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The temple of elemental evil3/9/2024 The videogame builds on that adventure with a literal translation of D&D's then-current 3.5 edition, the ruleset with all its quirks plunked down wholesale, with turn-based combat. It laid down a format later adventures would follow, so even D&D players who didn't experience the original have probably played something influenced by it. ![]() The idyllic Hommlet served as a home base from which to explore a moathouse full of bandits, a swampy hive of scum and villainy called Nulb, and the ruined temple itself, each a progressively more difficult challenge. Published in 1985, the book followed on from a 1979 adventure called Village of Hommlet, combining the two into one of the biggest D&D scenarios of the time. It helps that The Temple of Elemental Evil is an adaptation of an actual printed adventure written by Frank Mentzer and Gary Gygax (D&D's co-creator).
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