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A sequel to The Kidnapping of Princess Arelina 's accessory, [1] it features Dragon Tiles, which are cardboard cutouts which can be arranged in different ways to make a variety of dungeon maps. In addition cardboard figurine cutouts which can be used in a manner similar to miniatures , and a short adventure designed to use the pieces that come ...
Each supplement in the Dungeon Tiles series contains six fully illustrated map grids that can be used by the Dungeons & Dragons gamemaster to both add atmosphere to a game of D&D, and save time otherwise spent on drawing maps for the players. The seven supplements in this series are:
Garry Spiegle wrote 3-D Dragon Tiles Featuring The Kidnapping of Princess Arelina as a supplement with two purposes in mind. First it included a fairly large number of cardboard cutouts of monsters, characters, and maps called Dragon Tiles. The latter could be configured in different ways to provide a variety of maps for the figure cutouts. [1]
The Dungeon Geomorphs are sets of aids that consist of dungeon map sections. These sections can be cut apart and assembled together in various formations. Set One was for typical dungeon corridors and rooms; Set Two was for unusual dungeon corridors and rooms; and Set Three was for larger, even more unusual dungeons, corridors and rooms.
Each adventure takes up six pages, [2] with an introduction to the player's mission, the actual adventure, maps of the various encounter areas — and advice on how to adapt each map to WotC's Dungeon Tiles — and hints on how the gamemaster can flesh out the adventure. Each adventure includes three combat encounters with standard D&D monsters ...
It was a set of terrain tiles intended to combine together to form various locations. [2] Dungeon Floor Plans is a package that includes twelve thick cardboard sheets, each printed in colors to represent different types of flooring, with flagstone in tan, rough stone and dirt in grey, wood in brown and stone stairways in grey. The sheets are ...
Keep on the Shadowfell is the first official product from the 4th edition Dungeons & Dragons ("D&D") line. [1] It is part one of a three-part series of adventures.It introduces a series of 4th edition Dungeons & Dragons settings called the Points of Light, a loosely connected and open-ended series of settings designed to allow other modules and fan-created content to be integrated seamlessly ...
TSR, Inc. published four starter sets for Advanced Dungeons & Dragons. Shannon Appelcline noted that by 1993 the Basic D&D line ended and was replaced by games such as Dragon Quest (1992) and DragonStrike (1993), and that "There was another abrupt change the next year when TSR put out First Quest (1994) by Richard Baker, Zeb Cook, and Bruce Nesmith.