This was my first fighting fantasy book I ever bought and played, must have been 1983 when UK schools had those 'book club' posters outside English classrooms an this book was featured as one of the books on the poster and you pre-ordered and paid for the book and then received it on release date at school; I was shocked how good it was and got hooked.
Odd how the first ones tend to be the best e.g. Citadel of Chaos, Deathtrap Dungeon, City of Thieves etc. Forrest of Doom was one of the first ones and was excellent.
@@davedogge2280 I’ve read the majority of them. I think City of Thieves and Deathtrap Dungeon were when Ian Livingstone had learnt from the first few books enough to really untap the potential in game books. They combine narrative with great challenge to tell fun stories. There are some others late in the series which are great too, but those are two of the best.
Same here, my very first FF book!
Clannad! Yeeeaaah
Oooh! How professional! Impressive.
This was my first fighting fantasy book I ever bought and played, must have been 1983 when UK schools had those 'book club' posters outside English classrooms an this book was featured as one of the books on the poster and you pre-ordered and paid for the book and then received it on release date at school; I was shocked how good it was and got hooked.
This was my favourite back in the day.
Looking forward to playing along!
City of Thieves and Deathtrap Dungeon. 😍😍😍
Odd how the first ones tend to be the best e.g. Citadel of Chaos, Deathtrap Dungeon, City of Thieves etc. Forrest of Doom was one of the first ones and was excellent.
@@davedogge2280 I’ve read the majority of them. I think City of Thieves and Deathtrap Dungeon were when Ian Livingstone had learnt from the first few books enough to really untap the potential in game books.
They combine narrative with great challenge to tell fun stories. There are some others late in the series which are great too, but those are two of the best.