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Forgotten Realms является сеттинг для Dungeons & Dragons ( D & D ) фантазии ролевой игры . Игроки и геймдизайнеры часто называют его «Царства». Он был создан игровым дизайнером Эдом Гринвудом примерно в 1967 году как место действия его детских историй. [1] Несколько лет спустя Гринвуд опубликовал сеттинг для игры D&D в виде серии журнальных статей, и первые игровые продукты Realms были выпущены в 1987 году. С тех пор продукты для ролевых игр производятся для этого сеттинга. иметь различные лицензионные продукты, включая романы , ролевые видеоигрыадаптации (включая первую многопользовательскую ролевую онлайн-игру с использованием графики) и комиксы.

Forgotten Realms - это сеттинг фэнтезийного мира , описанный как мир странных земель, опасных существ и могучих божеств, где магия и сверхъестественные явления вполне реальны. Предпосылка состоит в том, что давным-давно планета Земля и мир Забытых Царств были более тесно связаны. Со временем жители Земли по большей части забыли о существовании этого другого мира - отсюда и название «Забытые царства». Оригинальный логотип Forgotten Realms, который использовался до 2000 года, имел маленькие рунические буквы, которые гласили: «Здесь лежат потерянные земли» как намек на связь между двумя мирами.

Forgotten Realms является одним из самых популярных D & D настройки , [2] [3] в значительной степени из - за успеха романов таких авторов, как Р. Сальваторе и многочисленных ролевых видеоигр, в том числе : Бассейн Сияния (1988), Глаз смотрящего (1991), Icewind Dale (2000) и сериалы Neverwinter Nights и Baldur's Gate .

Творческое происхождение [ править ]

Эд Гринвуд в 2008 году

Ed Greenwood began writing stories about the Forgotten Realms as a child, starting at the age of 8.[4]:72 He came up with the name from the notion of a multiverse of parallel worlds; Earth is one such world, and the Realms another. In Greenwood's original conception, the fantastic legends of Earth derive from a fantasy world that can no longer be accessed.[5] Greenwood discovered the Dungeons & Dragons game in 1975, and became a serious role-playing enthusiast with the first Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (AD&D) game releases in 1978.[5]Гринвуд перенес свой мир фантазий в новую среду ролевых игр, когда студент университета по имени Сентябрь познакомил его с AD&D . [4] : 72 Обстановка стала домом для личной кампании Гринвуда . [6] Гринвуд начал кампанию Королевств в городе Уотердип, прежде чем создать группу, известную как Рыцари Миф Драннора в регионе Шэдоудейл. Гринвуд чувствовал, что жажда его игроков к деталям сделала Realms тем, чем они являются: «Они хотят, чтобы это выглядело реальным, и работают над« честной работой »и личными делами, пока все это не превратится в нечто большее, чем обычная кампания. Ролевая игра всегда управляет правилами, и кажется, что приключения развиваются сами по себе ".[5]Гринвуд заявил, что его собственная версия Забытых Королевств, запущенная в его личной кампании, намного мрачнее опубликованных версий. [7]

Начиная с 1979 года Гринвуд опубликовал серию статей, подробно описывающих сеттинг, в журнале «Дракон» (ныне « Дракон» ), первая из которых была о монстре, известном как проклятый . [4] : 72 Гринвуд написал для Дракона обширные записи и использовал Царства как сеттинг для своих описаний магических предметов , монстров и заклинаний . [6] Когда Гэри Гайгакс «потерял контроль над TSR в 1985 году, компания увидела возможность выйти за рамки Greyhawk и ввести новую настройку по умолчанию». [8] : 87В 1986 году TSR начал поиск нового сеттинга кампании для AD&D , [4] : 72 и поручил Джеффу Граббу узнать больше о сеттинге, используемом Гринвудом в его статьях в Dragon . [8]

