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This is a list of official Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by Wizards of the Coast as separate publications. It does not include adventures published as part of supplements, officially licensed Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by other companies, official d20 System adventures and other Open Game License adventures that may be compatible with Dungeons & Dragons.
"Advanced Advanced Dungeons & Dragons" is the tenth episode of the fifth season of Community, and the 94th episode overall in the series. It originally aired on March 20, 2014 on NBC. The episode was written by Matt Roller, and directed by Joe Russo. The episode marked the series writing debut of Roller and the final episode directed by Russo.
Dungeons & Dragons is an American animated television series based on TSR's Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game. [1] It is a co-production of Marvel Productions and TSR, with the Japanese Toei Animation. It ran on CBS from 1983 through 1985 for three seasons, for a total of twenty-seven episodes.
It’s rare for every main character on The Equalizer to be under attack at once, but that was the case on the show’s Season 3 finale, which aired Sunday on CBS. Robyn, Mel, Harry, Dante ...
The episode draws inspiration from the Dungeons & Dragons games played by creator Dan Harmon when growing up. Harmon came up with the basic premise but allowed the other writers to build a story around it. Having never played Dungeons & Dragons, Guest studied the game with fellow writers and relied on Harmon's experience when writing the script ...
The HBO series’ season-ender, which aired Sunday, puts all of the pieces in place for one of the franchise’s huge battle episodes. Tentative alliances are forged. Dragonriders are armored.
Friday’s finale picks up with Catherine in Stephen’s kitchen, sipping the tea he spiked with sleeping pills and telling him her version of what happened to his son Jonathan years ago in Italy.
While the Rules Cyclopedia includes all information required to begin the game, a revised introductory boxed set, named The New Easy-to-Master Dungeons & Dragons Game (and nicknamed "the black box") was released at the same time. [10] A final repackaging of the introductory set, titled The Classic Dungeons & Dragons Game was released in 1994 ...