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This is a list of tabletop fantasy role-playing game supplements published by various companies. Many of these books were unlicensed publications intended to be used with Dungeons & Dragons or other game systems, and many were designed to be "generic" or "universal", or to be adapted to any fantasy role-playing game system.
Labyrinth Lord (LL) is a fantasy role-playing game written and edited by Daniel Proctor and published by Goblinoid Games. It emulates the rules and feel of Dungeons & Dragons ( D&D ) using the Open Game License (OGL) from Wizards of the Coast.
The release prompted another game designer, Daniel Proctor, to write and release Labyrinth Lord in 2007, a more complete retro-clone of the 1981 version of the Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set and its accompanying Expert Set. The following year, Finch announced the release of Swords & Wizardry, a retro-clone of the original Dungeons & Dragons game.
An updated Player Character Record Sheets pack for AD&D (serialized as REF2), with a new cover by Keith Parkinson, was released in 1986 as a 64-page booklet. [2]: 112 REF2 Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Player Character Record Sheets is a booklet containing 16 character sheets, with sufficient spaces included to record information for AD&D characters.
The Dungeon Masters Guild is an online store that hosts official Wizards of the Coast products and acts as a platform for third party publishers and individuals "to publish lore, maps, character designs and adventures based on Dungeons & Dragons intellectual property". [19]
A character sheet from Advanced Dungeons & Dragons. A character sheet is a record of a player character in a role-playing game, including whatever details, notes, game statistics, and background information a player would need during a play session. Character sheets can be found in use in both traditional and live-action role-playing games.
The box set included two booklets (a 32-page book for players and a 64-page book for Dungeon Masters), two sheets of die-cut tokens for characters and monsters, dice, and cardstock character sheets and power cards. It also included two adventures – one designed for solo-play and one designed for group play (called The Twisting Halls).
This version is intended as an introduction to Advanced Dungeons & Dragons with streamlined rules. The boxed set contains six dice, a dice bag, a gamemaster's screen, a rulebook, a book of pregenerated characters, and a book of adventures. [2] This version of Dungeons & Dragons Adventure Game was written by Bill Slavicsek. [2]