По словам Гринвуда, Грабб спросил его: «Вы просто придумываете все это на ходу, или у вас действительно огромный мир кампании?»; Гринвуд ответил утвердительно на оба вопроса. [5] TSR чувствовал, что Забытые Царства будут более открытым сеттингом, чем его эпический фэнтезийный аналог Dragonlance , и выбрал Царства в качестве готового сеттинга кампании после решения опубликовать второе издание AD&D . [5] Гринвуд согласился работать над проектом и начал работу над официальной публикацией Forgotten Realms. [9] Он отправил TSR несколько десятков картонных коробок, набитых карандашными пометками и картами, и продал все права на сеттинг за символическую плату. [5]Он отметил, что TSR изменил его первоначальную концепцию Царств как места, к которому можно было получить доступ с Земли, поскольку "[c] озабоченность по поводу возможных судебных исков (дети получают травмы, пытаясь" найти ворота ") заставили TSR переоценить это имея в виду." [5]

Джон Петерсон, автор Dungeons and Dragons Art и Arcana: A Visual History , сказал, что Гринвуд «был тем редким одержимым DM, который, казалось, имел больше идей и энергии, чтобы вложить в его мир, чем даже люди из TSR. Естественно, когда TSR покупал новые миры кампании в рамках своей кросс-медиа-стратегии, они должны были получить Забытые царства. Р.А. Сальваторе взял мир Гринвуда и создал для него персонажей и истории, которые сделали его автором бестселлеров и поддержали TSR как крупного издателя фэнтезийных книг. . " [10]

История публикаций [ править ]

1985–1990 [ править ]

In 1985, the AD&D module Bloodstone Pass was released by TSR and is retroactively considered to be a part of the Forgotten Realms,[11] although it was not until the module The Bloodstone Wars was released that it became the official setting for the module series.[12] Douglas Niles had worked on a trilogy of Celtic-themed novels, which were modified to become the first Forgotten Realms books, beginning with Darkwalker on Moonshae (1987).[4]:73 It is the first book in The Moonshae Trilogy, which predates the Forgotten Realms Campaign Set by one month.[13]

Forgotten Realms Campaign Set позже был выпущен в 1987 году [8] в качестве коробочного набора из двух исходных книг ( Cyclopedia Королевств и из первоисточников для DM Королевств ) и четыре больших цветных карт, разработанных Greenwood в сотрудничестве с Граббом. [14] : 99 Набор представил сеттинг кампании и объяснил, как его использовать, [14] : 99 и зарезервировал место на карте для компьютерных ролевых игр SSI 's Gold Box, действие которых происходит в Забытых Королевствах. [15]

TSR начал включать элементы от других дизайнеров в Forgotten Realms, в том числе Moonshae острова по Дуглас Niles , в «пустыне запустения» по Хикмны и Лаура Хикман и Кара-Tur по Зебу Кук . [4] : 73 Сеттинг также дал TSR новый способ продавать свои правила Battlesystem , которые он поддержал в приключенческой последовательности Bloodstone, которая началась с Bloodstone Pass . Последние две книги этой серии, Войны Кровавого Камня (1987) и Трон Кровавого Камня (1988), были явно помещены в Забытые Королевства. [4]: 74 Некоторые персонажи из « Яйца феникса» Фрэнка Ментцера (1987) были включены в «Дикие рубежи» (1988). [4] : 40

Модуль компиляции Desert of Desolation был переработан, чтобы вписаться в Forgotten Realms. [16] Модуль Under Illefarn, опубликованный в 1987 году, расположен в Forgotten Realms, [14] : 108, как и модуль, выпущенный в 1988 году, Swords of the Iron Legion . [14] : 103

R. A. Salvatore wrote his first Forgotten Realms novel in 1988, The Crystal Shard (1988), which was originally set in the Moonshae Islands before being moved to a new location and introduced the drow character Drizzt Do'Urden.[4]:73[17] Drizzt has since appeared in more than seventeen subsequent novels, many of which have appeared on the New York Times Best Seller list.[18] In 1988, the first in a line of Forgotten Realms role-playing video games, Pool of Radiance, was released by Strategic Simulations, Inc.[19] The game was popular and won the Origins Award for "Best Fantasy or Science Fiction Computer Game of 1988".[20]

Several supplements to the original boxed set were released under the first edition rules, beginning with Waterdeep and the North,[4]:73 which was followed by Moonshae in 1987, and Empires of the Sands, The Magister, The Savage Frontier, Dreams of the Red Wizards, and Lords of Darkness in 1988.[14]:96–97 The City System boxed set was released in 1988, and it contained several maps of the city of Waterdeep.[14]:89 Ruins of Adventure, a module based on the computer game Pool of Radiance, was also released in 1988.[14]:113

