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  2. Slay the Spire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slay_the_Spire

    Slay the Spire is a combination of roguelike-inspired progression and the gameplay of a deck-building card game.At the start of a playthrough the player selects one of four predetermined characters, [a] which sets a starting amount of health, gold, a starting relic which provides a unique ability for that character, and an initial deck of cards with basic attack and defense, as well as ...

  3. Spire: The City Must Fall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spire:_The_City_Must_Fall

    [1] In Spire, the tables are turned. It is the formerly righteous and good high elves who have conquered the drow's massive city structure known as the Spire and enslaved its citizens, justifying their actions by claiming that the drow are a lesser race. [1] The game uses a set of rules rules titled "Resistance System". [2]

  4. SLA Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SLA_Industries

    SLA Industries (pronounced "slay") is a role-playing game first published in 1993 by Nightfall Games in Glasgow, Scotland.The game is set in a dystopian far-flung future in which the majority of the known universe is either owned or indirectly controlled by the eponymous corporation "SLA Industries" and incorporates themes from the cyberpunk, horror, and conspiracy genres.

  5. Metagame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metagame

    A metagame, broadly defined as "a game beyond the game", typically refers to either of two concepts: a game which revolves around a core game; or the strategies and approaches to playing a game. [1] A metagame can serve a broad range of purposes, and may be tied to the way a game relates to various aspects of life. [2]: 2,14 [3]

  6. Ptolus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptolus

    The city lies in the shadow of an mysterious and impossibly tall spire. [1] The book only provides information about the city and what lies beneath it (sewers, dungeons and an ancient dwarven city), [ 1 ] and gives few details of the surrounding lands, the rest of the Tarsis empire or the planet Praemal, leaving the gamemaster to fill in these ...

  7. The Spire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Spire

    The Spire is subject to critical analysis by Steve Eddy in the York Notes Advanced series. Reviews by Frank Kermode and David Skilton are included in William Golding: Novels 1954–1967. Don Crompton, in A View from the Spire: William Golding's Later Novels, analyses the novel and relates it to its pagan and mythical elements.

  8. Spire of Dublin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spire_of_Dublin

    The Spire of Dublin, alternatively titled the Millennium Spire or the Monument of Light [3] (Irish: An Túr Solais), [4] is a large, stainless steel, pin-like monument 120 metres (390 ft) in height, [5] located on the site of the former Nelson's Pillar (and prior to that a statue of William Blakeney) on O'Connell Street, the main thoroughfare of Dublin, Ireland.

  9. Outer Plane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outer_Plane

    The Outer Planes were presented for the first time in Volume 1, Number 8 of The Dragon, released July 1977 as part of the Great Wheel of Planes. [1] In the article "Planes: The Concepts of Spatial, Temporal and Physical Relationships in D&D", Gary Gygax mentions that there are 16 Outer Planes and describes the Seven Heavens, the Twin Paradises, and Elysium as "Typical higher planes", Nirvana ...