Buy the Neverland RPG from Amazon: bit.ly/NeverlandRPG Buy the Neverland RPG from Bookshop: bit.ly/NeverlandRPGBookshop Buy it in PDF: bit.ly/NeverlandPDF Join the Questing Knights on Patreon: bit.ly/QBPatreon
I bought the hardcover for $25.00 of the Amazon link, but on DriveThruRPG, I see the PDF alone is $20. Do you know if I missed an option somewhere for a physical copy w/PDF included?
This might be the most well-designed book I've ever seen. If every gamebook was designed this way but with different setting/themes I'd be happy to line my shelves with them.
Honestly man, I never really understood the appeal of OSR until I started watching your channel. The creativity and quality to be found in this scene leaves me with a hunger to explore it all. Thanks for being our Virgil, bro.
Thanks for the review! Andrew Kolb's Neverland was one of the first acquisitions we made whenever I joined Andrews McMeel Publishing to stand up our RPG division. Katie Gould is the acquiring editor, while I was the developer. Andrew is an incredibly gifted writer and artist. To deliver on the gorgeous interior, we over-indexed on quality of print, carrying forward many of the learnings we picked up with Zweihander print standards (quality of print, collector's grade, inexpensive). -d.fx
So excited to see Andrew Kolb's work featured here! You're right to say this is his first project as a game designer but the quality of the book is standard for him, as he has a background and career in writing, designing, and illustrating children's books. I've been following him for years for his art and he has a phenomenal monthly post on his blog about all the media he's consumed over the last few months and what his thoughts are. Not surprised to see the OSR influence, as he's been playing in a LotFP game for a few years now, and I believe he even ran a campaign of A Red and Pleasant Land a couple years ago. Highly recommend checking out the rest of his work!
That is a great idea! As a long time gamer (started with AD&D in 1981) it's rare to see something new I really like. That one was a wow moment. So simple yet effective.
I love the idea of taking old stories and media imagery in general knowledge and making them gameable settings with twists. Alice in Wonderland, this, hell, I'd love a Wizard of Oz OSR setting just to experience it without reading all the books. Or Narnia.
The book called "A red and pleasant land" is about wonderland. I think a christian publisher made Narnia back in 1988. Then their is Grim Hollow which is about the Brothers Grim fairy tails. I agree about that Oz should be a settings book. I also think a settings book about the story's of Hans Christian Anderson should also be a thing. Then maybe a steampunk setting about the story's of Jules Verne.
TSR made a module called Dungeonland which is Alice and Wonderland with stats and just as brutal as you might hope. XD en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeonland
A while back I started making a homebrew world where players play as human children who get transported to a fantasy world (i got a good bit done but its on hold for a while) But I based everything loosely on familiar portal fantasy books but with a few twists. The classic Oz Four appeared as bizarro style villains of themselves, the evil version of Lion doubling as a Scar type Kingslayer, the Tin Woodsman as a warforged craving hearts to become real, the Scarecrow a sentient construct who drains knowledge, and Dorothy as a girl who arrives before the players but becomes an evil witch. I think the reason I stopped working on it is I thought it was a bit too silly lmao, and as it went on I started to pick up on more original ideas for the setting but needed to redo everything to compensate.
I would love to hear the story of how such a high quality product can be made and sold for this price. It's mind boggling to me that this level of value can exist at all. I was smitten with Hot Springs Island from the day I watched your video on it and eventually received a copy of both books as a gift after having given up hope of finding a copy on my own for a reasonable price (UK resident here). I'm serious though, Neverland appears to be a magnificent book and I can't fathom how it can be mine for under £17 - my copy is due to arrive mid November.
I had no intention of buying this book but having finished the video... I bought it. I don't even run 5e games but it seems like a totally transferrable world full of useful tools, plenty of inspiration and... well it's just a beautiful piece of work. Thanks for bringing it to our attention.
Wow!!! What a beautiful looking book. I love the format and the immense amount of tables and tools it provides. I had to buy it immediately after this video (through your amazon affiliate link). Thanks for the review, you’re quickly becoming one of my favorite content creators. Your dungeon creation series has been fantastic so far!
I tend to be late to the party, but I just bought a copy of this to run a 5E campaign at a library for my son and other kids. This seems like a great setting for that, and I figure I can add in some other beasties, lore, etc. from other island settings like Cyradon (HARP from ICE), The Isle of the Unknown (LotFP), and the islands from old TSR adventures too. Thanks for the thorough review.
xD Thought the same. Some sort of Azhdarchid to be exact. To be fair they were every bit as fantastic as most fantasy creatures. The author probably likes paleofauna as there is a Dimetrodon just next to it in the same page.
