D&D 5th ed was already doing great and was on its way to being the best selling version of D&D ever before it became a major feature of the highly popular Netflix show Stranger Things. When Season 1 premiered I had adults my age (who would have been the same ages as the kids in ST at the time) coming to me and asking how they could get a D&D game for their kids.
Well, I wish I had had this boxed set at the time.
The new Dungeons & Dragons Stranger Things Starter Set is making it's way to retailers now.
I picked up a copy on Amazon (to donate to my son's D&D club at High School...yeah they have now) and getting another one from my FLGS.
Truth be told I don't *need* it, but it sure is fantastic!
Done up like everyone's favorite red box D&D this is a starter set for D&D 5th Edition. And it is PERFECT for anyone that is a fan of the show and wants to learn how to play D&D.
It does have the Wizards of the Coast logo on it, but also the "Hasbro Gaming" logo which is new. Also since this is being sold not only in game stores and Amazon it is being released to Game Stops (the video game store) and other markets. Hasbro is serious about backing D&D and I think it is going to be a huge win for them.
The box set includes a basic rule book similar to what we got in the first D&D 5e Starter set. We also get an adventure "Written by Mike Wheeler", character sheets, a set of dice (mine are exactly like the ones I got in the Starter Set) and two "Demogorgon" minis; one painted the other plain.
Starter Set Rulebook
This book gives all the basics of D&D in 44 concise, full-color pages. Everything is here to get you started. How to play, the basics of combat and adventuring, a chapter on spell casting and a subset of magic items and monsters. Pretty much what you expect in a "Basic" set.
Instead of art we get some screen grabs from the ST show.
There are stats for the Demogorgon monster (not the demon).
Hunt for the Thessalhydra
Ok, truth time, I LOVE this. I want more adventures like this.
The sample adventure is done up to like a notebook written by Mike from the show. Complete with wide ruled notebook paper background and Jr. High style art (only much better). D&D artist Stan! is behind this one and I could not be happier about that.
The adventure is as old-school as summer 1983. You have a quest, a knight a monster to defeat, a table of rumors. Troglodytes! (art takes it inspiration from the Monster Manual) and random encounters.
The adventure is not ground-breaking, but it is not supposed to be. BUT it does take place in the "Upside Down", so that is cool. They describe it a bit like the Shadowfell, but no attempt is made to make it part of the larger D&D 5 cosmology and that is perfectly great by me. There is even a sword from the Upside Down.
And no Refrigerator Aleena in this one, there is a Proud Princess that will aid the characters but they can't even harm her if they try. She is obviously the Eleven stand in.
Character Sheets
These are all stand-ins for the kids on the show, more or less, We get all the major races; elf, dwarf, human, half-elf, and half-orc. No halfling though. And a good subset of classes; bard, cleric, paladin, ranger, wizard. But no straight up fighter or rogue. A halfling rogue (or maybe a zoomer!) would have been a nice touch. No names or genders on the sheets as it should be.
Dice and Demogorgons
The dice a pretty standard, same set I got with the other starter set. There are only six (as were in old-school sets) so no d%, there is a standard d10 (and d4, d6, d8, d12 and d20).
The Demogorgon minis are the weakest part of this set. The minis are the right scale but the plastic is really flimsy. The "painted" one only has a little bit of orange on it. These are not the Wiz Kids minis we get at game stores, these are made by Hasbro and appear to be made cheaply so they can make tons of them.
But really, this box hits all the nostalgia boxes AND is still a solid introduction to the D&D 5 game.
3 comments:
Great review. This set doesn't arrive over here until May, but very excited to get my hands on it. Shame about the minis, but the adventure sounds cool.
Great post, Tim. Can you comment on any changes or (hopefully) improvements to the rulebook from the original Starter Set version?
For the most part things seem to be a little better explained. But I would have to read them both side by side to be sure.
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