The boxed set Kara-Tur: The Eastern Realms was released in 1988. It gives details of the lands of Kara-Tur, and was designed to be used with the 1986 book Oriental Adventures, which officially placed the book in the Forgotten Realms world.[14]:103

In 1989, DC Comics began publishing a series of Forgotten Realms comics written by Grubb.[4]:75 Each issue contains twenty-six pages, illustrated primarily by Rags Morales and Dave Simons. Twenty-five issues were published in total, with the last being released in 1991. A fifty-six page annual Forgotten Realms Comic Annual #1: Waterdhavian Nights, illustrated by various artists, was released in 1990.

Curse of the Azure Bonds, a module based on the role-playing video game of the same name, was released in 1989.[14]:97

1990–2000[edit]

To transition the Forgotten Realms from first edition AD&D to the ruleset's second edition, a story of the gods being cast down was planned from the top-down by management and began in Hall of Heroes (1989) and spread into a three-adventure Avatar series (1989), a three-novel Avatar series (1989), and some stories in the comic book.[4]:84 TSR adjusted the timeline of the Forgotten Realms by advancing the calendar one year forward to 1358 DR, referring to the gap as the Time of Troubles.[8]

In early 1990, the hardcover Forgotten Realms Adventures by Grubb and Greenwood was released, which introduced the setting to AD&D 2nd edition;[14]:99–100 the book also detailed how the Time of Troubles had changed the setting.[21]:139 The Ruins of Undermountain (1991) was one of the first published mega-dungeons.[4]:93 The Al-Qadim setting by Jeff Grubb was released in 1992, and the setting was placed in the southern Forgotten Realms.[4]:95 The RPGA used the Forgotten Realms city of Ravens Bluff as the setting for their first living campaign.[4]:93 Official RPGA support for this product line included the Living City module series. A number of sub-settings of the Forgotten Realms were briefly supported in the early 1990s. Three more modules were produced for the Kara-Tur setting. The Horde boxed set, released in 1990, detailed the Hordelands, which featured a series of three modules. The Maztica Campaign Set, released in 1991, detailed the continent of Maztica.

The original gray boxed set was revised in 1993 to update it to AD&D 2nd edition, with the release of a new Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting boxed set containing three books (A Grand Tour of the Realms, Running the Realms, and Shadowdale) and various "monster supplements".[22] Additional material for the setting was released steadily throughout the 1990s. Forgotten Realms novels, such as the Legacy of the Drow series, the first three books of The Elminster Series, and numerous anthologies were also released throughout the 1990s, which led to the setting being hailed as one of the most successful shared fantasy universes of the 1990s.[23] By the first quarter of 1996, TSR had published sixty-four novels set in the Forgotten Realms out of the 242 novels set in AD&D worlds.[24]:20 These novels in turn sparked interest in role-playing by new gamers.[25]

Numerous Forgotten Realms video games were released between 1990 and 2000. The Eye of the Beholder PC game was released in 1990,[26] which was followed by two sequels: the first in 1991,[27] and the second in 1992.[28] All three games were re-released for DOS on a single disk in 1995.[29] Another 1991 release was Neverwinter Nights on America Online, the first graphical Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game (MMORPG).[30] In 1998, Baldur's Gate, the first in a line of popular role-playing video games[31] developed by BioWare and "considered by most pundits as the hands-down best PC roleplaying game ever", was released.[1] The game was followed by a sequel, Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn, in 2000 and Icewind Dale, a separate game that utilized the same game engine as Baldur's Gate. Pool of Radiance: Ruins of Myth Drannor was released in 2001. Several popular Forgotten Realms characters such as Drizzt Do'Urden and Elminster made minor appearances in these games.

