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The module won a Gamer's Choice award. [1] Michael Mullen reviewed the adventure in Space Gamer/Fantasy Gamer No. 81. [4] He felt that the module is necessary to running the campaign of the world presented in the original Oriental Adventures, and that the module "is worth looking at also for the method of approach to detailing a province". [4]
A trailer was released for the game in February 2011, [9] and the iPad version was released on March 24, 2011. Superbrothers: Sword & Sworcery EP won the Independent Games Festival Mobile Achievement in Art award in 2010. [10] The developers initially stated that they had no intention of creating an Android version of the game. [11]
Rick Swan reviewed Quest for the Silver Sword for Dragon magazine #191 (March 1993). [1] He reviewed the adventure Sword and Shield in the same column, and felt that these two introductory adventures typify the "easy-on-the-brain" revised Dungeons & Dragons game, as each of them "boasts clutter-free story lines, maps that double as game boards, and colorful sheets of punch-out counters that ...
R—Role Playing Game Association tournament modules, R1–6 were also available to RPGA members. R1–4 were later revised and abridged as I12. R1–4 were later revised and abridged as I12. Mentzer initially intended the "R" series to take place in Greyhawk (on a different continent from Oerik ) as part of an "Acquaria" or "Aqua-Oeridian ...
The game is set in the fictional Sword Coast region of the continent Faerûn on the planet Toril. Graphics are in 3D. One addition to the game is that it allows players to be a "dungeon master" (or DM), as in the tabletop version of Dungeons & Dragons. [3] It features single-player and co-operative multiplayer modes.
The puzzle is considered by many gamers and publications to be one of the most challenging and hardest video game puzzles of all time. Broken Sword creator and Revolution CEO Charles Cecil [2] and Broken Sword designer Steve Ince, [1] as well as publications which have covered it, explain that the puzzle was challenging because the player was not met with any "time critical" puzzle prior to ...
It runs on all platforms, and is free, open-source software. [1] [2] For example, there is a Star Wars Miniatures module, where players can play with up to three others in a digital replica of the table-top game. It is written in Java and the source code is available from GitHub under the LGPL open source license. [3]
The module contains six stand-alone scenarios in addition to the requisite Campaign Games, two in number in this module. The mapsheet depicts the bridge and surrounding towns of Benouville and Le Port. Chapter Q of the ASL Rule Book is included. Additionally, Day 7 of the Chapter K training module is included (later released with the second ...