This source book encourages the sparse use of bards, warlocks, and wizards, and outlines that both clerics and paladins aren’t really existent on the plane. The plane of Kaladesh is full of inventors and tinkers, but has a lack of mages. Weldfast Wingsmith by Dan Scott, from Magic the Gathering ![]() These miniature source PDFs, called Plane Shifts, are not quite as in depth as the later hard cover books, but still offer you plenty of inspiration in bringing these settings to your Dungeons & Dragons campaign ( DMs have a range of tools available to them to help with these things). Several of these planes were written out by James Wyatt as companion books to their more detailed corresponding Art Of Magic The Gathering books. RELATED: Story Hooks In D&D You Always See And Why They WorkMagic The Gathering now has nine of its lore-rich planes written and prepared for Dungeons & Dragons, though some of them are better resources than others, owing to the fact that fully-fledged source books have only just started releasing. ![]() It makes sense, then, that such fantastical locations would make for some incredible campaign settings for the most popular tabletop role-playing-game on the planet: Dungeons & Dragons. The rich lore and vibrant planes of Magic The Gathering have always lent themselves to players’ imaginations. ![]() Worlds fraught with dangerous monsters and powerful magicians, adventures waiting beneath every cobbled stone and dark alley, and heroes awaiting their chance to prove themselves.
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