@ChrisPerkinsDnD I think there needs to be a companion book to "Out of The Abyss" called " How to pronounce all the names in this book"
— Lambchops (@ChelseyLamoureu) July 6, 2017
Every new adventure gives us opportunities to improve. Case in point, Tomb of Annihilation includes a name pronunciation guide. #wotcstaff https://t.co/wxyDoyhXDk
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) July 6, 2017
Good, we're still arguing about how to pronounce Acerack for ToH in Yawning Portal.
— Romrapaara (@ThePaperToast) July 6, 2017
Acererak: Split the name into two pieces, "Acere" and "rak." That's how we landed on the pronunciation ah-SAIR-ak. #WOTCstaff https://t.co/Gj0rjRBHmk
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) July 6, 2017
So @wilw said it wrong in the RP1 audiobook?
— Aaron Morse (@abmorse1) July 6, 2017
It's not wrong to slip an extra "er" syllable into Acererak's name, as many people do, but it's unnecessary. #wotcstaff https://t.co/pttaIwiJiT
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) July 6, 2017
Interesting view. I see it this way: if you'd pronounce Acerak as Ah-Sair-ak (and I would), then Acererak must be different https://t.co/nck5FHG6ro
— Phil (@thedicemechanic) July 6, 2017
I wouldn't pronounce it that way. https://t.co/uQyaIkdrvU
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) July 7, 2017
@wilw pronounces it in the Ready Player One audiobook
— Rich (@SetNameToRich) July 6, 2017
Among his many astounding super powers, @wilw can pronounce D&D terms any way he wants to. That's an official ruling, BTW. #wotcstaff https://t.co/kMJSV6wnuj
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) July 7, 2017
It's "Ass-Rack" right? That's what @The_Trevor_Kidd told me.
— Dread Gazebo (@DreadGazeebo) July 7, 2017
Trevor's a special person. #wotcstaff https://t.co/xRar2xKlrc
— Christopher Perkins (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) July 7, 2017