2006 Fun Fact: The three fanes in Expedition to Castle Ravenloft were inspired by the idea of walking the faneways in Gregory Keyes's Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone series.
— James Wyatt (@aquelajames) January 24, 2020
Dude. No joke, all of the adjacent encounters were my fav. One of my favorite DMing moments dealt with the cavern of that creepy Dwarven taxidermist.
— Matthew Mercer (@matthewmercer) January 24, 2020
Thank you for this!
— James Wyatt (@aquelajames) January 24, 2020
2006 Fun Fact: Expedition to Castle Ravenloft almost went to press with an editor's comment in the text. I noticed because I grabbed the PDF to run part of the adventure at a special event, and managed to both remove the comment and address the editor's concern!
— James Wyatt (@aquelajames) January 24, 2020
2006 Fun Fact: More of the little weirdness I love in Expedition to Castle Ravenloft: Suggestions for using it as a d20 Modern adventure!?!?!! pic.twitter.com/hEH5GAMJ7F
— James Wyatt (@aquelajames) January 24, 2020
I need clarification…were they a dwarf and a taxidermist, a taxidermist of dwarves, or or dwarf who was a taxidermist that taxidermied dwarves?
I believe the answer dictates the caliber of creepiness A dwarf and a taxidermist, but the kind of taxidermist who stuffs an adventurer and kills an innocent villager to create a stuffed "werewolf" because he's disappointed that dead werewolves revert to human form.
— James Wyatt (@aquelajames) January 24, 2020
Thank you for the clarification.
So they were a Fuji mermaid makerSorry for the follow up question, where did the “wolf” part come from? Seems a dead adventurer and a dead villager just makes two regular dead people… Two separate things. pic.twitter.com/KbXyP4O2XV
— James Wyatt (@aquelajames) January 25, 2020
2006 Fun Fact: Expedition to Castle Ravenloft continues the trend of my favorite things being off the beaten path—the stuff I added to Barovia outside the village and the castle is some of my favorites.
— James Wyatt (@aquelajames) January 24, 2020