



Spelljammer: Pirates of Realmspace (1992) Play the first-ever dragon combat simulator and pilot the mighty dragons of Krynn into battle! Complete 20 missions in the Dragonlance universe to earn experience, magical items, and a better dragon, as well as to foil enemy dragons and destroy enemy ships. With the Silver Box titles, plus the previously released Gold Box titles, I think we’ve provided a lot of games to make D&D fans, old and new, very happy!” DragonStrike (1990) Oleg Klapovskiy, Director at SNEG, told the press ĭ&D has a long history of great video game adaptations, and it’s a dream come true to be able to bring many of them back to modern players. Manuals, rulebooks, and clue books are just some of the digital extras that came packaged with the original releases of each game. Spelljammer: Pirates of Realmspace, Fantasy Empires, DragonStrike, DeathKeep, and the Silver Box Classics bundle’s Heroes of the Lance, Dragons of Flame, War of the Lance, and Shadow Sorcerer are just some of the old favourites that have returned. The company’s audience is fans of retro games from all generations and wants to see more of them revitalised for modern audiences. Click here for a list.Twenty years after their last PC releases, several Dungeons & Dragons games make a grand return, including Spelljammer, Fantasy Empires, and Dragonlance classics.īehind the revival is SNEG, an independent boutique publisher specialising in remastering classic games. Yes, this is a plug, but it's a plug for a movie I really believe in because it's a movie that shows why you should never stop doing good work and never give up hope - someone will hear you someday.Ī Band Called Death is in select theaters today. The full story of Death is covered in the latest Drafthouse Films release A Band Called Death, which extends all the way to the modern day and shows the incredible way that Death's music resurfaced. They would be rediscovered decades later, and their place in music history - a missing link between The Stooges and The Ramones - has been secured. And no audience Death pressed a handful of singles and then disappeared. Today we'd call it protopunk - the raucous, careening hard rock sound that would coalesce into punk rock a few years later - but at the time there was no name for it. They liked rock and funk music, but the sound they made was something new. Three black kids - brothers - from Detroit put together a band in their bedroom in 1971.
