
It’s a decent price for a book this size. I’ll update this post when I have my copy.Īt any rate, for $19.99 you can get the PDF on DriveThruRPG. I can’t speak for the book quality since I’m still waiting on a hardbound copy from one of Nocturnal Media’s Kickstarters I backed last year. KAP runs 272 pages if you include the newly redesigned character sheets in the back. Most of my previous reviews have been of minimalist RPGs who’s rules could be distilled into a few pages if you wanted them to be incredibly dense. The Pendragon book isn’t the most massive RPG book I own, but it’s nowhere near the smallest either. Primarily, the changes relate to layout and art. A few errata have been merged in, but otherwise, the two versions can be used interchangeably. I own both in PDF and 5.1 print-on-demand hardbound, and they contain mostly the same content. That said, King Arthur Pendragon 5.2 is a mainly cosmetic update from KAP 5.1. I’m going to approach this review as if you know nothing about previous versions.


I mean, what game has a chance against Nocturnal Media’s King Arthur Pendragon RPG?Īm I giving away the ending? Oops.
