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Wizards and originally
Wizards of the Coast published many of the races originally found in Star Frontiers in their d20 Future supplement for d20 Modern.
V: TES, perhaps the most successful card game, was originally published by Wizards of the Coast in 1994, but was abandoned just two years later after a revamped base set, name change and three expansions were published.
The d20 System is a role-playing game system published in 2000 by Wizards of the Coast originally developed for the third edition of Dungeons & Dragons.
Most of the incarnations of the franchise involve the fictional trading card game called Duel Monsters ( originally known as Magic & Wizards ), where each player uses cards to " duel " each other in a mock battle of fantasy " monsters ".
The title features digital version of cards from the first three sets of the trading card game originally released in English by Wizards of the Coast between 1998 and 1999, as well as exclusive cards not available outside of the game.
Two months later, the league announced that four teams from the Continental Basketball Association were joining the league: the Dakota Wizards, Sioux Falls Skyforce, Idaho Stampede, and a team originally slated for CBA expansion, the Colorado 14ers.
Deities & Demigods was originally published in 1980 by TSR, Inc. and is now published by Wizards of the Coast, who acquired the D & D brand with their purchase of TSR in 1998.
Paladine is a fictional major deity from the Dragonlance fantasy series of novels and role playing games, originally published by TSR, Inc. and later by Sovereign Press under the d20 Open Gaming License developed by Wizards of the Coast.
It was originally written for W. H. Smith Bookcase magazine and was then slightly modified and extended, being published again in the programme of the OryCon 15 convention, and then again in The Wizards of Odd, a compilation of fantasy short stories.
Goldmoon ( also known as Goldmoon of the Que Shu tribe or just Goldmoon of the Que Shu ) is a fictional character from the Dragonlance fantasy series of novels and role playing games, originally published by TSR, Inc. and later by Wizards of the Coast.
They included Max Force from NARC ( originally an arcade game by Williams, ported to the NES by Rare ), Kuros from The Wizards and Warriors series ( originally created by Rare ), Kwirk from the game of the same name ( originally by Atlus ), Tyrone from Arch Rivals ( originally by Midway ) and BigFoot from the game of the same name ( developed by Beam Software, and based on the famous monster truck ).
Their first ( which had originally been slated as a Spice release which becomes apparent after listening to " The Lansdowne Tapes ", " Very ' eavy Very ' Umble ", " Salisbury ", " Look At Yourself ", " Demons And Wizards ", " The Magician's Birthday ", " Live " ( also known amongst fans as " Friday Night In Birmingham ", " Sweet Freedom ", " Wonderworld ", " Return To Fantasy ", " High And Mighty ".
Wizards of the Coast originally planned all foreign-language Chronicles sets to be black-bordered, except the Italian version, which would be white-bordered because every card in it had already been printed in Italian in a black-bordered set.
The Wizards traded Profit to the Orlando Magic, the team that originally drafted Profit, for the draft rights to Brendan Haywood on August 1, 2001.
He declared for the 2005 NBA Draft out of high school, and while originally thought of as a first-round prospect, he slipped to the second round and was taken by the Washington Wizards with their only selection, the 49th pick.
It was originally published as " The Mad Wizards of Mars " in Maclean's on 15 September 1949 and was reprinted the following year by Fantasy Fiction, Inc. First collected in The Illustrated Man ( 1951 ), it was later included in the collections R is for Rocket ( 1962 ), Bradbury Stories: 100 of His Most Celebrated Tales ( 2003 ) and A Sound of Thunder and Other Stories ( 2005 ).

Wizards and planned
The book also ties into the " Year of the Dragons " theme that Wizards of the Coast planned out for 2006 with the Spawn of Tiamat, yet contains no new monsters that are considered true dragons.
As a concession for these issues, Wizards planned to throw " Chuck's Virtual Party ," a weekend of free tournaments after the problems settled down.

Wizards and return
In 2000, their first full season under Bob Gansler, the Wizards return to their form from their first two seasons, playing well and having a solid defense.
The Wizards would return to the top half of the West in 2003 with a record of 11 10 9.
Having saved Fourecks, Rincewind and the Wizards return to Ankh-Morpork by ship, and the story ends with the old man with the sack ( the Creator of the last continent ) catching the bullroarer in front of a young boy.
The Wizards built their own stadium in 2008 and did not return to Arrowhead.
On June 20, 2012, Okafor was traded to the Washington Wizards along with Trevor Ariza in return for Rashard Lewis and the 46th pick of the 2012 NBA Draft.
Burciaga was traded by Kansas City Wizards to league rivals Colorado Rapids on January 16, 2008, in return for a 2009 second round 2009 MLS SuperDraft pick.
Upon his return to the Wizards for the 2010-11 season, Arenas elected to change his number from 0 to 9, claiming he was trying to put the entire incident from the previous season behind him.
NBC's coverage of the NBA began on Christmas Day each season, with the exception of their inaugural season ( which featured a November game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs ), the 1998-99 season ( no Christmas games played due to the lockout ) and their final season ( which included two early season games featuring the return of Michael Jordan with the Washington Wizards ).
However, he did not remain with the team and he was traded in March 2001 to the Kansas City Wizards in return for conditional picks in the 2002 MLS SuperDraft.

Wizards and Kansas
For the majority of its first 15 years of existence the team was known as the Kansas City Wizards.
Following a 2006 season in which they missed the playoffs, Lamar Hunt sold the club in August 2006 to OnGoal, LLC, a six-man ownership group led by Cerner Corporation co-founders Neal Patterson and Cliff Illig, a local group committed to keeping the Wizards in Kansas City.
The Wizards played their home games at CommunityAmerica Ballpark in Kansas in 2008, and ended a four year playoff drought by posting an 11 10 9 record, which was good enough for fourth place in the Eastern Conference.
The shield's contour alludes to the team's former logo while under the " Kansas City Wizards " appellation.
File: Kansas City Wizards logo. svg | Kansas City Wizards logo ( 1997 2006 )
File: Kansascitywizards. svg | Kansas City Wizards logo ( 2007 2010 )
From 1996 to 2007, the Wizards played home games in Arrowhead Stadium, the American football stadium mainly used by the Kansas City Chiefs.
The Wizards entered an agreement with the Kansas City T-Bones to use their home stadium, CommunityAmerica Ballpark, during the 2008 and 2009 seasons.
The stadium, located across the state line in Kansas City, Kansas, built a new bleacher section financed by the Wizards to increase its capacity to 10, 385.
On December 17, Wizards president Robb Heineman provided an update on the stadium situation published on team official website and blog, basically identifying the Kansas City, Kansas, location as final, pending the signature of the final agreements.
The Kansas City Wizards was a charter member of MLS in 1996 and became the Wizards from 1997 onwards.
* Kevin Hartman, Kansas City Wizards goalie.
* Chance Myers, professional soccer player with the Kansas City Wizards
United then defeated the Kansas City Wizards to take their fourth MLS Cup.
Despite this, they lost to the Kansas City Wizards after a tied aggregate and a sudden death game.
The club was owned by Lamar Hunt, who also owned the Kansas City Chiefs, Kansas City Wizards ( now Sporting Kansas City ), and Dallas Burn ( now FC Dallas ) until his death in 2006.

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