Eberron - Rising from the Last War

(Joyce) #1

  1. Dragonmarked Dynasties. The great dragonmarked
    families are the barons of industry and commerce
    throughout Khorvaire and beyond. Their influence
    transcends political boundaries, and they remained
    mostly neutral during the Last War. Not technically
    citizens of any nation, the matriarchs and patriarchs
    of each house live in splendor within their enclaves
    and emporiums located throughout Khorvaire. These
    dynastic houses of commerce derive their power from
    dragonmarks-hereditary arcane sigils that manifest
    on certain individuals within the fa mily, granting
    them limited but useful magical abilities associated
    with the trade guilds each family controls.

  2. Lands oflntrigue. The war is over, and the nations
    of Khorvaire now try to build a new age of peace and
    prosperity. Ancient threats linger, however, and the
    world needs heroes to take up the cause. Nations
    compete on many levels-over economic dominance,
    political influence, territory, magical power, and
    more-each looking to maintain or improve its status
    by any means short of all-out war. Dragonmarked
    houses, churches both pure and corrupt, crime lords,
    monster gangs, psionic spies, arcane universities,
    secret societies, sinister masterminds, dragons, and
    a multitude of organizations and fa ctions join the
    struggle for position and power in the aftermath of
    the Last War.

  3. A Continent of Adventure. From the jungles of
    Q'barra to the blasted hills and valleys of the Demon
    Wastes, from the skyscrapers of Sham to the dino­
    saur-filled Talenta Plains, Eberron is a world of ad­
    venture. Adventures can draw heroes from one exotic
    location to another across the continent of Khorvaire.
    The quest for the Mirror of the Seventh Moon might
    take the heroes from a hidden mountain shrine in
    Darguun to a ruined castle in the Shadow Marches
    and finally to a dungeon deep below the Library of
    Korranberg. Through the use of magical transporta­
    tion, heroes can reach a wide range of environments
    over the course of an adventure, and thus deal with a
    diverse assortment of monsters and other challenges.

  4. A World of Magic. The technology of Eberron has
    developed not through the advance of science but by
    the mastery of magic. The widespread use of magic
    pervades life in the cities and towns. Airships and
    rail transport make rapid travel across the continent
    possible. A working class of minor mages, called
    magewrights, uses spells to provide energy and other
    necessities. Advances in magic item creation have led
    to everything from self-propelled farming implements
    to sentient, free-willed beings created in artificers'
    forges. With the aid of rare crystals called dragon­
    shards, dragonmarks can be made more powerful, el­
    ementals can be controlled and harnessed, and magic
    items can be crafted and shaped.

  5. New Races. In addition to the common player charac­
    ter races found in the Player's Handbook, players can
    choose to play ore or goblinoid characters in Eberron.
    Or they can choose one of four new races: change­
    lings, kalashtar, shifters, am;! warforged. Changelings
    have minor shapechanging abilities similar to those
    of doppelgangers. Kalashtar are planar entities


merged with human hosts, giving them telepathic
abilities. Shifters developed from the mixing of hu­
mans and lycanthropes, a union that grants them lim­
ited bestial abilities and fe ral instincts. The warforged
are a constructed race created during the Last War,
seeking to find its place in a post-war world.


  1. Dl9-D with a Twist. Every race, monster, spell, and
    magic item in the Player's Handbook, Dungeon
    Master's Guide, and Monster Manual has a place
    somewhere in Eberron, but it might not be the place
    you expect. Eberron has a unique spot in the D&D
    multiverse, and many familiar elements of the game
    play different roles in the world. In particular, mortal
    creatures are products of culture and circumstances,
    rather than the direct influence of the gods. As a re­
    sult, you can't assume that a gold dragon is good or a
    beholder is evil; only in the case of celestials, fiends,
    and certain other creatures whose identity and world­
    view are shaped by magic (such as the curse of lycan­
    thropy) is alignment a given.


HISTORY OF EBERRON
Every child knows the story of the Progenitor Dragons:
Siberys, Eberron, and Khyber. In the dawn of time,
these three cosmic beings created thirteen planes of
existence, each embodying a concept. Their final work
was the Material Plane, where all ideas would become
manifest: a realm that could know war and peace, life
and death, order and chaos. But cruel Khyber sought
ultimate dominion over this new reality. She struck Sib­
erys without warning and tore him apart. Eberron wres­
tled with Khyber and bound the traitor in her coils but
could not defeat her. So Eberron became a living prison,
a world that would forever contain Khyber's evil.
Almost every culture in the world shares this story as
a myth that explains the world. Shattered Siberys be­
came the ring of golden dragonshards wrapped around
the planet, said to be the source of magic. Eberron is
the world, the source of all natural life. And Khyber is
the Underdark and the source of aberrations and fiends,
forever struggling against her bonds and yearning to de­
stroy the world above.
Another tale shared across cultures describes one
more conflict that occurred in the first age of the world.
Long ago, powerful archfiends known as the Overlords
and their armies of rakshasa and lesser fiends domi­
nated Eberron. Forces of light-some versions of the
story say the nine gods of the Sovereign Host, others
say an alliance of dragons and celestials-eventually
defeated the Overlords. But these fiends couldn't be de­
stroyed; instead, their immortal essences were bound in
Khyber. Whatever the true details of this tale, this much
is true: if the Overlords ever break their bonds, the con­
sequences would be catastrophic.
Over the course of millennia, numerous civilizations
rose only to fall. Giants built mighty kingdoms on the
continent of Xen'drik that were devastated by a war
with the dragons of Argonnessen. The goblin empire of
Dhakaan ruled Khorvaire until its reign was shattered
by an invading army of mind flayers, beholders, and the
foul creatures that created them. Today these civiliza­
tions are known only through the remnants left behind.

WELCOME TO EB ERRON
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