2000–2008[edit]

When Wizards of the Coast took over publication of Dungeons & Dragons after purchasing TSR in 1997, they trimmed production down from six campaign settings to Forgotten Realms and Dragonlance, and completed AD&D 2nd edition production sometime between 1998 and 1999.[32]:146 They later hired Rob Heinsoo as a member of the D&D Worlds team to focus on Forgotten Realms in the third edition of Dungeons & Dragons.[32]:162 An official material update and a timeline advance were introduced to the Dungeons & Dragons 3rd edition in 2001 with the release of the hardcover book the Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting,[33] which won the Origins Award for Best Role-Playing Game Supplement of 2001 in 2002.[34] The timeline was officially advanced from 1358 DR to 1372 DR.[8] After the adventure City of the Spider Queen (2002) failed to meet its projected sales targets, Wizards of the Coast cut back on production of new adventures.[32]:165

In 2002, BioWare released Neverwinter Nights, set in the northern reaches of Faerûn and operating on the revised 3.0 rules for D&D. It was followed by two expansion packs: Shadows of Undrentide and Hordes of the Underdark. A sequel using version 3.5 of the rules was produced by Obsidian Entertainment in 2006, and was followed by the expansion sets Mask of the Betrayer and Storm of Zehir. The Forgotten Realms Deluxe Edition compilation was released in 2006, containing the Baldur's Gate series (excluding the Dark Alliance games), Icewind Dale series, and all Neverwinter Nights games before Neverwinter Nights 2.

2008–2014[edit]

With the release of Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition in 2008, Wizards opted for a publishing plan featuring a series of six books per year – three core rulebooks and three setting books – beginning with the Forgotten Realms. The company started the cycle with the Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide (2008), the Forgotten Realms Player's Guide (2008), and Scepter Tower of Spellgard.[32]:190 These books updated the Forgotten Realms to the newest rules system which altered the setting drastically to make it fit into the 4th edition's "Points of Light" concept.[32]:190

The main lore change centered around an event called the Spellplague in 1385 DR.[8] This cataclysm was unleashed when the goddess of magic Mystra was killed, "transforming whole nations and altering creatures. In addition, parts of Toril have fused with its long-lost twin world Abeir, whisking away some countries and adding new ones. The Underdark is more open to the surface. Thay has become a nightmare land of death and the Elves, sensing the newfound connection to the Feywild, have returned to Faerûn in force".[35] The event moved the fictional world's timeline 94 years into the future to 1479 DR.[8] The Spellplague acted as "a narrative justification for design changes."[8]:107

In 2008, the Forgotten Realms also became the setting for the RPGA's sole living campaign, Living Forgotten Realms, replacing Living Greyhawk.

In 2011, the Neverwinter Campaign Setting was released which launched the 4th edition's first major multimedia release. The Forgotten Realms city setting spawned four novels by R. A. Salvatore called the Neverwinter Saga, a comic book, and a board game called The Legend of Drizzt, as well as two video games – the Facebook game Heroes of Neverwinter (2011–2012) and a MMORPG called Neverwinter (2013).[36] Laura Tommervik, from the Wizards of the Coast marketing team, explained the approach: "We use Neverwinter as the connective tissue across multiple product categories. The transmedia campaign is an opportunity for fans to experience the brand however they choose to".[36]

In 2013, Wizards of the Coast announced a year-long event called the Sundering which acted as a multimedia project to transition the Forgotten Realms to the next edition of the game.[37][38] This release included a weekly D&D Encounters in-store play event, a free-to-play mobile game Arena of War (2013), and a collaborative novel series: The Companions (2013) by R. A. Salvatore, The Godborn (2013) by Paul S. Kemp, The Adversary (2013) by Erin Evans, The Reaver (2014) by Richard Lee Byers, The Sentinel (2014) by Troy Denning, and The Herald (2014) by Ed Greenwood.[37][39] Liz Schuh, Head of Publishing and Licensing for Dungeons & Dragons, said:[40]

The Sundering is the last of a series of ground-shaking events. It really affects the whole world of the Forgotten Realms in a major way. You may remember when the Spell Plagues began, the two worlds of the Forgotten Realms, Abeir and Toril, crashed together. That created both geographic changes (the map of the Forgotten Realms and Faerun actually changed due to that collision), and also changed the way magic works. It changed the pantheon of the gods. The Sundering is all about those two worlds separating—coming apart—and the process of that separation is really the story that we're telling over the next year. At the end of this story arc, Abeir and Toril will be separate again, and many of the things that happened when they crashed together will go back to the way they were before. So magic will be much like it was before the Spell Plague. Markings that marked spell-plagued people and animals will fade and go away. It's really about moving the Forgotten Realms forward, but also about bringing it around to the most beloved and most fondly remembered Forgotten Realms.

