Enaronia

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A homebrewed campaign setting for Dungeons and Dragons 3.5 E.  As of this point, Enaronia is still under construction—potentially with help, if you’re interested, and possibly to be completed by being used unfinished, to receive player input.

 

 

DM’s Library:

3.5 Player’s Handbook

Player’s Handbook II

3.5 Dungeon Master’s Guide

Dungeon Master’s Guide II

3.5 Monster Manual

Monster Manual II

Expanded Psionics Handbook

Eberron Campaign Setting

Sharn:  City of Towers

Races of Eberron

Deities and Demigods

Complete Divine

Complete Adventurer

Complete Warrior

Complete Arcane

Complete Psionic

Lords of Madness

Libris Mortis

Weapons of Legacy

Heroes of Horror

 

World Info:

A diverse world with a number of diverse cultures.  Players should be aware before considering character concepts that prejudice and gender roles may play a part in adventuring in Enaronia.  While for the most part defying these norms makes one the subject of gossip rather than scorn, there are some societies that are strongly matriarchal or patriarchal, and at least one where these things are highly dangerous.

 

Players should also be aware that elite characters like PCs are rare and most people couldn’t dream of matching their potential.  Most people have little or no experience with magic or psionics.  These people are used to the mundane, to physical strength coinciding with physical size perfectly well and truly exceptional ability being rare.  They understand powerful villains and powerful heroes and know of both, but rarely see eithere personally—only in stories.

Updates!

 

Navigation fixed and the link to the forum put back up… oops, not sure how I messed that up in the first place, sorry… 10/21/06

New feats, power, and creature added 10/12/06

New material page added 10/12/06

DM’s library updated 10/12/06

Forum added 5/30/2006

Note:  If I use class names as words somewhere in this page, it doesn't necessarily mean that the person is of that class.  "Wizard" and "sorcerer" are often used interchangeably by people that can't tell the difference by looking, and priests or priestesses of a faith may be called clerics even if they don't actually have levels in the class, for instance.

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