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  2. Guild Wars Factions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guild_Wars_Factions

    Players are able to join in this conflict, assisting their chosen faction in claiming towns on the game map. Factions introduced a new PvE campaign, two new professions in addition to the original six, new skills and armor for existing professions, new gameplay modes for both PvE and PvP , and gameplay modifications in response to criticism of ...

  3. Guild Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guild_Wars

    Guild Wars 2 is the sequel to the original Guild Wars. It was released on August 28, 2012. The game's campaign centers on the awakening of the Elder Dragon Zhaitan and the cataclysm that this brings to Tyria. This threat unites the game's major factions to form a Pact.

  4. Guild Wars (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guild_Wars_(video_game)

    Guild Wars is a multiplayer online action role-playing game developed by ArenaNet, a subsidiary of South Korean game publisher NCSOFT, and released in 2005.As the original installment of the Guild Wars series, its campaign was retroactively titled Prophecies to differentiate it from the content of subsequent releases.

  5. Elementalist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementalist

    Elementalist may refer to: Gaming. a type of character in the Dragon Warriors games series; a type of character in the Dungeons & Dragons nation Glantri;

  6. G-2 (intelligence) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G-2_(intelligence)

    The 48th and current Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence G-2, is Lieutenant General Tony Hale (USA). LTG Hale is "the senior advisor to the Secretary of the Army and Chief of Staff of the Army for all aspects of Intelligence, Counterintelligence and Security, and responsible for the training, equipping, policy and oversight of the Army Intelligence and Security Enterprise" [clarification ...

  7. The Rod of Seven Parts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rod_of_Seven_Parts

    The Rod of Seven Parts is a 1996 accessory for the 2nd edition of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, written by Skip Williams.It focuses on the fictional artifact of the same name, which was originally introduced in the 1976 supplement Eldritch Wizardry.

  8. The Principalities of Glantri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Principalities_of_Glantri

    Ken Rolston reviewed The Principalities of Glantri for Dragon magazine #129 (January 1988). [3] Rolston called Glantri "Quite an unusual D&D game setting", as it is a nation run by an aristocracy of magic-users, numbered among them disguised lycanthropes, vampires, necromancers, liches, and Immortals; and "a nation where religion is prohibited, and where being a cleric is a capital offense". [3]