personal avatar are “right” for a particular situation. As one of these seven champions (or “pets,” as the deity Gruumsh once sneeringly called them), Borin is watched over by Moradin, who will rescue him from death but not defeat (which is why he seems to live on through lost battles where all other dwarves fall, or return from certain death. Borin is a loner, is shy around she-dwarves, and considers himself unworthy of family life or fatherhood, as he “belongs to Moradin” and must, he believes, inevitably sadden any mate he takes by his own death—so he seeks no mate.
questing gm Posted - 13 May 2024 : 14:37:17
On current attitude of the svirfneblin of Blingdenstone toward drow in general

Dudeling — 01/31/2024 9:49 AM

@Ed Greenwood I'm very interested to better understand the current attitude of the svirfneblin of Blingdenstone toward drow in general. Given the current trending towards there not being any "any completely evil races", I would personally see the deep gnomes of Blingdenstone, not having really had any experience with any drow other than those of Menzoberranzan, and the horrors the drow of that city have enacted upon them, would very possibly have a borderline racist attitude towards drow from anywhere, excepting, possible, one singular drow, that the currently-living gnomes of Blingdenstone would only have potentially legends about.

Ed Greenwood — 02/02/2024 2:11 AM

Pretty much "yes." To Blingdenstone, drow are THE enemy (aside from illithids who have locally in the Underdark far more been lurking in the background/attention elsewhere, as opposed to the expansionist, far-patrolling drow). The sight of a drow means "war" to most of those deep gnomes, the exceptions being the trade envoys who travel far and see much.

Dudeling — 02/02/2024 3:02 AM

And I take it they would likely not even get into the possibilty that "this drow might be from Callidae" or anything. Stab first, ask questions later?

Ed Greenwood — 02/02/2024 3:02 AM

War footing first; they'll be READY to stab, but wary of provoking a trap (drow magic).
questing gm Posted - 13 May 2024 : 14:30:26
On Cyric's first course of action if madness left him

Ninjanurse29 — 01/29/2024 1:15 AM

@Ed Greenwood If Cyric's madness left him and he was freed, what would his first corse of action be?

Ed Greenwood — 01/29/2024 6:19 AM

To run (through the planes, to some "relatively safe" place with conditions that would hamper anyone seeking to trace him, even if the seeker is a deity) and hide (in an assumed form), to buy himself time to think. He would be assessing whatever he could recall of his own actions, and interactions with other deities and their senior servitors, to consider what their views on him would be. He doesn't want to be seen as an out-and-out villain, mistrusted/hated/feared, as it would hamper all of his future activities, so he'd be thinking of diplomatic strategies to salvage his reputation/give himself a new one.

Cdawg — 01/29/2024 7:45 AM

I see him as too malignant a narcissist to take such reasonable measures.

Ed Greenwood — 01/30/2024 2:34 AM

Yes, but how much of that is his "madness"?

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