Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Advanced Dungeons & Dragons CD-ROM Core Rules was published by TSR. TSR funded a start-up, Evermore Entertainment, to produce the product, with Victor Penman as Project Manager. [1] As the title suggests, it was released as a CD-ROM for PC only. [2] In 1999, Wizards of the Coast released a new CD-ROM titled Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Core ...
Gold Box is a series of role-playing video games produced by Strategic Simulations from 1988 to 1992. The company acquired a license to produce games based on the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game from TSR, Inc. [1] These games shared a common game engine that came to be known as the "Gold Box Engine" after the gold-colored boxes in which most games of the series were sold.
Prisoners of Pax Tharkas. Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Adventure Gamebook is a series of 18 gamebooks published from 1985 to 1988. The series was initially titled Super Endless Quest Adventure Gamebook as the books added a more complex game system to stories which otherwise share the same style with the Endless Quest books.
The Masterpiece Collection is a boxed set which included six official AD&D licensed SSI video games: Dark Sun: Shattered Lands (1993), Dark Sun: Wake of the Ravager (1994), Ravenloft: Strahd's Possession (1994), Ravenloft: Stone Prophet (1995), Al-Qadim: The Genie's Curse (1994), and Menzoberranzan (1994). [1]
1 (highest) [4] Electronic Games stated in 1983 that " Advanced Dungeons & Dragons ... proves to have been worth the wait". [ 5 ] The game received an award in the category of "1984 Best Adventure Videogame" at the 5th annual Arkie Awards , where the judges noted that it was "the first videogame version of the role-playing game that has ...
TSR, Inc. published four starter sets for Advanced Dungeons & Dragons. Shannon Appelcline noted that by 1993 the Basic D&D line ended and was replaced by games such as Dragon Quest (1992) and DragonStrike (1993), and that "There was another abrupt change the next year when TSR put out First Quest (1994) by Richard Baker, Zeb Cook, and Bruce Nesmith.
The 128-page book was published by Wizards of the Coast in April 2000 for second edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons rules. [1] The adventure is a sequel to the Scourge of the Slave Lords series (modules A1 - A4), being set in the World of Greyhawk campaign setting ten years after the events described in the earlier adventures.
To Find a King was used as the AD&D tournament module at Gen Con XVI, [2] as a four-round competition module. The C in the module code represents the first letter in the word competition , the name of C1–C6 module series.