Dungeons and Dragons Fan Art Characters Mages Half Elf Red
| Dungeons & Dragons | |
|---|---|
| DVD comprehend | |
| Genre | Action Adventure Fantasy |
| Created by | Kevin Paul Coates Dennis Marks Takashi |
| Developed by | Marking Evanier |
| Written by | Karl Geurs |
| Directed by | John Gibbs |
| Voices of | Willie Aames Don Nearly Katie Leigh Adam Rich Tonia Gayle Smith Teddy Field III Sidney Miller Peter Cullen Frank Welker Bob Holt |
| Composers | Johnny Douglas Rob Walsh (additional music) |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original linguistic communication | English |
| No. of seasons | 3 |
| No. of episodes | 27 |
| Production | |
| Executive producers | David H. DePatie (season 1) Lee Gunther (seasons 1–3) Margaret Loesch (seasons 2–3) |
| Producers | Bob Richardson (flavor 1) Karl Geurs (seasons 2–three) |
| Animator | Toei Animation |
| Running time | 24 minutes |
| Production companies |
|
| Distributor | New World Tv set |
| Release | |
| Original network | CBS |
| Original release | September 17, 1983 (1983-09-17) [1] – December 7, 1985 (1985-12-07) |
Dungeons & Dragons is an American blithe television series based on TSR's Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game.[2] A co-production of Marvel Productions and TSR, the show originally ran from 1983 through 1985 for 3 seasons on CBS for a total of twenty-seven episodes. The Japanese company Toei Animation did the animation for the series.
The show focused on a group of six friends who are transported into the titular realm and followed their adventures as they tried to find a way home with the help of their guide the Dungeon Master.[iii]
A final unproduced episode would have served as both a conclusion to the story every bit well every bit a re-imagining of the show had the series been picked up for a 4th season; notwithstanding, the prove was cancelled before the episode was fabricated. The script has since been published online and was performed every bit an audio drama as a special feature for the BCI Eclipse DVD edition of the series.
Overview [edit]
The show focuses on a grouping of friends aged between 8 and xv who are transported to the "realm of Dungeons & Dragons" by taking a magical nighttime ride on an entertainment park roller coaster. Upon arriving in the realm they meet Dungeon Master (named for the referee in the role-playing game) who gives each child a magical particular.
The children's primary goal is to find a manner abode, but they frequently have detours to assistance people or find that their fates are intertwined with that of others. The group comes across many unlike enemies, merely their chief antagonist is Venger. Venger is a powerful sorcerer who wishes to rule the realm and believes the power from the children's weapons will help him to practice so. Another recurring villain is Tiamat, who is a v-headed dragon and the merely animate being that Venger fears.
Throughout the show, a connectedness is suggested between Dungeon Master and Venger. At the end of the episode "The Dragon's Graveyard", Dungeon Master calls Venger "my son." The last unproduced episode "Requiem" would have confirmed that Venger is the Dungeon Master's corrupted son (making Karena Venger's sister and Dungeon Chief's daughter), redeemed Venger (giving those trapped in this realm their freedom), and concluded on a bewilderment where the 6 children could finally return home or deal with evil that however existed in the realm.
Characters [edit]
Heroes [edit]
Left to right: Hank, Eric, Diana, Presto, Sheila, Bobby and Uni. in the first episode "The Nighttime of No Tomorrow"
- Hank, the Ranger (voiced by Willie Aames): At fifteen years of age,[four] he is the leader of the group. Hank is dauntless and noble, maintaining a focus and conclusion even when presented with grave danger. Hank is a Ranger, with the magical Free energy Bow that shoots arrows of glowing free energy. These arrows could be used in many different ways such every bit a climbing tool, to hurt enemies, to bind them or to create lite. His deepest fright is a failure to be a leader (as seen in "Quest of the Skeleton Warrior"). Twice he does fail as a leader: making the wrong decision trying to relieve Bobby from Venger (as seen in "The Traitor") and disobeying Dungeon Master's instructions (as seen in "The Dungeon at the Heart of Dawn"). Simply once does his anger and frustration at not going home result in uncontrollable rage at Venger (as seen in "The Dragon's Graveyard"). Of all the kids, Venger regards Hank as his almost personal enemy ("The Dungeon at the Heart of Dawn").
