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Beware the Draconian! (1-4). It's rather daring to set a new story with a new protagonist right in the heart of the original Dragonlance Chronicles. But, oh, Riva is horribly Mary-Sued here. Not only does she get her own artifact of the gods and her own Dragonlance, but she's also drawn the attention of powerful forces like Lord Soth and Kitiara and even gods like Takhisis and Paladine. Who even needs the Companions with Riva here?With all that said, this is still a good story that makes strong
The first story is a straightforward fantasy adventure filled with archetypal characters, jumping directory to the Dragonlance with little build-up. This is light, enjoyable fare worth about 3.5 stars. The second story was mostly crap with some irritating characters, especially the pratfall gnome Gnatsch with his stupid run together words and stupid inventions. I disliked this one enough that by the time it got more serious, I didn't care. 2 stars.The artwork on both was lovely, leaning toward e...
Really fun stories in the Dragonlance world recommend!
Tried combining this book with the other editions. It didn't work. These are nice side stories to the main Dragonlance Chronicles story arc. They fit for a fantasy story. They lack the feel of Dragonlance. That was my biggest drawback.
Some great art and interesting storylines but you will need to be a fan to truly get the most out of this. The plots take place concurrently with the original book trilogy so you may be lost if you haven’t read those
I grew up reading Dragonlance as a kid. It's been twenty years. Unfortunately there's not much here. Cheesy and dated. More of a nostalgic glimpse than anything else. I wouldn't mind seeing a reboot.
I'm so glad these comics were made available on Hoopla, I'd honestly never even known of their existence but now (similarly to the excellent Dungeons & Dragons: Forgotten Realms Classics series) I am hooked!Now if THAT page doesn't scream classic D&D-based comics to you, I don't know what you're missing!
Old 80's Dragonlance Comics that happen alongside the books. Sturm meets a monk of Majere and continues home to Solace without realizing that monk is actually his uncle. Then it follows the uncle's storyline. Not bad really but seems like a strange alternate timeline even though I'm pretty sure they are part of the overall canon.
Love going back to my childhood D&D days! Glad to find these and revisit that classic fantasy world that made me who I am today.
A pair of stories set during the events of the original Dragonlance novels. Both are pretty solid, interesting stories. Unfortunately, unlike the AD&D and Forgotten Realms comics from the same period, you really need to know at least the basics of Dragonlance to really appreciate them. I suspect they'd leave new readers pretty cold. Still, if you do know the Dragonlance saga, these make pretty nice side stories... (B+)
I first encountered Dragonlance in high school circa '85 and have always adored the core stories, especially the original trilogy, but always felt the ancillary stuff was lacking the heart and soul of the material by Weis & Hickman, and these comics are no different. Sometimes interesting, always serviceable, they are a decent diversionary read, but do not provide anything close to the type of memorable experience that you will never forget and always be willing to revisit that the original tril...
I grabbed this off Hoopla due to nostalgia - I loved the Dragonlance setting back in the day (still do) and wanted to see what this particular tie in was like. The artwork was on the plain side, but felt in line with what the big 2 were doing at the time. In particular I loved the look of the draconians and the dragons.The plots... meh. The first half had a somewhat interesting story that followed a woman who wanted to be a knight of Solamnia (which, like most organizations modeled after medieva...