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This is a list of fictional characters from the Dark Sun campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game. Most of these characters have appeared in the multiple Dark Sun source books or novels .
Flint the King author Mary Kirchoff said she imagined Flint's voice as a combination of Wilford Brimley and Yosemite Sam, and referred to Tasslehoff Burrfoot and Flint as "the Abbott and Costello of Dragonlance". [15] Flint appears as one of the player characters in the video game Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Heroes of the Lance. [9]
King of Ooo; King of Swords; The King of the Cats; King of the Fairy Beavers; The King of the Golden River; King of Wands; King Rience; King Shark; King Smurf; King Triton; King Ubu; King Vitaman; The King Who Wished to Marry His Daughter; The King Who Would Be Stronger Than Fate; The King Who Would Have a Beautiful Wife; King Worm (character ...
King of the Dead (March 1996), by Gene DeWeese, (ISBN 0-7869-0483-6): Focuses on Azalin's life in Oerth, entry into Ravenloft, and ending with his assumption as ruler of Darkon. Lord of the Necropolis Oct 1997 by Gene DeWeese, ( ISBN 0-7869-0660-X ): Focuses on Azalin's attempts to escape Ravenloft through the Grand Conjunction and Requiem.
The pantheons employed in D&D provide a useful framework for creating fantasy characters, as well as governments and even worlds. [1] [2]: 275–292 Dungeons and Dragons may be useful in teaching classical mythology. [3] D&D draws inspiration from a variety of mythologies, but takes great liberty in adapting them for the purpose of the game. [4]
Introduced in the 1st Edition of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (AD&D) and continuing into 2004's release of Complete Divine, Bahamut, the Platinum Dragon, is the King of the Good Dragons. [2] He is a deity of good dragonkind (usually, but not exclusively, referring to metallic dragons) and a member of the default pantheon of D&D gods. [3]
Kender are a type of fantasy race first developed for the Dragonlance campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role playing game published by TSR, Inc. in 1984. The first kender character was created by Harold Johnson as a player character in a series of role-playing adventures co-authored by Tracy Hickman and Margaret Weis.
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