Dragons of Faith

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Dragons of Faith
DL10 DL12 DL13 DL14

Dragons of Faith is the second of four parts in the third major story arc of the

14 Dragonlance adventures published by TSR between 1984 and 1986. Its cover features a painting by Jeff Easley
.

Plot synopsis

Dragons of Faith is a continuation of the story of

Krynn equivalent of the tarot), to determine specific events which occur during the adventure.[2]

After this battle, the player characters must sail across the

Blood Sea of Istar
into enemy territory, evade the forces of the Dragon Highlords and according to the module's teaser, "capture the crucial pawn before darkness snatches it away!"

This module can be played as a stand-alone adventure or used as part of the larger sequence of Dragonlance adventures.

Contents

The module comes with a sheet of cut-apart Talis cards, as well as game statistics and counters to be utilized with an underwater battle using the Battlesystem rules.

kender).[1] The cover also includes a chart of combined monster statistics and a set of maps indicating where the events of the adventure take place.[1] This set of maps is a double-sided large sheet depicting smaller locations in the adventure on one side, while the other side has a larger map showing the main battle area and intended to be used for the Battlesystem rules.[1] The text explains how to use the Talis cards to predict events before they occur in the adventure, as well as how to use them in games of chance.[1] The module has sixty-four pages, sixteen of which are pull-outs such as 20 non-player character character cards.[1]

Publication history

DL12 Dragons of Faith was written by Harold Johnson and Bruce Heard, with a cover by Jeff Easley and interior illustrations by Diana Magnuson, and was published by TSR in 1986 as a 64-page booklet with a large map, cardstock sheet, cardstock counter sheet, and an outer folder.[2]

A pack of Talis cards, a fictional

Krynnian card game, was included, along with rules for various games that could be played with them. Also included were Battlesystem
miniatures rules.

Dragons of Faith was later updated for AD&D 2nd edition rules and included in "Dragonlance Classics III", which condensed the last four Dragonlance modules into one book.

Reception

John S. Davies reviewed Dragons of Faith for the British magazine Adventurer #3 (August/September 1986).

DL10, though the DM still has a lot to keep track of."[1] However, he adds that "Although there is a lot of freedom for the characters, they are still given plenty of guidance to get them back on the main plot, should they stray too far. There is also enough given for the DM to run a whole series of mini-adventures around the main plot."[1] Davies concluded the review by saying the adventure was worthwhile and that the adventure "although expensive, is a pleasing continuation of the Dragonlance saga, though it does not work as a stand alone module".[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Davies, John S. (August–September 1986). "Shop Window". Adventurer (3). Mersey Leisure Publishing: 13.
  2. ^ .

External links