The Fantasy Trip - Released Products

Released Products

  • 3103 - Melee
  • 3106 - Wizard
  • 2102 - In The Labyrinth
  • 2103 - Advanced Melee
  • 2104 - Advanced Wizard
  • 3201 - Death Test (MQ#1)
  • 3202 - Death Test 2 (MQ#2)
  • 3203 - Grail Quest (MQ#3). Set in King Arthur's court, the players were knights searching for the Holy Grail. Considered one of the more enjoyable MicroQuests.
  • 3204 - Treasure of the Silver Dragon (MQ#4). Notable for its associated contest. The game contained clues to a real silver dragon hidden somewhere in the U.S. The 31 troy oz. dragon was found by Mr. Thomas Davidson, who was afterwards awarded with a $10,000 check in addition to the dragon itself.
  • 3205 - Security Station (MQ#5)
  • 3206 - Treasure of Unicorn Gold (MQ#6). Identical in concept to Treasure of the Silver Dragon, except this time the quest was for a small golden Unicorn. No prize was awarded before Metagaming folded, and it is not clear whatever became of the gold unicorn. Read one person's account of his search for the golden unicorn at an external link listed at the bottom of this page. It is titled, "Treasure of Unicorn Gold Solution? A seeker's tale".
  • 3207 - Master of the Amulets (MQ#7). A very simple adventure where the player explores a valley and picks up many magical amulets laying about.
  • 3208 - Orb Quest (MQ#8)
  • 2201 - Tollenkar's Lair
  • 2202 - The Warrior Lords of Darok. The first module released in a series called "The Land Beyond the Mountains", a full campaign setting designed exclusively for TFT. This detailed the province of Darok, whose inhabitants worship a mean and nasty god of war and fire. This land was to be detailed over the course of several modules, but only this and The Forest Lords of Dihad were released before Metagaming's untimely demise. In the works were two more province modules for Muipoco and Soukor, along with two and probably more city modules, detailing the provincial capitals. As noted below, the city modules for the capitals of Darok and Dihad were redesigned and released under other names by Game Lords, Ltd.
  • 2203(?) - The Forest Lords of Dihad. The last TFT release before the closing of Metagaming. The product number is speculative, as it does not appear anywhere on the module itself.
  • 2301 - The Fantasy Master's Codex. Originally called the TFT Yearbook, this was planned to be a supplement that would be updated annually, to include rule changes, expansions and new rules interpretations. It was also planned to include variants and expansions submitted by TFT players, as well. Only the first one was ever released.
  • 2302 - The Game Master's Screen. A GM's shield, featuring useful reference charts and tables for game play. Similar in concept to the DM's shields produced by TSR for Dungeons & Dragons, the screen summarized all game mechanic information likely to be required during a given session.
  • 5102 - Dragons of the Underearth. A compact set of fanatsy role-playing rules derived from Melee, Wizard and ITL, with simplified combat and magic . Not actually a Basic TFT but close to it.
  • 3118 - Lords of Underearth. Technically, this was a separate Microgame, but was designed with TFT in mind as a mass combat system for armies. Featured a set of conversions for building up units based on TFT characters. Conversely, with a little work, one could turn Underearth into a fine labyrinth for the players to explore and get eaten in.

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