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  2. Baldur's Gate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldur's_Gate

    Baldur's Gate is a series of role-playing video games set in the Forgotten Realms Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting. The series has been divided into two sub-series, known as the Bhaalspawn Saga and the Dark Alliance, both taking place mostly within the Western Heartlands, but the Bhaalspawn Saga extends to Amn and Tethyr.

  3. Baldur's Gate 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldur's_Gate_3

    Larian accepted, and while working to wrap up the release stage of development for Divinity: Original Sin II, a small group gathered to develop the design document to present to Wizards of the Coast with their ideas for the new Baldur's Gate. [34] Baldur's Gate 3 is based on the 5th edition of the Dungeons & Dragons tabletop role-playing game.

  4. Warlock (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warlock_(video_game)

    Warlock (also stylized Beware the Ultimate Evil of Warlock) is a side-scrolling action video game based on the 1989 horror film series of the same title. It was released on May 26, 1995 through Acclaim Entertainment for the Genesis and Super NES platforms. [1] A version for the Atari Jaguar was planned by Trimark Interactive but never released. [2]

  5. Symphony of War: The Nephilim Saga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_of_War:_The...

    Symphony of War: The Nephilim Saga is a tactical role-playing game. Players control squads of up to nine units, which engage in battle automatically, similar to auto battlers. Depending on the quest, they can field up to 20 squads on the overworld map, each led by a squad commander. Progressing through quests allows players to gain special ...

  6. List of compositions by Peter Warlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compositions_by...

    Peter Warlock was the pseudonym adopted by the British composer and music scholar Philip Arnold Heseltine (1894–1930). He wrote over a hundred songs, a number of choral works and a small number of instrumental pieces.

  7. Pastoral Symphony (Vaughan Williams) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastoral_Symphony_(Vaughan...

    Ralph Vaughan Williams's Symphony No. 3, published as Pastoral Symphony and not numbered until later, was completed in 1922. Vaughan Williams's inspiration to write this symphony came during World War I after hearing a bugler practising and accidentally playing an interval of a seventh instead of an octave; [1] this ultimately led to the trumpet cadenza in the second movement.

  8. Symphony No. 8 (Beethoven) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_No._8_(Beethoven)

    The most substantial movement in the symphony, the finale is in sonata rondo form with a fast tempo. [15] The metronome marking supplied by Beethoven himself is whole note = 84. This is the first symphonic movement in which the timpani are tuned in octaves, foreshadowing the similar octave-F tuning in the scherzo of the Ninth Symphony. [16]

  9. Symphony No. 3 (Sibelius) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_No._3_(Sibelius)

    The Symphony No. 3 in C major, Op. 52, is a three-movement work for orchestra written from 1904 to 1907 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.. Coming between the romantic intensity of Sibelius's first two symphonies and the more austere complexity of his later symphonies, it is a good-natured, triumphal, and deceptively simple-sounding piece.