Hi everyone. I am looking for maps of the cities of Greyhawk. I know a few have been published but not in great detail. On the interwebs I have found Dyvers and Verbobonc and they are in black & white. They appear to be similar art work. What I fail to see, is where they came from. Is there a book?
Verbobonc was detailed in the Living Greyhawk setting, as was Dyvers.
I don' know if the campaign guides are even available online anymore.
The Verbobonc map (there are several, all different) may have come from Fate of Istus (WG8). Hard to be sure about Dyvers since I'm not sure which map you're referring to.
There are a bunch of maps of the Cities out there on th' 'Net. Now that you can get Greyhawk stuff at Drivethru RPG, they won't cost you an arm and leg
to name a few:
Marklands: Chendl, Willip, Rel Mord
Iuz the Evil: Dorakaa, Molag, Admundfort
Fate of Istus: Rookroost, Rel Mord, Jurnre, Eldredd, Wintershiven, Leukish, Rauxes, Chendl, Verbobonc, Hesuel Ilshar
I found an interesting take on Hochoch from an online source: angelfire.com
I tend to just Google the name of a city and see what comes up. I just found Radigast City, Hardby, Mitrik and Rel Astra while I was searching for Hochoch's site. _________________ CN -- It makes firing into combat a whole lot more fun
Watabou's Medieval Fantasy City Generator automatically makes a map of a small town, large town, small city, or large city which you can then modify in various ways, warping streets and walls, changing the style, making it more complex, eliminating triangular buildings, adding shanty towns, adding or subtracting rivers or coasts, changing the names, etc. It's a really good resource for quickly making maps of any fantasy city you can imagine.
Watabou's Medieval Fantasy City Generator automatically makes a map of a small town, large town, small city, or large city which you can then modify in various ways, warping streets and walls, changing the style, making it more complex, eliminating triangular buildings, adding shanty towns, adding or subtracting rivers or coasts, changing the names, etc. It's a really good resource for quickly making maps of any fantasy city you can imagine.
Watabou's Medieval Fantasy City Generator automatically makes a map of a small town, large town, small city, or large city which you can then modify in various ways, warping streets and walls, changing the style, making it more complex, eliminating triangular buildings, adding shanty towns, adding or subtracting rivers or coasts, changing the names, etc. It's a really good resource for quickly making maps of any fantasy city you can imagine.
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