- Eric, the Condescending (voiced by Don Well-nigh): The Condescending, age fifteen, is the spoiled child, originating from a rich dwelling house. On the surface, Eric is a big-mouthed comic relief coward. Eric complains nearly the dire situations in which he is involved and voices concerns which would be sensible to inhabitants of our earth transplanted to the Realm. Despite his cowardice and reluctance, Eric has a heroic cadre, and oftentimes saves his friends from danger with his magical Griffon Shield, which tin projection a force field. In "Day of the Dungeon Master", he is fifty-fifty granted the powers of the Dungeon Master, and manages this duty quite successfully—fifty-fifty to the extent of risking his own life fighting Venger—so his friends can return home. Serial developer Marker Evanier revealed that Eric'southward contrary nature was mandated past parents' groups and consultants to push the then-dominant pro-social moral for cartoons of "The group is e'er right; the complainer is always incorrect".[five]
- Diana, the Acrobat (voiced past Tonia Gayle Smith): Diana is a dauntless and outspoken 14-year-old girl.[4] She is an Acrobat who carries the Javelin Staff, which can shift in length from every bit short as a few inches (and thus easily carried on her person) to every bit long as 6 feet. She uses her staff as a weapon or as an aid in various acrobatic moves. If the staff is cleaved apart, Diana can hold the severed pieces together and they will reunite. She is skilled at treatment animals and is self-bodacious and confident. These qualities make her the natural leader in the absenteeism of Hank. Diana was chosen every bit the Acrobat because in her existent world she is an Olympic-level gymnast. In "Kid of the Stargazer", Diana finds her soulmate—whom she must give up in social club to save a community.
- Presto, the Sorcerer (voiced by Adam Rich): the fourteen-yr-old Wizard of the team.[four] Presto fulfills the part of well-significant, diligent, simply hopeless magic user. He suffers from low self-confidence and nervousness, which manifests in the use of his Lid of Many Spells. He is able to pull an endless succession of various tools from it, just often these will be, or announced to be, of little use. In that location are also numerous instances when the whole group is in danger, whereupon Presto will depict from his hat precisely what is needed in order to relieve all of his friends. Although, similar all the kids, Presto yearns to render domicile, in "The Last illusion", Presto finds his soulmate in Varla—a girl with the ability to create powerful illusions—and makes friends with the Fairie Dragon Amber (every bit seen in "Cave of the Fairie Dragons"). While the Serial Bible gives his real name equally "Albert", said document differs from the drawing in some elements such as names. In the comic Forgotten Realms: The Grand Bout he is called "Preston", although information technology is not specified whether this is his first or terminal name.[six]
- Sheila, the Thief (voiced by Katie Leigh): As the Thief, Sheila age 13 has the Cloak of Invisibility which, when the hood is raised over her head, makes her invisible. Too her cloak she can also speak and sympathise Fairy language due to an accidental encounter with Dungeonmaster magic ("In Search of the Dungeon Chief"). Although Sheila is often shy and nervous (every bit seen in "Citadel of Shadow") with a deep-seated monophobia (fright of being alone) (every bit seen in "Quest of the Skeleton Warrior"), she will always display bravery when her friends are in trouble, especially her younger brother, Bobby. Sheila is besides the first to point out the flaws or dangers of the group's plans. Through her capacity for friendship with those in trouble, she receives unexpected rewards—such every bit existence offered to become Queen of Zinn which she politely declines (as seen in "The Garden of Zinn") and redeeming Karena, Dungeonmaster'southward girl, from evil (as seen in "Citadel of Shadow").
- Bobby, the Barbaric (voiced by Ted Field 3): Bobby is the youngest member of the squad, eight years erstwhile when he enters the realm; the characters gloat his ninth altogether in the "Servant of Evil" episode, and he confirms that he is "near ten" 4 episodes later in "The Lost Children". He is the Barbarian, as indicated by his fur pants and boots, horned helmet, and cantankerous belt harness. He is Sheila's younger brother; in contrast to her, Bobby is impulsive and gear up to run headlong into battle, even against physically superior enemies, usually resulting in one of the others moving him from harm's way. He has a close human relationship with Uni and is often reluctant to leave her when they find a style home. Bobby carries the Thunder Lodge, which he regularly uses to trigger earthquakes or dislodge rocks when he strikes the ground. In "The Dragon's Graveyard", the strain of beingness separated from family and friends causes him to have an emotional breakup; in "The Girl Who Dreamed Tomorrow", Bobby finds his soulmate Terri, whom he must give upwardly in club to save her from Venger.
