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This is a list of campaign settings published for role-playing games. Since role-playing games originally developed from wargames, there are many historical and alternate-history RPGs based on Earth. The settings for such games are excluded from this list, unless they include significant fictional elements.
Ranked 11th greatest adventure of all time. [1] Incorporates rules from the Player's Option books. Generic setting. 2502: Hail the Heroes: 1–3: Tim Beach: 1994: Set in Mystara. Includes an interactive audio CD for use with the adventure. 9534: A Hero's Tale: 1-10: Monte Cook: 1996: Adventure anthology suitable for any campaign world. 9436: In ...
March 1, 2001: Rules and options for integrating psionic powers into the D&D game. 160: 0-7869-1835-7: Defenders of the Faith: Rich Redman, James Wyatt: May 1, 2001: A guidebook to clerics and paladins: 96: 0-7869-1840-3: Tome and Blood: Bruce R. Cordell, Skip Williams: July 1, 2001: A guidebook to wizards and sorcerers: 96: 0-7869-1845-4: Song ...
A modification of Lagged-Fibonacci generators. A SWB generator is the basis for the RANLUX generator, [19] widely used e.g. for particle physics simulations. Maximally periodic reciprocals: 1992 R. A. J. Matthews [20] A method with roots in number theory, although never used in practical applications. KISS: 1993 G. Marsaglia [21]
Jackson Haime, for Screen Rant in 2020, compared the large number of rulebooks released for the 3rd/3.5 editions (12 different core rulebooks and over 50 supplements published in seven years) to the number for 5th edition and wrote, "Dungeons and Dragons 5th edition has been released for almost as long as 3 and 3.5 now, and only has 3 core ...
[1]: 239 Magic was now divided into either arcane or divine magic. [2] This edition also includes what the game designer community would come to call the Vancian magic system. [1]: 240 [2] "In the Vancian model of magic, magic users must memorize all the spells which they wish to cast. When they cast a given spell, it disappears from memory and ...
The beholder was introduced with the first Dungeons & Dragons supplement, Greyhawk (1975), and is depicted on its cover (as shown in the section below). [4] [1]: 39 It is described as a "Sphere of Many Eyes" or "Eye Tyrant", a levitating globe with ten magical eye stalks.
ISBN 1-55634-318-3. —presents six versions of Earth possessing alternate histories to that of our own world, as well as a number of less-detailed settings scattered throughout the book in sidebars: for instance, "Gernsback" is a parallel, inspired by 1930s science fiction adventure stories (it is named for the editor Hugo Gernsback) has as ...