My name is Christopher Frigo, I'm an author and D&D enthusiast from Charlotte, NC. I used to be an IRS auditor, staring at tax code all day. Eventually, I learned to embrace the pain and started to love the structure and breadth of the rule of law.
So, I combined two of my passions: D&D, and law. As you can imagine from the title and the pictures, this ended up becoming the Magical Code of Regulations, which is 499 pages of bureaucratic gobbledy-gook nonsense governing the use of magic. 600-some-odd for the eBook version. It covers, spellcasting licenses, eldritch creature containment, dragon regulations, necromancy, demonic contracts, and much, much more. Needless to say, it's pretty dense, lol.
It's not an exact 1:1 D&D supplement, but it's meant to be system-agnostic, so it can be useful for both D&D players and DMs, as well as TTRPG players as a whole.
And while most of it is straightforward, there are numerous humorous sections to add a bit of levity!
Anyways, I finally released the book in numerous places (can be found on Amazon, B&N, Books-A-Million, IngramSpark, DTRPG, Wal-Mart, etc.), and just wanted to share the enjoyment with everyone.
If this is something up your alley, if you love torturing your players (or your DM), if you just want a cool-looking book on your coffee table, would really appreciate you guys taking a look at the link below! I promise you've never seen fantasy law even close to this detailed!
Aside_Dish on June 6th, 2026 at 18:20 UTC »
Hey, guys!
My name is Christopher Frigo, I'm an author and D&D enthusiast from Charlotte, NC. I used to be an IRS auditor, staring at tax code all day. Eventually, I learned to embrace the pain and started to love the structure and breadth of the rule of law.
So, I combined two of my passions: D&D, and law. As you can imagine from the title and the pictures, this ended up becoming the Magical Code of Regulations, which is 499 pages of bureaucratic gobbledy-gook nonsense governing the use of magic. 600-some-odd for the eBook version. It covers, spellcasting licenses, eldritch creature containment, dragon regulations, necromancy, demonic contracts, and much, much more. Needless to say, it's pretty dense, lol.
It's not an exact 1:1 D&D supplement, but it's meant to be system-agnostic, so it can be useful for both D&D players and DMs, as well as TTRPG players as a whole.
And while most of it is straightforward, there are numerous humorous sections to add a bit of levity!
Anyways, I finally released the book in numerous places (can be found on Amazon, B&N, Books-A-Million, IngramSpark, DTRPG, Wal-Mart, etc.), and just wanted to share the enjoyment with everyone.
If this is something up your alley, if you love torturing your players (or your DM), if you just want a cool-looking book on your coffee table, would really appreciate you guys taking a look at the link below! I promise you've never seen fantasy law even close to this detailed!
https://linktr.ee/christopherfrigo
bugsyramone on June 6th, 2026 at 18:25 UTC »
https://giphy.com/gifs/Cz6TlrRVVyv9S
Real talk though. Fantastic achievement. I took a look at the sample section 101.4 on Amazon. Good stuff!
blackout-loud on June 6th, 2026 at 18:27 UTC »
What are the regulations on dual wielding various elements for offensive purposes? (eg Shock in one hand and Fireball in the other)