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T O P I C    R E V I E W
Alaundo Posted - 26 Jan 2005 : 23:16:47
Well met

This being a collective scroll of any questions the Scribes and visitors of Candlekeep wish to put to a renowned game designer of the Realms, namely - Eric L Boyd. Eric has been a game designer for TSR\WotC for many years, with a vast array of products to his name, including Champions of Ruin, Champions of Valor, City of Splendors: Waterdeep, Faiths & Pantheons, Lost Empires of Faerűn, Serpent Kingdoms, Races of Faerűn and the upcoming Power of Faerűn, to name but a few.

Present your questions herein and check back to see what news may also come forth from the quill of this Realms master.
30   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Delnyn Posted - 19 Jul 2025 : 19:56:03
Correct Mr. Costa, druids had extended lifespans in 1e. Unearthed Arcana was the book. 3.x editions negated old age penalties for druids and monks but did not extend lifespan.
TomCosta Posted - 19 Jul 2025 : 18:57:47
Lore wise and mechanically, druids have a history of extended lifespans going back to the early editions of D&D (I think 1E, but at least 2E). This faded out by 5e mechanically. But, for example, in BG3, they reference the druid ritual that senior druids can participate in to extend their lives.
George Krashos Posted - 19 Jul 2025 : 08:45:08
While I hate bonding game mechanics with Realmslore, the general thrust is that Druids age slowly. I can think of some cool, lore explanations for that - like simply spending time in tree form for extended periods - but you can go with whatever works for you.

— George Krashos
Kelnaar Posted - 19 Jul 2025 : 01:17:49
quote:
Originally posted by George Krashos

quote:
Originally posted by Kelnaar

Eric,
Greetings and hope all is well. I have another question for you when you have a moment. Some where on these forums it was mentioned that you and George had fleshed out the rulers of Uthtower/Yarlith and the members of the family through their demise after Uthtower fell (iirc). Is that something you could provide?



UTHTOWER
Myrmoran Dynasty

Uth I (b.110; d.168; reigned 146/168 - Founder of Uthtower; exiled noble of Tavaray; slain by old raiders)
Ornoth (b.141; d.191; r.168/191 - Son and sole heir of Uth I; dies of heart stop)
Uth II (b.179; d.272; r.191/272 - 1st son (twin) of Ornoth; dies of old age)
Uth III (b.236; d.309; r.272/309 - Grandson of Uth II; dies of winterchill fever)
Uth IV (b.268; d.349; r.309/349 - Son and sole heir of Uth III; dies of old age)
Uth V "the Slumbering King" (b.314; d.543; r.349/543 - 1st son of Uth IV; extends his life through longevity magic; dies of old age)
Uth VI (b.517; d.589; r.543/589 - Great-great grandson of Uth V; dies of heartstop)
Uth VII (b.551; d.615; r.589/615 - Son and sole heir of Uth VI; slain in the inundation of Iniarv)

YARLITH
Yarlith Dynasty

Yarlith (b.179; d.272; r.191/272 - 2nd son (twin) of King Ornoth of Uthtower; dies of old age)
Ornoth II (b.206; d.287; r.272/287 - 1st son of Yarlith; dies of old age)
Tarnoth "the Troubled" (b.239; d.292; r.287/292 - 1st son of Ornoth II; dies of a fit)
Belorth (b.264; d.306; r.292/306 - Sole son of Tarnoth; dies in battle against the Thousand Fangs orc horde)
Imrith I "the Leaf King" (b.288; d.392; r.306/392 - Sole son of Belorth; 1st Druid King; dies of old age)
Imrith II "The Treeheart" (b.369; d.487; r.392/487 - Grandson of Imrith I; 2nd Druid King; dies of old age)
Imrith III "the Branchblessed" (b.449; d.528; r.487/528 - Grandson of Imrith II; 3rd Druid King; slain in battle with the orcs of the Howltusk Horde)
Imrith IV "the Hewn" (b.497; d.611; r.528/611 - Grandson of Imrith III; 4th Druid King; dies in battle against the orcs of the Everhorde; last king of Yarlith)

-- George Krashos


Thank you for responding, George! Wow! The Imriths were pretty long lived. Is that on account of them being really accomplished Druids or do they have some fey blood in those veins? Or mayhaps they are just built of sterner stuff and/or have good genes?
TomCosta Posted - 17 Jul 2025 : 16:56:04
Having talked to him about it, he definitely would have, but I think he would acknowledge after a couple hundred entries, making them unique does start getting harder. Looking back, we had a slight power creep throughout the history of the three books.

