- A suspected Aurum member by the name of Elias Raubritter has purchased a season's stay at The Turnstone, supposedly with a gold bar. [OLD]
- A woman in rags was seen exiting The Door in the Deep with a party of adventurers, but supposedly nobody ever saw her enter in the first place.
- A local gnoll warband called the Drybones makes its home by an enormous rock formation that resembles a scorpion, and claims the sands around it can cure any disease or affliction.
- A walk of giants known as the Windcatchers occupy the peak of the mountain above the mine, and have taken note of your presence.
- A band of theatrical and deadly "snakebloods," wielding humming war fans, are on the move nearby [colloquially, snakeblood refers to the yuan-ti].
- Local legend holds that atop the Byeshk Mountains are a "skyway," a funnel of swiftly moving hot air that harpies and other winged fauna use to traverse the mountain range in a matter of hours.
- A Khyber cult is rumored to have moved into town, headed by a gnoll figure known simply as Cut. [OLD]
- A representative of the Traveler known as the Butterfly Knight has come to Khyber's Bounty to preach the word of the Sovereign of Chaos.
- Elias Raubritter was last seen headed for The Door in the Deep with Shield and a small army of mercenaries. [OLD]
- Word is Vivir's hiding a duergar in that maze of a tent, and has been refusing business to people who ask too many questions about it.
- A nearby battle between Gossuk the Red-Handed and two other warlords ended with their capture and public execution, and the remainder of their forces press-ganged into service under the Red-Handed's banner. Stories as to how the battle began are unclear, but they all end the same: a large and sudden consolidation of manpower.
- Supposedly, the Daughters of Sora Kell have secured the favor of the fae of the Neverglades, an area of the Watching Wood to the east of Droaam.
Information provided in this primer may not precisely match that of official Wizards of the Coast content or Keith Baker’s writing on the subject of Eberron and the nation of Droaam. Whether intentional or not, these changes are considered canon in relation to our specific tabletop experience.
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