- Uni, the Unicorn (vocal effects provided by Frank Welker): Uni is Bobby'due south pet, a babe unicorn, which Bobby discovers in the intro and retains every bit his companion throughout the evidence. She has the power to speak, though her words are non quite discernible; she usually is heard echoing Bobby when she agrees to his opinions. As seen in the episode "Valley of the Unicorns", Uni also possesses the potential for the natural unicorn ability to teleport in one case a mean solar day, and has accessed this power through tremendous concentration and endeavor; it is implied that she is yet also immature to use this ability regularly—without her horn she cannot teleport and becomes very weak; too whenever the children notice a portal abode, she must stay behind in the Dungeons and Dragons Realm as she cannot survive in their globe {as seen in "The Eye of the Beholder," "The Box," and"Mean solar day of the Dungeon Principal"} . As revealed in "P-R-E-S-T-O Spells Disaster," Uni also possesses the ability to apply magic, proving herself to be more adept at using Presto's magic hat than Presto is.
- Dungeon Principal (voiced by Sidney Miller): The group'southward friend and mentor, he provides important communication and help, but often in a cryptic way that does not make sense until the squad has completed the quest of each episode. It is the Dungeon Chief who supplies the companions with their weapons and clues for their numerous opportunities to render home. As the series progresses, from his repeated displays of power, it begins to seem possible and afterward, fifty-fifty probable, that the Dungeon Principal could easily return the companions dwelling house himself. This suspicion is confirmed in the script for the unmade serial finale, "Requiem", wherein the Dungeon Primary proves he can do but that, without any difficulty.[7] In some episodes, including "Metropolis at the Edge of Midnight" and "The Terminal Illusion", realm inhabitants display corking respect or nervous awe of Dungeon Master. Information technology is through the efforts of the kids that both of Dungeon Master's children, Venger (equally seen in "Requiem") and Karena (as seen in "Citadel of Shadow"), are redeemed from evil.
Villains [edit]
Venger, the primary villain; trapped in "The Dragon'southward Graveyard"
- Venger, the Forcefulness of Evil (voiced by Peter Cullen) - The main antagonist and the Dungeon Master'due south son (as revealed in "The Dragon's Graveyard" when Dungeon Chief refers to him equally "my son"), Venger is an evil magician of great power who seeks to apply the children's magical weapons to bolster his power. He especially hates the kids non only considering their refusal to office with their weapons prevents him from enslaving Tiamat (as seen in "The Hall of Basic") and conquering the realm (as seen in "The Dragon's Graveyard"), but also because they are "pure of heart" (equally seen in "Quest of the Skeleton Warrior"). He is described as an evil strength, although it is hinted that he was one time practiced, but fell under a corrupting influence (as seen in "The Treasure of Tardos"). The episode "The Dungeon at the Eye of Dawn" revealed that his master was the Nameless Ane. This is afterwards revealed to be true in the unmade finale "Requiem", when Venger is restored to his onetime self.
- Shadow Demon (voiced by Bob Holt) - A shadowy demon, he is Venger's personal spy and banana. Shadow Demon often informs Venger near the children's (whom he refers to as "Dungeon Primary'southward young ones") electric current quests.
- Night-Mare - A black horse that serves as Venger's mode of transportation.
- Tiamat (vocal effects provided by Frank Welker) - Venger'due south curvation-rival is a fearsome female person five-headed dragon with a reverberating multi-level vocalism. Her v heads are a white caput breathing water ice, a green head breathing toxic gas, a key ruby-red head animate fire, a blue head breathing lightning, and a black head breathing acid. Although Venger and the children both avert Tiamat, the children often employ her to their ain ends such as making a bargain with her in "The Dragon's Graveyard" to destroy Venger. Although promotional blurbs testify the kids fighting Tiamat, the kids but fight her twice (equally seen in "The Night of No Tomorrow" and "The Dragon's Graveyard") - Tiamat'due south main quarrel is with Venger.