In other news, we have almost finished updating all the 3.5E domains for all the humanoid gods and a few others.

quote:
Originally posted by Galuf the Dwarf

Dear Mr. Boyd,

If you had all the time and space you needed in Faiths & Pantheons, would you have adapted EVERY specialty priest for 3rd/3.5 Edition D&D?

TomCosta Posted - 17 Jul 2025 : 16:39:53
Having talked to him about it, he definitely would have, but I think he would acknowledge after a couple entries, making them unique does start getting harder. Looking back, we had a slight power creep throughout the history of the three books.

We have updated all the 3.5E domains for all the humanoid gods and a few others.

quote:
Originally posted by Galuf the Dwarf

Dear Mr. Boyd,

If you had all the time and space you needed in Faiths & Pantheons, would you have adapted EVERY specialty priest for 3rd/3.5 Edition D&D?

George Krashos Posted - 17 Jul 2025 : 14:55:54
quote:
Originally posted by Kelnaar

Eric,
Greetings and hope all is well. I have another question for you when you have a moment. Some where on these forums it was mentioned that you and George had fleshed out the rulers of Uthtower/Yarlith and the members of the family through their demise after Uthtower fell (iirc). Is that something you could provide?



UTHTOWER
Myrmoran Dynasty

Uth I (b.110; d.168; reigned 146/168 - Founder of Uthtower; exiled noble of Tavaray; slain by old raiders)
Ornoth (b.141; d.191; r.168/191 - Son and sole heir of Uth I; dies of heart stop)
Uth II (b.179; d.272; r.191/272 - 1st son (twin) of Ornoth; dies of old age)
Uth III (b.236; d.309; r.272/309 - Grandson of Uth II; dies of winterchill fever)
Uth IV (b.268; d.349; r.309/349 - Son and sole heir of Uth III; dies of old age)
Uth V "the Slumbering King" (b.314; d.543; r.349/543 - 1st son of Uth IV; extends his life through longevity magic; dies of old age)
Uth VI (b.517; d.589; r.543/589 - Great-great grandson of Uth V; dies of heartstop)
Uth VII (b.551; d.615; r.589/615 - Son and sole heir of Uth VI; slain in the inundation of Iniarv)

YARLITH
Yarlith Dynasty

Yarlith (b.179; d.272; r.191/272 - 2nd son (twin) of King Ornoth of Uthtower; dies of old age)
Ornoth II (b.206; d.287; r.272/287 - 1st son of Yarlith; dies of old age)
Tarnoth "the Troubled" (b.239; d.292; r.287/292 - 1st son of Ornoth II; dies of a fit)
Belorth (b.264; d.306; r.292/306 - Sole son of Tarnoth; dies in battle against the Thousand Fangs orc horde)
Imrith I "the Leaf King" (b.288; d.392; r.306/392 - Sole son of Belorth; 1st Druid King; dies of old age)
Imrith II "The Treeheart" (b.369; d.487; r.392/487 - Grandson of Imrith I; 2nd Druid King; dies of old age)
Imrith III "the Branchblessed" (b.449; d.528; r.487/528 - Grandson of Imrith II; 3rd Druid King; slain in battle with the orcs of the Howltusk Horde)
Imrith IV "the Hewn" (b.497; d.611; r.528/611 - Grandson of Imrith III; 4th Druid King; dies in battle against the orcs of the Everhorde; last king of Yarlith)

-- George Krashos
Galuf the Dwarf Posted - 17 Jul 2025 : 00:56:23
Dear Mr. Boyd,

If you had all the time and space you needed in Faiths & Pantheons, would you have adapted EVERY specialty priest for 3rd/3.5 Edition D&D?
Kelnaar Posted - 17 Jul 2025 : 00:02:35
Eric,
Greetings and hope all is well. I have another question for you when you have a moment. Some where on these forums it was mentioned that you and George had fleshed out the rulers of Uthtower/Yarlith and the members of the family through their demise after Uthtower fell (iirc). Is that something you could provide?
Italian Archmage Karsus Posted - 16 Jul 2025 : 15:22:30
Loremaster Boyd, you said you've since acquired a copy of "Dungeon of the Hark", right? I know it's under NDA, so I won't ask for anything about it: my question is about the printing on the paper. Would you happen to know if DocuColor tracking dots are present? I need to know whether they're present in one, so I can better validate other, different copies.
sleyvas Posted - 07 Jun 2025 : 17:20:53
quote:
Originally posted by Wooly Rupert

quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas


BTW, I am just getting a look at the 2024 Monster Manual, and I'm glad to see they've adapted something I was about to say and didn't even realize. Rakshasa are no longer always a tiger or even cat person body.



