The Atruaghin Clans

The Atruaghin Clans (product code GAZ14) is an accessory for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game. The book was written by William W. Connors, and was published in 1991. Cover art is by Clyde Caldwell, with interior illustrations by Stephen Fabian.

The Atruaghin Clans
AuthorWilliam W. Connors
GenreRole-playing game
PublisherTSR
Publication date
1991
Pages96
ISBN0-88038-891-9

Contents

The book describes the territory of the Known World/Mystara known as "the Atruaghin Clans", which are a society loosely based on American Indian tribes.

The publication consists of two booklets, a fold-out map and a cardboard cover. The 64-page booklet "Player's Guide" describes the realm of the Atruaghin Clans within the D&D world for the players. After the introduction, the book is divided into the following sections: The Story of Atruaghin, Character Generation, Shamani, Spell Descriptions and sections on the individual tribes (Children of the Horse, Children of the Bear, Children of the Turtle, Children of the Tiger, Children of the Elk). The second 32-page booklet ("Referee's Guide") is for the DM. It contains information on the history timeline, the Immortals ("Gods") involved in the Clans' history, some Non Player Characters, sections on "Totem Magic", on "Atruaghin's Mystical Conveyor" and a note on how to adapt the content to 2nd Edition AD&D.

Publication history

GAZ14 The Atruaghin Clans was written by William W. Connors, with a cover by Clyde Caldwell and interior illustrations by Stephen Fabian, and was published by TSR in 1991 as a 64-page booklet, a 32-page booklet with a large color map and an outer folder. It is the last of the Gazeteer series of source books.[1]

Reception

gollark: Probably items, yes.
gollark: Well, not really an *M*MO.
gollark: Emu War but real-time and an MMO.
gollark: Last I heard he was trying to work out types and game data serialization instead of any game logic whatsoever.
gollark: baidicoot#1364 is actually implementing Emu War Online in Haskell for whatever reason.]

References

  1. Connors, William W., The Atruaghin Clans, TSR, Lake Geneva, 1991, ISBN 0-88038-891-9
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