Welcome back to RPGBOT.Podcast, where optimism is optional, feedback is weaponized, and today we're firing up the lightning rails straight into Eberron: Forge of the Artificer.
This is Part 1 of our review, which means we're here to ask the most important questions first:
Does this book actually understand artificers? Does it respect Eberron's magic-as-industry vibe? And will Ash rant about corporate design decisions like an angry warforged with a union card?
Spoiler: yes. Probably several times. Grab your tool proficiencies and buckle up—this is Eberron, where magic is practical, progress has consequences, and feedback is delivered with a hammer.
NOTE: WE GOT SEVERAL RULES WRONG IN THIS EPISODE. We recorded after an initial read of the book, and I hadn't had time to analyze things in depth, so we made several mistakes. Check our full Artificer class guide, which represents the more accurately.
Show Notes
In RPGBOT.Podcast – Eberron: Forge of the Artificer Part 1, the crew kicks off a deep-dive review of Wizards of the Coast's newest Eberron supplement, focusing on core themes, design intent, and early impressions rather than final verdicts.
This episode sets the foundation for the full review by examining how Forge of the Artificer approaches Eberron's defining pillars: magical technology, artificer identity, pulp action, and noir-inspired worldbuilding. Along the way, the hosts reflect on feedback culture, creator intent, and how production environments shape the final product—because you can't talk about artificers without talking about how things are made.
Covered in Part 1:
- First impressions of Eberron: Forge of the Artificer
- Artificers as a class fantasy vs. mechanical execution
- Eberron's "magic as infrastructure" philosophy
- Tone consistency with classic Eberron (pulp + noir)
- Early signs of passion vs. corporate checkbox design
- What this book signals for future D&D 2024 content
This is a setup episode—laying groundwork, raising expectations, and sharpening knives for Part 2.
Key Takeaways
- Eberron still lives or dies on tone. The book's success hinges on whether it treats magic as an economic force, not just spell flavor.
- Artificers need identity, not just options. New tools are exciting, but the real test is whether the class fantasy feels coherent and intentional.
- Design fingerprints matter. You can feel when a book is made with enthusiasm—and when it's made to hit a release window.
- This is a promising start, not a final judgment. Part 1 is about signals and foundations; Part 2 will be about payoff.
- Feedback culture comes full circle. The episode opens with feedback talk for a reason: the hosts apply that same lens to the book itself.
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Meet the Hosts
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Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix.
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Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme.
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Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy.
Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos.
How to Find Us:
In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net
Tyler Kamstra
Ash Ely
Randall James
Producer Dan