That's been a thing for a long time -- it was just that they preferred tigers and the art always went there.



They've vascillated, but agreed. During the 3rd, 4th, and prior to 2024 5th edition era it was "tiger headed" or "feline headed". I remember that in 1st edition a dragon article had them looking gorilla-like though, and the 2nd edition MC mentioned both ape and tiger, but said it could be other. But since 3rd edition its been all cat. Granted, they had illusions to take another form.
Wooly Rupert Posted - 06 Jun 2025 : 21:49:31
quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas


BTW, I am just getting a look at the 2024 Monster Manual, and I'm glad to see they've adapted something I was about to say and didn't even realize. Rakshasa are no longer always a tiger or even cat person body.



That's been a thing for a long time -- it was just that they preferred tigers and the art always went there.
sleyvas Posted - 06 Jun 2025 : 15:33:08
Eric,

Hey man, you had an article in Dragon 357 on "Savage Tidings: Gazing into the Abyss". In it was an entry for a vestige that you called Ansitif the Befouler, and in his backstory you noted he and 6 other "tanar'ri allies" joined up to ceombat a powerful Obyrith named The Malgoth. In said backstory, you named the 6 allies, and one was Felex'ja the Tiger King. Was that just a throwaway reference for possible use later OR is some extra lore I should hunt down before I decide to try and put a fun spin on it?

Also, just to give you an idea of the spin that I want to do with it .... thinking something somewhat similar to Gargauth. He was a powerful Rakshasa Raja serving in the nine hells, but he became disenchanted with the bindings of law. He slew a powerful tanar'ri Klurichir by assaulting it moments after it had slain another minor demon lord (a goristro with an intellect maybe with an eye towards advancement). He had in fact setup the encounter between the Klurichir and the minor demon lord through some acts of trickery. He took the fallen demon's and the Klurichir's four arms, and he grafted them to his body (four arms facing forward and four arms facing backward). He also set the four eyes of the fallen demons floating around his head, almost like ioun stones, so that he could see all around himself. He proclaimed himself master of the fallen demon lord's domain. It was this grafting that transformed him via "blood bond" into a tanar'ri and effectively broke the controls upon him by Asmodeus and allowed that if he were killed outside his abyssal home that he would reform here rather than the Nine Hells.

Then of course, per your history, for some reason he's drawn into conflict against the Malgoth with six allies... Then in an act reminiscent of how he drew himself to power, someone else betrays him when he's at a disadvantage and gets him cast into the wells of darkness.

BTW, I am just getting a look at the 2024 Monster Manual, and I'm glad to see they've adapted something I was about to say and didn't even realize. Rakshasa are no longer always a tiger or even cat person body.
ericlboyd Posted - 31 Mar 2025 : 14:05:22
quote:
Originally posted by Kelnaar

Eric,

Just purchased The Uthgardt on DMGuild. You knocked it out of the park again! Great job, my dude!

Which leads me to a quick question: in Illefarn Anew Delfen Ondabarl has an apprentice named Jaeldar “Stagheart” Stoneblade. Is he kinda of an Easter egg or is he related to either the Stoneblades of Scathril and/or the Blue Bear/Ghost Tree tribe? Seems awful coincidental……



The implication is that he is descended from the Stoneblades of Scathril, or at least one of his ancestors claimed to be and kept the name. Either way, he might have pretensions, if the DM wishes him to do so.

Thanks,
--Eric
TBeholder Posted - 30 Mar 2025 : 00:59:48
quote:
Originally posted by Azar


Essentially, Player Characters will need to perform a rather substantial favor for Corellon's children before they are granted the privilege? Much appreciated.


quote:
Originally posted by ericlboyd
Exactly. And "substantial" is probably on par with rescue a small kingdom of elves.

