D&D 5E I believe the Greyhawk Campaign setting was a missed opportunity for Wizards of the Coast.

Ah, the good old days. Back in those days, we didn't have this here fancy broadband thing. No, we had DIAL-UP! With 14.4 kbps modems and a PHONE BILL. And debates about whether to put articles in .txt (minimal size) or .rtf (fancy!).

Iquander, are you feeling as old as I am? ;)

Older, probably. :)
 

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Even then, though, Tharizdun felt off to me. Like Gygax could never quite decide what Tharizdun was supposed to be, or what he wanted to do with him. It's like someone trying to create a Lovecraftian god when his only exposure to Lovecraft was hearing about it through someone who heard about it through someone who read a few of the stories once, 30 years ago.

I think Tharizdun was actually a clone of Thasaidon, a god in the Clark Ashton Smith story The Dark Eidolon

Before him, on an altar of jet, was the dark, gigantic statue of Thasaidon which a devil-begotten sculptor had wrought in ancient days for an evil king of Tasuun, called Pharnoc. The archdemon was depicted in the guise of a full-armored warrior, lifting a spiky mace as if in heroic battle. Long had the statue lain in the desert-sunken palace of Pharnoc, whose very site was disputed by the nomads; and Namirrha, by his divination, had found it and had reared up the infernal image to abide with him always thereafter. And often, through the mouth of the statue, Thasaidon would utter oracles to Namirrha, or would answer interrogations.

http://www.eldritchdark.com/writings/short-stories/212/the-dark-eidolon
 

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