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Could someone please give me a complete list of D&D franchise games? Between the Archive collections and Stronghold, GOG has really peaked my interest in a lot of the old D&D games I haven't played in forever. So if anyone has a near complete list of the games GOG offers, that would be really cool!
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holiday_hawk: Could someone please give me a complete list of D&D franchise games? Between the Archive collections and Stronghold, GOG has really peaked my interest in a lot of the old D&D games I haven't played in forever. So if anyone has a near complete list of the games GOG offers, that would be really cool!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Dungeons_%26_Dragons_video_games

My personal recommendations:

- Baldur's Gate
- Icewind Dale
- Temple of Elemental Evil
- Neverwinter Nights
- Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance
- Birthright: The Gorgon's Alliance

Sword Coast Legends is coming out in a few days (early start starts tomorrow). That one looks promising, but also DLC-laden.
Post edited September 20, 2015 by Tallima
D&D related items that GOG carries -

Planescape: Torment
Baldur's Gate: The Original Saga
Baldur's Gate 2 Complete
Baldur's Gate Enhanced Edition
Baldur's Gate 2 Enhanced Edition
Icewind Dale Complete
Icewind Dale 2 Complete
Icewind Dale Enhanced Edition
Forgotten Realms: Demon Stone
Dungeons and Dragons: Dragonshard
Neverwinter Nights Diamond
Neverwinter Nights 2 Complete
Temple of Elemental Evil
Forgotten Realms: The Archives - Collection 1
Forgotten Realms: The Archives - Collection 2
Forgotten Realms: The Archives - Collection 3
D&D Stronghold: Kingdom Simulator
Al-Qadim: The Genie's Curse

Pretty sure that's everything, at least for now.
GOG's d&d collection won't be complete until they add Dark Sun and Ravenloft.
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javier0889: ...until they add Dark Sun...
Ahhh dark sun... I remember that game. Funky bugs in the character editors where making a ridiculously high stat renders it useless, and a mission where you're to find eyes from certain types of monsters and butterfly wings, and a druid reprimands you for killing butterflies for their wings and gives you a bunch instead...

Good times...
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javier0889: GOG's d&d collection won't be complete until they add Dark Sun and Ravenloft.
Somebody is forgetting Dragonlance...
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javier0889: GOG's d&d collection won't be complete until they add Dark Sun and Ravenloft.
And Krynn.
And Buck Rogers.
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oldschool: And Buck Rogers.
Only if by D&D you mean Disruptors & Drones.
Personal favorite, not (yet) available on GOG: Pool of Radiance: Ruins of Myth Drannor.

Very much a dungeon crawler, with very few random encounters. And yet, something about it grabs me. Maybe its the use of the D&D v3.5 ruleset, allowing for very flexible multiclassing. Or the fact that if you solo, you'll eventually be so OP you'll even outrank the game's final boss.
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TwoHandedSword: Personal favorite, not (yet) available on GOG: Pool of Radiance: Ruins of Myth Drannor.

Very much a dungeon crawler, with very few random encounters. And yet, something about it grabs me. Maybe its the use of the D&D v3.5 ruleset, allowing for very flexible multiclassing. Or the fact that if you solo, you'll eventually be so OP you'll even outrank the game's final boss.
This is the first time I've seen someone giving a positive opinion on this game.
It is bad, with very little redeeming factors other than the novelty of being one of the first video games to use 3rd ed rules. Temple of Eelemental Evil is WAY better.

Besides, although it was later fixed by patches, it had a legendary bug where the game would delete the contents of your hard drive if you tried to uninstall it.
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TwoHandedSword: Personal favorite, not (yet) available on GOG: Pool of Radiance: Ruins of Myth Drannor.

Very much a dungeon crawler, with very few random encounters. And yet, something about it grabs me. Maybe its the use of the D&D v3.5 ruleset, allowing for very flexible multiclassing. Or the fact that if you solo, you'll eventually be so OP you'll even outrank the game's final boss.
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javier0889: This is the first time I've seen someone giving a positive opinion on this game.
It is bad, with very little redeeming factors other than the novelty of being one of the first video games to use 3rd ed rules. Temple of Eelemental Evil is WAY better.

Besides, although it was later fixed by patches, it had a legendary bug where the game would delete the contents of your hard drive if you tried to uninstall it.
Yes, that bug was fixed in patch 3. Its not that bad a game. You really don't want to play in a party though as other party members cant move off the screen. I would be interested to see it here also, as I say its not that bad, I have a boxed.copy from early release.
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TwoHandedSword: Personal favorite, not (yet) available on GOG: Pool of Radiance: Ruins of Myth Drannor.

Very much a dungeon crawler, with very few random encounters. And yet, something about it grabs me. Maybe its the use of the D&D v3.5 ruleset, allowing for very flexible multiclassing. Or the fact that if you solo, you'll eventually be so OP you'll even outrank the game's final boss.
You are kidding me, right?

That game was a bugfest when it was released and plagued by numeroes technical issues and on top of that it was originally designed for an earlier D&D edition and was changed midway in development. The result was that it did a pretty poor job at adhering to the ruleset because some things couldn't be changed anymore without too much work. In an interview the developers gave years later they stated themselves that PoR was a perfect example of how not to develop games.

And don't even get me started on the famous "If you try to uninstall me I'll erase your hard drive."-bug.

Play Temple of Elemental Evil, that is a very similar game (gameplay wise) but was doing everything right that PoR royally messed up.
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javier0889: This is the first time I've seen someone giving a positive opinion on this game...
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Geralt_of_Rivia: You are kidding me, right?
Yes, it was a bugfest when first released, including the one which could accidentally wipe your hard drive. Yes, it's fairly linear, especially as you approach certain checkpoints and the end of the game. Yes, managing a large party can be a PITA, especially if one person happens to get their foot caught in a rock and the game tells you that you can't proceed until you head back and free them.

I'll even add that it doesn't work well with modern graphics cards and drivers, and that you have to shut off the sound or else the game is prone to hanging. I need to save often, and with a rotating set of savegames, just in case the game crashes and the most recent save gets corrupted. (These are the kinds of things I'd expect would be addressed, should GOG ever decide to release this game.)

All that being said, people like what they like. And just as importantly, the OP was looking for as comprehensive a D&D game list as possible. TOEE is a fine game in its own right, but in fairness it did have its own issues upon release, until it was patched as well.

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nightcraw1er.488: Its not that bad a game.
Thanks for the vote of support. I'm glad there are a few others out there who've also enjoyed this one.
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javier0889: GOG's d&d collection won't be complete until they add Dark Sun and Ravenloft.
I remember playing those not on the computer but with paper and dice, so much fun.