Sleeping Dragon's Wake is a Dungeons & Dragons adventure designed for characters of 9th through 10th level and takes place in the Forgotten Realms campaign setting. By the end of the adventure the characters should reach 11th level. You can run the adventure for as few as one player or as many as six players.
You can run it as a stand-alone adventure or as the middle adventure in a trilogy called Beyond the Dragon of Icespire Peak (of which Storm Lord's Wrath is the first adventure and Divine Contention is the last). This adventure trilogy can be played as a sequel to Dragon of Icespire Peak, the adventure that comes with the D&D Essentials Kit.
Wizards of the Coast LLC (often referred to as WotC /ˈwɒtˌsiː/ or simply Wizards) is an American publisher of games, primarily based on fantasy and science fiction themes, and formerly an operator of retail stores for games. Originally a basement-run role-playing game publisher, the company popularized the collectible card game genre with Magic: The Gathering in the mid-1990s, acquired the popular Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game by purchasing the failing company TSR, and experienced tremendous success by publishing the licensed Pokémon Trading Card Game. The company's corporate headquarters are located in Renton, Washington in the United States.[1]
Wizards of the Coast publishes role-playing games, board games, and collectible card games. They have received numerous awards, including several Origins Awards. The company has been a subsidiary of Hasbro since 1999. All Wizards of the Coast stores were closed in 2004.
Still a little bit flavourless, like the rest of the series, and very very short (ends on a cliff hanger - at that point why not just put this and Divine Contention into one book)? But it's fun and creative and there's lots of dragons ✨
Sleeping Dragon's Wake offers better quests than the sometimes mundane first part of Beyond Dragon of Icespire Peak. Still, this mini module requires a lot of work from the Dungeon Master because not everything makes sense.
Pretty solid. A little bit of the same from previous modules in the storyline. I feel like what the others did well, this one didn't do, and vice versa. So ultimately, still very middling for me.