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Drow, also called dark elves or myrk'alfen in Elvish,[19] are a subrace of elves whose history since the late Age of Arcanum has been heavily influenced by Lolth, the Spider Queen and, in one major society, the Luxon.

Appearance

Drow skin tones cover a spectrum from light violet[20] to a gray blue-purple[21] to gray-blue[22] to dark blue.[23] Similarly, their eyes are generally a shade of blue or violet,[24][16][17] but can also be a pale silver.[25] Their hair is usually white or platinum, though it can taper into a purple or violet color,[26][27] and occasionally some have red or orange hair.[28][29]

Traits and abilities

In addition to the abilities shared by all elves, drow have the following additional traits:[3]

History

Before the Divergence

Some sources claim that Lolth, the Spider Queen, created the drow late in the Founding or early in the Age of Arcanum.[30] The drow were once a wise, beautiful people with silvery hair and ash-colored skin.[31]

There are differing accounts of exactly when the drow fell under the influence of the Spider Queen. According to one account focused on the history of Wildemount, centuries before the Divergence, the drow primarily worshiped her.[32] According to another account focused on Tal'Dorei, during the Calamity the drow merely split from the elves of Syngorn and escaped into underground tunnels, where their enclaves became decadent and cruel, and they unwittingly fell into the Spider Queen's grasp.[19]

When the Calamity began, the drow sided with Lolth against the elven god Corellon and their followers.[31] But before the drow even saw battle, Kord, the Stormlord, impaled Lolth against a cliffside with one heave of his thunderspear,[33] and the Spider Queen was banished back to the Abyss.[34] The suddenly leaderless drow were driven from the surface world and forced to rebuild their empire underground.[33]

Depiction of a drider from D&D: Monster Manual, page 120

Depiction of a drider from D&D: Monster Manual, page 120.[art 2]

Meanwhile, Lolth's thick, silvery blood pooled in the dark caverns beneath the surface of the world. In the years that followed, her most devoted drow servants discovered the blood and drank of it deeply, granting them power and gradually twisting themselves into half-spider hybrids called driders.[35]

However, the seeds had already been planted for a great many drow, whom Lolth considered her children, to escape her influence. Early in the Calamity, in Alyxian's village in Wildemount, a drow named Saqiri Yestrana was a hunt captain, well integrated into the community.[36] More than a century before the Divergence, Leylas Kryn was present at the discovery of the first of several buried Luxon beacons.[37] And drow and orcs were depicted working together to build the city of Cael Morrow in the jungles of Marquet.[38]

After the Divergence

Following the Divergence, Lolth's children could feel the lessening of their banished god's influence.[34]

Wildemount

Official art of drow facing the sun as they emerge in the ruins of Ghor Dranas, by Livia Prima from , p. 20

Official art of drow facing the sun as they emerge in the ruins of Ghor Dranas, by Livia Prima from Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 20.[art 3]

The drow of Xhorhas mostly abandoned their centuries-long worship of Lolth, turning instead to the Luxon, who is inscrutable to the Spider Queen. Guided by the Luxon, a group of scavenging drow led by House Kryn survived the ascent from deep within the Underdark to the then-abandoned dark city of Ghor Dranas, reclaiming it under the name Rosohna (meaning "Rebirth" in their tongue). They slowly and quietly began reaching out to the other races of the Xhorhasian wastes, attempting to unite them under the worship of the Luxon.[39]

Feeling the abrupt decline in her influence, the Spider Queen sought vengeance against those who turned their backs on her, and she began seducing and empowering even non-drow minds in Xhorhas. By 836 PD a network of Lolthite spies, assassins, and raiders called the Children of Malice had formed hidden cabals on the fringes of Xhorhasian society (including the villages of Igrathad) and infiltrated the highest echelons of the Luxon-worshipping Kryn Dynasty. The extent of the infiltration was alarming to the Dynasty faithful, who began to uncover the infiltration[40] and in turn plotted to undermine the Children of Malice.[41]

Gwessar/Tal'Dorei

The dark elves of the continent that would come to be called Tal'Dorei faced a different fate after the Divergence, as carving out a new life underground exposed them to new dangers: as Lolth's influence waned, Tharizdun began whispering to the drow nobility, and their servitors found themselves surrounded by shapechanging and mind-manipulating aberrations, causing mass paranoia. By 812 PD, the underground drow of Tal'Dorei were on the verge of collapse. Neighbors slaughtered each other in the streets. The drow elite turned increasingly authoritarian and ordered the royal guard to violently quell the mass riots. Some drow commoners, desperate to end their suffering, offered themselves over to the aberrations and were transformed into doppelgangers. Some drow nobility reacted to the chaos by devoting themselves even more utterly to Lolth, willingly seeking out the Blood of the Spider Queen to transform themselves into driders.[42]

Marquet

Drow are among the many people living in Jrusar.[43]

Society

In some of the darker drow societies, there is sometimes a blending of drow and demon blood to create a large, four-armed, sharp-toothed fiend called a draegloth.[44]

Many drow societies are characterized by endemic political scheming and infighting to win Lolth's favor,[41] but there are exceptions.