I wonder how this would fit as a kind of alternate/other/fae world for the Dolmenwood setting? Having a party stumble across a portal to Neverland for some side adventures.
Thank you for another great review! It looks like I'll be buying this, as I do a lot of the things you review. Being able to look at a flip-through is great!
Amazon currently has a 3 for 2 sale going on and this book is on the list. Along with several 5e, including Icewind Dale; Pathfinder and Starfinder books.
Now that I know "Giant Crocodile That Is Also A Dungeon" is a theme in the OSR community, it makes me want to include something of that kind in my own game. Maybe an underwater rock formation that looks like a crocodile, that you enter by swimming into its gaping maw. (Just make sure it's not magically enchanted to shut behind you).
@@Zenas521 There's an Oz game out there but it's not OSR. www.drivethrurpg.com/product/83891/Adventures-in-Oz-Fantasy-Roleplaying-Beyond-the-Yellow-Brick-Road
Picked this one up and it's great, though my daughter swiped it up quick and has read the whole thing already. I'm trying to convince her to run a game now :)
Found this gem. I was just ranting at how it was $25 to my friends. If WoTC made this it would have been $50+ for sure. This is just a fun read in itself.
Thanks for the great videos- the Yoon Suin shot out in a prior video has my really wanting to play some kind of OSR that pulls more from BECMI, but I'm in Tokyo and ordering books from the USA is mostly and a lot of the players are younger and not familiar with what came prior to 5e. I currently run 2 5e campaigns, but i'd like to play something that feels more old school (ohhh 5e, as pretty as you are-- you leave a lot to be desired for us DMs). Basic Fantasy (thanks again for that review, too) seems an intriguing option, so to you and your audience members-- What OSRs with a easy access for 5e gen players should I consider? I'm a bit overwhelmed with where to start. Thanks to all that respond!
So you do not have to desecrate a wonderful looking book the Maps and character sheets available for download at www.kolbisneat.com/portfolio/neverland/
I'm super new to tabletop rpgs, how do you adapt books like this with settings to other rulesets? Im starting with rules light to get into the hang of it. Is it simply, replacing the rules with stat adjustments? (I also have to play solo :( )
Looking at Ch. 2, the monsters will require some work to convert from 5e to OSR. It will not be entirely intuitive and would recommend doing some prep ahead of time than doing it at the table. On second thought, some things are super hard to translate, especially damage-wise. A gnome does 1d6+10 damage. How do you translate that from 5e to OSR?
I'd look for equivalent or similar creatures already written in your OSR system of choice, or else just make everything deal 1d6 and adjust up or down as needed. In OSR it seems like most things do 1d6 unless they have a special weapon or claws.
God damnit, guy did everything we do but better, cheaper and for a mainstream audience. We are so screwed. Also, longish video by him here describing it ua-cam.com/video/H7WNVsMyMJE/v-deo.html Also, doesn't mention R&PL as an influence??? Good to see the Orwell machine in full effect
Geezer here... On the crocodile you can crawl inside. Anyone remember the game, originally from Dragon magazine.... Reprinted as a box board game as I recall.... Hint... Involved the dreaded blahtatomus (spelled horribly wrong I suspect) It's.... Snits Revenge. Game on.
@@richmcgee434 yeah the Intellectual property is public domain so you can set as many of you own stories. but it has to be transformative for you to copyright your story... but you can't copyright stuff that's public domain like dracula or elves or illithids . unless you games workshop trying to copyright warhammers and pauldrons.
This looks amazing and I'd love to get this to my table, but I don't understand how to create characters for this world or how to work this world into my existing game. Neverland is essentially a type of portal fiction, where kids from the "real world" travel to a fantasy world but there doesn't seem to be any game mechanics to replicate that scenario in this setting. Feels like this should have been designed as an RPG unto itself, rather than a settings book. Am I missing something?
There are a lot of rules for exploration, encounters etc, and a lot of creatures, but there isn't a system to run combat or general "I try to do something" resolution system -- you'll need to select your own method of dealing with these things, and some version of DnD is going to be easiest. It's introduced as 5e compatible and while this is true, I think you could pretty comfortably use it with a previous edition of D&D or an OSR system with minimal tweaking.