Episodes [edit]
Season one (1983) [edit]
Season 2 (1984) [edit]
Season 3 (1985) [edit]
Unfinished finale [edit]
The intended concluding episode from the third season, and potential series finale, entitled "Requiem", was written by the series' frequent screenwriter Michael Reaves, but was not finished due to the evidence's counterfoil. Information technology would have served as both a conclusion to the electric current story likewise as a re-imagining of the series had the show continued into a fourth flavor. Reaves has discussed the episode online,[8] and published the original script on his personal website.[7] The BCI Eclipse Region one DVD release includes the script recorded in the grade of an audio drama every bit a special feature.
A fan-made animated version of the finale appeared online in 2020.[nine] It includes the original audio drama, animations mostly recut from the serial, and a legal disclaimer stating the rights belong to Marvel, Disney and Wizards of the Coast. This version closely follows Reaves' script, except it deviates from the latter'south "open catastrophe", in which the characters were given the choice to render dwelling or stay in the realm, every bit their conclusion is shown.[10]
Production [edit]
Opening credits [edit]
Fear non: Ranger, Barbarian, Magician, Thief, Cavalier, and Acrobat. That was Venger, the force of evil. I am Dungeon Master, your guide in the realm of Dungeons and Dragons!
The opening credits served equally an introduction to the series and an explanation equally to how the children ended upward in the realm. It begins with the grouping getting on the "Dungeons & Dragons" ride, which and so transports them to the realm. Dungeon Master appears to give them their individual weapons to defend themselves from Tiamat and Venger.
The credits were altered for the second and third seasons. Information technology started in a similar fashion to the first with the group getting onto the roller coaster. Once in the realm, yet, the characters can be seen in a castle and already in possession of their weapons fighting various enemies before Venger appears and says –
At that place is no escape from the realm of Dungeons and Dragons!
The credits featured an orchestral score composed by Johnny Douglas, which played aslope the soundtrack of Dungeon Principal. Withal, in French republic it ran with the vocal "Le Sourire du Dragon" sung past Dorothée. In Espana, the theme vocal "Dragones y Mazmorras" ("Dragons and Dungeons") sung by Dulces became very pop.
Controversy [edit]
The level of violence was controversial for American children's television at the time, and the script of 1 episode, "The Dragon's Graveyard", was about shelved because the characters contemplated killing their nemesis, Venger.[eleven] In 1985, the National Coalition on Goggle box Violence demanded that the FTC run a alarm during each broadcast stating that Dungeons & Dragons had been linked to real-life violent deaths.[12] The series spawned more than 100 different licenses,[thirteen] and the show led its time slot for two years.[1] [13]
Home media [edit]
In 2004, Contender Entertainment Grouping released the serial on iv stand-alone DVDs (under license from Fox Kids Europe/Jetix Europe). Actress features on each volume include fan commentary tracks on two episodes, character profiles, and DVD-ROM content. The original series bible, scripts, character model sheets, original promo artwork, an interview with Michael Reaves (writer on the unproduced finale episode "Requiem"), and a featurette on the championship sequence are spread amongst the discs. The fourth book includes the script for "Requiem" and a featurette about it. The four DVDs each have different original encompass artwork (past Eamon O'Donoghue) that form a panorama when placed side by side, depicting the serial' main characters: Hank and Sheila with Venger, Presto with Tiamat, Eric and Diana with Shadow Demon, and Bobby with Uni and Dungeon Master.
The commencement Region one DVD release, Dungeons & Dragons - The Complete Animated Series, was on December 5, 2006 by BCI Eclipse LLC, under its Ink & Paint classic animation entertainment make (under license from Disney). The 5-disc set featured all 27 episodes, uncut, digitally re-mastered, and presented in story continuity social club, as well as an all-encompassing array of special features including documentaries, commentaries, character profiles, a radio play of the unproduced finale episode "Requiem", and more than. This release is at present out of impress, equally BCI Eclipse ceased operations in December 2008.[14]
In June 2009, Mill Creek Entertainment acquired the rights to the serial and subsequently re-released the consummate serial on Baronial 25, 2009 (in one case once again under license from Disney), in a 3-disc set without any special features, just with almost all the original music restored; the release contains all the televised episodes just does not contain the radio play of "Requiem".[15]
The series was besides shown on Toon Disney's Jetix cake during the summertime for the years 2006, 2007 and 2008. Foreign language versions on the serial can be constitute on YouTube.
