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Monster Manual (3.5) $9.99
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Monster Manual (3.5)
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Monster Manual (3.5)
Publisher: Wizards of the Coast
by Timothy B. [Featured Reviewer]
Date Added: 08/04/2022 11:42:21

Originally posted here: https://theotherside.timsbrannan.com/2022/08/monstrous-mondays-d-3rd-edition-monster.html

It is the year 2000. We don't have flying cars, but I have a brand new baby, and Wizards of the Coast, the brand new owners of Dungeons & Dragons are putting out their new 3rd Edition material. The Monster Manual was the last of the three core rule books.

For today I am going to consider the 3.0 and the 3.5 versions of the Monster Manuals. I am also considering the Print and PDF versions from DriveThruRPG.

Monster Manual 3rd Edition

3.5 324 pages. 425 monsters.

More so than the AD&D 2nd Edition Monstrous Compendiums or Manual this book felt like the Monster Manual of old.

It was the start of the new millennium (almost) and we all survived Y2K. I had been moving away from D&D for some time by this point and this was the edition that brought me back. I do sometimes still get the urge to play 3.x and this book is one of those reasons.

The art budget for D&D (no more "Advanced") was heavily increased. Art that would have been chosen for cover art for products in the 1990s now joins several more just like for interior art. Every monster in illustrated in full color now and the book itself is a work of art.

Inside are all the favorites and many new ones to boot. Demons and Devils are back AS Demons and Devils, although they also retain their bowdlerized names of Tanar'ri and Baatezu respectively. This works out to Wizards of the Coast's advantage since now those names can be considered Product Identity under the newly formed OGL. Sure other publishers can, and do (and boy do they!), talk about demons, but Tanar'i are off-limits.

What is special about this book, and 3.x in general, is now monsters are built using the same rules as characters. They have the same abilities, a great wyrm blue dragon has a strength of 39, and built like characters are with the same skills and the new feat system. So that same ancient blue dragon can have a fly-by attack feat. I can't say everything is perfect, but it is certainly better than the catch as catch can abilities of AD&D where a Will-O-the-wisp can has ridiculous stats.

The implication is here is that some monsters could even be characters. For a crazy example take the Skum (p.229). It has 2d8+2 HD. At the bottom of the stat block is a "Level Adjustment" of +3. Skum start out at 3rd level but still 0 XP. Once they gain enough to get to 4th level they can advance. Usually, there is a preferred class listed, but almost everything can advance as a fighter.

Creatures also get a different hit die based on their type. Faeries get a d6 while undead gets a d12. Type is very important here.

There are also templates which is a great idea. Have a 14th-level fighter who is changed into a vampire? Well in older forms of D&D he would have gone down to the HD of a vampire. In 3.x he is now 14th level (yeah level drain is gone, more or less) and you add vampire abilities on top. It was something hinted at with Ravenloft, now it is part of the rules.

I mentioned the art, it is great though there are some changes between the 3.0 and 3.5 versions.

In fact, there are some monsters not illustrated in the 3.0 version that do get illustrations in the 3.5.

It is really a great resource. My one complaint is that the one monster per page layout is gone. This does conserve space and makes the book smaller, I just had gotten used to the format with 2nd Ed. 4th Ed would bring it back.

I have very fond memories of this book. My oldest son as a small child would spend hours flipping through it, just like I had done with the original Monster Manual.



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
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Monster Manual (3.5)
Publisher: Wizards of the Coast
by Chris A. [Verified Purchaser]
Date Added: 05/26/2015 11:48:58

As with the PHB and DMG for 3.5 ed, the MM for 3.5 is equally well-made; beautiful, high-resolution page images which stand up to the "zoom-in" test quite well. I have yet to see any flaws in the images for these pages, in any of these (3.5 core rules) books, and the font is crystal clear, even at 600% magnification. Like the other two books, it is fully indexed and searchable, and you get all this for a modest file size of 32 MB, which is fantastic, in my opinion, since portable devices (iPhones / iPads) love small file sizes. Lastly, for only $9.99, it's beyond what you would normally call a "bargain;" a more apt description might be, "deal of the year." I am extremely happy with this book, and I am confident that others will share my enthusiasm.



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
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