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An updated Player Character Record Sheets pack for AD&D (serialized as REF2), with a new cover by Keith Parkinson, was released in 1986 as a 64-page booklet. [2]: 112 REF2 Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Player Character Record Sheets is a booklet containing 16 character sheets, with sufficient spaces included to record information for AD&D characters.
Although TSR was focused on AD&D at the time, the project was seen as a profitable enterprise and a way to direct new players to anticipate the release of the AD&D game. It was published in July 1977 as the Basic Set, which included a single booklet covering character levels 1 through 3, and also includes dice and a beginner's module.
Permanent Character Record is an accessory for players of the first edition AD&D rules, which consisted of a folder to contain various character statistics and information, and included record sheets to help the player track events that their player character was involved in. [1]
The Player's Handbook (spelled Players Handbook in first edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (AD&D)) is the name given to one of the core rulebooks in every edition of the fantasy role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons (D&D). It does not contain the complete set of rules for the game, and only includes rules for use by players of the game.
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Heroes of the Lance is a video game released in 1988 for various home computer systems and consoles. The game is based on the first Dragonlance campaign module for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, Dragons of Despair, and the first Dragonlance novel Dragons of Autumn Twilight.
The Rogues Gallery is a supplement for the Dungeon Master containing hundreds of non-player character listings, with characters from each of the first edition AD&D character classes, and game statistics for characters originally played in Gary Gygax's home Dungeons & Dragons campaign. [1]
The Fighter's Player Pack is an AD&D game accessory which comes in a case with everything a newcomer needs to get his fighter PC ready for a campaign: a pad of character sheets, a stand-up reference screen, a brief but informative player's guide, seven polyhedral dice, three pewter miniatures, and a shiny red pencil.
In 1982, TSR published Pharaoh as a thirty-two-page booklet with two outer folders, for the first edition of AD&D. [7]: 101 It was designed for 6-8 player characters of levels 5-7 [10] and formed the first of the three-part Desert of Desolation module series. [1] [7]: 101 The cover art for Pharaoh was provided by Jim Holloway. [11]