Misplaced Pages

Country Sites

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons game supplement
Country Sites
GenreRole-playing game
PublisherTSR
Publication date1995
Media typePrint

Country Sites is a supplement to the 2nd edition of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game.

Contents

Country Sites is a supplement which includes seven large settings, such as The Haunted Temple, Sanctuary in the Sand, The City of the Dead, The Mariner's Graveyard, The Island of Lost Souls, Darion's Wall, and The Place of Broken Dreams. The set also includes four smaller settings, which consist of floorplans and background sites, which include examples of a toll-house and a waystation.

Publication history

Country Sites was the final release for the "Sites" accessory series produced by TSR. Country Sites features design by Robin Jenkins, and design assistance by John Nephew (with Paul Numberger), and was published by TSR in 1995. The cover art was by Jennell Jaquays with interior art by Phillip Robb.

Reception

David Comford reviewed Country Sites for Arcane magazine, rating it a 6 out of 10 overall. He cautions that the settings in this book "are frameworks for adventures. Taken as they are, the majority of the sites will prove to have many failings - lack of any reward for a PC's efforts being a major weakness." Comford advised ignoring the adventure hooks, calling them "very poor", but felt that the settings can be "salvaged with a little thought". He called The Haunted Temple and The Place of Broken Dreams "Prime examples" and found them interesting sites, "but with little hope for exciting roleplaying unless set as a divine test of faith or as a condition for level advancement". He commented on The City of the Dead, "where tomb robbing PCs find new surprises", and recommended Darion's Wall "to a certain extent although avid readers of David Gemmel will surely have staged such an adventure". He said that Country Sites does succeed with The City of the Dead, The Mariner's Graveyard, The Island of Lost Souls, and Darion's Wall, as all four "offer a certain amount of originality and offer exciting scenarios for roleplaying, whether as part of an existing campaign or even as stand-alone adventures". He recommended that if the reader is "looking for a volume of amazing adventures - fully mapped, laid out and ready to use - then look elsewhere. If, on the other hand, you are looking for adventure ideas, then search no longer." He suggested that the book does have failings and that some reworking would be needed, and noted that for example there were no monster descriptions. Comford concluded by saying that "Country Sites, as with other volumes in the series, is a useful accessory, but by no means an essential one."

Notes

  1. Credited as Paul Jaquays.

References

  1. ^ Comford, David (January 1996). "Games Reviews". Arcane (2). Future Publishing: 79.
Dungeons & Dragons rulebooks and accessories
Original Dungeons & Dragons
Core
Supplements
Basic Dungeons & Dragons
Core
Supplements
Modules
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons
Core
Supplements
Modules
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd edition
Core
Supplements
Adventures
Dungeons & Dragons 3rd edition
Core
Supplements
Adventures
Dungeons & Dragons v3.5
Core
Supplements
Eberron
Forgotten Realms
Other
Adventures
Eberron
Expedition series
Fantastic Locations
Other adventures
Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition
Core
Supplements
Adventures
Dungeons & Dragons 5th edition
Core
Supplements
Campaign guides
Adventures
Magazines
Dungeons & Dragons
Basics
General
Gameplay
Creators
Companies
Licenses
Geography and cosmology
Campaign settings
Planes of existence
Characters and beings
Races and lineages
Classes
Character lists
Notable characters
Creatures and monsters
Deities and powers
Publications
Core rulebooks
Classic boxed sets
Supplements
High-level rules
Psionics Handbook
Notable
modules
Online tools
Categories: