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In 1999 a CD-ROM compilation of the first 250 issues, called Dragon Magazine Archive, was released in PDF format with a special viewer. It includes the seven issues of The Strategic Review. The Dragon Magazine Archive is out of print because of issues raised with the 2001 ruling in Greenberg v.
Dragon Magazine (Japanese: ドラゴンマガジン, Hepburn: Doragon Magajin), frequently abbreviated as "Doramaga" or "DM", is a Japanese light novel and manga magazine aimed at young adult males, first published in 1988. Since March 19, 2008 the magazine has been published every other month.
Finieous Fingers (often misspelled Fineous even in Dragon magazine's own FAQ) was among the earliest comics that appeared in Dragon magazine. [1] [2] [3] Finieous Fingers, the title character and self-proclaimed "World's Greatest Thief", was a good-natured thief who was pestered by halflings (hobbits) and evil magic-users. He was generally ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Dragon Magazine may refer to: Dragon, an American magazine for Dungeons ...
Dungeon (initially titled Dungeon Adventures) first received mention in the editor's column of Dragon Issue 107 (March 1986). Lacking a title at that point, it was described as "a new magazine filled entirely with modules" made available "by subscription only" that would debut "in the late summer or early fall" of 1986 and "come out once every two months".
SnarfQuest originally ran in Dragon Magazine from 1983–1989, debuting in issue #75 [3] and running until No. 145 (75-78,80-145). The first story arc, detailing Snarf's quest to become king, was collected into a single 144-page book, [3] entitled SnarfQuest: The Book, published by TSR in 1987; this edition also featured several never-before-published pages in full color including a story set ...
Rick Swan reviewed The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga for Dragon magazine #222 (October 1995). [1] He commented that the dancing hut "remains of one TSR's most durable villains, having boogalooed through a 1976 Dungeons & Dragons game supplement (Eldritch Wizardry), the AD&D Book of Artifacts, and a couple of Dragon Magazine articles."
The Dragonchess gameboard consists of three 12×8 chess boards stacked vertically. The upper board (blue and white) represents the air, the middle board (green and amber) represents the land, and the lower board (red and brown) is the subterranean world (Gygax 1985:34).