Talislanta Sorcerer's Guide
Talislanta Sorcerer's Guide is a supplement published by Bard Games in 1988 for the fantasy role-playing game Talislanta.
Publication history
In 1982,
After publication of the game rules in The Talislantan Handbook in 1987, Sechi also published three supplements: A Naturalist's Guide to Talislanta, The Chronicles of Talislanta, and Talislanta Sorcerer's Guide.
Contents
Talislanta Sorcerer's Guide is a 104-page perfect-bound softcover book with illustrations by P.D. Breeding-Black and Patty Sechi. The book builds on the magic system outlined in The Talislantan Handbook, adding information about new spells, powerful magical tomes, magical and alchemical research, selected famous historical mages from Talislanta, new character classes involving magician by character race, the Lycean Arcanum college for teaching magic, the structure of the Omniverse that Talislanta is a part of, and a short fiction piece.[2]
Reception
In the July–August 1989 edition of
In the March 1989 edition of Dragon (Issue #143), Jim Bambra found the short piece of fiction quite good, saying, "The story moves along ay a good pace and makes good reading." Bambra wasn't sure if this book was a necessary purchase, commenting that "The Sorcerer’s Guide is a useful addition to the Talislanta series, but it is not essential as magic is adequately covered in The Talislantan Handbook." However, he concluded, "it is a valuable sourcebook to anyone interested in studying the magic of Talislanta and its associated planes of existence."[3]
Four issues later, in the July 1989 edition of Dragon (Issue 147), Ken Rolston was not as impressed; his first impression was of an "awkward and unsophisticated jumble of high-fantasy magic ideas." He found the contents badly organized, and the "undetailed floor and city maps with brief description keys were unimpressive, and the adventure and scenario ideas were brief, common, and unexciting." However, for a referee looking to transport ideas from the book into a different role-playing system, Rolston thought the book was "more effective as an open-ended menu of ideas for the GM to develop in his own campaign." He concluded, "The virtues of the Talislanta Sorcerer’s Guide are not as sophisticated and polished as [...] other products [...] but the quantity and quality of high fantasy ideas here are noteworthy. Though not a first-class model of FRPG presentation or campaign development, as a sourcebook of ideas for high- fantasy campaigns [...] this book may be quite satisfying."[4]
Reviews
- White Wolf #11 (1988)
References
- ISBN 978-1-907702- 58-7.
- ^ Space Gamer. 2 (1). World Wide Wargames: 34–35.
- TSR, Inc.: 74.
- TSR, Inc.: 69–70.