The result of The Second Sundering, in game terms, was the transition from 4th edition rules to 5th edition rules of Dungeons & Dragons, published in 2014.[8][41]

2014–2020[edit]

When D&D 5th edition was published in 2014, Wizards of the Coast announced that the Forgotten Realms would continue to serve as the official campaign setting for its upcoming published adventure materials.[42][43][44] The village of Phandalin in the Forgotten Realms acted as the primary setting for the new 5th edition Starter Set (2014) which was published before the release of three new core rulebooks.[45] Tyranny of Dragons was the first multimedia storyline for the new edition and included two adventure modules, Hoard of the Dragon Queen (2014) and The Rise of Tiamat (2014), and an update to the Neverwinter (2013) video game.[8][46][47] The next two storylines, Elemental Evil which included Princes of the Apocalypse (2015) and Rage of Demons which included Out of the Abyss (2015), were also set in the Forgotten Realms.[8][48][49]

The first campaign guide for the new edition, the Sword Coast Adventurer's Guide (2015), was released on November 3, 2015, and only covered a fraction of the Forgotten Realms.[50][8] It describes the 2013 Sundering event, referred to as the Second Sundering in the book, and its consequences in game terms and lore.[51] The video game Sword Coast Legends (2015) published by Digital Extremes was also released in the same month as the tabletop campaign guide.[50][52]

5th edition details on "the rest of Faerûn had been untouched until the Tomb of Annihilation (2017), an adventure that leaves the northern Savage Coast for the southern jungles of Chult".[8]:101

Fictional setting[edit]

The focus of the Forgotten Realms setting is the continent of Faerûn, the western part of a continent that was roughly modeled after the Eurasian continent on Earth.[24]:6 The lands of the Forgotten Realms are not all ruled by the human race, with populations of many humanoids races and creatures ubiquitous in fantasy fiction works such as dwarves, elves, goblins, orcs. Technologically, the world of the Forgotten Realms is not nearly as advanced as that of Earth; it resembles the pre-industrial Earth in the 13th or 14th century. However, the presence of magic provides an additional element of power to the societies. There are several nation states and many independent cities, with loose alliances being formed for defense or conquest. Trade is performed by ship or horse-drawn vehicle, and manufacturing is based upon cottage industry.

Geography[edit]

The Forgotten Realms is part of the fictional world of Abeir-Toril (usually just called Toril[21]:91), an Earth-like planet with many real-world influences and consists of several large continents.[53] It was first detailed in the original Forgotten Realms Campaign Set, published in 1987 by TSR.[54] The other continents of Toril include Kara-Tur, Zakhara, Maztica,[53] and other yet unspecified landmasses.[33] Kara-Tur, roughly corresponding to ancient East Asia, was later the focus of its own source book Kara-Tur: The Eastern Realms, published in 1988.[14]:103[55] There is also a vast subterranean world called the Underdark beneath the surface.[21]:98,138[49]

In early editions of the setting, The Realms shared a unified cosmology with various other campaign settings called the Great Wheel. In this way each of the Dungeons & Dragons campaign settings were linked together to form one interwoven world connected by various planes of existence. With the release of the 2001 Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting, the setting was given its own distinct and separate cosmological arrangement, with unique planes not explicitly connected to those of the other settings.[33][56]

Forgotten Realms partial map

Religion[edit]

Religion plays a large part in the Forgotten Realms, with deities and their followers being an integral part of the world. Deities interact directly in mortal affairs, answer prayers, and have their own personal agendas. All deities must have worshipers to survive, and all mortals must worship a patron deity to secure a good afterlife. A huge number of diverse deities exist within several polytheistic pantheons; a large number of supplements have documented many of them, some in more detail than others.[57][58] Greenwood created a pantheon of gods for his home Dungeons & Dragons game, in his Forgotten Realms world, which were introduced in his article "Down-to-earth divinity" from Dragon #54 (October 1981).[59]

