Dungeons \u0026 Dragons: Underdark by Rob Heinsoo


Dungeons \u0026 Dragons: Underdark
Title : Dungeons \u0026 Dragons: Underdark
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 078695387X
ISBN-10 : 9780786953875
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 160
Publication : First published January 1, 2010

Descend into the depths of the world!

No realm in the D&D ® world stirs the imagination like the Underdark. This vast subterranean domain holds thousands of adventure possibilities and myriad threats, including drow, mind flayers, dragons, and worse! Entire campaigns can unfold in its depths, and its rewards are boundless.

Underdark ™ contains everything a Dungeon Master needs to run adventures or campaigns set in the vast underworld of his or her D&D campaign, including new monsters and hazards, ready-to-play encounters, monster lairs, and detailed information on various dark-dwelling “movers and shakers.”


Dungeons \u0026 Dragons: Underdark Reviews


  • Moe

    My 4e group has just descended to the Underdark as the next step on their Paragon level quest for glory. I picked up this book to help flesh out the module: Demon Queen's Enclave. Overall the book was a good read. There was some really interesting things that I had no clue about. I expect things like the Kings Highway and some of the new monsters like the Incuballa to make an appearance in my game. The problem with this book is that it is one of the older 4e books written before the new monster rules in MMIII and before any of the esentials rules. This means the monsters are rather badly balanced. I still dug the fluff for this even if not all of the crunch will be as useful as it could.

  • Garrett Henke

    Awesomely frightening, Underdark finally makes the classic adventuring area truly chill inducing. The Underdark has always been filled with potential, but its actual depiction has traditionally been a let down. Generally it just boils down to caverns, more caverns, and look over here: caverns. Even 5e suffers from this problem (see Out of the Abyss with the exception of Zuggtmoy’s Wedding).

    This 4e book portrays The Underdark as a diverse world - each area more terrifying than the last. It truly shows a locale that should be avoided by any sane sentient while providing important reasons for adventurers to leave their better judgement behind and descend into the depths.

  • Michael T Bradley

    Despite some bizarre 4E choices (it all relates back to primordials. All of it. Always), and despite some annoying overused artwork (vs. a lack of artwork at places that desperately needed something to illustrate what they were talking about), this is a really solid, incredibly useful-yet-open exploration of the Underdark in 4E.

  • Abraham Ray

    got & finished it in one day!