| Post/Author/DateTime | Post |
|---|---|
| #1adambomb76Mar 13, 2015 12:04:59 | For the life of me I cannot understand why the product descriptions for the published Adventures a la http://dnd.wizards.com/products/tabletop-games/rpg-products/princes-apocalypse don't list the level range of the adventure - anyone know why they don't include this info? This omission really bugs me, especially as the level ranges aren't printed on the front cover.
Seems like it wouldn't be much more effort to add one sentence like, "A Dungeons & Dragons adventure for characters of levels 1 - 7".
It really annoys me they don't do this, and yet it's such a simple thing to fix.
Come on WotC marketing - I know you can do it! |
| #2jcherazMar 13, 2015 12:48:04 | I have found that odd, too. Even if they mean them to be a good fit for a wider range, having something like "A Low-Level Adventure" would at least give us an idea that it would be better suited for early-life gaming and might be too easy for mid- to high-life gaming. |
| #3pukunuiMar 13, 2015 12:56:17 | I believe I've seen somewhere that Princes of the Apocalypse is for levels 1-15. Not sure where I saw that, though. |
| #4Farmer42Mar 13, 2015 13:00:44 | Yeah, IIRC the adventure paths are all designed around 1-15, be it in two books or one book. |
| #5DaveDashMar 14, 2015 1:01:25 | They want you to buy it, even if you don't think you need it. |
| #6Ath-kethinMar 14, 2015 15:59:46 | It isn't an adventure. They aren't publishing adventures. They are publishing campaigns, more or less compete. They will all be "1st level to high level" in scope. |
| #7pukunuiMar 14, 2015 16:07:16 |
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