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  2. Fantasy Grounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasy_Grounds

    Fantasy Grounds officially supports over 50 game systems with over 3,000 products, making it the largest digital catalog of officially-licensed content. In addition to various editions of Dungeons & Dragons and Pathfinder , support is offered for Savage Worlds , Call of Cthulhu , Traveller , Rolemaster , Castles & Crusades and many others.

  3. Warez scene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warez_scene

    Software cracking has been the core element of The Scene since its beginning. This part of The Scene community, sometimes referred to as the crack scene, specializes in the creation of software cracks and keygens. The challenge of software cracking and reverse engineering complicated software is what makes it an attraction. [12]

  4. Warez - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warez

    Warez scene hierarchy. Warez are often distributed outside of The Scene (a collection of warez groups) by torrents (files including tracker info, piece size, uncompressed file size, comments, and vary in size from 1 k, to 400 k.) uploaded to a popular P2P website by an associate or friend of the cracker or cracking crew.

  5. Paradox (warez) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_(warez)

    In July 2020, the group released an up to date crack for Monster Hunter World: Iceborne for PC, a game protected by Denuvo Anti-Tamper, a protection widely known for being hard to crack. [8] Paradox had members such as D3stY (d3zxor) and Genius specialized in dongle reverse engineering and patching for hardware dongles such as Rainbow Computer ...

  6. Candlekeep Mysteries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candlekeep_Mysteries

    It was also released as a digital product through the following Wizards of the Coast licensees: D&D Beyond, Fantasy Grounds, and Roll20. [6] On the book's development, Chris Perkins said, "It brought back memories of working on Dungeon Magazine back in the day. It was pretty much the exact same thing: Somebody comes to you with an idea, and I ...

  7. Tomb of Annihilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_of_Annihilation

    It was also released as a digital product through the following Wizards of the Coast licensees: D&D Beyond, Fantasy Grounds, and Roll20. [1] Tomb of Annihilation was inspired by the classic adventure module Tomb of Horrors, "a lethal dungeon made by D&D co-creator Gary Gygax himself". [7]

  8. FitGirl Repacks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FitGirl_Repacks

    [2] [3] TorrentFreak listed FitGirl Repacks at sixth in 2024 [4] and at ninth in 2020's Top 10 Most Popular Torrent Sites lists. [ 5 ] FitGirl, the creator of the site, does not crack games; instead, she uses existing game installers or pirated game files like releases from the warez scene and repacks them to a significantly smaller download size.

  9. Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warhammer_Fantasy_Roleplay

    Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay was first published in 1986 by Games Workshop. [6] The product was intended as an adjunct to the Warhammer Fantasy Battle tabletop game. A number of Games Workshop publications – such as the Realm of Chaos titles – included material for WFRP and WFB (and the Warhammer 40,000 science fiction setting), and a conversion system for WFB was published with the WFRP rules.