Awards [edit]
For her work on the series, Tonia Gayle Smith (equally "Diana") was nominated for Outstanding Immature Actress in an Blitheness Voice-over at the 1984–1985 Youth in Flick Awards.[sixteen] In Jan 2009, IGN ranked Dungeons & Dragons at #64 on its "Best 100 Animated Serial" list.[17]
Merchandise and other media [edit]
The bear witness produced a variety of spin-off merchandise.
Lath games [edit]
In 1984 TSR, Inc. released the lath game named Quest for the Dungeonmaster, inspired by the episode "In Search of the Dungeon Primary", in which Dungeon Principal is captured by Warduke and frozen in a magic crystal, and the kids try to rescue him before Venger gets there. Brazilian visitor Grow released a Portuguese-linguistic communication version of this game in 1993.
Books [edit]
Several books based on this series were released at the fourth dimension of its highest popularity.
- Dragones y Mazmorras. Comic book adaptations of all 27 episodes by Comics Forum, a partition of Spanish publisher Editorial Planeta De Agostini under license from TSR.[18]
- Option a Path to Gamble books. Six gamebooks written from the signal of view of one of the children, each focused on a different graphic symbol (though Eric's book gave the protagonism to his younger brother Michael, who did not announced in the drawing series). These books were released by TSR.[xix]
- UK Annuals. Two hardcover books published in the United Kingdom in 1985 and 1987 by World International Publishing Limited, each including various prose stories. The first featured 7 original adventures, while the second only included iii, plus Comics Forum's adaptation of "The Centre of the Beholder" (translated as "The Eye of the Watchman!").
- Curiosity Summertime Special 1987. Published in the United Kingdom. An English-language reprint of Comics Forum's adaptation of the episode "Prison house Without Walls".
- Donjons et Dragons: Published in France, a vi-book drove adapting dissimilar episodes in storybook form.
- Forgotten Realms: The Grand Tour: One-shot comic book published past TSR in 1996. Features the at present-adult protagonists still living in a Dungeons & Dragons world, this time the Forgotten Realms, with Presto seeking an apprenticeship with Elminster the Sage.[6]
Card games [edit]
In June 2021, Wizards of the Coast announced a "Clandestine Lair set" for Magic the Gathering based on the blithe serial.[20] Also, announced that series will be streamed on Twitch.[21]
Music [edit]
A full orchestral version of the Dungeons & Dragons animated serial master theme, composed past Johnny Douglas, was released every bit the sixth track of the 1991 album The Johnny Douglas Strings - On Screen, published by the label Dulcima,[22] a record label founded by Douglas in 1983.[23]
Tv advertisements [edit]
The characters were licensed for a Brazilian alive-action television set commercial, released in May 2019 to promote the launch of Renault's Kwid Outsider.[24] [25] The commercial was shot in Salta, in Argentina, in a identify well-nigh the Andes mountain range.[26]
Toys and collectibles [edit]
An Advanced Dungeons & Dragons toy line was produced by LJN in 1983,[27] including original characters such as Warduke, Strongheart the Paladin, and the evil Wizard Kelek, who would later announced in campaigns for the Basic edition of the roleplaying game. None of the master characters from the TV serial were included in the toy line, just a connexion does exist, as Warduke, Strongheart and Kelek each appeared in one episode of the series. Only in Espana and Portugal were PVC figures of the master characters produced.[28] [29] The Brazilian visitor named Iron Studios will release in 2019 an unabridged set of polystone collectible statues for near of the Dungeons & Dragons cartoon characters, using a 1/10 scale and together they form a full diorama.[30] Planned for the same year, more exactly June–August 2019, PCS Collectibles company volition release 2 versions of Venger in ane:4 scale, both fully sculpted polystone statues manus painted.[31] I version, a Sideshow and PCS Collectibles partnership, volition be strictly express to only 400 pieces worldwide; the 2nd version, a PCS exclusive version will include Venger's loyal henchman, the Shadow Demon, likewise every bit an alternate swap-out arm with a magical energy issue, will be limited to 250 pieces.[32]
References [edit]
- ^ a b "Dungeons & Dragons FAQ". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 2008-ten-02. Retrieved 2008-10-03 .
- ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television set Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 174. ISBN978-1538103739.
- ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Tv set Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 298. ISBN978-1476665993.
