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Describes the world of Eberron and the classes and races of that world. Includes the adventure Forgotten Relics (levels 1-2). 320 [33] 978-0-7869-6689-9: Explorer's Guide to Wildemount: Matthew Mercer, Chris Lockey, James Introcaso, James Haeck, Wizards RPG Team: March 17, 2020: Describes the world of Exandria from the web series Critical Role.
Offers an in-depth look at the power of dragonmarks and the thirteen dragonmarked houses of the Eberron world. 0-7869-3933-8: Secrets of Sarlona — February 2007: Explores the continent of Sarlona for the first time. It gives players and Dungeon Masters their first real glimpse inside the empire of Riedra, home of the Inspired and the kalashtar.
The original D&D was published as a box set in 1974 and features only a handful of the elements for which the game is known today: just three character classes (fighting-man, magic-user, and cleric); four races (human, dwarf, elf, and hobbit); only a few monsters; only three alignments (lawful, neutral, and chaotic).
Armstrong's mixture is a highly shock and friction sensitive [1] explosive.Formulations vary, but one consists of 67% potassium chlorate, 27% red phosphorus, 3% sulfur, and 3% calcium carbonate.
Eberron is a campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) role-playing game.The game is set primarily on the continent of Khorvaire following a vast destructive war. . Eberron is designed to accommodate traditional D&D elements and races within a differently toned setting; Eberron combines a fantasy tone with pulp and dark adventure elements, and some non-traditional fantasy technologies ...
Exandria, which is the world in which Wildemount is a continent, fits into the D&D multiverse insofar as it is another world in the material plane. So just like Eberron or Toril, or Krynn, or Athas, it exists in that same sphere. [...] This is a universe born out of one man's imagination, for the most part. And, it is also born out a livestream ...
Gunpowder is a low explosive: it does not detonate, but rather deflagrates (burns quickly). This is an advantage in a propellant device, where one does not desire a shock that would shatter the gun and potentially harm the operator; however, it is a drawback when an explosion is desired.
In World War II, the German Wehrmacht attempted to develop a vacuum bomb, [28] under the direction of the Austrian physicist Mario Zippermayr. [29] The weapon was claimed by a weapons specialist (K.L. Bergmann) to have been tested on the Eastern front under the code-name "Taifun B" and was ready for deployment during the Normandy invasion in ...