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Up until 1987, a number of games inspired by Dungeons & Dragons had appeared, such as the Wizardry and Ultima series, but these were not licensed from TSR. TSR considered making their own video games and passed on the idea, and instead announced in 1987 that it was looking for a game development partner to make officially-licensed games.
Dungeon Crawl Classics (DCC) is a series of tabletop role-playing game modules published by Goodman Games. The modules have been published for the third and fourth editions of Dungeons & Dragons and for the Dungeon Crawl Classics Role-Playing Game (DCC RPG).
This is a list of official Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by Wizards of the Coast as separate publications. It does not include adventures published as part of supplements, officially licensed Dungeons & Dragons adventures published by other companies, official d20 System adventures and other Open Game License adventures that may be compatible with Dungeons & Dragons.
The term is usually applied to adventures published for all Dungeons & Dragons games before 3rd Edition. For 3rd Edition and beyond new publisher Wizards of the Coast uses the term adventure. For a list of published 3rd, 4th, and 5th Edition Adventures see List of Dungeons & Dragons adventures.
In 2012 Goodman Games released the Dungeon Crawl Classics Role Playing Game.The company describes it as "an OGL system that cross-breeds Appendix N with a streamlined version of 3E", [2] referring to Appendix N of the original Dungeon Masters Guide, which listed fiction that was an influence on Dungeons & Dragons.
The Dungeon Master's Guide (DMG [1] or DM's Guide; in some printings, the Dungeon Masters Guide or Dungeon Master Guide) is a book of rules for the fantasy role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons. The Dungeon Master's Guide contains rules concerning the arbitration and administration of a game, and is intended for use by the game's Dungeon Master. [2]
While the Rules Cyclopedia includes all information required to begin the game, a revised introductory boxed set, named The New Easy-to-Master Dungeons & Dragons Game (and nicknamed "the black box") was released at the same time. [10] A final repackaging of the introductory set, titled The Classic Dungeons & Dragons Game was released in 1994 ...
Menzoberranzan, a subterranean city where the Drow live, was the main setting for the video game of the same name, and had been introduced in the tabletop game materials two years earlier in December 1992 in a three-book box set called Menzoberranzan: The Famed City of the Drow by Ed Greenwood, R. A. Salvatore, and Douglas Niles. [1]