I bought the hardcover for $25.00 of the Amazon link, but on DriveThruRPG, I see the PDF alone is $20. Do you know if I missed an option somewhere for a physical copy w/PDF included?
@@QuestingBeast That's interesting, honestly never heard of someone doing it that way before. Do you just give a pre-set amount of XP for the entire session or something?
@@MythosFilmsYT I award XP for recovering treasure, usually 1xp per gold piece. That's the standard XP mechanic from older editions. It encourages exploration over combat. Some editions give out a small amount of XP for killing monsters, but not much vs treasure.
It is amazing that independent creators can turn out a quality product (intellectually and physically) yet Wizards books are very vanilla, tend to fall apart and cost more.
@@dungeoneering1974 I still have my original 1978 copies of the PH, MM and DMG and they are in better condition than my 5E stuff. They were all stitched.
I think an equally valid compliment to independent creators vs criticism of wizards, is that of functional design; Wotc 5e adventures are embarrassingly weak in this regards.
They do tend to fall apart more, but that's only one minor factor. The rest is prettt awesome - Tales From the Yawning Portal, Curse of Strahd, etc. And the art is amazing!
If I recall neverland is not really consistent with that. After all Peter Pan himself fled to Neverland as a baby but by time of the story he is a young boy.
Buy the Neverland RPG from Amazon: bit.ly/NeverlandRPG
Buy the Neverland RPG from Bookshop: bit.ly/NeverlandRPGBookshop
Buy it in PDF: bit.ly/NeverlandPDF
Join the Questing Knights on Patreon: bit.ly/QBPatreon
I bought the hardcover for $25.00 of the Amazon link, but on DriveThruRPG, I see the PDF alone is $20. Do you know if I missed an option somewhere for a physical copy w/PDF included?
Thank you for the links! I'm excited for this one!
This might be the most well-designed book I've ever seen. If every gamebook was designed this way but with different setting/themes I'd be happy to line my shelves with them.
Honestly man, I never really understood the appeal of OSR until I started watching your channel. The creativity and quality to be found in this scene leaves me with a hunger to explore it all. Thanks for being our Virgil, bro.
Thanks for the review!
Andrew Kolb's Neverland was one of the first acquisitions we made whenever I joined Andrews McMeel Publishing to stand up our RPG division. Katie Gould is the acquiring editor, while I was the developer.
Andrew is an incredibly gifted writer and artist. To deliver on the gorgeous interior, we over-indexed on quality of print, carrying forward many of the learnings we picked up with Zweihander print standards (quality of print, collector's grade, inexpensive).
-d.fx
This video just cost me $25 to watch...
Same
So excited to see Andrew Kolb's work featured here! You're right to say this is his first project as a game designer but the quality of the book is standard for him, as he has a background and career in writing, designing, and illustrating children's books. I've been following him for years for his art and he has a phenomenal monthly post on his blog about all the media he's consumed over the last few months and what his thoughts are. Not surprised to see the OSR influence, as he's been playing in a LotFP game for a few years now, and I believe he even ran a campaign of A Red and Pleasant Land a couple years ago. Highly recommend checking out the rest of his work!
"It's something in the water...I dunno...everyone wants to make giant crocadiles" < +1 for the pun.
Wow. Ordered the book before the video even finished. The quality is amazing.
Same! Looked it up during the video and Amazon is selling it for $18 lol. STOLEN
Love the adaptable "X" stat idea. I'm so latching onto this concept. Omg! I'm borrowing a bunch of stuff from this thing! Awesome!
That is a great idea! As a long time gamer (started with AD&D in 1981) it's rare to see something new I really like. That one was a wow moment. So simple yet effective.
I love the idea of taking old stories and media imagery in general knowledge and making them gameable settings with twists. Alice in Wonderland, this, hell, I'd love a Wizard of Oz OSR setting just to experience it without reading all the books. Or Narnia.
The book called "A red and pleasant land" is about wonderland. I think a christian publisher made Narnia back in 1988. Then their is Grim Hollow which is about the Brothers Grim fairy tails. I agree about that Oz should be a settings book. I also think a settings book about the story's of Hans Christian Anderson should also be a thing. Then maybe a steampunk setting about the story's of Jules Verne.
@@Zenas521 A lot of good stuff. Han's would be fun. I could see The Little Mermaid being fleshed out.