When the Forgotten Realms was published as a setting in 1987, the pantheon added Waukeen, the goddess of trade, money, and wealth, who was created by one of Jeff Grubb's players, and added to the Forgotten Realms by Grubb. Tyche was replaced with Tymora, and the elemental lords from Melniboné were replaced by Akadi, Grumbar, Istishia, and Kossuth.[60]

Much of the history of the Forgotten Realms detailed in novels and source books concerns the actions of various deities and The Chosen (mortal representatives with a portion of their deities' power) such as Elminster, Fzoul Chembryl, Midnight (who later became the new embodiment of the goddess of magic, Mystra[21]:140), and the Seven Sisters. Above all other deities is Ao, the Overlord, who does not sanction worshipers and distances himself from mortals. He is single-handedly responsible for the Time of Troubles, or Godswar, as seen in The Avatar Trilogy.[61]

Characters[edit]

The setting is home to several noteworthy recurring characters that have gained wider reception, including:

  • The Companions of the Hall, a group of adventurers that were created by R. A. Salvatore[62][63] and introduced in The Crystal Shard (1988).[64][65][66] Each of these characters "fit into an RPG archetype".[67] They include:
    • Drizzt Do'Urden, a drow, or dark elf, ranger who is the main character of 34 novels.[64] Drizzt is noted for his commitment to friendship and peace, which is contrary to the stereotype of his people.[68] Drizzt as a character is often used to represent issues of racial prejudice, particularly in The Dark Elf Trilogy.[69][70] Drizzt is also troubled by the lifespan discrepancy between himself and his human romantic interest Catti-Brie.[71]
    • Wulfgar, a massive human barbarian;[72] in The Crystal Shard, Wulfgar's combat prowess is significant enough that along with Drizzt and his magic panther Guenhwyvar, they manage to "beat 25 giants by themselves".[64] As a character, Wulfgar exemplifies "the strong, honest, hot-headed young warrior hero type common to adventure stories and similar to Howard's creation Conan".[73]
    • Bruenor Battlehammer, a dwarven fighter who retakes Mithral Hall with the help of the other Companions.[64][67][74] He was one of the first friends Drizzt made upon leaving the Underdark and both Catti-Brie and Wulfgar are his adopted children.[75][67] Rob Bricken for io9 highlighted Bruenor as "a dwarf that hits pretty much every fantasy stereotype, including his desire to reclaim an ancestral home that his people were chased out of after they dug too far and awakened a monster".[64]
    • Catti-Brie, a human archer who would later develop abilities as a spellcaster;[64][67][76] in The Crystal Shard, Drizzt referred to her as his soulmate.[64] Catti-Brie is favored by Mielikki, a goddess associated with forests and nature spirits, and she bears the deity's mark. Bricken argued that her characterization in The Icewind Dale Trilogy is limited,[64] while Aidan-Paul Canavan maintained that she becomes a "hero" only in later novels.[77]
    • Regis, a halfling member of the Companions, who behaves in the stereotypical manner of J.R.R. Tolkien's hobbits. Bricken noted that Regis is a rogue who "set himself apart a bit by carrying a crystal pendant he can use to charm people", though he is sometimes forced into dangerous situations and "ends up saving the day, Bilbo-style", such as in the final battle of The Crystal Shard.[64]
  • Elminster, a wizard also known as the Sage of Shadowdale;[78] he is "a founding member of the Harpers and one of the oldest surviving and most powerful Chosen of Mystra".[79] The Harpers are a semi-secret organization; Jonathan Palmer, for Arcane magazine, commented that they are "fighters for freedom and justice. Laudable".[80] Bricken described Elminster as "the most powerful, important, and smartest wizard in the Forgotten Realms, and one of the setting's most important characters [...] more Merlin than Gandalf, which makes him less enigmatic and prone to tomfoolery than other major fantasy wizards, which I count as a good thing".[81]
  • Volothamp Geddarm, a human adventurer who is famed within the setting Faerûn for the number of guidebooks he writes about the various regions within the Realms. The character's name is often attributed in real-world D&D publications as the in-universe narrator of said works.[82] Paul Pettengale from Arcane described him as "one of those characters that everyone's heard about, and one that just about every Dungeon Master must have been tempted to introduce to their campaign at some point or another".[83]
