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The Book of Three Circles (by White Wolf Publishing): The first version of a book detailing sorcery in the world of Exalted. The book contains sorcerous spells for Terrestrial, Celestial and Solar Circle spells, as well as other works of wonder, details on demesnes, manses and hearthstones, and an appendix on War Striders.
Development of Exalted's Third Edition was officially announced in October 2012. The Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign for Exalted Third Edition ran in 2013 from May 9 to June 8, reaching its $60,000 funding goal within 18 minutes, [6] raising a total of $684,755 and breaking Numenera's record for the most funded tabletop RPG Kickstarter. [7]
The Book of Exalted Deeds is an optional sourcebook for the 3.0 edition [1] of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game published by Wizards of the Coast (WotC) in 2003. It provides supplementary game material for campaigns involving characters of good alignment. Within the game, there is also a powerful magical artifact of the same name.
[5] Moran released a second edition in 2002 with Hogshead Publishing, which became affectionately known as the "Great White Book" owing to its unusual 12x12" form factor. In 2005, Moran was the primary author of the Weapons of the Gods RPG, the first role-playing game that Eos Press published in-house.
A plate from the 1742 deluxe edition of Richardson's Pamela; or, Virtue Rewarded showing Mr. B intercepting Pamela's first letter home to her mother. Pamela Andrews is a pious, virtuous fifteen-year-old, the daughter of impoverished labourers, who works for Lady B as a maid in her Bedfordshire estate.
As a web designer for White Wolf, Conrad Hubbard led the production of a text-based online chat based role-playing game set in the World of Darkness, fictional New Bremen, Georgia.
Onyx Path produced seven books (Chicago by Night, Let the Streets Run Red, The Chicago Folios, Cults of the Blood Gods, Trails of Ash and Bones, Forbidden Religions, and Children of the Blood) for Vampire: The Masquerade 5th Edition before they were repackaged as games by industry peer, Renegade Games, and otherwise focus on creating content ...
Part of a Song Dynasty stone rubbing of Wang Xizhi's manuscript of the Yellow Court Classic. The Yellow Court Classic (simplified Chinese: 黄庭经; pinyin: Huángtíng-jīng), a Chinese Daoist meditation text, [1] was received from an unknown source by Wei Huacun, one of the founders of the Shangqing School (Chinese: 上清), in 288 CE.