So, I was watching the Jeopardy Teen Tournament last night, and there was a category called Games. Most board or children's game questions, but I thought, "Never know, they might ask one..."
Anyways, the $600 question... er... answer was:
"'Bastion of Broken Souls' is a version of this game."
Obviously (or at least, to most of us on these boards), the answer... er... question is "What is Dungeons and Dragons?"
But the wording just caught me as odd. Has anyone every heard of an module being referred to as a "version" of D&D? Or were the trivia/question/answer/whatever writers just lazy in their research?
Also, I can't see why they'd use "Bastion of Broken Souls". Certainly there are other, better known modules? Castle Greyhawk, for example. Or Tomb of Horrors. Or Temple of Elemental Evil. Or for strictly third edition stuff, Sunless Citadel was the introductory adventure on the Adventure Path, whereas Bastion of Broken Souls was much further along (I don't know the order).
Anyways, I just thought I'd throw this out for commentary.
Anyways, the $600 question... er... answer was:
"'Bastion of Broken Souls' is a version of this game."
Obviously (or at least, to most of us on these boards), the answer... er... question is "What is Dungeons and Dragons?"
But the wording just caught me as odd. Has anyone every heard of an module being referred to as a "version" of D&D? Or were the trivia/question/answer/whatever writers just lazy in their research?
Also, I can't see why they'd use "Bastion of Broken Souls". Certainly there are other, better known modules? Castle Greyhawk, for example. Or Tomb of Horrors. Or Temple of Elemental Evil. Or for strictly third edition stuff, Sunless Citadel was the introductory adventure on the Adventure Path, whereas Bastion of Broken Souls was much further along (I don't know the order).
Anyways, I just thought I'd throw this out for commentary.