  • Khelben "Blackstaff" Arunsun, developed by Greenwood and game designer Steven Schend, is a character noted for his appearances in several novels set in the Forgotten Realms,[21][84] as well as the 2004 video game Forgotten Realms: Demon Stone.[85] A powerful wizard renowned for his namesake staff, in earlier editions he is the Archmage of Waterdeep, leading member of the Harpers, and one of Mystra's Chosen.[21] Prior to his death, Khelben passes the Blackstaff to his apprentice Tsarra,[84] who takes up residence at Blackstaff Tower in Waterdeep and inherits his memories and legacy. Writer Aubrey Sherman said he is an example for the importance of a wand or staff behind the conception of a wizard archetype and listed the character among D&D's notable wizards.[86][84]
  • Jarlaxle, also a character by Salvatore, was introduced in the 1990 novel Exile. He also appears in Promise of the Witch King, Road of the Patriarch and The Pirate King, as well as The Sellswords and the Paths of Darkness trilogies. Described by Christian Hoffer from Comicbook.com as a popular and intriguing supporting character,[87] Jarlaxle is the charismatic and opportunistic drow leader of the mercenary band Bregan D'aerthe. Anglistics scholar Caroline de Launay characterized Jarlaxle as an independent character inclined to "subtle manoeuvres",[88] while Hoffer explained that he is an amoral villain who has "plenty of contingencies and secret plots".[87] When comparing the plot of The Dark Elf Trilogy to a game of chess, de Launay assigned Jarlaxle the role of the knight.[88] Theo Kogod, for CBR, wrote "in many ways, Jarlaxle is a dark reflection of the heroic and honorable Drizzt. He used lies, manipulation and cunning to rise as high as a male Drow could within his culture, but in the end, he also left his home behind. [...] In Waterdeep: Dragon Heist, Jarlaxle is trying to leverage himself to become accepted as a legitimate member of the Lords' Alliance. He is one of four possible main villains in the campaign".[89]
  • Artemis Entreri, a human assassin described by Bricken as "cold-blooded" and Drizzt's "equal in fighting and opposite in morality", a mirror image of how Drizzt would have ended up if he had remained part of the universally evil drow society instead of forsaking it."[90]
  • Gromph Baenre is Archmage of the city of Menzoberranzan, the City of Spiders. Gromph is a rival in power to the other archmages of the Forgotten Realms, such as Elminster and Khelben "Blackstaff" Arunsun. In a review of the 1995 novel Daughter of the Drow, Gideon Kibblewhite for Arcane, called Gromph the "only interesting character" in the book, describing him as "the bitter and twisted archmage", and lamented that "he rarely makes an appearance after the opening".[91]
  • Liriel Baenre is the daughter of Gromph Baenre; she originally belonged to House Vandree before her talent for arcane spellcasting was discovered by Gromph.[92] After being sent away to hone her magical talent rather than study as a priestess, Liriel uses a book given by her father to travel to the surface lands, where she encounters followers of the goddess Eilistraee, the Dark Maiden of benevolent drow, comes to possess the magical artifact known as the Windwalker, and eventually settle down on the surface world permanently. Liriel was created by Elaine Cunningham for Daughter of the Drow, and is described by Trenton Webb of Arcane as "the oddest Drow" due to her lack of traits deemed as stereotypical of her people.[93]
  • Erevis Cale, first introduced in the short story "Another Name For Dawn" published in issue 277 of Dragon magazine, is a pivotal character in novels by Paul S. Kemp, including The Halls of Stormweather, Shadows Witness, the Erevis Cale Trilogy, and The Twilight War trilogy. Originally a normal human, he accepts the gift of the Fane of Shadows in Twilight Falling and becomes a shade; being imbued with the essence of matter integral to the Plane of Shadow brings about drastic changes to his appearance and physiology. Don D'Ammassa described Erevis Cale as "a man tormented by questions of right and wrong".[94]

Reception[edit]

