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Dungeon Geomorphs: N/A: Clayton Bunce: 2004: Not an adventure. Map fragments to help GMs create adventures. 10: The Sunless Garden: 6–8: Brendan J. LaSalle: 2004 11: The Dragonfiend Pact: 2: Chris Doyle: 2004: Nomination, Best Adventure, 2005 Gen Con ENnie Awards [2] 12: The Blackguard's Revenge: 9–11: F. Wesley Schneider: 2004 12.5: The ...
Reverse Dungeon: Various: John D. Rateliff & Bruce R. Cordell: 2000: Players roleplay monsters defending a dungeon against NPC adventurers. Generic setting. 11376: Road to Danger: 1–3: Christopher Perkins: 1998: Low level adventures compiled from Dungeon magazine. 9560: Sea of Blood: 7–9: Bruce R. Cordell: 1997: Third part of the "Sahuagin ...
Dungeon Crawl Stone Soup is a roguelike game where the player creates a character and guides it through a dungeon, mostly consisting of persistent levels, full of monsters and items, with the goal of retrieving the "Orb of Zot" (a MacGuffin) located there, and escaping alive. To enter the Realm of Zot where the Orb is located, the player must ...
The chapters of Delicious in Dungeon are written and illustrated by Ryoko Kui.The series was serialized in Enterbrain's Harta magazine from February 15, 2014, [1] [2] to September 15, 2023. [3]
Al-Qadim is a campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game which was developed by Jeff Grubb with Andria Hayday for TSR, Inc., and was first released in 1992.. Al-Qadim uses One Thousand and One Nights as a theme and is set in the land of Zakhara, called the Land of Fate.
A character class is a fundamental part of the identity and nature of characters in the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game.A character's capabilities, strengths, and weaknesses are largely defined by their class; choosing a class is one of the first steps a player takes to create a Dungeons & Dragons player character. [1]
The Dungeon Geomorphs are sets of aids that consist of dungeon map sections. These sections can be cut apart and assembled together in various formations. Set One was for typical dungeon corridors and rooms; Set Two was for unusual dungeon corridors and rooms; and Set Three was for larger, even more unusual dungeons, corridors and rooms.
The most famous examples are the various Dungeons & Dragons media. In this context, the word "dungeon" has come to be used broadly to describe any labyrinthine complex (castle, cave system, etc) rather than a prison cell or torture chamber specifically. A role-playing game involving dungeon exploration is called a dungeon crawl.