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Tasslehoff Burrfoot (often called Tas) is a fictional character of the kender race from the Dragonlance series of novels, written by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman. [2] He was born in Kendermore . His parents are unknown and he has few known relatives.
A dark grey cell indicates that the character did not appear or that the character's presence has yet to be announced. A Y indicates a role as a younger version of character portrayed by another actor. A U indicates an uncredited role. A P indicates a photographic role. A C indicates a cameo role. A V indicates a voice-only role.
Lord Soth appeared on the 2018 Screen Rant top list at #12 on "Dungeons & Dragons: The 15 Most Powerful Villains, Ranked", and Scott Baird highlighted that "Lord Soth was a death knight from the Dragonlance setting, who later became one of the Darklords of Ravenloft, before returning to his homeland."
Death knight may refer to: Death knight, an Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd edition monster; Death knights, characters in World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King; Deathknights, or Abyssal Exalted, in the game Exalted; Death Knight, a character in Fire Emblem: Three Houses
We first saw this dagger way back in Season 1 of Game of Thrones, when it was wielded by an assassin who made an attempt on Bran Stark's life while he lay in a coma after Jaime Lannister pushed ...
Chris DeVille, for The Verge in 2017, stated Critical Role is "arguably the most popular and influential D&D liveplay series" and that "the YouTube archive of Critical Role's first episode has accumulated more than 5 million views – this for a three-hour video almost entirely consisting of pals sitting around a table and acting out whimsical ...
Acererak first appears in the original Tomb of Horrors adventure (1978) by Gary Gygax as the main adversary. [1] One of the areas in the Tomb is a "Chapel of Evil", described as "obviously some form of temple area - there are scenes of normal life painted on the walls, but the people have rotting flesh, skeletal hands, worms eating them, etc." [3]: 5 The adventure described him as "a human ...
In genealogy, the dagger is used traditionally to mark a death in genealogical records. [32] In chess notation, the dagger may be suffixed to a move to signify the move resulted in a check, and a double dagger denotes checkmate. This is a stylistic variation on the more common + for a check and # (number sign) for checkmate. In linguistics, the ...