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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.
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 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.
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.
Labyrinth Lord: Goblinoid Games D&D Basic Set: 2007, 2009 Lace and Steel: Published originally by TAGG and re-released by Pharos Press 1989 An Australian RPG set in a world of civilised Centaurs and Harpies with a musketeers/swashbuckling feel Lady Blackbird: 2009 Lancer: Massif Press, Dark Horse Comics: 2019 Land of the Rising Sun: Fantasy ...
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).
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]
In the Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) fantasy role-playing game, rule books contain all the elements of playing the game: rules to the game, how to play, options for gameplay, stat blocks and lore of monsters, and tables the Dungeon Master or player would roll dice for to add more of a random effect to the game.