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Tal 39-dorei Campaign Setting Reborn < ULTIMATE - METHOD >

Optional rules based on Matt Mercer’s own table, such as (drinking potions as a bonus action) and unique Resurrection mechanics. Physical Assets

Lirien smiled. It was not a nice smile. "I'm not taking it off. I'm giving it back."

And the Dorei—forty-seven freed, confused, terrified—did something the Guild had never accounted for. They didn't run. They picked up the fallen chains. They picked up rocks. The girl picked up a shard of her own shattered collar and held it like a dagger.

Kaelen nodded. He’d been Tal 39 for three years now. The number was a brand over his heart, magic-etched so deep it pulsed when the Guild whispered his name. He was a weapon. A reborn —one of the broken things reforged in the Black Forges beneath the Spire. Once, he’d been a Dorei slave himself. Now, he wore the collar by choice, because the Guild’s leash was the only thing keeping the poison in his blood from dissolving him from the inside. tal 39-dorei campaign setting reborn

The most immediate difference between the original guide and the Reborn edition is the timeline. The original book was written during the hiatus between Critical Role’s first and second campaigns. Consequently, it lacked the closure of Vox Machina’s final adventures and the establishment of the Republic of Tal’Dorei.

In a groundbreaking move, Reborn dedicates an entire chapter to the —a meta-game layer that runs parallel to individual adventures. Players build safe houses, sway public opinion, sabotage supply lines, and recruit from the oppressed. The GM tracks a "Shadow Economy" and a "Fear Index." When the Fear Index drops to zero, a full-scale uprising begins, changing the region’s rules permanently.

DMs are given detailed breakdowns of the city's districts, from the academic halls of the Alabaster Lyceum to the shadowy underbelly of the Lower Slums. The book emphasizes that Emon is a melting pot of races and cultures, making it a perfect starting point for diverse parties. Optional rules based on Matt Mercer’s own table,

Then the Orm screamed, "Kill them all!"

"Tal 39," a voice rasped from his shadow. Vex, his handler—a woman made of old scars and older bitterness—stepped beside him. "The client wants a distraction. You burn the front gate. The real package goes out the back."

For those who own the original books, Reborn includes a conversion guide. You can port over old NPCs, but their mechanics must be reworked: "I'm not taking it off

On the player side, the subclasses are the star of the show. The , for instance, allows players to tap into the cycles of the moon, offering a versatile spellcaster that shifts in power and ability based on the lunar phase. This mechanic is not only fun to play but deeply rooted in the lore of Exandria, where the moon

: Includes five brand-new options such as the College of Tragedy for Bards, Moon Domain for Clerics, and Blood Magic for Wizards.