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Forgotten Realms designer can't get over the fact that someone out there has a PhD in the D&D setting he created: "You do know I make this all up, you know?"
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Moises Taveras
2025-11-12
Ed Greenwood, creator of the famed D&D setting known as the Forgotten Realms, recently shared that he was both amazed and bewildered by the fact that someone has a PhD in the lore of his fantasy world, which has gone on to feature heavily in both the worlds of tabletop and video games. "I was told that somebody had a doctorate in Realms lore obtained from an official university," Greenwood shared during a recent appearance on the Slandered Gaming podcast. "And I said, 'Really? And when you impaneled the experts for defending the doctorate, why didn't you phone me?" According to Greenwood, who reunited with David Gaider (of Dragon Age fame) and Trent Oster on this Baldur's Gate 2-themed 25th anniversary show, the school did in fact reach out out to the publishers of D&D only to be told that Greenwood, in a shock to all parties, had passed away. Fallout co-creator Tim Cain's long list of "nitpicky" D&D questions for Wizards of the Coast in 2002 might help explain why Larian wanted to move on from the tabletop license after Baldur's Gate 3 "I don't know why I subject myself to this level of torture": Oblivion Remastered player spends 100 hours spamming the RPG's most basic spell in the sewers, all to achieve a goal they set themselves as a child To celebrate Critical Role 4, Matt Mercer hid an important message to new DM Brennan Lee Mulligan inside a gifted pair of hand-forged swords "Apparently, they repeated when it was time for the D&D movie guys. That was a very good way of grieving the brush off," Greenwood said. Greenwood proceeded to cruise past the humorous anecdote and communicate his astonishment at the fact that anybody would study up on the world that he invented so thoroughly, let alone that an accredited institution would then reward said person with a doctorate certifying their knowledge and fandom. Nowadays, the Forgotten Realms, which Greenwood created back in the '60s as the setting for his childhood stories, figures prominently in the world of D&D. It is one of the most popular settings in the popular tabletop game, and is featured in numerous video games, including the Neverwinter Nights games and, of course, Baldur's Gate 3. Shawn Levy says making Netflix's Dungeons and Dragons TV show has been a "challenging process" because "you're adapting a world and a lexicon and a spirit"
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mintJelly
Jan 20, 03:01 PM
Pretty boring story. Worth the money.
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galacticToad
Jan 18, 10:31 AM
What's your take? , classic style. likely Ugh, so many bugs.
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nerfedUnicorn
Jan 14, 09:01 AM
This isn't a game, it's a masterpiece (in a good way). sus
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Captain_Obviouss
Dec 20, 04:51 AM
🤡 :D Bad multiplayer. goodbye nah
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snailJedi
Dec 12, 03:49 PM
🐉 Up to you.
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