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The books involve a branching path format in order to move between sections of text, but the reader creates a character as in a role-playing game, and resolves actions using a game-system. Unlike role-playing solitaire adventures, adventure gamebooks include all the rules needed for play in each book.
High Score!: The Illustrated History of Electronic Games Published in April 2002 by McGraw-Hill Osborne Media and written by Rusel Demaria and Johnny Lee Wilson. The first edition is mostly center on the US video game history, while the second edition, published in December 2003, features a brief history on Japanese and UK video game companies.
Blood Sword is a series of gamebooks created by Oliver Johnson and Dave Morris and published by Knight Books in the late 1980s. The books were illustrated by Russ Nicholson and the maps supplied by Geoff Wingate. It was set in the authors' own fantasy world of "Legend" which was also the setting for their Dragon Warriors role playing game.
Blood Games: A True Account of Family Murder is a true crime non-fiction book written by Jerry Bledsoe and published on November 1, 1991 by Dutton Books. The book recounts the murder of Lieth Von Stein. [1] [2] [3] It was adapted into a television film titled Honor Thy Mother that premiered on CBS on April 26, 1992. [4]
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In 2004, French-based Cyanide Studio developed a game called Chaos League (and, later, a subsequent expansion Chaos League: Sudden Death) which bore a heavy resemblance to Blood Bowl in its style and rules, even though it was a real-time game (rather than turn-based, like Blood Bowl). Games Workshop sued over the similarities, but later ...
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Publishers Weekly described Blood Games as "middling", like "so much of [Laymon's] mid-career work". The review concluded by saying that it is a "brisk but routine entertainment from the controversial author". [1]