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Dungeons & Dragons

An elaborate D&D game in progress. Among the gaming aids here are dice, a variety of miniatures, and a dungeon diorama.

Dungeons & Dragons (commonly abbreviated as D&DorDnD) is a fantasy tabletop role-playing game (RPG) originally created and designed by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson. The game was first published in 1974 by Tactical Studies Rules, Inc. (TSR). It has been published by Wizards of the Coast, later a subsidiary of Hasbro, since 1997. The game was derived from miniature wargames, with a variation of the 1971 game Chainmail serving as the initial rule system. D&D's publication is commonly recognized as the beginning of modern role-playing games and the role-playing game industry, and also deeply influenced video games, especially the role-playing video game genre.

In 2004, D&D remained the best-known, and best-selling, role-playing game in the US, with an estimated 20 million people having played the game and more than US$1 billion in book and equipment sales worldwide. The year 2017 had "the most number of players in its history—12 million to 15 million in North America alone". D&D 5th edition sales "were up 41 percent in 2017 from the year before, and soared another 52 percent in 2018, the game's biggest sales year yet". The game has been supplemented by many premade adventures, as well as commercial campaign settings suitable for use by regular gaming groups. D&D is known beyond the game itself for other D&D-branded products, references in popular culture, and some of the controversies that have surrounded it, particularly a moral panic in the 1980s, which attempted to associate it with Satanism and suicide. The game has won multiple awards and has been translated into many languages. (Full article...)

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Dwellers of the Forbidden City is an adventure module, or pre-packaged adventure booklet, ready for use by Dungeon Masters in the Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) fantasy role-playing game. The adventure was first used as a module for tournament play at the 1980 Origins Game Fair, and was later published by TSR in 1981 for use with the first edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons rules. The module was written by game designer David "Zeb" Cook, who partly ascribes his hiring by TSR to his work on this module. In the adventure, the characters are hired to recover a stolen object from a hidden oriental-style city ruled by a snake-worshipping cult of yuan-ti and their mongrelmen and tasloi servants.

The module was ranked as the 13th greatest Dungeons & Dragons adventure of all time by Dungeon magazine for the 30th anniversary of the Dungeons & Dragons game in 2004. (Full article...)

List of selected articles

  • Against the Giants
  • Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn‎
  • Dave Arneson
  • Dragonlance
  • Dragons of Autumn Twilight
  • Dragons of Despair
  • Drizzt Do'Urden
  • Dwarf (Dungeons & Dragons)
  • Gary Gygax
  • Icewind Dale II
  • Libris Mortis
  • Dungeons & Dragons (album)
  • Expedition to the Barrier Peaks
  • Ravenloft (module)
  • Monster Manual
  • TSR, Inc.
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  • Character class (Dungeons & Dragons)
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  • Book of Vile Darkness
  • Tomb of Horrors
  • White Plume Mountain
  • Planescape: Torment
  • Forgotten Realms
  • Dungeons & Dragons (album)
  • Wizards of the Coast
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    Gary Gygax, co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons, at Gen Con Indy 2007
    Credit: User:Alan De Smet

    WikiProjects

    The Dungeons & Dragon WikiProject collaborates on improving all D&D-related articles on Wikipedia. WikiProject Role-Playing Games, its parent project, has a larger scope and covers all role-playing games. The Video games project also has a task force dedicated to Dungeons & Dragons-related video games.

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    This page was last edited on 29 September 2022, at 05:05 (UTC).

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