TSR made a module called Dungeonland which is Alice and Wonderland with stats and just as brutal as you might hope. XD
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeonland
A while back I started making a homebrew world where players play as human children who get transported to a fantasy world (i got a good bit done but its on hold for a while)
But I based everything loosely on familiar portal fantasy books but with a few twists. The classic Oz Four appeared as bizarro style villains of themselves, the evil version of Lion doubling as a Scar type Kingslayer, the Tin Woodsman as a warforged craving hearts to become real, the Scarecrow a sentient construct who drains knowledge, and Dorothy as a girl who arrives before the players but becomes an evil witch.
I think the reason I stopped working on it is I thought it was a bit too silly lmao, and as it went on I started to pick up on more original ideas for the setting but needed to redo everything to compensate.
The author is releasing an Oz-based book in September of this year.
I would love to hear the story of how such a high quality product can be made and sold for this price. It's mind boggling to me that this level of value can exist at all.
I was smitten with Hot Springs Island from the day I watched your video on it and eventually received a copy of both books as a gift after having given up hope of finding a copy on my own for a reasonable price (UK resident here).
I'm serious though, Neverland appears to be a magnificent book and I can't fathom how it can be mine for under £17 - my copy is due to arrive mid November.
I was immediately struck by the art design of this book, I gotta get my hands on it!
I had no intention of buying this book but having finished the video... I bought it. I don't even run 5e games but it seems like a totally transferrable world full of useful tools, plenty of inspiration and... well it's just a beautiful piece of work. Thanks for bringing it to our attention.
I didn't know I wanted this until this review.
I didn't know this existed until this review too.
Thank you for your content!
Wow!!! What a beautiful looking book. I love the format and the immense amount of tables and tools it provides. I had to buy it immediately after this video (through your amazon affiliate link). Thanks for the review, you’re quickly becoming one of my favorite content creators. Your dungeon creation series has been fantastic so far!
I tend to be late to the party, but I just bought a copy of this to run a 5E campaign at a library for my son and other kids. This seems like a great setting for that, and I figure I can add in some other beasties, lore, etc. from other island settings like Cyradon (HARP from ICE), The Isle of the Unknown (LotFP), and the islands from old TSR adventures too. Thanks for the thorough review.
Dude, that's not a pelican, it's a pterosaur.
xD Thought the same. Some sort of Azhdarchid to be exact. To be fair they were every bit as fantastic as most fantasy creatures.
The author probably likes paleofauna as there is a Dimetrodon just next to it in the same page.
Nice overview and agreed, this is easily one of the best RPG products I have purchased this year. Super high quality as well.
Another OSR giant crocodile to crawl inside is the Fungal Ambassodile, going all the way back to *Veins of the Earth*!
I love this book, i photocopied my handouts to preserve them, buy it buy it now!!!
Fantastic! I was holding off to buy this, but I just went ahead and got this!
One of the most handsome roleplaying books I've ever seen.
Blimey, that is absolutely gorgeous!
Blown away by the quality, depth, and design. I'll need to pick this up soon.
the price alone makes this handsome book so desirable! thanks for the review
How did anyone not like this video?
10:05
This is Crab Rave.
Crabs on the beach, and in Chime Hours they even dance to the music!
Stunning book design! And illustration! Thanks for sharing.
I wonder how this would fit as a kind of alternate/other/fae world for the Dolmenwood setting? Having a party stumble across a portal to Neverland for some side adventures.
This thing looks really nice.
Amazing book! I'm definitely getting it!
Thanks for the heads up, Ben! The book looks wonderful. Got it.
Yeah I bought this immediately after watching this.
Thank you for another great review! It looks like I'll be buying this, as I do a lot of the things you review. Being able to look at a flip-through is great!
Aaaaand ordered it.
WOW I GOTTA HAVE THIS BOOK!
That's amazing. I might get that for my daughter to run.
I like books like this for 5e or some type RPG that reminds me of childhood loves.
Fantastic book and an amazing review! Thanks Ben!
I’m getting this. I need a wonderland book to go with it
This would make for an amazing Visitation/Portal Fantasy game!
Amazon currently has a 3 for 2 sale going on and this book is on the list. Along with several 5e, including Icewind Dale; Pathfinder and Starfinder books.
Looks like a beautiful book. I read the pdf preview and didn't seem that good but with this review I see It will be totally worth it to buy it. :)
Definitely going on my Christmas list!
