Vampire of the Mists was #4 on
CBR's 2020 "10 Of The Best DnD Stories To Start Off With" list — the article states that "
Vampire Of The Mists not only provides a great introduction to the
Ravenloft setting but also explains its connections to the base setting of Faérun. [...] It also provides insight on how to apply things like Vampires to a traditional
D&D setting". In the
Io9 series revisiting older
Dungeons & Dragons novels, Rob Bricken highlighted that Strahd isn't the main villain of
Vampire of the Mists and instead Strahd, Jander and Anna "have all been manipulated by the Demiplane of Dread itself". He compared the novel to both
Bram Stoker’s
Dracula and
Anne Rice’s
Interview With the Vampire, stating, "it’s a simpler, more basic version of both classics, of course, but I absolutely do not hold that against the book". He wrote that "
Mists isn’t scary, per se, but Strahd wreaks enough horror and carnage to drive home that Ravenloft is much, much more sinister than the Forgotten Realms. It all comes together into a solid narrative. [...].
Vampire of the Mists is also a
D&D novel published in the early ‘90s, which means hunks of it have, as usual, aged rather poorly. There’s the Vistani, a race of Romani analogues repeatedly called by the old slur, which isn’t great. Strahd is exclusively interested in creating a coven of sexy vampire ladies, which means a lot of female characters exist solely to be victims. [...] If you’re looking for a good vampire story, you could do significantly better than
Vampire of the Mists, but if you’re someone rereading a bunch of 30-year-old
Dungeons & Dragons novels, you could do much, much worse".
Vampire of the Mists appeared on the 2024
Game Rant "31 Best Dungeons & Dragons Novels, Ranked" list at #11. ==Reviews==