Return to the Keep on the Borderlands

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Return to the Keep on the Borderlands
Return to the Keep01.jpg
Cover of RttKotB, art by Fred Fields.
Type: Adventure
Code/Abbreviation: RttKotB or
TSR 11327
Edition: second edition
Author(s): John D. Rateliff
Editor(s): Duane Maxwell
Cover Artist(s): Fred Fields
Interior Artist(s): Glenn Brewer
Series: Silver Anniversary Adventures
Publisher: TSR
First Published: June 1999
Pages: 64
ISBN: 0-7869-1327-4
Class: Apocryphal

Return to the Keep on the Borderlands is a 1999 adventure for second edition. It is a sequel to the original The Keep on the Borderlands module (B2) from 1979. Both modules were published by TSR, Inc. It takes place twenty years after the events of The Keep on the Borderlands, and featured a fully re-stocked Caves of Chaos. Although the original B2 publication was generic in terms of setting, the 1999 Return located the Keep in the World of Greyhawk.

The placement of the Keep in Greyhawk was made difficult, due to some details not matching the Greyhawk setting, such as: several non-Greyhawk deities, nations, and peoples. Two of the NPC descriptions even refer to details from the Mystara setting rather than Greyhawk. Therefore, for the purposes of this wiki, it is considered apocryphal, and it is left to the DM to determine if it is useful for their campaign.

Background[edit]

Although the original B2 The Keep on the Borderlands publication was generic in terms of setting, the 1999 "Return" publication retroactively placed the Keep in the World of Greyhawk, specifically in the southwestern Yeomanry .

The events depicted in the sequel take place approximately 20 years after those in the original B2 module. It is nevertheless an introductory adventure intended for low-level characters.

Plot summary[edit]

Return to the Keep on the Borderlands was set twenty years after the events of the original module, and featured a fully re-stocked Caves of Chaos.[1]

Publication history[edit]

Return to the Keep on the Borderlands was written by John D. Rateliff, and published by TSR in June 1999.[2]

Several supplements were released in 1999 to update some of the most popular of TSR's Dungeons & Dragons adventures, including Against the Giants: The Liberation of Geoff (1999), Dragonlance Classics 1fifth Anniversary Edition (1999), Ravenloft (1999), Return to the Keep on the Borderlands (1999) and Return to White Plume Mountain (1999).[3]:284

Reception[edit]

Andrew Byers, in his review of the adventure for Pyramid magazine, commented that "much of this module is a dungeon crawl, but it's an intelligently designed one, with a fleshed-out base of operations for adventurers, an interesting wilderness environment, and some very good characterization of non-player characters. It could easily provide the basis for an extended campaign for low-level adventurers."[1] Byers stated "If you're not nostalgic about the early days of D&D ... don't buy this book. But if you're interested in reliving (or experiencing for the first time) those first few roleplaying adventures... I don't think you'll be disappointed."[1]

Notes[edit]

Because of the inclusion of things like a Mystara deity, and the city of Cyndicea, on the Mystara mailing list Sean K. Reynolds is quoted from the original AOL message boards as saying,

"RTTKOTB was never supposed to be a GH product. It was a core product, designed with some Babylonian/Sumerian deities (_not_ Mystaran deities), and the GH logo was added late in the production schedule, and nobody caught it in time. ... It wasn't supposed to be a GH book, it's not a GH book, it's not a Mystara book, and so he could have suggested it be near the City of Greyhawk or Glantri for all it matters. It's just a suggestion, it's not canon, it doesn't matter. Previous canon location of the old adventure doesn't matter (note that apparently the first printing of the original actually had a GH location listed in it, which was dropped in later printings), since this is a _core D&D_ adventure and doesn't require any of our other world material." [4]

External links[edit]

Disclaimer:Any lore presented through the following links does not necessarily adhere to established officially published content, and the views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of the editors of this wiki.

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. a b c Byers, Andrew (2000-01-07). "Pyramid Review: Return to the Keep on the Borderlands". Pyramid (Online). (sample)
  2. WotC Product Library: Return to the Keep on the Borderlands. wizards.com.
  3. Shannon Appelcline (2011) Designers & Dragons, Mongoose Publishing ISBN: 978-1-907702-58-7.
  4. Reynolds, Sean K.. Mystarra Archives: The official word on the Keep on the Borderlands (AOL message boards). Oracle.wizards.com. TSR, 26 September 2000. Archived from the original on 29 January 2015. Retrieved on 2 June 2021.

Bibliography[edit]

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).

Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index

The Index is based on previous work of Jason Zavoda through '08, and his work as continued and updated by Eric Johnson, Richard DiIoia, Jason "PupickDad" Jacobson, a French fan group, and numerous other fans over the years. The wiki page for the EGI has a list of sources, full product names, abbreviations, and a link to the full, downloadable index.

Topic Type Description Product Page/Card/Image

Return to the Keep on the Borderlands Adventure Adventure - Living Greyhawk, Living Onnwal Gazetteer, D&D 3.5e 5