Woo! Got my Patreon shout out! Guess I gotta buy this now....
Added to my wishlist. Very nice
Now that I know "Giant Crocodile That Is Also A Dungeon" is a theme in the OSR community, it makes me want to include something of that kind in my own game. Maybe an underwater rock formation that looks like a crocodile, that you enter by swimming into its gaping maw. (Just make sure it's not magically enchanted to shut behind you).
Ordered immediately after watching video.
Quite possibly the greatest quality for money that you can find.
great episode
I got something to say
I ordered this book today
Didn't cost much to me
But it'll get read
Hmm? I wonder if a Wonderland Campaign Setting Book will be next?
There is one: "A Red and Pleasant Land" (it's a really good book as well)
@@Santzlol Excellent book, but in fairness that's Wonderland + Vampires.
Their is a Wonderland book, but how about a Oz book.
@@Zenas521 my thoughts exactly
@@Zenas521 There's an Oz game out there but it's not OSR. www.drivethrurpg.com/product/83891/Adventures-in-Oz-Fantasy-Roleplaying-Beyond-the-Yellow-Brick-Road
I got it with an Amazon coupon for $17. Very worthwhile
I really hope it will be available on amazon.it some day...
Picked this one up and it's great, though my daughter swiped it up quick and has read the whole thing already. I'm trying to convince her to run a game now :)
Holy shit I'm impressed
Found this gem. I was just ranting at how it was $25 to my friends. If WoTC made this it would have been $50+ for sure. This is just a fun read in itself.
Now he need to make another book but in Wonderland world
That bestiary section was sooo coool
...okay, now I kinda want this book...
Usually buy only pdfs, but I'm thinking I want this hardcover book.
great review very helpful
Glad you liked it
Just ordered this one for $18! I appreciate what they did to rebrand the Native Americans
Awesome review
why do i want to buy almost every OSR book you review :)
Thanks for the great videos- the Yoon Suin shot out in a prior video has my really wanting to play some kind of OSR that pulls more from BECMI, but I'm in Tokyo and ordering books from the USA is mostly and a lot of the players are younger and not familiar with what came prior to 5e. I currently run 2 5e campaigns, but i'd like to play something that feels more old school (ohhh 5e, as pretty as you are-- you leave a lot to be desired for us DMs). Basic Fantasy (thanks again for that review, too) seems an intriguing option, so to you and your audience members-- What OSRs with a easy access for 5e gen players should I consider? I'm a bit overwhelmed with where to start. Thanks to all that respond!
That map looks like it'd be amazing have printed on a cloth.
I need this, but for lamentations 🙏
Part of me wants to run this as part of The Midderlands
Love that pirates of the Caribbean take off
"Eeeeeeeeeexit light-ah..."
I bought it and LOVE it, but man the print is tiny.
So you do not have to desecrate a wonderful looking book the Maps and character sheets available for download at www.kolbisneat.com/portfolio/neverland/
Amazing.
Andrew MacMeel has also been the publisher of Zweihänder for the last year or so. Seems like they are stretching out in the RPG direction.
We are indeed! Neverland is just the tip of the iceberg. We've been quiet, but you can watch what else we have coming at zweihander.game
I didn't even make it halfway through the video before I ordered it from Amazon lol
captains hooks ship is a spelljammer lol
Oh, wow! I'd not considered roleplaying Neverland Ranch...
I'm super new to tabletop rpgs, how do you adapt books like this with settings to other rulesets? Im starting with rules light to get into the hang of it. Is it simply, replacing the rules with stat adjustments? (I also have to play solo :( )
Looking at Ch. 2, the monsters will require some work to convert from 5e to OSR. It will not be entirely intuitive and would recommend doing some prep ahead of time than doing it at the table. On second thought, some things are super hard to translate, especially damage-wise. A gnome does 1d6+10 damage. How do you translate that from 5e to OSR?
I'd look for equivalent or similar creatures already written in your OSR system of choice, or else just make everything deal 1d6 and adjust up or down as needed. In OSR it seems like most things do 1d6 unless they have a special weapon or claws.
God damnit, guy did everything we do but better, cheaper and for a mainstream audience. We are so screwed.
Also, longish video by him here describing it ua-cam.com/video/H7WNVsMyMJE/v-deo.html
Also, doesn't mention R&PL as an influence??? Good to see the Orwell machine in full effect
Geezer here...
On the crocodile you can crawl inside.
