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Consider also the ''Fantasy Forest'' books, thinner interactive books also by TSR but meant for first time-readers. Which even had a tie-in series based on the ''WesternAnimation/DungeonsAndDragons'' TV series.

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Consider also the ''Fantasy Forest'' books, thinner interactive books also by TSR but meant for first time-readers. Which younger readers. It even had a tie-in series based on the ''WesternAnimation/DungeonsAndDragons'' TV series.
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Consider also the ''Fantasy Forest'' books, thinner interactive books also by TSR but meant for first time-readers. Which even had a tie-in series based on the ''WesternAnimation/DungeonsAndDragons'' TV series.
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The reader's character for that book is a 15th level paladin.


* ActionSurvivor: The protagonist of ''Master of Ravenloft'' is a low-level cleric who can't do much more than conjure light. In accordance with this detail, s/he '''cannot defeat the BigBad'''. The goal is to escape the castle alive [[spoiler:(ideally with the DamselInDistress)]], not to blast through everything like in a typical dungeon-crawling campaign. Fighting Ravenloft's denizens or taking stupid risks will only end in a game over.
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A related series of gamebooks, initially titled ''Super Endless Quest'' but later retitled ''Advanced Dungeons and Dragons Adventure Gamebooks'', was published from 1985 to 1988, adding a slightly more complex game system with stats and dice-rolling. A spinoff called ''Heart Quest'' tried to attract female readership by focusing on female adventurers finding romance while on their quest. Another spinoff, lasting only four books, was ''Endless Quest: Crimson Crystal Adventures'', which was mostly the same system-wise as the main books, but came with a red plastic inlay that could be used to reveal secrets hidden in some of the illustrations to help make decisions.

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A related series of gamebooks, initially titled ''Super Endless Quest'' but later retitled ''Advanced Dungeons and Dragons Adventure Gamebooks'', was published from 1985 to 1988, adding a slightly more complex game system with stats and dice-rolling. A spinoff called ''Heart Quest'' tried to attract female readership by focusing on female adventurers finding romance while on their quest. Another spinoff, lasting only four books, was ''Endless Quest: Crimson Crystal Adventures'', which was mostly the same system-wise as the main books, but came with a red plastic inlay that could be used to reveal secrets hidden in some of the illustrations to help make decisions.
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# ''Kings Quest (Endless Quest)''

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# ''Kings Quest (Endless Quest)''''Literature/KingsQuest1984''

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