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Roxley (also styled Roxley Games, or Roxley Game Laboratory) is a Canadian game development and publishing firm located in Calgary, Alberta. [1] Their most notable games include Brass:Birmingham, Santorini, Radlands, and Marvel Dice Throne (a Marvel-themed version of their earlier Dice Throne game).
The core mechanic involves rolling three six-sided dice with one die being designated as the "Marvel Die." The sum of the three dice are added together and further augmented by character statistics, then compared against a difficulty number. Exceeding or meeting this number means the character achieves their goal, while the opposite means failure.
Marvel Heroic Roleplaying: Margaret Weis Productions: Cortex Plus: 2012 Marvel Super Heroes Adventure Game: TSR SAGA System: 1998 Marvel Super Heroes Role-Playing Game: TSR, Inc. 1984, 1986 Marvel Universe Roleplaying Game: Marvel Comics: 2003 Masks: A New Generation: Magpie Games: Powered by the Apocalypse: 2017 Masterbook: West End Games: 1994
Marvel Champions is played using player cards, which consist of hero decks, aspect cards, and basic cards; villain cards made up of villain decks, main schemes, encounter sets; status cards used to track when characters have the games various conditions applied to them; various tokens to track damage to minions and allies, villain progress toward completing a scheme, or other resources ...
Marvel Super Dice is a board game published by TSR in 1997. Gameplay. Marvel Super Dice is a collectible superhero dice game. Reviews. InQuest Gamer #36 [1]
Dragon Dice was one of the attempts at a collectible dice game in the 1990s. In early 1996, the CCG market was still reeling from its recent failures and glut of products, including the release of Wizards' expansion Homelands which was rated as the worst Magic expansion to date. The next two years would mark a "cool off" period for the over ...
TSR produced the game under license from Marvel. [2] Kevin and Brian Blume guided TSR in the early 1980s to compete for a Marvel Comics license against companies such as Fantasy Games Unlimited, Games Workshop and Mayfair Games, and TSR ultimately used its top industry position and existing relationship with Marvel to obtain the license; TSR referred to this project as "Boot Hill revision" to ...
Marvel Heroic Roleplaying (abbreviated as MHR or MHRP) is the fourth role-playing game set in the Marvel Universe published by Margaret Weis Productions under license from Marvel Comics (after Marvel Super Heroes RPG, Marvel Super Heroes Adventure Game, and the Marvel Universe Roleplaying Game). It uses the Cortex Plus system. The first volume ...