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Wilderlands of the Fantastic Reaches is a campaign setting supplement which details the locations found on four large wilderness maps of the setting (Wilderness Maps 15-18). [ 2 ] The regions of the Isle of Dawn (#15), the Southern Reaches (#16), the Silver Skein Isles (#17), and the Ghinor Highlands (#18) [ 3 ] are shown in full detail on the ...
He gave the colored maps high marks, and found the detailed town of Daggerford a good start for a new campaign in the area, providing everything necessary for the Dungeon Master. Stylo considered the description of various cities, towns and locations of the North in the "Cities" book detailed, including rumors providing adventure hooks.
The Mouser is a small (not much more than 5 feet (1.5 m)) mercurial thief, gifted and deadly at swordsmanship (often using a sword in one hand and a long dagger or main-gauche in the other), as well as a former wizard's apprentice who retains some skill at magic. Fafhrd talks like a romantic, but his strength and practicality usually wins ...
The Savage Frontier (FR5) was written by Jennell Jaquays [a] and published by TSR in 1988 as a 64-page booklet with a large color map and an outer folder. [1]Shannon Appelcline explained that Frank Mentzer's Aquaria setting was initially published as four adventure modules for the RPGA, and presumably to be included as part of the Greyhawk setting; after these modules were collected and ...
Fantastic Four: 1966: C Averoigne: Clark Ashton Smith: A fictional French province. The End of the Story: 1930: N Azeroth: Blizzard Entertainment: Primary setting of the Warcraft franchise. Warcraft: Orcs & Humans: 1994: A C F G V N Barsoom: Edgar Rice Burroughs: A version of Mars inhabited by various species of intelligent life: Under the ...
This is a list of official Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by Wizards of the Coast as separate publications. It does not include adventures published as part of supplements, officially licensed Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by other companies, official d20 System adventures and other Open Game License adventures that may be compatible with Dungeons & Dragons.
MV1 Midnight on Dagger Alley was published in 1984, and was written by Merle M. Rasmussen. [4] The module features art by Jeff Easley. [1] The module comes in a cardboard folder, with two double-sided maps, a cardboard sheet that has character statistics printed on one side and charts printed on the other side, and an eight-page booklet containing the adventure.
Fantasy cartography, fictional map-making, or geofiction is a type of map design that visually presents an imaginary world or concept, or represents a real-world geography in a fantastic style. [1] Fantasy cartography usually manifests from worldbuilding and often corresponds to narratives within the fantasy and science fiction genres.