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Elminster's Ecologies Appendix I is a sequel to the Elminster's Ecologies box for the Forgotten Realms setting, which focuses on the flora and fauna of the Battle of Bones and Hill of Lost Souls. It includes such encounters as the zombie ferret, lava ankheg, and dead grass snake, and also in-game recipes for ruby blushrose potpourri and ...
Lost Souls is a game in which the player characters are ghosts who have returned to complete an unfinished task before they are able to move on to their next lives. [1] The mission of these ghosts is to restore justice using their powers, and to oppose supernatural enemies such as ghosts who have chosen the path of corruption, or invaders from other dimensions.
Yogscast Limited, [1] also known as The Yogscast, is a British entertainment company based in Bristol that primarily produces video gaming-related videos on YouTube and Twitch, and also operates the Yogscast multi-channel network for affiliated content creators.
Lost Souls was an early mover into the Web among MUDs, registering its domain lostsouls.org in April 1995, [14] after previously maintaining a Web presence at lostsouls.desertmoon.com. [15] As a result, it is one of the four sites cited in the LPMud FAQ [ 16 ] (now a frozen document), only two of which are still online and MUD-related (the ...
The Forest of the Lost Souls (Portuguese: A Floresta das Almas Perdidas) is a 2017 Portuguese slasher drama [4] film directed by José Pedro Lopes. Described as a "coming of age slasher movie", the film had its world premiere at the Director's Week of the Fantasporto Film Festival 2017.
Wizardry: Labyrinth of Lost Souls is a role-playing video game developed and published by Acquire for the PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita, iOS, and Microsoft Windows. The game's Japanese title is Wizardry: Torawareshi Tamashī no Meikyū ( ウィザードリィ 囚われし魂の迷宮 , Wizādoryi Torawareshi Tamashī no Meikyū ) . [ 3 ]
Dark Fall: Lost Souls is a 2009 first-person psychological horror/adventure game developed by British studio Darkling Room and published by Iceberg Interactive for Microsoft Windows. It was first released for download via Steam and Darkling Room's official website in November 2009. It was subsequently released for retail in Europe in January ...
Marcus L. Rowland reviewed The Forest of Doom for the June 1983 issue of White Dwarf, rating the title a 10 out of a possible 10.Rowland suggested that only "[r]eally stupid players" would try to loot the home of the mage, because they "will not like the consequences", and noted the lethality of the forest area with "some encounters being survivable only by luck or remarkably good combat rolls ...