Anyone remember the game, originally from Dragon magazine.... Reprinted as a box board game as I recall....
Hint... Involved the dreaded blahtatomus (spelled horribly wrong I suspect)
It's....
Snits Revenge.
Game on.
@@richmcgee434 Yeah..... Awful green things.....
Ohhhh those were the days.
@@richmcgee434 Not sure.. They had many jewels indeed.
Biggest Thank You on that info.
Game On.
anyone know what the ideal level range is for this setting?
Its for level 1+, but like all campaign settings, it can be extended to higher levels fairly easily.
i was thinking of writing lovecraft inspired setting based in neverland. i didn't know its now public domain.
@@richmcgee434 yeah the Intellectual property is public domain so you can set as many of you own stories. but it has to be transformative for you to copyright your story... but you can't copyright stuff that's public domain like dracula or elves or illithids . unless you games workshop trying to copyright warhammers and pauldrons.
Ilithids aren't in the public domain! They're owned by Wizards!
And intellectual property definitely did exist during the time Peter Pan was put out (1850s to 1910s I think).
This looks amazing and I'd love to get this to my table, but I don't understand how to create characters for this world or how to work this world into my existing game. Neverland is essentially a type of portal fiction, where kids from the "real world" travel to a fantasy world but there doesn't seem to be any game mechanics to replicate that scenario in this setting. Feels like this should have been designed as an RPG unto itself, rather than a settings book. Am I missing something?
does this setting need to be used in tandem with another RPG system, or can you play a campaign just with this book?
There are a lot of rules for exploration, encounters etc, and a lot of creatures, but there isn't a system to run combat or general "I try to do something" resolution system -- you'll need to select your own method of dealing with these things, and some version of DnD is going to be easiest. It's introduced as 5e compatible and while this is true, I think you could pretty comfortably use it with a previous edition of D&D or an OSR system with minimal tweaking.
Wow this book is so well made! Is there a dark fantasy setting book made in a similar way?
Hot Springs Island
Could this easily be run using Dungeon Crawl Classics?
I bought the hardcover for $25.00 of the Amazon link, but on DriveThruRPG, I see the PDF alone is $20. Do you know if I missed an option somewhere for a physical copy w/PDF included?
looks amazing... but mannn. the size of those letters... so small.
This is amazing
The one thing I'm really missing in Chapter 2 is Challenge Ratings/how much XP you get from defeating a creature. How do other people do this?
I typically don't give out XP for fighting monsters and don't use challenge ratings.
@@QuestingBeast That's interesting, honestly never heard of someone doing it that way before. Do you just give a pre-set amount of XP for the entire session or something?
@@MythosFilmsYT I award XP for recovering treasure, usually 1xp per gold piece. That's the standard XP mechanic from older editions. It encourages exploration over combat. Some editions give out a small amount of XP for killing monsters, but not much vs treasure.
@@QuestingBeast For a setting like Neverland, that's actually a really great idea. Thanks for sharing that! I'll discuss it with the party 😁
Most of those monsters are from Celtic or Irish and Scottish mythology
This looks excellent. I am very tired of the verbose writing in the WOTC offerings. Especially because it all gets dumped off at game time anyway.
It is amazing that independent creators can turn out a quality product (intellectually and physically) yet Wizards books are very vanilla, tend to fall apart and cost more.
@@dungeoneering1974 I still have my original 1978 copies of the PH, MM and DMG and they are in better condition than my 5E stuff. They were all stitched.
Their is something to be said about brand name recognition.
I think an equally valid compliment to independent creators vs criticism of wizards, is that of functional design; Wotc 5e adventures are embarrassingly weak in this regards.
They do tend to fall apart more, but that's only one minor factor. The rest is prettt awesome - Tales From the Yawning Portal, Curse of Strahd, etc. And the art is amazing!
wasn't the whole "catch" of neverland that you do not age there?
then why are all the characters older?
Captain Hook was old. Maybe whatever happened to him, happened to them.
If I recall neverland is not really consistent with that. After all Peter Pan himself fled to Neverland as a baby but by time of the story he is a young boy.
What would be my best option for ordering this book in Asia? I looked at amazon and the shipping costs 40$ for a 25$ book...
Just shows that the main stream publisher's just charge way too much for rpg books.
I am going to use this and follow up after the movie Hook. Peter Pan will be an old man with the heart of a Child. (I’m getting old)
I've got to stop watching your videos Ben. They're costing me too much money. :p