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Gamebooks range widely in terms of the complexity of the game aspect. At one end are the branching-plot novels, which require the reader to make choices but are otherwise like regular novels (this style is exemplified by the originator of the gamebook format, Choose Your Own Adventure, and is sometimes referred to as "American style").
Lone Wolf, mostly written by Joe Dever (33 books planned, 31 published so far) Make Your Own Adventure With Doctor Who (6 books, Sixth Doctor) [1] Marvel Superheroes, written by various authors (8 books) Narnia Solo Games, written by various authors (7 books advertised, 5 published) Nintendo Adventure Books, written by various authors (12 books)
Diablo Archive: Richard A. Knaak, Mel Odom, Robert B. Marks ISBN 978-1416576990: Collection of the first three Diablo books and Demonsbane. Demonsbane: Robert B. Marks ISBN 9780743418997: Diablo III: The Order: Nate Kenyon: ISBN 978-1416550785: Gallery Books Storm of Light: ISBN 978-1416550808: Book of Cain (Memo Collection) ISBN 978-1608870455 ...
For the Queen is a tabletop role-playing game by Alex Roberts about the dangerous journey of a queen's servants. The first edition was published by Evil Hat Productions in 2019, and the second edition was published by Darrington Press in 2024. [1] The game features themes of power, authority, femininity, love, loyalty, and betrayal.
Kingdom Builder is a strategy board game designed by Donald X. Vaccarino, published in 2011 by Queen Games with illustrations by Oliver Schlemmer in German, British and international versions (English, French, Dutch, Spanish, German).
The majority of the books in the series were based on Dungeons & Dragons (D&D), but some were based on other TSR games (e.g. Gamma World, Top Secret) or even licensed properties (e.g. Conan, Tarzan). Mirrorstone, a division of Wizards of the Coast that publishes fantasy fiction for children and teens, began republishing the Endless Quest series ...
Troika! is a science fantasy indie role-playing game with a surreal multiverse setting. It was created by Daniel Sell and published by Melsonian Arts Council in 2018 under a free license, encouraging other indie role-playing game creators to use its rule system to create their own projects. [1] [2]
Agon (or queen's guards or royal guards) is a strategy game invented by Anthony Peacock [1] of London, and first published in 1842. [2] It is a two-player game played on a 6×6×6 hexagonal gameboard, and is notable for being the oldest known board game played on a board of hexagonal cells.