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D&D: Tony DiTerlizzi Sends People Through Planescape Torment

2 Minute Read
Aug 30 2020
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Yesterday, artist Tony DiTerlizzi, better known as the artist behind Planescape, announced he was back with WotC, but not for Planescape.

For five and a half brief hours, yesterday, the D&D community was rocked by the hope that there might be a Planescape supplement in the work, when Tony DiTerlizzi, whose artwork gave Planescape it’s iconic style, announced that he was “doing a little something” for his old pals at WotC.

This sent people on all corners of the internet into a tizzy. After all, it’s Tony DiTerlizzi, what else could he be working on? This had to be a teaser for an upcoming Planescape supplement. This is what everyone, be they on reddit:

Twitter:

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Or whatever online community you prefer, the D&D community proved positively pained for Planescape. So much so, that five hours and twenty-five minutes later, DiTerlizzi had to reply (on various threads) that it was not, in fact Planescape, as that would be “gigantic” or possibly “infinite something.”

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Which led many folks to speculate that DiTerlizzi might be back working on Magic: the Gathering cards, which he has also done:

And so, the hype train was dismantled on the tracks mere six feet from the station. But the community’s growing interest in a setting beyond D&D’s Forgotten Realms is palpable. On the latest big survey, they had ample opportunities to talk about settings–though curiously, it’s only ever the old settings that get a mention. But, Planescape struck a chord with many people in its day, presenting a much more cosmopolitan–or perhaps cosmic-politan view of D&D’s Multiverse. It was a setting like no other, with a massive city at its heart, where angels and demons could work together, but no gods were allowed.

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And beyond the City of Doors? Infinite possibilities across the vast planes of existence. We may never get a Planescape book, but for five brief hours, the community had hope.

Guess you could say they experienced some Planescape…torment.

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Author: J.R. Zambrano
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