When was the Dungeons & Dragons Companion Set released?
The Dungeons & Dragons Companion Set was released in 1984. It served as the third pillar of the Mentzer D&D system and was published by TSR.
Short answers, pulled from the story.
The Dungeons & Dragons Companion Set was released in 1984. It served as the third pillar of the Mentzer D&D system and was published by TSR.
The Dungeons & Dragons Companion Set was designed for characters who had reached levels 15 through 25. This expansion shifted the game from dungeon crawling to kingdom building and high-level warfare.
Frank Mentzer wrote the Dungeons & Dragons Companion Set. He crafted a narrative that acknowledged the inevitable end of the adventurer's life as a wandering hero and the transition to ruling a domain.
The War Machine system was introduced in the Dungeons & Dragons Companion Set to handle large-scale battles involving thousands of troops. It was designed by Douglas Niles and Gary Spiegel to simulate medieval warfare and manage resources, morale, and terrain.
The limited edition 10th Anniversary Dungeons & Dragons Collector's Set was limited to only 1,000 copies. It was sold by mail and at GenCon 17 and included rulebooks from the Basic, Expert, and Companion sets.
Megan C. Robertson rated the Dungeons & Dragons Companion Set 7 out of 10 in issue 61 of White Dwarf magazine in January 1985. She noted that the set provided interesting ideas for characters reaching 15th level to settle down and retire.