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Pool and Radiance
Pool of Radiance is a role-playing video game developed and published by Strategic Simulations, Inc ( SSI ) in 1988.
The other games in the " Gold Box " series used the game engine pioneered in Pool of Radiance, as did later D & D titles such as the Neverwinter Nights online game.
Pool of Radiance takes place in the Forgotten Realms fantasy setting, with the action centered in and around the port city of Phlan.
Generally well received by the gaming press, Pool of Radiance won the Origins Award for " Best Fantasy or Science Fiction Computer Game of 1988 ".
Also well-regarded was the ability to export player characters from Pool of Radiance to subsequent SSI games in the series.
Pool of Radiance is based on the same game mechanics as the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons rule set.
As in many role-playing games ( RPGs ), each player character in Pool of Radiance has a character race and a character class, determined at the start of the game.
Pool of Radiance takes place in the Forgotten Realms fantasy world, in and about the city of Phlan.
Pool of Radiance was the first official game based on the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons rules.
The section of the Forgotten Realms world in which Pool of Radiance takes place was intended to be developed only by SSI.
Pool of Radiance was released in June 1988 ; it was initially available on the Commodore 64, Apple II series and IBM PC compatible computers.
The game was ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System under the title Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: Pool of Radiance, released in April 1992.
The original Pool of Radiance game shipped with a 28-page introductory booklet, which describes secrets relating to the game and the concepts behind it.
Computer Gaming World printed a preview of Pool of Radiance in its July 1988 issue, in which the reviewer noted a sense of deja vu.
Pool of Radiance received positive reviews, with Tony Dillon from Commodore User giving it a score of 9 out of 10.
The reviewer was critical that Pool of Radiance was not original in its presentation and that the colors were a little drab, but concluded that the game is " classic Dungeons & Dragons which SSI have recreated excellently ".
In their March 1989 " The Role of Computers " column in Dragon magazine # 143, Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser ( often called " The Lessers ") gave Pool of Radiance a three-page review.
The reviewers praised Pool of Radiance as " the first offering that truly follows AD & D game rules ", calling it a " great fantasy role-playing game " that " falls into the must-buy category for avid AD & D game players ".
The reviewers advised readers to " rush out to your local dealer and buy Pool Of Radiance ".
Pool of Radiance was well received by the gaming press and won the Origins Award for Best Fantasy or Science Fiction Computer Game of 1988.
For the second annual " Beastie Awards " in 1989, Dragons readers voted Pool of Radiance the most popular fantasy role-playing game of the year, with Ultima V as the runner-up.
Pool of Radiance was also selected for the RPGA-sponsored Gamers ' Choice Awards for the Best Computer Game of 1989.
Alex Simmons, Doug Johns, and Andy Mitchell reviewed the Amiga version of Pool of Radiance for Amiga Action magazine in 1990, giving it a 79 % overall rating.
Mitchell preferred the game Champions of Krynn, which had been released by the time the Amiga version of Pool of Radiance became available ; he felt that Pool of Radiance was " more of the same " when compared to Champions, but was less playable and with more limited actions for players.

Pool and Ruins
The 1988 Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game module Ruins of Adventure was produced using the same adventure scenario as Pool of Radiance, using the same plot, background, setting, and many of the same characters as the computer game.
Ruins of Adventure contains four linked miniscenarios, which form the core of Pool of Radiance.
According to the editors of Dragon magazine, Pool of Radiance was based on Ruins of Adventure, and not vice versa.
Ruins of Adventure is a Dungeons & Dragons module that served as the basis for the popular " Gold Box " role-playing video game Pool of Radiance, published in 1988 by Strategic Simulations, Inc. ( SSI ).
According to the editors of Dragon magazine, Pool of Radiance was based on Ruins of Adventure, and not vice versa.
The Ruins of the Byzantine Church, adjacent to the site of the Bethesda Pool
The Ruins of the Byzantine Church, in the area of the Bethesda Pool
* Pool of Radiance: Ruins of Myth Drannor ( 2001 ) for PC, published by SSI

Pool and Myth
* Pool of Radiance: Attack on Myth Drannor ( Forgotten Realms ) ( 2000 )

Myth and Drannor
* Eye of the Beholder series ( 1990 – 1991 ), minus Assault on Myth Drannor
The game had two sequels, Eye of the Beholder II: The Legend of Darkmoon, released in, and Eye of the Beholder III: Assault on Myth Drannor, released in.
Eye of the Beholder III: Assault on Myth Drannor was not developed by Westwood Studios, the developer of Eye of the Beholder and The Legend of Darkmoon, but rather in-house by the publisher SSI.
After that, a mysterious man enters the tavern and asks the heroes to save the ruined city, Myth Drannor, which is ruled by a Lich named Acwellan.
The man then tells the heroes that they need to save Myth Drannor by getting an ancient artifact from the Lich known as the Codex.
After the heroes foolishly accept the quest, the mysterious man teleports the heroes just outside of Myth Drannor.
In the Forgotten Realms a good-aligned red dragon is involved against his will in the Fall of the elf city of Myth Drannor.
The series includes Elminster: The Making of a Mage, Elminster in Myth Drannor, The Temptation of Elminster, Elminster in Hell, and Elminster's Daughter.
The Knights of Myth Drannor are also his close friends and confidants, and two or three knights are always in Shadowdale in case it is in peril.
A sequel to Making of a Mage, Elminster in Myth Drannor
Elminster remains in Cormanthor for over two decades, and is present when the mythal is raised and the city is renamed Myth Drannor.
In Elminster's absence, the foes of evil tried to rally, but the other Chosen, the Knights of Myth Drannor, and the Rangers Three held them at bay until he returned.
Stormfront set their first Forgotten Realms Gold Box title, Gateway to the Savage Frontier ( 1991 ), in Neverwinter, far from the locale of the prior games in Myth Drannor.
The lost princess Alusair Nacacia will ask the party to help her to fight Rakshasas in Myth Drannor.
Khelben was once " The Nameless Chosen ," the child of Arun Maerdrym — the first half-elf born to a noble elven family of the ancient city of Myth Drannor — and the human ranger Arielimnda.
* Elminster In Myth Drannor ( 1997 )
At the end of the novel, Cormanthor is renamed Myth Drannor.
The organization was created near the founding of Myth Drannor by elven elders, generals, and priests, and led by an elven mage named " Lady Steel " ( and advised by a young Elminster.
) Over time, and after the fall of Myth Drannor, this organization evolved into a new group, founded by Elminster and other influential and powerful individuals, with support from many freedom loving and good-aligned deities and churches ( although the churches don't always agree with Harper aims, the deities themselves do.
* The Knights of Myth Drannor

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