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The Darksword Trilogy consists of Forging the Darksword (December 1, 1987), [2] Doom of the Darksword (May 1988), and Triumph of the Darksword (September 1988). A fourth book is a sequel, Legacy of the Darksword (June 1998). The role-playing game is Darksword Adventures (December 1988).
Darksword Adventures is a book that describes a role-playing game set in Thimhallen, the world of Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman's Darksword novels. The rules for the game are largely found in the final chapter of the book, while the previous chapters give an in-depth background of the world:
The Darksword: A sword wielded by Joram. It is made of darkstone/iron, which has the ability to absorb Life (magic). Weapons forged from darkstone must be infused with Life from a catalyst and can only be effectively wielded by the Dead (devoid of magical power), who have no magic to be absorbed.
Forging the Darksword (1987) Doom of the Darksword (1988) Triumph of the Darksword (1988) Legacy of the Darksword (1997) Darksword Adventures (1988) Rose of the Prophet
The words in brackets were in the exact phrase the Darksword Adventures used to show how little regard Simkin has for human life. Draco Hunt 08:21, 24 April 2007 (UTC) [ reply ] Given that this criticism was lodgsd in 2007, and going on over 12 years there still few sources cited for this article, I suggest that th characterization of Simkin in ...
Ninja Gaiden II: The Dark Sword of Chaos: 1990 Ninja Gaiden III: The Ancient Ship of Doom: 1991 Ninja Gaiden: 2004 Xbox Ninja Gaiden Sigma: 2007 PlayStation 3, Windows Updated visuals and features. [378] Ninja Gaiden Sigma Plus: 2012 PlayStation Vita [379] Ninja Gaiden II
In Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman's Darksword series the Darksword is a sword capable of absorbing magic. Michael Moorcock created a sinister magic sword in Stormbringer, wielded by Elric of Melniboné. This black sword has the power to suck out the souls of its victims and transfer their energy to its holder.
In the mid to late 1980s, a rift developed between TSR and the authors. Weis and Hickman were feeling under-appreciated and, when TSR turned down their Darksword series of novels, they went to Bantam Books. Bantam made them an offer, which they accepted, and they stopped writing Dragonlance novels for TSR. [2]