Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Like several other RPGs from Chaosium (most notably Call of Cthulhu), Pendragon has a literary basis, in this case the fifteenth-century Arthurian romance, Le Morte d'Arthur. It studiously avoids fantasy RPG cliches in favor of its source material. This has caused it to become something of a cult game, even within the narrow confines of the RPG ...
WIN WIN3X: Tactical RPG Video game creation suite: Exile: NA 1999 (JP) Farland Odyssey: TGL: TGL: Fantasy: WIN: Tactical RPG: Farland Story spinoff: JP 1999 (NA) Darkstone: Gathering of Developers: Delphine: Fantasy: WIN: Action RPG Diablo-style: FR 1999 (NA/EU) Gorky 17 Odium: Metropolis: 1C Company TopWare Monolith: Fantasy: WIN: Tactical RPG ...
Action RPG: Action role-playing game: FPS/RPG: First-person shooter / RPG hybrid (role-playing shooter) Tactical RPG: Tactical role-playing game: RTS/RPG: Real-time strategy / RPG hybrid (real-time strategy RPG) Roguelike: Roguelike: CRPG/WRPG: Computer-style role-playing game: Eroge: Japanese game featuring erotic content: JRPG: Japanese-style ...
TSR, Inc. was an American game publishing company, best known as the original publisher of Dungeons & Dragons (D&D).Its earliest incarnation, Tactical Studies Rules, was founded in October 1973 by Gary Gygax and Don Kaye.
He also found the quality of artwork varied greatly. Overall, Bambra thought Torg was "a major addition to the role-playing games currently available." [34] In the July 1992 edition of Dragon (Issue 183), Martin Wixted called Torg "one of the most gripping role-playing games I have ever encountered." However, he cautioned that it was "not for ...
It’s nearly 1 in the morning, and I’m still exploring Limgrave, trudging through waters to the west, more exploring with wonder than searching for anything in particular. Sometimes, it’s fun ...
Role-playing games began to influence other media. The first role-playing video games arose from early mainframe computer imitations of RPGs, with Akalabeth and Rogue both published in 1980; the genre inherited many of the settings and game mechanics of RPGs as well as the name, and went on to have its own varied history.
King's Bounty is a turn-based fantasy video game designed by Jon Van Caneghem and published by New World Computing in 1990. The game follows the player's character, a hero of King Maximus, appointed with the job of retrieving the Sceptre of Order from the forces of chaos, led by Arech Dragonbreath.