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1982 was the peak year for the golden age of arcade video games as well as the second generation of video game consoles. Many games were released that would spawn franchises, or at least sequels, including Dig Dug, Pole Position, Mr. Do!, Zaxxon, Q*bert, Time Pilot and Pitfall!
Those games are listed in the year when they made the transition to a standalone role-playing game. Unique games with identical or similar titles are listed separately. Unique means games that use different rules or settings but does not include rule revisions by the same author or publisher.
The first game to encourage players to have non-humanoid roles, and the first to have detailed martial arts and skill systems. Bureau 13: Stalking the Night Fantastic: Tri Tac Games: 1992 Burn Bryte: Roll20: 2020 Science fantasy: Design tailored to be played on a virtual tabletop platform: Burning Empires: Luke Crane: 2006 Science fiction
This is a list of companies that have produced tabletop role-playing games in English, listed in order of the year that the company published its first role-playing game-related product (game, supplement, or magazine). Also listed is the years the company was active, and a list of notable role-playing games the company has produced.
The Book of Crafts was designed by Aron Anderson, Phil Brucato, James Estes, Looking Eagle, Deena McKinney, Wade Racine, Andrew Ragland, Derek Pearcy, Kathleen Ryan, and Lucien Soulban, with interior artwork by James Daly, Pia Guerra, Anthony Hightower, Mark Jackson, Robert Macneil, Shea Anton Pensa, Alex Sheikman, and Ron Spencer, and cover art by Ash Arnett and Matt Milberger.
In May 2023, By Night Studios launched a crowd-funding campaign for a new version of Laws of the Night which would feature updated rules and settings based on Vampire the Masquerade, Fifth Edition. A PDF version of the new book was published in September 2023, with a physical release expected in 2024.
The Book of Chantries is a 182-page softcover book written by Steven C. Brown, Phil Brucato, and Robert Hatch, with interior art by Joshua Gabriel Timbrook, Larry MacDougall, Quinton Hoover, Drew Tucker, Lawrence Allen Williams, Craig Gelmore, Elliott, Andrew Robinson, Jeff Menges, and cover art by Scott Hampton and Michelle Prahler. [1]
A.E. (video game) Action Quest; Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Cloudy Mountain; Adventure (1982 video game) Adventures of Tron; Air Raid (1982 video game) Air Raiders; Airlock (video game) Airstrike (video game) Ali Baba and 40 Thieves (video game) Alien (1982 video game) Alien (Avalon Hill) Alien Garden; Alpiner (video game) The Amazing ...