Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Creatures from the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game that come from or are based on real-life folklore or mythology.Note that many of these although taking the name from the mythological version, have very little in common with them, instead being based on modern fantasy fiction.
Black & White: Kenzer & Company: 2002–2003: 6 [2] Vecna: Hand of the Revenant: Iron Hammer Graphics: 2002: 1: Graphic novel. Intended as part one of a series that was never produced. [2] Where Shadows Fall: Kenzer & Company: 2003–2004: 5 [2] Crisis in Raimiton: Wizards of the Coast: 2004: 1: Produced for Free Comic Book Day in 2004. [2 ...
Chromatic dragons have played a large role in various D&D monster compilation books: white, black, green, blue and red dragons being the classic chromatic dragons. [49] Tiamat is the queen of chromatic dragons, based on the evil mother of all dragons from Babylonian mythology .
The black abishai, blue abishai, green abishai, red abishai, and white abishai (lesser devils), the bearded devil (lesser devil), the nupperibo (least devil), and the spined devil (least devil), appeared in the first edition Monster Manual II (1983), along with the princess of Hell Glasya, the dukes of Hell Amon, Bael, Hutijin, and Titivilus ...
Steven H Silver reviewed Art & Arcana for Black Gate, and stated that "Art and Arcana is not only a beautiful book looking at more than 50 years of gaming art, but it also provides the most complete public history of Dungeons and Dragons, its founders, and the culture which has grown up around it. Interspersed with the familiar iconography of ...
The idea of playing the racial outsider who nonetheless protects the people who wrongly revile them is a well-known trope built into D&D". Clements found this stereotype associated with the tiefling problematic, as the "solution is usually to focus on individual good, rather than confronting deeper, systemic problems of racial politics".
While trolls can be found throughout folklores worldwide, the D&D troll has little in common with these. Instead it was inspired partly by Norse myth, and partly by a troll that appears in Poul Anderson's Three Hearts and Three Lions, [1] [2] [3] which is especially apparent in their ability to "regenerate" (their bodies to heal wounds extremely rapidly), and their weakness to fire.
Wizards of the Coast discontinued the production of D&D Miniatures in 2011. In 2012, Wizards of the Coast released Dungeon Command, the successor to the D&D Miniatures skirmish game. Dungeon Command's gameplay bears some similarities to the D&D Miniatures game, but features a diceless combat system and a new component, order cards. Dungeon ...