Quasqueton
First Post
I just looked through a copy of Diablo II: Diablerie in a local store. This looks like it could be interesting. I've played the Diablo PC games, and I always thought the magic item naming convention was pretty cool -- each prefix or suffix meant a different power, some minor, some major. This book listed them all out in D&D3 terms.
I've checked the reviews here at ENWorld, and most were negative.
$20 is probably a bit much for this book, but I'm really drawn to wanting to read more about these magic items.
And I saw Diablo II: To Hell and Back also. The maps looked useful for general gaming. But, again, $30 for this book is too much also.
Have any of you read/used these books in any way? Are the magic items as cool in actual play as they seem to me reading the concept in the book? Would either be worth looking for a cheap, maybe second-hand copy?
-- And please, no one take this as an opportunity to bash PC gaming in general, or Diablo in particular. I like both very much. If you don't, skip this thread.
Quasqueton
I've checked the reviews here at ENWorld, and most were negative.
$20 is probably a bit much for this book, but I'm really drawn to wanting to read more about these magic items.
And I saw Diablo II: To Hell and Back also. The maps looked useful for general gaming. But, again, $30 for this book is too much also.
Have any of you read/used these books in any way? Are the magic items as cool in actual play as they seem to me reading the concept in the book? Would either be worth looking for a cheap, maybe second-hand copy?
-- And please, no one take this as an opportunity to bash PC gaming in general, or Diablo in particular. I like both very much. If you don't, skip this thread.
Quasqueton