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Exile follows Drizzt Do'Urden to the wilds of the Underdark. For the ten years following his abandoning his house, he is left with no one but his faithful Guenhwyvar, a magical Panther he had acquired in Homeland. He is also met with great dangers that he meets with the business ends of his scimitars.
However, the story does have an "NPC glut" and "while the actual artwork in the book is quite good, a lot of it has been very, very poorly laid out". [3] In Kotaku's review, Cecilia D'Anastasio wrote that her group of players had initial enthusiasm when playing this story but that couldn't be sustained. She wrote that "soon, after six or so NPC ...
The Underdark is a fictional setting which has appeared in Dungeons & Dragons role-playing campaigns and Dungeons & Dragons-based fiction books, including the Legend of Drizzt series by R. A. Salvatore.
Plot summary [ edit ] Daughter of the Drow is a novel set in the Underdark featuring a drow princess who wants to escape from her life as a priestess of the evil spider-god, and encounters a berserker warrior and becomes involved in a quest involving a talisman of power and finds true love.
The book has Drizzt Do'Urden as its nominal guide. [12] The guide starts with an introduction that defines the physical boundaries of the Underdark, and also describes the intent and organization of the book and gives a brief list of D&D materials which have a strong connection to the Underdark. [ 12 ]
Expedition to Undermountain presents an adventure campaign designed to cover a number of levels of play.Undermountain, as it is presented here, is a huge adventuring area for any D&D campaign, containing nine main levels and more than twenty sublevels, connecting to more extensive dungeons and caverns, and ultimately to the Underdark.
This book was written by Bruce R. Cordell, Gwendolyn F.M. Kestrel, and Jeff Quick, and was released in October 2003 published by Wizards of the Coast. [2] Cover art was by Sam Wood, with interior art by Kalman Andrasofszky, Matt Cavotta, Mike Dubisch, Wayne England, Matt Faulkner, Vance Kovacs, Vince Locke, Raven Mimura, Jim Pavelec, Vinod Rams, Richard Sardinha, Stephen Tappin, and Joel Thomas.
Homeland received a positive review from critic Cindy Speer. She stated the novel was an impressive start to the characterization of Drizzt. [1]Pornokitsch, in their review of Homeland, wrote that "Mr. Salvatore displays tiny fragments of being able to write the drow as a compelling race, but abandons these efforts and indulges himself in making them as evil as possible instead.