Hurl Spells Faster than Ever Before with this Invaluable Accessory from Wizards of the Coast and GaleForce 9 The Spellbook cards are an invaluable resource for both players and Dungeon Masters. With these spell details at their fingertips, they can save time, keep the action up, and avoid stalling the game by flipping through books. Each deck contains laminated cards that players and Dungeon Masters can use as a quick reference resource during Dungeon & Dragons tabletop play. There are currently eight decks (each sold separately): Arcane Spell Deck (For any class that utilizes arcane cantrips and spells like wizards and sorcerers), Bard Spell Deck, Cleric Spell Deck, Druid Spell Deck, Paladin Spell Deck, Martial Powers & Races Deck (Includes spell-like racial abilities, Monk and Barbarian spell-like abilities, and fighter maneuvers), Ranger Spell Deck, Xanathar's Guide to Everything Spell Deck (Contains spells found in the D&D supplement, Xanathar's Guide to Everything) Read more
Download NowIt's wrong to label these as they are. I get that a lot of spells come from different source books, but when I buy something labeled "Spellbook Cards: Druid," it's reasonable to expect to find all the spells a druid can cast. It's not like it reads "Druid Spells in the PHB," or "Some Druid Spells." Most of my players are new to the hobby, but instead of helping, these cards would still require me to print out the missing spells, and then leave my player looking two different places for her spells. That's less convenient than me just printing all the spells. On just an aesthetic note, Wizards must recognize a desire for continuity between the spell cards, because Cleric spell cards are a different color from Druid spell cards from Ranger spell cards. So sure, I could maybe buy Xanathar's and fill in the missing spells, but they're still going to be blue instead of green. The SAME people made all of these products, they decided they should differentiate between class, but then they printed just a couple decks that are denoted by source book? How does that make sense? I felt the same way about the Arcane Spell Cards, but I'd hoped they'd get the individual class cards right. Ultimately, this creates more problems than it solves, I'm disappointed, and I still need a suitable alternative. *DNDBeyond is a pretty good alternative with a similar caveat that you'll have to pay for access to non-core spells.
Read NowCopyright © Easyread. All Rights Reserved.
Designed by HTML Codex