The question is who gets to decide, and what are their limits.
Elaith Craulnober designated Danilo "elf-friend" on his own.
Of course, he is the heir of a noble clan, in self-exile or not. And there may be limitation to the effect that he can only bestow this status on one human during his life, or something like that, at least on his own, without involving higher powers (royal/high priest special dispensation).
Kelnaar Posted - 29 Mar 2025 : 21:15:03
Eric,

Just purchased The Uthgardt on DMGuild. You knocked it out of the park again! Great job, my dude!

Which leads me to a quick question: in Illefarn Anew Delfen Ondabarl has an apprentice named Jaeldar “Stagheart” Stoneblade. Is he kinda of an Easter egg or is he related to either the Stoneblades of Scathril and/or the Blue Bear/Ghost Tree tribe? Seems awful coincidental……
kysus Posted - 17 Feb 2025 : 02:43:27
Eric i have a question for you on your work on the high forest. What elven kingdom did you put the elven family Toryvhallen in? and if you came up with anymore information on them? I found them in the adventure hellgate keep as a tomb to that family that had some secrets of high magic and was wondering if you came across it and what did you do with it in lore?
ericlboyd Posted - 08 Jan 2025 : 04:52:34
quote:
Originally posted by Kelnaar

Eric, first I would like to express a heartfelt thank you for all the work you do and the fact that you interact with the community.
I am currently running an Age of Worms campaign, integrating it with Under Illefarn Anew and all the information it contains (great stuff BTW). I have taken the Land family and made them part of the Delimbiyr family (cousins of the current Delimbiyrs). However as I was researching the Delimbiyrs I came across a conflicting issue in Under Illefarm Anew. In the history of Daggerford it lists Kelven Delimbiyr as half moon elf, however, under Arayndar’s description Kelven is referred to as a half sun elf. Which is the accurate description? Also, do you have any further information on the Delimbiyr family? Ancestors that came after Kelven? Was Kelven tied to any of the noble elf families? Any answers would be greatly appreciated.



Good catch. The original N5 - Under Illefarn doesn't specify.

I think half-moon elf is more likely than half-gold elf, so I would go that route.

I would say that Kelven was a commoner, not of noble birth.

--Eric
Kelnaar Posted - 07 Jan 2025 : 16:16:13
Eric, first I would like to express a heartfelt thank you for all the work you do and the fact that you interact with the community.
I am currently running an Age of Worms campaign, integrating it with Under Illefarn Anew and all the information it contains (great stuff BTW). I have taken the Land family and made them part of the Delimbiyr family (cousins of the current Delimbiyrs). However as I was researching the Delimbiyrs I came across a conflicting issue in Under Illefarm Anew. In the history of Daggerford it lists Kelven Delimbiyr as half moon elf, however, under Arayndar’s description Kelven is referred to as a half sun elf. Which is the accurate description? Also, do you have any further information on the Delimbiyr family? Ancestors that came after Kelven? Was Kelven tied to any of the noble elf families? Any answers would be greatly appreciated.
ericlboyd Posted - 06 Jan 2025 : 15:55:20
quote:
Originally posted by Returnip

Hey, Eric. I have a question for you.

In the "trail of tears" article series there are words of wisdom from Tempus "echoing in the mind of anyone passing through the portal". Are those words supposed to echo in the mind after they arrive at a new scene as a sort of hint of what is to come or are they supposed to echo in the mind as people pass through the next portal leading to the next scene as a sort of conclusion of what they experienced at the last scene? Each can work equally fine I guess. I'm just curious as to what you intended.



After they arrive, but other is fine.

quote:

And one additional question.

In 3.x City of Splendors - Waterdeep, in the sewers encounter tables, when you roll "thief" it refers to the text for explanation, but there is no explaining text for the thief entry. Was it supposed to be a reference to the previously mentioned "solitary rogues" that could be encountered there, basically just "rogue with 1dX levels" or did you have something more elaborate in mind for that, such as important rogue NPCs or teams of rogues from one of the thieves' guilds?


I don't recall exactly.

I would probably do something like:

60% - Solitary rogue, level 1d6
20% - Solitary rogue, level 2d6
20% - 1d4+1 rogues from a guild (re-roll for each).

