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The Sunless Citadel * The Forge of Fury * The Speaker in Dreams * The Standing Stone * Heart of Nightfang Spire * Deep Horizon * Lord of the Iron Fortress * Bastion of Broken Souls The Sunless Citadel is an adventure module for the 3rd edition of the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game .
This is a list of official Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by Wizards of the Coast as separate publications. It does not include adventures published as part of supplements, officially licensed Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by other companies, official d20 System adventures and other Open Game License adventures that may be compatible with Dungeons & Dragons.
The druid is a playable character class in the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game. [1] [2] Druids wield nature-themed magic. Druids cast spells like clerics, but unlike them do not have special powers against undead and, in some editions, cannot use metal armor. Druids have a unique ability that allows them to change into various ...
Bastion of Broken Souls; Rules required: Dungeons & Dragons, 3rd edition: Character levels: 18th: Authors: Bruce R. Cordell: First published: 2002: Linked modules; The Sunless Citadel * The Forge of Fury * The Speaker in Dreams * The Standing Stone * Heart of Nightfang Spire * Deep Horizon * Lord of the Iron Fortress * Bastion of Broken Souls
Sigil is first described in the Planescape Campaign Setting boxed set, released in 1994. [4] It is also featured prominently in some later Planescape rulebooks, including In the Cage: A Guide to Sigil (1995), [5] The Factol's Manifesto (1995), [6] and Uncaged: Faces of Sigil (1996), [7] as well as in many adventures, such as The Eternal Boundary (1994), [8] Harbinger House (1995), [9] and ...
The Order of Bards, Ovates & Druids or OBOD is a Neo-Druidic order based in England, [1] but based in part on the Welsh Gorsedd of Bards. [2] [3] It has grown to become a dynamic druid organisation, with members in all parts of the world.
The ritual of oak and mistletoe is a Celtic religious ceremony, in which white-clad druids climbed a sacred oak, cut down the mistletoe growing on it, sacrificed two white bulls and used the mistletoe to make an elixir to cure infertility and the effects of poison. [1]
They were described by other Roman writers such as Cicero, [2] Tacitus, [3] and Pliny the Elder. [4] Following the Roman invasion of Gaul, the druid orders were suppressed by the Roman government under the 1st-century CE emperors Tiberius and Claudius, and had disappeared from the written record by the 2nd century.