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Ptolus, subtitled "Monte Cook's City by the Spire", is a fantasy role-playing game campaign setting published by Malhavoc Press in 2006 that details a single city and the dungeons that lie beneath it. Ptolus uses the rules of the third edition of Dungeons & Dragons — the d20 System — under the terms of Wizards of the Coast's Open Game License.
Deluxe Eberron Player Character Sheets — August 2005: Based on the D&D Deluxe Player Character Sheets and also include a sheet for the new class introduced in the setting. 0-7869-3849-8: Player's Guide to Eberron — January 2006
Spire: The City Must Fall is a fantasy tabletop role-playing game that reimagines the drow (a Dungeons & Dragons race of evil predators) as a race subjugated and enslaved. The game was designed by Grant Howitt and Chris Taylor and released by the indie publisher Rowan, Rook and Decard in 2018.
Conflux continues the Shards of Alara set's multicolor theme, expanding on it by introducing five-colored cards to the Alara block. Conflux is the set with the highest number of five-colored cards of all Magic sets. Aside from the multicolored theme, the set makes use of the mechanics introduced in Shards of Alara, Exalted, Unearth, and Devour.
Sigil, the "City of Doors", is located atop the Spire in the Outlands. It has the shape of a torus, and the city itself is located on the inner surface of the ring. There is no sky, simply an all-pervasive light that waxes and wanes to create day and night. Sigil cannot be entered or exited save via portals.
Sigil was originally created for Planescape as the setting's "home base". According to Steve Winter in 30 Years of Adventure: A Celebration of Dungeons & Dragons, "a movable base, like a vessel of some sort (or an artifact, which was the original idea for the means of traversing the planes) wouldn't do it.
GURPS Lite [4] A 32-page introduction to the rules of GURPS based on the core rules in the GURPS 4e Basic Set (mainly Characters).It includes basic character creation with advantages, disadvantages, skills and equipment, as well as some rules for playing.
Tasha's Cauldron of Everything is a good rules supplement, one that opts to build upon existing rules rather than try to come up with new rules systems, but fits perfectly into the Fifth Edition design ethos". [30]