The novels followed the path of the modules, which detailed the same basic plot and settings as the books took, but they did not write the modules based on a campaign they were playing.
The novels followed the path of the modules, which detailed the same basic plot and settings as the books took, but they did not write the modules based on a campaign they were playing.
You only have that perception because you are thinking of it as a D&D game.
He didn't quite become a god, he failed at the last moment because he had a change of heart and instead decided to sacrifice himself for his brother. He spends every morning being raped and torn to shreds by Takhisis, to be resurrected and healed in the evening and then raped and shredded again the next day. Ahh,…
None of it, I'd assume. I don't see any Raistlin in Littlefinger at all.
Shannara books were like a teeny bopper version of Terry Goodkind's Sword for Truth series. It's different each book but in the first novel it's a post apocalyptic rompfest where the Shannara descendant must find the Sword of Shannara (which only he can use because of his Shanara blood) to kill the evil Foozle at the…
It works because Ravenloft summons whoever it damn pleases through the mists. After Soth had his fun in Krynn, we was summoned by the Mists and led to Ravenloft Castle. It's actually slightly amusing seeing Soth and Strahd square off, they get into a "My **** is bigger" fight at one point. But it was a pretty…
Knight of the Black Rose was still better than Spellfire. Try ordering a ocpy of Spellfire by Ed Greenwood, I read a LOT of TSR novels in my day and that was the absolute worst.
Nevermind that Fizban never gathered components (he never had to, he's freaking Paladine he can cast whatever magic he wants) or that there were no Feats back then in AD&D.
Dalamar is a completely different elf from Drizzt. In fact, you could even say he's the complete opposite.
I'd like to point out that while Tracy Hickman did work on the modules that the first trilogy was based on, Margaret Weis did not. The first modules were not "Someone's D&D game" and the Chronicles was definitely not "a prose version of someone else's D&D Game."