Monstrous Supplement (Original core set)



Monstrous Compendium Appendix



Monstrous Supplement (Planes of Chaos)



Monstrous Supplement (Planes of Law)



Monstrous Compendium Appendix II



Monstrous Supplement (Planes of Conflict)



Monstrous Compendium Appendix III

So I cut my teeth gaming on 2nd edition Advanced Dungeons and Dragons. Dragonlance, Ravenloft, Dark Sun, all these worlds bring back a small twinge of nostalgia when I see something that reminds me of them. But the setting that will always have my heart, that has never, in my opinion, been surpassed, and that I've never ever been able to do any justice in actually running, has been Planescape.Planescape! Infinite worlds promising an infinite variety of infinite adventures, and sitting in the center of it all, Sigil, the City of Doors, a hotbed of faction politics and intrigue barely kept from exploding into violence by the mysterious Lady of Pain. No other D&D setting compares, because it contains, within itself, all other D&D settings, and no other game setting compares, because, frankly, Planescape is awesome. In the literal definition of "engendering awe". Ah, how I love it so.So anyway. I've seen, in a couple of places, people who desire a nostalgia trip going through their monster manuals and commenting on each and every entry, in order, in a public place. Sometimes it's 2nd edition, sometimes it's original AD&D, sometimes it's on a forum like rpg.net, sometimes it's in a blog like "Playing D&D With Porn Stars", you get the idea. The last time I saw something like it, a little thought occurred to me: "I could totally do this with Planescape."And I checked, and, well, I actually still had all those books of Planescape monsters, some in nicer condition than others, but all very readable. The possibility tantalized me.So, let's get to it! I'm gonna do the books in order of release. For the curious, that's: