rusty_shackleford
Arcane
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2018
- Messages
- 50,754
it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
Weren't you the one that said that book is non-canon?it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
No. "A Murder in Baldur's Gate" explicitly states that a wealthy merchant commissioned the statue.
Joseph Stalin I'm pretty sure there are disputes about the canonicity of the novels? I know you talked to WotC about it, but did they say they are non-canon? Also, are these the names of the people who traveled with CHARNAME or are these just names which were mentioned/had a role somewhere in canon?
Weren't you the one that said that book is non-canon?it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
No. "A Murder in Baldur's Gate" explicitly states that a wealthy merchant commissioned the statue.
Also, they lied. It was magic.
Heroes of Baldur's Gate is very contradictory, though. Isn't Viconia an antagonist in there? Also, Xzar and Montaron are in there too.WotC have explicitly removed the novels from canon. Even the fucking wiki finally got a message from them and did the same. As to the list - the sources are "Legends of Baldur's Gate", where Minsc, Neera, and Coran are explicitly stated to be travelling companions. The rest is from "Heroes of Baldur's Gate", also stated as companions to "Gorion's Ward".
Heroes of Baldur's Gate is very contradictory, though. Isn't Viconia an antagonist in there? Also, Xzar and Montaron are in there too.
Minsc is in the Neverwinter MMO, him being a statue is also part of his backstory. That also predates descent into avernus by about 5 years btw.Weren't you the one that said that book is non-canon?it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
No. "A Murder in Baldur's Gate" explicitly states that a wealthy merchant commissioned the statue.
Also, they lied. It was magic.
No, I said that the canonicity of that book is in question, since it was obviously written before WotC decided to revive the franchise. As to the "it was petrification magic" - that was a retarded idea introduced by "Descent into Avernus" - a fact which clashes with every other source. Even the comics hint that Minsc isn't the real deal (a witch states that she "know exactly who he is" in a context which isn't supposed to be pleasant.
Viconia is also in Neverwinter meaning the romance is entirely non-canon.Btw, does Minsc having a statue as the "beloved ranger" mean he's canonically a part of the Bhaalspawn's party? Are the other "canon" members still canon?
I don't like being imposed a canon.
Minsc is in the Neverwinter MMO, him being a statue is also part of his backstory. That also predates descent into avernus by about 5 years btw.Weren't you the one that said that book is non-canon?it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
No. "A Murder in Baldur's Gate" explicitly states that a wealthy merchant commissioned the statue.
Also, they lied. It was magic.
No, I said that the canonicity of that book is in question, since it was obviously written before WotC decided to revive the franchise. As to the "it was petrification magic" - that was a retarded idea introduced by "Descent into Avernus" - a fact which clashes with every other source. Even the comics hint that Minsc isn't the real deal (a witch states that she "know exactly who he is" in a context which isn't supposed to be pleasant.
Speaking of which,
Viconia is also in Neverwinter meaning the romance is entirely non-canon.Btw, does Minsc having a statue as the "beloved ranger" mean he's canonically a part of the Bhaalspawn's party? Are the other "canon" members still canon?
I don't like being imposed a canon.
That bitch Nettie, should’ve thrown her straight into the gas chamber.Yes, you can throw people if your strength is high enough.
Neera
Wait... Heroes of Baldur's Gate the 5E module? How can an unofficial module be considered canon?The rest is from "Heroes of Baldur's Gate",
Neera
Wait... Heroes of Baldur's Gate the 5E module? How can an unofficial module be considered canon?The rest is from "Heroes of Baldur's Gate",
You can't refund that long after buying.If Minsc turns gay I'm refunding.
There's nothing to suggest it isn't canon.Minsc is in the Neverwinter MMO, him being a statue is also part of his backstory. That also predates descent into avernus by about 5 years btw.Weren't you the one that said that book is non-canon?it can easily be explained by being magicAnd here's proof that Minsc wasn't fucking petrified. Unless he is 9 foot tall.
No. "A Murder in Baldur's Gate" explicitly states that a wealthy merchant commissioned the statue.
Also, they lied. It was magic.
No, I said that the canonicity of that book is in question, since it was obviously written before WotC decided to revive the franchise. As to the "it was petrification magic" - that was a retarded idea introduced by "Descent into Avernus" - a fact which clashes with every other source. Even the comics hint that Minsc isn't the real deal (a witch states that she "know exactly who he is" in a context which isn't supposed to be pleasant.
Speaking of which,
Viconia is also in Neverwinter meaning the romance is entirely non-canon.Btw, does Minsc having a statue as the "beloved ranger" mean he's canonically a part of the Bhaalspawn's party? Are the other "canon" members still canon?
I don't like being imposed a canon.
Are the events presented in Neverwinter supposed to be canon? I believe I've read somewhere this is not the case.
Why do I think it's unofficial?Why do you think it's unofficial? It's a licensed adventure module, written by James Ohlen, the man behind the games. If anything, this is what Siege of Dragonspear should've been.
The first year of the game's plot is 1479. It's entirely canon.OK, did some digging. Neverwinter isn't canon. It takes place in 1470 DR. Minsc is "ressurrected" in the 1490s.
Why do I think it's unofficial?Why do you think it's unofficial? It's a licensed adventure module, written by James Ohlen, the man behind the games. If anything, this is what Siege of Dragonspear should've been.
It's being sold through the DM Guild... it doesn't even have "Dungeons & Dragons" written on the front cover. It's not a D&D adventure, it's an adventure "for the world's greatest roleplaying game".
This is what an official module looks like:
This is what an unofficial module looks like, instead:
I'm not saying it CAN'T be canon, I just need serious proof before I can believe it.
I'm fairly sure there must be some sort of licensing involved in the making of Heroes of Baldur's Gate. I don't know to what extent, though.The first year of the game's plot is 1479. It's entirely canon.OK, did some digging. Neverwinter isn't canon. It takes place in 1470 DR. Minsc is "ressurrected" in the 1490s.
Neverwinter, a WotC licensed product, is more canon than an unlicensed DM's guild book.
The first year of the game's plot is 1479. It's entirely canon.OK, did some digging. Neverwinter isn't canon. It takes place in 1470 DR. Minsc is "ressurrected" in the 1490s.
Neverwinter, a WotC licensed product, is more canon than an unlicensed DM's guild book.