The Savage Frontier


The Savage Frontier is an accessory for the Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting Forgotten Realms. It describes the Savage Frontier of Faerûn. The book was written by Jennell Jaquays and published by TSR in 1988. Cover art is by Larry Elmore, with interior illustrations by Esteban Maroto, and cartography by Dave Sutherland, Dennis Kauth, and Jaquays.

Contents

The Savage Frontier describes the lands north of the High Moors—the location of the novel The Crystal Shard—and the northern barbarians. The book focuses on the lands to the north of the city of Waterdeep. The color maps and text add further detail to the Northlands and Trackless Sea. This campaign supplement contains information on the Northmen, the Uthgardt Barbarians, and the northern dwarves and orcs. It provides information on major settlements, strongholds, ruins, and includes adventure ideas.
The Savage Frontier is a 64-page booklet wrapped in a removable gatefold cover. The outside gatefold contains a map of Waterdeep, while the inside front cover contains maps of the Ruins of Ascore, Grandfather Tree, Hellgate Keep, Luskan, and typical Uthgardt ancestor mounds. Two fold-out color poster maps are included: one of the Savage Frontier region, and one of the Trackless Sea. The book focuses on the Savage Frontier; it includes an overview of the region and of the peoples of the North, their cities, towns, and villages, and geographic features such as the Sea, the Ice, the Islands, the Lost Lands, strongholds, ruins, rivers, mountains, rough lands, the High Forest, and Uthgardt ancestor mounds, as well as personalities of the North. The book contains four appendices which describe magical items of the Savage Frontier, northern proficiencies, news of the land, and adventures in the Savage Frontier.

Publication history

The Savage Frontier was written by Jennell Jaquays and published by TSR in 1988 as a 64-page booklet with a large color map and an outer folder.

Reception

reviewed The Savage Frontier for Dragon magazine #144. Bambra wrote that the color maps and text "place firmly in context the descriptions given in FR1 Waterdeep and the North. He concluded: "This supplement is for anyone who can't resist the call of the wild."