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The Complete Thief's Handbook is a rules supplement for the 2nd edition Player's Handbook which details the thief class, including 18 "kit" subclasses. [1]Also included is a section on creating a "Lone Wolf;" essentially a one-character class designed using the class, creation rules in the Dungeon Master's Guide.
The assassin class, a sub-class of the thief in first edition, was excluded from the second edition core rules. [12]: 84 The assumption was that an assassin could be treated mechanically as a normal thief who simply specialized in assassination-related skills. The thief class is further detailed in The Complete Thief's Handbook. [8]: 109
Noir uses LP to gain dancing skills and is declared victor. The Phantom Thief then arrives, steals the Tear, and kidnaps Emma. Leila Overlock, from Lahmu, chases her with Noir. The Phantom Thief summons a Phoenix, which Leila defeats while Noir defeats the Phantom Thief.
The reviewer from Pyramid noted the prestige classes in the book, and felt that it offered "some jim-dandies in this one", including the thief-acrobat, and the Fang of Lolth, "which starts with the assumption that a PC tries to access an artifact not meant for humanoids with a Use Magic Device roll.
Blackmoor added two new character classes to the game: [6] the assassin, a sub-class of the thief; and the monk, a "monastic martial arts" sub-class of the cleric, intended to be a hybrid of the fighter and thief classes. The Sage character was also introduced, but changed to a Non-Player Character type and moved to the back of the booklet by ...
Thief is a series of stealth video games in which the player takes the role of Garrett, a master thief in a fantasy steampunk world resembling a cross between the Late Middle Ages and the Victorian era, with more advanced technologies interspersed.
Thief: The Dark Project is a 1998 first-person stealth video game developed by Looking Glass Studios and published by Eidos Interactive.Set in a fantasy metropolis called the City, players take on the role of Garrett, a master thief trained by a secret society who, while carrying out a series of robberies, becomes embroiled in a complex plot that ultimately sees him attempting to prevent a ...
Greyhawk is a rules supplement written by Gary Gygax and Robert J. Kuntz and published for the original edition of the Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) fantasy role-playing game.It has been called "the first and most important supplement" to the original D&D rules.