Contents
Setting
The game is set in Talislanta, a continent on the world of Archaeus. Magic is common and has reached a high level of technology.Character creation
In the 1st to 4th editions, characters are essentially pre-generated, with over 80 character types defined by race, nationality, ability scores, skills, equipment and background. Players pick the type of character they wish to play, then individualize it by increasing one ability by three points; decreasing one ability by one point; and adding an additional skill. PD Breeding-Black was the first artist to work on Talislanta, and was instrumental in creating the look and feel of the First and Second Edition books. Her artwork was integral in establishing the look of Talislanta, and it remains so to the present day. In the 5th edition, a more complex character generation system was introduced that was similar to other role-playing games.Task resolution
All task resolutions, whether for combat, magic or skills/attributes, are resolved on a single table using a twenty-sided die. Five results are possible: Mishap, Failure, Partial Success, Full Success or Critical Success. The difference between the result gained and the rated difficulty of the task indicates how much of a success or failure was achieved.Publishing history
1st edition (Bard Games)
In 1982 Stephan Michael Sechi, Steven Cordovano and Vernie Taylor formed the company Bard Games to produce their own ''2nd edition (Bard Games)
In 1988, Bard Games published a second edition of ''Talislanta'' starting with '' The Cyclopedia Talislanta''. This 88-page softcover book included continental and local maps; a listing of urban centers and important geographical features; and expanded list of flora and fauna; new character types; new types of transportation; and variant rules. In 1989, Bard Games released ''Talislanta Handbook and Campaign Guide'', a 152-page softcover book that combined ''The Talislatan Handbook'' and material from the three supplements. The book included: * Rules revisions for combat, magic, skills, and attributes * New rules for mass combat rules * Expanded listings of skills, equipment, weapons, and transportation * A map of the City of Cymril * A new introductory adventure. * New character backgrounds * Optional combat rules * Details of languages, currencies, and Talislantan chronology In 1990, Bard Games published ''Talislanta Worldbook'', a 183-page atlas of the world of Archaeus and the continent of Talislanta. Shortly after publication, Bard Games went out of business.3rd edition (Wizards of the Coast)
In 1992,10th anniversary edition (Pharos Press)
In 1997, Pharos Press acquired the license to ''Talislanta'' in order to produce a new edition of the game in time for the tenth anniversary of ''Talislanta''. Pharos had an ambitious plan to expand and revise all previously published material, then combine it one book. Plagued by production delays, Pharos got as far as producing a few ashcans, but failed to publish a product by the end of the year. Because they had missed the tenth anniversary, trademark holder Stephen Michael Sechi rescinded their license.4th edition (Shooting Iron and Morrigan Press)
A small company called Shooting Iron acquired the license and in 2001 produced ''Talislanta Fantasy Role-playing'', a 502-page 4th edition that was largely based on the never-published Pharos Press 10th anniversary edition. Shooting Iron also published the supplement ''Midnight Realm'' in 2005, a 152-page book detailing the plane of existence known as The Darkness, but then relinquished the license. Morrigan Press acquired the license to ''Talislanta'' and published the following supplements under Shooting Iron's 4th edition rules: * ''Talislanta Menagerie'' (2005), an updated bestiary * ''Codex Magicus'' (2005), an updated magic system * ''The Northern Reaches'' (2005), an exploration of the arctic regions of Talislanta * ''The Weight of Water'' (2005), a 64-page adventure * ''The Chronicles of Talislanta'' (2005), a revised and updated version of the book originally published under 1st edition rules in 1987 * ''The Darkness'' (2005), a revised edition of Shooting Iron's ''Midnight Realm'' * ''Talislanta Cardstock Minis'' (2005), 13 pages of illustrations of popular character types that could be cut out and used as miniatures * ''People & Places: Djaffa'' (2006), details of the nomadic desert tribes known as the Djaffa. * ''Riding the Sky'' (2006), a book about windsailorsd20 edition
In 2005, Morrigan Press released ''Talislanta d20 Edition'', a new version adapted to the5th edition (Morrigan Press)
