D'karr
Adventurer
Once you ignore the races, classes, locations, names, stats, spells, deities, religions, organizations and history -- it is all obviously Bioware/Black Isle IP.
LOL
Once you ignore the races, classes, locations, names, stats, spells, deities, religions, organizations and history -- it is all obviously Bioware/Black Isle IP.
If you look at your posting times you are posting way after my edits.And @Derren you're still editing in additional content to your posts after my replies. I won't be searching your old posts for new content, I'm afraid, so those items will go overlooked. Please put new content in new posts, as I asked above. Thanks.
Once you ignore the races, classes, locations, names, stats, spells, deities, religions, organizations and history -- it is all obviously Bioware/Black Isle IP.
If you look at your posting times you are posting way after my edits.
I don't want to get into a lengthy debate about the times when one hits the reply button and the submit button other than that there is a finite period of time between the two. But that aside, please put new content in new posts; I am seeing even now additional content in a post that wasn't there when I originally hit reply. Thanks. The edit button is best used to correct typos and the like, not to add entirely new paragraphs and points.
And how much of that really mattered in Baldurs Gate?
And if WotC really only uses the symbols has the Sundering has no real connection the the video games it is especially audacious (is that the correct one? There are so many different words for that concept in English).
Quite a bit. Truth is, most people bought it because it was a computer RPG version of D&D, not because it was Bioware/Black Isle. They were the ones who were making a game using licensed IP, that their own IP is also in there doesn't negate that fact.
Which symbol are you referring to? The Bhaal symbol? It predates Baldur's Gate by at least a decade.