Never heard of Press Enter before, but it sounds interesting. Looks like it's pretty easy to find copies of its original appearance in Analog.It makes a neat duo with John Varley’s novella “Press Enter”. There’s an entering subgenre of stories about the Singularity coming early and unobtrusively, until an eruption happens. Wil McCarthy’s Bloom seems like a probable outcome for many such worlds - grey goo has consumed th inner solar system, with humanity surviving on moons far away enough from the sun. Not as cheery as John Varley’s Eight Worlds, but with a fascinating complication.
I can see this being a downside of listening to the audiobooks, when the rules stuff goes on a little too long in the books you can just skip to the next paragraph.Dungeon Crawler Carl: This book would be MUCH better with out the LitRPG nonsense. I don't mean not having the premise. that's cool. But holy crap is the "explaining the rules" stuff absolutely boring.
Agree so hardthose old vintage covers before photoshop/digital was created
I've managed to find most of Nathan Brazils used. Once I've got them all, I'm excited to dive back in.Just finished Twilight at the Well of Souls, and am going to reread All Tomorrow's Parties. Sad that the Twilight at the Well of Souls is falling apart, and could be the last time it is ever read.
As far as I know, there is not an official one.Did anyone ever do an official Well of Souls RPG? I'm pretty sure someone linked me to a fan version here on ENWorld or elseweb at some point in the 'tween/'teens.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.