Thanks,

--Eric
ericlboyd Posted - 06 Jan 2025 : 15:47:51
quote:
Originally posted by kysus

Oh thats really cool, that name Teshyll the aged seems familiar are they in your write up for the myth glaurach online article, was there anymore information on who Teshyll the aged was, were they any elf noble of some sought or a really powerful human caster that was respected by the elves? Im also curious about what Teshyll and Arun's son thoughts were on the fate of that city.



I think Teshyll the Aged was probably a moon elf, but I don't think I've ever figured that out for sure.

--Eric
Returnip Posted - 24 Aug 2024 : 20:47:38
Hey, Eric. I have a question for you.

In the "trail of tears" article series there are words of wisdom from Tempus "echoing in the mind of anyone passing through the portal". Are those words supposed to echo in the mind after they arrive at a new scene as a sort of hint of what is to come or are they supposed to echo in the mind as people pass through the next portal leading to the next scene as a sort of conclusion of what they experienced at the last scene? Each can work equally fine I guess. I'm just curious as to what you intended.

And one additional question.

In 3.x City of Splendors - Waterdeep, in the sewers encounter tables, when you roll "thief" it refers to the text for explanation, but there is no explaining text for the thief entry. Was it supposed to be a reference to the previously mentioned "solitary rogues" that could be encountered there, basically just "rogue with 1dX levels" or did you have something more elaborate in mind for that, such as important rogue NPCs or teams of rogues from one of the thieves' guilds?
kysus Posted - 10 Apr 2024 : 00:32:22
Oh thats really cool, that name Teshyll the aged seems familiar are they in your write up for the myth glaurach online article, was there anymore information on who Teshyll the aged was, were they any elf noble of some sought or a really powerful human caster that was respected by the elves? Im also curious about what Teshyll and Arun's son thoughts were on the fate of that city.
ericlboyd Posted - 08 Apr 2024 : 21:59:25
quote:
Originally posted by kysus

Hey Eric i had a question for you i was just thinking about, do you think there could still be some secrets left behind undiscovered in myth glaurach that were never found by the elves during the last mythal series? and would you have any examples of some if there is any secrets still left?



Of course there are secrets!

For example, there is a lost folio penned by Teshyll the Aged recording his notes from speaking with Arun's Son about the fate of the lost city of Myth Adofhaer.

--Eric
kysus Posted - 08 Apr 2024 : 21:38:24
Hey Eric i had a question for you i was just thinking about, do you think there could still be some secrets left behind undiscovered in myth glaurach that were never found by the elves during the last mythal series? and would you have any examples of some if there is any secrets still left?
ericlboyd Posted - 08 Mar 2024 : 23:19:07
Great example.
Wooly Rupert Posted - 08 Mar 2024 : 22:40:04
I had an NPC that became an elf-friend and was welcome to Evermeet because he was part of a group (the others were elves) that found a legendary magic staff and returned it to Evermeet. The staff allowed High Magic to be cast without penalty outside of Evermeet.
ericlboyd Posted - 27 Feb 2024 : 01:46:38
quote:
Originally posted by Azar

quote:
Originally posted by ericlboyd

My guess is probably about as interested as the Fair Folk are in having non-elves visit Evermeet.

By that I mean, very resistant, with the exception of certain elf-friends like Mirt, the Seven Sisters, Elminster, and senior Harpers.

--Eric



Essentially, Player Characters will need to perform a rather substantial favor for Corellon's children before they are granted the privilege? Much appreciated.



Exactly. And "substantial" is probably on par with rescue a small kingdom of elves.
Azar Posted - 27 Feb 2024 : 00:28:53
quote:
Originally posted by ericlboyd

My guess is probably about as interested as the Fair Folk are in having non-elves visit Evermeet.

By that I mean, very resistant, with the exception of certain elf-friends like Mirt, the Seven Sisters, Elminster, and senior Harpers.

--Eric



Essentially, Player Characters will need to perform a rather substantial favor for Corellon's children before they are granted the privilege? Much appreciated.
ericlboyd Posted - 17 Feb 2024 : 10:57:12
My guess is probably about as interested as the Fair Folk are in having non-elves visit Evermeet.

By that I mean, very resistant, with the exception of certain elf-friends like Mirt, the Seven Sisters, Elminster, and senior Harpers.

--Eric

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