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Dragonflight raised the level cap to 70, the first increase since the level squish in Shadowlands. [4] Dragonflight also features a revamp of the user interface and talent tree systems, [1] [4] with two tree branches. [5] Dragonflight includes a new playable race, the Dracthyr, and a new class, the Evoker. The two are combined: Evokers are ...
Dragonflight may refer to: Dragonflight (novel) , a 1968 science-fiction novel by Anne McCaffrey Dragonflight (convention) , a gaming convention established in 1980
Dragonflight is a science fiction novel by the American-Irish author Anne McCaffrey. It is the first book in the Dragonriders of Pern series. First published by Ballantine Books in July 1968, it was a fix-up of two novellas which between them had made McCaffrey the first woman writer to win a Hugo and a Nebula Award .
Anne Inez McCaffrey (1 April 1926 – 21 November 2011) [2] [3] was an American writer known for the Dragonriders of Pern science fiction series. She was the first woman to win a Hugo Award for fiction (Best Novella, Weyr Search, 1968) and the first to win a Nebula Award (Best Novella, Dragonrider, 1969).
The Brain & Brawn Ship series comprises seven novels. Only the first was written by Anne McCaffrey alone, a fix-up of five previously published stories. [1]The Ship books are set in the same universe as the Crystal Singer books, as Brainship-Brawn pairings were characters in the second and third volumes of that series.
In 1990, a group of Dragonflight members approached the Board of Directors with a proposal to join with the Simulation Gaming Association, a campus gaming group at the University of Washington, to create Metro Seattle Gamers, [3] a gaming experience, which is one of the nation's few self-supporting clubhouses devoted to the hobby. The club site ...
Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae, standard abbreviation ILS, is a three-volume selection of Latin inscriptions edited by Hermann Dessau. The work was published in five parts serially from 1892 to 1916, with numerous reprints. Supporting material and notes are all written in Latin.
The script of the Tugu inscription and the Cidanghyang inscription bear striking similarity, such as the script "citralaikha" written as "citralekha", leading to the assumption that the writer of these inscriptions was the same person. The Tugu inscription is the longest Tarumanagara inscription pronounced by edict of Sri Maharaja Purnawarman.