- ^ a b c "Archive of Evolution of the Dungeons and Dragons Cartoon: Series Bible". Marker Evanier. Archived from the original on 2007-10-06. Retrieved 2010-10-06 .
- ^ "Signal of view, by Marker Evanier". NewsFromMe.com. Retrieved 2016-11-01 .
- ^ a b Forgotten Realms: The Grand Bout (January 1996)
- ^ a b "Requiem" (PDF). Michael Reaves. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-twenty.
- ^ "Concluding Episode of Dungeons and Dragons". July 20, 2011. Archived from the original on July 20, 2011.
- ^ "Fans Create Catastrophe To 80s D&D Drawing". July 28, 2021.
- ^ "D&D: The Fan-Made Final Episode Of The D&D Cartoon Is Heart-Melting". July 28, 2021.
- ^ "Preface to Requiem: The Unproduced Dungeons and Dragons Finale". MichaelReaves.com. Archived from the original on July xx, 2011. Retrieved 2007-05-23 .
- ^ Starker, Steven (1989). Evil Influences: Crusades Against the Mass Media . Transaction Publishers. p. 153. ISBN9780887382758.
- ^ a b "The History of TSR". Wizards of the Declension. Archived from the original on 2008-09-24. Retrieved 2005-08-xx .
- ^ "Site News DVD news: Navarre shutters BCI Eclipse division". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Dec xviii, 2008. Archived from the original on 2010-05-31.
- ^ Lambert, David (June xvi, 2009). "Dungeons and Dragons - Mill Creek Acquires the License to the Classic '80s Cartoon". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2009-06-nineteen. Retrieved 2009-06-26 .
- ^ "Seventh Annual Youth in Moving picture Awards: 1984-1985". Young Creative person Awards. Archived from the original on 2010-11-14. Retrieved 2013-12-06 .
- ^ "Height 100 Blithe Series". IGN . Retrieved 13 Feb 2017.
- ^ "Kuronons': D&D comics history special - D&DC (blithe serie) related". 2011-03-13. Retrieved 2020-05-08 .
- ^ "Dungeons and Dragons Cartoon Evidence books". RPGGeek . Retrieved xiii February 2017.
- ^ "Dungeons & Dragons Cartoon Resurrected equally Magic: The Gathering Secret Lair Cards". GAMING . Retrieved 2021-07-03 .
- ^ "Dungeons & Dragons Drawing to Stream on Twitch". GAMING . Retrieved 2021-07-03 .
- ^ "The Johnny Douglas Strings - On Screen". Discogs.com . Retrieved 2018-12-11 .
- ^ "Dulcima". Discogs . Retrieved 2018-12-eleven .
- ^ "KWID | O SUV dos compactos". Renault Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2019-06-05.
- ^ "Hit dos anos 1980, Caverna do Dragão volta à TV em comercial para a Renault" [1980s Hit 'Dragon'due south Cave' returns to Idiot box in a commercial for Renault]. O Globo (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2019-05-13. Retrieved 2019-05-twenty .
- ^ "Descobrimos o que é o alive-action de 'Caverna do Dragão'" [We plant out about the alive-activeness 'Dragon'southward Cavern']. UOL (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2019-05-20 .
- ^ "Series 1 & 2 of the original LJN toyline at toyarchive.com". Retrieved 2008-01-23 .
- ^ "Spanish ready of PVC figures based on the TV series at toyarchive.com". Retrieved 2008-01-23 .
- ^ "Portuguese ready of PVC figures based on the Idiot box series at toyarchive.com". Retrieved 2008-01-23 .
- ^ "Caverna practise Dragão | Iron Studios lança coleção de estatuetas da animação - NerdBunker" [Dragon's Cavern: Fe Studios Launches Animation Figurines Drove]. Jovem Nerd (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2018-12-x .
- ^ "PCS Collectibles Announces Dungeons & Dragons VENGER 1:four Statue". Comics-Ten-Aminer. 2018-05-27. Archived from the original on 2019-04-01.
- ^ "Dungeons and Dragons Venger Statue past Pop Civilisation Shock". Sideshow Collectibles . Retrieved 2018-12-11 .
External links [edit]
- Dungeons & Dragons at IMDb
- "A storyboard for the second flavour's introduction". Archived from the original on 2011-07-24.
- Model sheets for characters
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeons_&_Dragons_%28TV_series%29
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