Cereal Tree: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Magical Tree with Lucky Leprechaun.jpg|thumb|Cereal Tree manifesting itself | [[File:Magical Tree with Lucky Leprechaun.jpg|thumb|Cereal Tree manifesting itself as the Lucky Charms leprechaun.]]A '''''cereal tree''''' is any of various types of trees which generate [[transdimensional corporations]] to deter pests, to attract mates, and to conceal hoards of gold, silver, electrum, gems and jewels, and (if your party is worthy) a magical spoon with +1 saving throw against hurting your mouth when eating Cap' Crunch cereal. | ||
== In the News == | == In the News == |
Revision as of 04:42, 1 March 2021
A cereal tree is any of various types of trees which generate transdimensional corporations to deter pests, to attract mates, and to conceal hoards of gold, silver, electrum, gems and jewels, and (if your party is worthy) a magical spoon with +1 saving throw against hurting your mouth when eating Cap' Crunch cereal.
In the News
The Thing head and beholder theory posits that the walking Thing head from John Carpenter's film The Thing is a juvenile form of the Beholder from Dungeons & Dragons.
1960: Nikolay Basov publishes guide to Fantasy Voronoi diagrams, which will influence a generation of Dungeons & Dragons players.
Squad of polyhedral dice ready to play some Dungeons & Dragons.
Fiction cross-reference
- Food alignment matrix
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- The Gnomon Chronicles Game
- Thing head and beholder theory - posits that the walking Thing head from John Carpenter's film The Thing is a juvenile form of the Beholder from Dungeons & Dragons
- Scrimshaw abuse - falsely correlated with Dungeons & Dragons during the "Satanic scrimshaw" mania of the late 1970s and early 1980s.
- The Spirit of Storytelling
Nonfiction cross-reference
- Bag of holding (nonfiction)
- Dice (nonfiction)
- Gelatinous cube (nonfiction)
- Polyhedral dice (nonfiction)
- Saving Throw (game) (nonfiction)
External links
- [ Post] @ Twitter
- Dungeons & Dragons @ Wikipedia