In 2006, Morrigan Press announced the upcoming release of a fifth edition that revised the magic system slightly and provided a variant character generation system. Over the next year, four books were released: * ''Hotan's History of the World'' (2006), a revised and expanded overview of the geography, peoples and major urban centers of Talislanta. * ''The Menagerie'' (2007), an updated bestiary that includes all creatures from previous editions. * ''A Player's Guide to Talislanta'' (2007) includes the new 5th edition rules for combat, magic, character generation. * ''A Gamemaster's Guide to Talislanta''(2007) includes new rule variants, new races, and new magic orders. In 2008, Morrigan Press went out of business.Talislanta: The Savage Land
Launched in a successful Kickstarter campaign by Nocturnal Media in 2017, ''Talislanta: The Savage Land'' was released starting in 2018 to backers and 2019 for the rest of the world. Instead of taking place in the classic game's time, this prequel game takes place shortly after The Great Disaster, referred by the Savage Land denizens as "The Fall". Three rule versions of the game were completed and released: one based on the classic ''Talislanta'' rules, one released under the 5th Edition ''D&D'' OGL, and one using the OpenD6 system. The setting is low-magic due to the loss of magical knowledge and the survivors' prejudice against magic.Epic Edition (Everything Epic)
In 2023, Everything Epic launched a Crowdfunding Campaign on Gamefound.com to fund an all new edition of Talislanta known as the "Epic Edition", also known as the 6th and Final Edition written by Steven Michael Sechi and Christopher Batarlis. This edition is the ultimate version of the game, curated by Sechi to include the "Best of Talislanta" throughout its history. With all new Color Artwork, Never-Before-Seen characters, lore, over 100 Player Character Archetypes, over 100 Monsters in the Bestiary, and a 400 + page Atlas, this version of Talislanta will include the entire final vision the original creator Sechi had for the universe. Including four brand new books: * ''The Talislanta Core Book (Player's Guide):'' Includes the full rules of play for Talislanta as well as Player Character Archetypes, Items, Skills, Spells, and everything needed to play the game. All archetypes have upgraded stats and full color artwork. * ''The Bestiary of Talislanta:'' Includes hundreds of monsters curated to be the most important for the world with updated stats and full color artwork. * ''The Atlas of Talislanta:'' In an over four hundred page tome, this book includes all of the most important locations of Talislanta as well as a great deal of important lore, random encounter tables, and other useful items for the Gamemaster to use in their games. * ''The Fifth Edition Conversion Book:'' Originally meant to be a part of the Core Book above, after the "OGL Conversion to Creative Commons in 2023", this book was removed from the core book and bestiary to create its own book. This book includes all of the Archetypes and all of the Monsters from the bestiary to create a book that will include everything needed to use Talislanta's unique characters in a "5e" rules system and play in the world of Talislanta. This edition is in development and is tentatively set to release to backers in November 2023 and to the rest of the world in December 2023.Translations
Talislanta has been translated into several languages, including Italian (1997), German (1991–1992) and French (2005–present). The French edition, published by Ludopathes Éditeurs, is based on the 4th edition rules by Shooting Iron, and has resulted in seven books and seven PDFs.Reception
Stewart Wieck reviewed ''Talislanta'' for '' White Wolf'' #11, rating it 9 out of 10 overall, and stated that "The true strength of Talislanta is its uniqueness. Here is a fantasy world without orcs and goblins and all those "standard" enemies ..I highly recommend this world as a place where your imagination can run wild." In the March 1989 edition of ''Reviews
*'' Black Gate'' #4 *'' Backstab'' #34https://archive.org/details/backstab-034/page/n97/mode/2upPublications
* The Chronicles of Talislanta (1987) * A Naturalist's Guide to Talislanta (1987) * The Talislantan Handbook (1987) * The Cyclopedia Talislanta (1988) *Talislanta Cyclopedia (1988) * Talislanta Sorcerer's Guide (1988) * The Cyclopedia Talislanta II, The Seven Kingdoms (1989) *The Cyclopedia Talislanta III, The Wilderlands of Zaran (1989) *The Cyclopedia Talislanta IV, The Western Lands (1989) *The Cyclopedia Talislanta V, The Eastern Lands (1989) *Talislantan Handbook and Campaign Guide (1989) *The Cyclopedia Talislanta VI, The Desert Kingdoms (1990) *The Cyclopedia Talislanta VII, The Northlands (1990) (Never Released) *The Cyclopedia Talislanta VIII, The Central Regions (1990) (Never Released)See also
* Tribes (supplement)References
External links
* {{RPG systems Creative Commons-licensed games Fantasy role-playing games Role-playing games introduced in 1987 Wizards of the Coast games