Dungeons & Dragons

Dungeons and Dragons, commonly rendered D&D, is a tabletop fantasy role-playing game--perhaps the tabletop fantasy role-playing game, in that it pioneered the d20 gaming system as we know it and is responsible for many tropes in the genre, such as character alignment, "Nat 20" and "Nat 1," Spot checks, etc. Since its creation, it has become a massive franchise including various "campaign settings" that use its basic rules, including Dragonlance, Forgotten Realms (home of the infamous Drizzt do'Urden), Ravenloft, Eberron, and Greyhawk.

D&D uses a system of levels, races, classes, alignments, and skills to roughly define each player character, giving a wide range of options in character creation. Events in the game are determined by a combination of storytelling on the Dungeon Master's part, in-character actions on the part of the players, and the rolling of dice by both the DM and the players, giving each game an element of random chance that keeps things exciting when used properly.

The game has gone through several incarnations since its first publication: Dungeons and Dragons, Advanced Dungeons and Dragons (AD&D), D&D 3.0, D&D 3.5, and most recently D&D 4.0. Many players find 4.0 to be too dumbed down for their liking and prefer to stick to 3.5 or even AD&D, but others like it just fine. It's probably a simple matter of what you're used to.

While D&D enjoys a great deal of popularity, especially among people who also enjoy fantasy fiction such as The Lord of the Rings (from which it lifted not a few concepts), some see it as a dangerous gateway to things like devil-worship. It is an unfortunate truth that some people who play D&D take it too far and get sucked into the fantasy world, but most players actually have a very healthy grasp on the difference between fantasy and reality, and they're generally more interested in having a good time than corrupting anyone's soul.

Agents from Generic D&D-verse

 * Nurse Elms is certainly acquainted with weapons that use dice as damage ratings (d4, d6, d8, etc.).


 * Unger is a D&D v3.5 Half-elf Barbarian.

Missions in this Continuum
Since D&D is left mostly undefined to leave room for DM and player creativity, it is difficult to determine what is D&D badfic. Its various campaign settings are another matter, but missions to them will be listed on their individual pages.