Other Definitions wizardry (dict)
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WizardryWizardry is a series of computer role-playing games that were popular in the 1980s. Originally made for the Apple II, they were later ported to other platforms. The latest game in the series, Wizardry 8, is available only on the PC. History Wizardry began as a simple dungeon crawl by Andrew C. Greenberg and Robert Woodhead. It was written when they were students at Cornell University and then published by Sir-Tech. The first four games in the series were written in Apple Pascal, an implementation of USCD Pascal, and was ported to many different platforms by writing UCSD Pascal implementations for the target machines. David W. Bradley took over the series after the fourth installment, adding a new level of plot and complexity. Woodhead went on to found the North American anime import company Animeigo, and Greenberg to become an intellectual property lawyer and contributor to the Squeak open source project. Greenberg also wrote another game series, Star Saga. The earliest installments of Wizardry were quite successful, as they were the first graphically-rich incarnations of Dungeons & Dragons-type gameplay for home computers. The release of the first version coincided with the height of D&D's popularity in North America. Series Ultimately the single game became a series: - Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord (1981)
- Knight of Diamonds (1982)
- Legacy of Llylgamyn (1983)
- The Return of Werdna (1986)
- Heart of the Maelstrom (1988)
- Bane of the Cosmic Forge (1990)
- Crusaders of the Dark Savant (1992) (Remade as Wizardry Gold in 1996)
- Wizardry 8 (2001)
The first and last three games were trilogies. Series in Japan The popularity of Wizardry in Japan led to the making of an anime OVA (direct-to-video animation), and several original console sequels, spinoffs, and ports. Most have not been released in the US. - Wizardry I (MSX, NES, Game Boy Color, WonderSwan Color, Cell phone)
- Wizardry II (MSX, NES, Game Boy Color)
- Wizardry I & II (Turbo CD)
- Wizardry III (MSX, NES, Game Boy Color)
- Wizardry III & IV (Turbo CD)
- Wizardry V (SNES, Turbo CD)
- Wizardry VI (SNES)
- Wizardry VI & VII (Saturn)
- Wizardry VII (PlayStation)
- Wizardry Gaiden (Game Boy)
- Wizardry Gaiden 2 (Game Boy)
- Wizardry Gaiden 3 (Game Boy)
- Wizardry Gaiden 4 (SNES)
- Wizardry Nemesis (Windows, SegaSaturn)
- Wizardry: Llylgamyn Saga(Windows, PlayStation, SegaSaturn)
- Wizardry: New Age of Llylgamyn (PlayStation)
- Wizardry: Dimguil (PlayStation)
- Wizardry Empire (PlayStation, Game Boy Color)
- Wizardy Empire II: Fukkatsu no Tsue (PlayStation, Game Boy Color)
- Wizardry Empire III (PlayStation 2)
- Wizardry Chronicle (Windows)
- Wizardry Summoner (Game Boy Advance)
- Wizardry: Tale of the Forsaken Land (Wizardry Busin in Japan) (PlayStation 2)
- Busin 0: Wizardry Alternative Neo (PlayStation 2)
- Wizardry Traditional (Cell Phone)
- Wizardry Traditional 2 (Cell Phone)
- Wizardry Xth (PlayStation 2)
Legacy Wizardry inspired many clones and served as a template for computer RPG games. Some notable series that trace their look and feel to Wizardry include The Bard's Tale and Might and Magic. Murkon's Refuge is a Wizardry clone played on the Internet via a web browser. External links
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