Tal'Dorei

As shambolic as the situation in Ruhn-Shak was in 812 PD, the drow of that society still posed a danger throughout the region. Countless tunnels and caverns wound throughout the Stormcrest Mountains, with hidden entrances throughout the Dreamseep Marshlands to the east and the darker regions of the Verdant Expanse to the west. The drow only came to the surface under cover of night in hunting and raiding parties that slaughter many, enslave the rest, and take the spoils as gifts to Lolth. Drow druids called Pit Witches specialize in molding earth and stone to open and collapse passages at will, making it impossible to give chase.[45]

Fan art of '"`UNIQ--nowiki-00000052-QINU`"'drow in Lyrengorn, by '"`UNIQ--nowiki-00000053-QINU`"'

Fan art of drow in Lyrengorn, by Edgar Noriega.[art 4]

As of that time, some drow had fled the chaos of Ruhn-Shak, but they were not tolerated in Syngorn, even if they were interested in going there. Most lived in secret in Emon, Kymal, or Westruun, and more than 150 of them made the trek all the way to Lyrengorn, where they lived among the wood elves in peace and hoped that the skyswimmers' ceremony would cleanse them of the corruption and bouts of sadistic madness that still plagued them.[46] Every dark elf in Tal'Dorei knows the dark whispers of the aberrations.[47]

Unsurprisingly, adventuring drow in Tal'Dorei tend to hold a violent hatred of aberrations, and some even turn dramatically from the darkness of Lolth to become paladins of Pelor, the Dawnfather.[48]

Wildemount

Depiction of a Luxon beacon, by 

Depiction of a Luxon beacon, by Olga Drebas.[art 5]

Worship of the Luxon plays a central role in Kryn Dynasty society. Though the Dynasty lays claim to the Underdark of Wildemount, Luxon worship leads large numbers of drow to live aboveground and participate in rituals that deliberately expose them to direct sunlight.[49] More importantly, their worship of the Luxon informs their belief in the importance of individual choice,[50] making them less authoritarian than Lolthite drow.

The fact that through consecution they can be reborn in non-drow bodies, which they believe brings them closer to true enlightenment, also makes them respectful of other races, including non-drow elves.[51] In contrast to Ruhn-Shak, where only a small minority of deep gnomes and other races exists, the drow of Xhorhas embrace a wide variety of other races. The Kryn Dynasty incorporates goblinkin,[52] people of orcish blood,[53] gnolls, minotaurs,[54] hill giants, ogres,[55] the odd duergar[56] and dragonborn,[57] and more. There is a fair amount of interbreeding, so that half-drow may have characteristics of minotaurs or bugbears,[58] and many half-orcs are half-drow as well.[53]

Meanwhile, the Children of Malice may be led by a drow, but they are headquartered in a hobgoblin stronghold,[41] and Lolth recruits other goblinoids, beastfolk, and various folk of the wastes for the cause.[34] Lolth's intense focus on vengeance against the Kryn drow, enforced by Head Matron Vivurk Tonn's iron fist and emphasized in rituals, unites the drow of Dumaran's warrior houses against their common enemy to an unusual degree for a drow society.[41]

Notable drow

Kryn Dynasty

Fan art of '"`UNIQ--nowiki-0000006E-QINU`"'Leylas and Quana Kryn, by '"`UNIQ--nowiki-0000006F-QINU`"'

Fan art of Leylas and Quana Kryn, by BlackSalander.[art 6]

Children of Malice

Other

Fan art of '"`UNIQ--nowiki-00000075-QINU`"'Essek Thelyss, by '"`UNIQ--nowiki-00000076-QINU`"'

Fan art of Essek Thelyss, by @porzio art.[art 7]

