
Welcome back to the RPGBOT.Podcast, where today's travel brochure reads: "The Elemental Plane of Fire: Come for the lava rivers, stay because you physically cannot leave." Congratulations. You're about to plan a vacation to a place where the weather forecast is "burning with a chance of more burning."
Let's talk about the Elemental Plane of Fire.
Show Notes
In this episode of the RPGBOT.Podcast, hosts Randall James, Tyler Kamstra, and Ash Ely explore the Elemental Plane of Fire in Dungeons & Dragons and Pathfinder, diving into the lore, cosmology, monsters, and adventure potential of one of the most dangerous locations in tabletop RPGs.
The discussion begins with the structure of the elemental planes in the D&D cosmology, where the Plane of Fire forms part of a ring of elemental realms surrounding the Material Plane. As Tyler explains, the inner planes gradually shift from familiar environments near the Material Plane to chaotic elemental extremes further out, meaning travelers eventually reach areas of pure elemental chaos.
Naturally, the Plane of Fire is exactly what it sounds like: blisteringly hot landscapes of lava flows, burning deserts, and perpetual ash storms. The environment resembles the hottest regions of the Material Plane at best, and at worst becomes an ocean of fire fed by magma from neighboring quasi-elemental planes. Survival requires magical preparation, fire resistance, and ideally a source of conjured water, since natural water sources are extremely rare.
The hosts also break down the cosmological neighbors of the Plane of Fire, including quasi-elemental planes like Ash and Magma, which connect fire to air and earth respectively. These transitional realms highlight how the elemental planes blend into one another rather than existing as strictly separate worlds, a key difference from the alignment-based Outer Planes.
At the center of civilization lies the legendary City of Brass, a massive metropolis ruled by efreeti. It functions as a multiversal marketplace where adventurers can obtain incredibly rare magic items, forbidden knowledge, or impossible cures—assuming they can survive the negotiation process. The city is protected from the plane's constant ash storms through powerful magic, making it the most habitable location in an otherwise lethal realm.
The episode also explores Pathfinder's reinterpretation of the elemental planes, where the classical four-element model expands into a broader elemental cosmology influenced by East Asian traditions. In that version, the Plane of Fire sits as the outermost elemental layer, functioning metaphorically as the "sun" of the multiverse.
Despite the constant danger, the hosts agree that the Plane of Fire is actually an excellent adventure setting. Between genie politics, dangerous cults, exotic creatures, and legendary trade cities, it provides countless opportunities for extraplanar adventures.
Key Takeaways
- The Elemental Plane of Fire is one of the Inner Planes in D&D cosmology and represents the pure elemental force of fire.
- The plane forms part of a ring of elemental realms surrounding the Material Plane, blending into neighboring elemental environments.
- Temperatures range from extreme desert heat to oceans of magma, with constant ash storms and burning winds.
- Water is extremely rare, so magical sources of water are essential for survival during travel.
- Major inhabitants include efreeti, azers, salamanders, fire giants, fire elementals, and red dragons.
- The City of Brass serves as the political and economic center of the plane, ruled by efreeti genies.
- The plane contains dangerous cults devoted to Imix, the destructive Prince of Elemental Evil.
- Pathfinder reimagines the elemental cosmology, placing the Plane of Fire as the outermost elemental layer of the multiverse.
- Despite its deadly environment, the plane offers excellent high-level adventure opportunities involving planar politics, rare magic markets, and elemental monsters.
- If you visit the Plane of Fire, remember the most important rule: everything is trying to burn you.
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Meet the Hosts
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Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix.
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Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme.
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Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy.
Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos.
How to Find Us:
In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net
Tyler Kamstra
Ash Ely
Randall James
Producer Dan
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