In his book The Fantasy Roleplaying Gamer's Bible, Sean Patrick Fannon describes the Forgotten Realms as being "the most ambitious fantasy game setting published since Tekumel",[1] and that it "may be the most widely played-in game setting in RPG history."[1] Similarly, in literature, the novels written in the Forgotten Realms setting have formed one of "the industry's leading fantasy series".[95] Over time these novels have gained "unprecedented popularity",[96] which led, as Marc Oxoby noted in his book, The 1990s, to the novels having an "extraordinary shelf life", remaining in print for many years.[96] This popular reception has also been reflected in public libraries; for example, Joyce Saricks states in The Readers' Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction that the novels have been among the most requested books by fans of the fantasy genre.[97]

Brian Silliman, for SYFY Wire, described the Forgotten Realms as "a classic fantasy backdrop" and highlighted that "at one time in our history, our world and this one were connected, but over time this magical realm was, well, forgotten. It is an ideal place for any D&D adventure, inspiring limitless possibilities for any smirking dungeon master".[98]

Philip J. Clements called the Forgotten Realms "highly popular", "an unusually well-developed D&D setting" and "more-or-less the flagship setting for D&D". He also noted that it has received the greatest number of supplements.[99]

The 4th edition update to the Forgotten Realms brought massive lore changes which were "tied to a number of other design philosophies" and the Forgotten Realms "simultaneously had become a grittier setting, on the edge of collapse, while also becoming a more fantastic one, full of wonder and mystery".[100] Jason Wilson, for VentureBeat, highlighted that unlike the Time of Troubles cataclysm, the 4th edition Spellplague cataclysm was "one players never embraced in the same manner as the earlier disaster".[101] Shannon Appelcline, author of Designers & Dragons, wrote:

[The 4th edition] Forgotten Realms Campaign Guide may be the most controversial D&D book ever produced by Wizards. That's entirely due to the large-scale destruction of the Realms. Similar updates have been tried by other companies — to reinvigorate settings, to make them more accessible to new players, or to make them more adventuresome. [...] It never seems to go well, because old fans feel left behind. With that said, some folks did love the changes, because the setting was now more playable, more accessible, more fantastic, and more PC centered. [...] Meanwhile, a series of adventures and novels called The Sundering (2013–2014) reversed many of the 4e changes to the Realms, but without rebooting the timeline. Instead, the Realms continues to evolve and advance, as it has since its earlier days.[100]

Salvatore was also publicly unhappy with the 4th edition changes to the Forgotten Realms. He said:[102]

[B]asically, we authors were handed a document and told how things were going to be. We were asked our opinions, but they mattered very little – the changes were being driven from a different direction. [...] To have characters that have built such a strong history, then have that upset on the orders of someone else was very disconcerting. I will admit that the abrupt changes forced me into an uncomfortable place, and from that place came some of the better things I've written, but I very much preferred the way it was done this time, with 5th Edition and the changes, where we, the authors, were told what was happening to the game and asked how we could make the world and the lore live and breathe it.

Aubrey Sitterson, for PC Magazine, included the Forgotten Realms in a 2015 roundup of the "11 Best Dungeons & Dragons Campaign Settings" and wrote "for most people, Forgotten Realms is synonymous with Dungeons & Dragons, and with good reason: it's the setting that played home to the massively popular Baldur's Gate video game, as well as R. A. Salvatore's Drizzt books. Currently, it's the only campaign setting actively supported by D&D makers Wizards of the Coast, which would be restrictive if Forgotten Realms wasn't such an incredibly diverse place, housing classic European middle ages tropes, as well as a heroic fantasy take on African, Middle Eastern, and other real-world cultures".[103]

Christian Hoffer, for ComicBook.com, reported that Wizards of the Coast's 5th edition publishing strategy, which focuses on the Forgotten Realms and newer intellectual property for campaign settings, has created a rift in the fan base where some "feel that this push for new players has come at the cost of keeping the game's current players sated" by not updating campaign settings that "predate the Forgotten Realms". Hoffer highlighted that Wizards of the Coast has a much slower publication schedule than with previous editions with a focus on quality and profit and "the D&D teams knows that they have plenty of great campaign settings in their back pocket and are either actively developing more settings or have ideas for them further down the line".[104]

See also[edit]

  • List of Forgotten Realms novels
  • List of Forgotten Realms modules and sourcebooks
  • List of Dungeons & Dragons video games

References[edit]

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External links[edit]

  • Official website
  • Forgotten Realms Wiki