Unfinity was great fun when it arrived last October. As one of the Un-sets, Unfinity had a sense of humor that is not often found on Magic: The Gathering's "real" expansions, including such cards as Killer Cosplay, Carnival Carnivore, and It Came From Planet Glurg. It was also the first Un-set to include cards that were legal in Magic's eternal formats, so despite the set's absolute madness, you had to take some of these cards seriously.
Each card described an outer space carnival attraction that seemed both very dangerous and very fun, which is the perfect location for a D&D adventure. That's probably why Gabe Rodriguez took Unfinity and turned it into a homebrew Dungeons & Dragons expansion booklet, which you can download free from GM Binder.com.
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A Planeshifted Guide To Unfinity contains new races, a new Artificer subclass, new magic items, new spells, new monsters, and of course, a description of Myra the Magnificent's Intergalactic Astrotorium of Fun. Everything is based on actual cards from Unfinity, whether they be Beebles, Plot Armor, or the Clown Extruder.
Although quite a few of the races in A Planeshifted Guide To Unfinity already exist in regular D&D, such as Goblins, Humans, Loxodons, and Minotaurs, there's also a whole bunch of all-new races for adventurers to try. There's the Ainok, a species of dog people from the plane of Tarkir; Bear-folk, sentient bears from various planes of Magic; Rhox, a species of rhinoceros people from Ravinca and elsewhere; and Chickens, a type of flightless aven that can't fly.
There's only one new subclass in Unfinity, which expands the lackluster Artificer to become the Hatificer at level three.
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