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The fictitious role-playing game featured in the film is an homage to the popular cyberpunk role-playing game Shadowrun. Humans & Households (the title is a reference to Dungeons & Dragons) turns the concept of The Gamers on its head: Characters in the fantasy world of The Gamers play a role-playing game set in our world.
The Gamers: Dorkness Rising is a feature-length film produced by Dead Gentlemen Productions, and focuses on a group of tabletop role-playing gamers as their gamemaster attempts to shepherd them through a campaign that they have played through three times and have yet to actually finish.
The Gamers (2002) The Gamers: Dorkness Rising (2008) JourneyQuest: Season 1 (2010) S.J. Tucker “Playing D&D” Music Video (2011) JourneyQuest: Season 2: City of the Dead (2012) The Gamers: Hands of Fate (2013) The Gamers: Natural One (2013) The Gamers: Households & Humans (2013) JourneyQuest: Season 3: The Pale Lady (2016) The Gamers: The ...
Elmer Scipio Dundy Jr. ("Skip") was born in Falls City, Nebraska on March 31, 1862, [1] the first of four children [2] (and only son) of lawyer (and later United States District Court Judge) Elmer Scipio Dundy and Mary Dundy. [3]
The movie begins with a team of players playing the Pathfinder RPG (a tabletop role-playing game based on Dungeons and Dragons).Though the team experiences problems in its schedule and it is unable to meet for more than a year partially because one of the players, Leo, a hobby store owner, spends a lot of time on a fictionally old card game, Romance of the Nine Empires (R9E), [2] by selling ...
Dakota City herald – Dakota City (1859–1860) [10] Dakota County Herald – Dakota City (1899–1922) The Enterprise – Omaha (1893–1920) The Falls City Tribune – Falls City (1904–1908) [11] Gibbon Reporter – Gibbon (1890–2017) The Gothenburg Times – Gothenburg (1908–2022) Heartland Messenger – Omaha (2006–2008)
He was a member of the Council of the Territory of Nebraska from 1858 to 1862. In June, 1861 Elmer Dundy married Ohio native Mary H. Robison and they had a son a year later, Elmer Scipio Dundy Jr., followed by 3 daughters: Mary Mae, Luna, and Enid Alva (died at one year of age). [1] He resumed private practice in Falls City from 1862 to 1863.
Early publishers of the Journal included former Nebraska state senator Theodore Pepoon, who owned and operated the paper from 1881 to 1885. [5] Under Pepoon, the paper was known for its promotion of Radical Republican politics. The Falls City Journal was sold to Richard L. Halbert on September 1, 2017. [6]
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related to: the gamers dorkness falls city nebraska obituaries