Denis Beauvais - Van Richten’s Guide to Vampires, 1991
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Art by Denis Beauvais for Dragon Magazine, Dec 1985
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Dragon 143 (March, 1989). “Firepower,” by Denis Beauvais. I mean, goddamn, look at all that detail. That palette of dusky purples with neon green highlights is pretty chef’s kiss
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Isaac Asimov's Vampires, paperback cover by Denis Beauvais, 1996
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Dragon Magazine #104 Cover Art by Denis Beauvais
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Lt. Ellen Ripley by Denis Beauvais.
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Dragon 169 (May, 1991). Cover by Den Beauvais. A much more serious dragon take. Really dynamic, but I have a hard time parsing what is going on with that old fellow.
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Denis Beauvais, 'The Conflict', ''The Art of Dragon Magazine'', 1988
’On the cover — In The Conflict by Denis Beauvais, two dragons are locked in a struggle that mirrors the essential fantasy element of Good vs. Evil. This illustration appeared on the cover of DRAGON Magazine #111, first issue of the second ten years of the fantasy magazine.”
Source
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436. Various Authors - Dragon #104 (December 1985)
With a pretty good cover by Denis Beauvais, this issue has a module for the Marvel Superheroes TTRPG as the centrepiece, this does not, however, mean that there isn't enough content to keep D&D fans happy, it has a lot of that.
This is a particularly good issue if you are into rogues as it has a whole three article section on that class, with two articles by John C. Bunnell covering some aspects of the roleplaying side of things, such as reasons for robbing and how certain racial features interact with the act of thieving, and one article on helping DMs deal with pickpocketing with some variant rules.
Other articles include a long review of the Oriental Adventures book (#433 in our listing) that had just come out as well as a page-long review of Red Arrow, Black Shield (#434), another recent module which mixed roleplaying and wargaming. Articles also cover psionics and specializations, while lore-god Ed Greenwood brings us the ecology of the Ochre Jelly as described by Elminster.
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Aliens by Denis Beauvais, 1990
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