Trivia

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 See D&D: Player's Handbook (2014), 5th ed., p. 24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 See D&D: Player's Handbook (2014), 5th ed., p. 23.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 See D&D: Player's Handbook (2014), 5th ed., pp. 23–24.
  4. The Kryn Dynasty is described as being populated with "gray-skinned elves." See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 6.
  5. Leylas Kryn's skin is gray-blue.  See "The Favor" (2x56) at 2:37:48.
  6. Jourrael's skin is dull, gray, almost blue-purple.  See "Titles and Tattoos" (2x84) at 3:58:22.
  7. Zethris Olios's skin is a light violet.  See "Feral Business" (2x52) at 3:45:53.
  8. K'ryyn's skin is ink blue.  See "Taryon, My Wayward Son" (1x97) at 1:43:36.
  9. Leylas Kryn's hair is white.  See "The Favor" (2x56) at 2:37:56.
  10. Zethris Olios's hair is bright white, tapering into a purple-violet color.  See "Feral Business" (2x52) at 3:45:53.
  11. Vedalla's hair is platinum with a purple tint at the tips.  See "With Great Power..." (2x94) at 2:56:37.
  12. A drow guard at Bazzoxan has a gray beard.  See "Beneath Bazzoxan" (2x66) at 2:00:31.
  13. Jourrael's hair is bright red.  See "Titles and Tattoos" (2x84) at 3:58:22.
  14. K'ryyn's eyes are pale silver.  See "Taryon, My Wayward Son" (1x97) at 1:43:49.
  15. Leylas Kryn's eyes are turquoise.  See "The Favor" (2x56) at 2:38:09.
  16. 16.0 16.1 See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, p. 85.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Matthew Mercer confirmed Essek's eye color on Twitter.
  18. See D&D: Monster Manual (2014), 5th ed., p. 128.
  19. 19.0 19.1 See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting Reborn, p. 156.
  20. Zethris Olios's skin is a light violet.  See "Feral Business" (2x52) at 3:45:53.
  21. Jourrael's skin is dull, gray, almost blue-purple.  See "Titles and Tattoos" (2x84) at 3:58:22.
  22. Leylas Kryn's skin is gray-blue.  See "The Favor" (2x56) at 2:37:48.
  23. K'rynn's skin is ink blue.  See "Taryon, My Wayward Son" (1x97) at 1:43:36.
  24. Leylas Kryn's eyes are turquoise.  See "The Favor" (2x56) at 2:38:09.
  25. K'ryyn's eyes are pale silver.  See "Taryon, My Wayward Son" (1x97) at 1:43:49.
  26. Zethris Olios's hair is bright white, tapering into a purple-violet color.  See "Feral Business" (2x52) at 3:45:53.
  27. Vedalla's hair is platinum with a purple tint at the tips.  See "With Great Power..." (2x94) at 2:56:37.
  28. Jourrael's hair is bright red.  See "Titles and Tattoos" (2x84) at 3:58:22.
  29. See The Tales of Exandria: The Bright Queen, Issue #3.
  30. See "Between the Lines" (2x78) at 2:49:14.
  31. 31.0 31.1 See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, p. 23.
  32. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 46. See also p. 19.
  33. 33.0 33.1 See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, pp. 27–28.
  34. 34.0 34.1 34.2 See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 46.
  35. See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, p. 122.
  36. See Call of the Netherdeep, pp. 147–148. Alyxian was born "[n]ear the beginning" of the Calamity; see p. 6.
  37. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 40.
  38. See Call of the Netherdeep, p. 133.
  39. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 19. See also p. 28.
  40. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 46. Also see pp. 141–142.
  41. 41.0 41.1 41.2 41.3 See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 138.
  42. See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, pp. 122–123.
  43. See "Thicker Grows the Meal and Plot" (3x09) at 3:34:40.
  44. See "Ghosts, Dinosaurs, and Stuff" (2x102) at 1:21:57.
  45. See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, p. 75. See also p. 24.
  46. See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, p. 24. See also pp. 68–69.
  47. See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, p. 121.
  48. See Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, p. 24.
  49. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 38. See also pp. 19 and 142.
  50. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 39.
  51. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 163. See also the section on dragonborn in Xhorhas on p. 169.
  52. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 174.
  53. 53.0 53.1 See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 178.
  54. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 6. See also p. 132, as gnolls are a significant minority in Asarius.
  55. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, pp. 141–142.
  56. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 162. See also p. 142, as duergar are a noticeable minority in Rosohna.
  57. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 169.
  58. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 176.
  59. See Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, pp. 139–140.
  60. See Call of the Netherdeep, p. 19.
  61. The Chronicles of Exandria - The Legend of Vox Machina Volume II, p. 98.
  62. See "Liam's One Shot: The Song of the Lorelei" (Sx36) at 1:08:16.
  63. See "Liam's One Shot: The Song of the Lorelei" (Sx36) at 3:10:54.
  64. DDB Drow Poison (Injury) on D&D Beyond
  65. See "The Temple Showdown" (1x11) at 1:02:29.
  66. See "Those Who Walk Away" (1x45) at 1:57:01.

Art:

  1. Fan art of Essek Thelyss and Leylas Kryn, by nelmdraws (source). Used with permission.
  2. Depiction of a drider from D&D: Monster Manual, page 120. This page contains unofficial Fan Content permitted under the Wizards of the Coast Fan Content Policy. Not approved/endorsed by Wizards. Portions of the materials used are property of Wizards of the Coast. ©Wizards of the Coast LLC.
  3. Official art of drow facing the sun as they emerge in the ruins of Ghor Dranas, by Livia Prima from Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, p. 20. This file is a copyrighted work. Its use in this article is asserted to qualify as fair use of the material under United States copyright law.
  4. Fan art of drow in Lyrengorn, by Edgar Noriega (source). Used with permission.
  5. Depiction of a Luxon beacon, by Olga Drebas (source). Used with permission. This page contains unofficial Fan Content permitted under the Wizards of the Coast Fan Content Policy. Not approved/endorsed by Wizards. Portions of the materials used are property of Wizards of the Coast. ©Wizards of the Coast LLC.
  6. Fan art of Leylas and Quana Kryn, by BlackSalander (source). Used with permission.
  7. Fan art of Essek Thelyss, by @porzio art (source). Used with permission.