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Dungeons and Dragons Warriors of the Eternal Sun – Genesis Game

Original price was: $83.00.Current price is: $59.97.

-28%
(40 customer reviews)

Available on backorder

only 10 left in stock

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  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
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Available on backorder

only 10 left in stock

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
Dungeons and Dragons Warriors of the Eternal Sun Sega Genesis Game cartridge Cleaned, Tested, and Guaranteed to work!

PRODUCT DETAILS
Condition:Used
Platform:Sega Genesis
Region:NTSC (N. America)
SKU:GEN_DUNGEONS_DRAGONS_WARRIORS_ETERNAL_SUN

———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.

Additional information

Weight 8 lbs
Condition

Used

Product Type

Platform

Sega Genesis

ESRB Rating

Everyone 10+

Players

1

Genre

Fighting

40 reviews for Dungeons and Dragons Warriors of the Eternal Sun – Genesis Game

  1. PJMA

    An excellent read! The author created an atmosphere of fright and unease that held my attention from beginning to end.Without giving anything away I would recommend this book to anyone in the mood for reading something different.I give it 4 stars!

  2. Renee

    Clay and Amanda and their children Archie and Rose are leaving Brooklyn, headed to their rental home on Long Island for a much-needed vacation. The cell phone service is spotty and their GPS stops working, but they are prepared with written directions. They have rented a beautiful house, secluded in the woods with seemingly no neighbors for miles.They enjoy the quiet, the pool, and a day trip to the ocean, the adults satiated and the children slightly bored. It is only their second night, but it looks like it will be a successful trip. Then there is a knock at the door, and Amanda is fearful knowing they are truly alone in this house. It could be robbers, rapists, or murderers, but Clay opens the door believing someone is lost or in trouble. An elderly couple, G.H, and Ruth are standing on the doorstep. They state that they are the owners of this house and a blackout in the city caused them to flee to the safety of their second home. Should Clay and Amanda trust what they say? Could they be lying about the blackout and their claim to the house? This may seem like the strangest thing that will happen to this family, but things are about to get much worse. Partial emergency broadcast notifications before the cable goes out, a deal landline, strange animal behavior, and an unbearable noise are just a few of the things they will have to navigate. Two families from two different worlds, separated by race and class and preconceived notions will have to decide who they were, who the.

  3. kathleen g

    Amanda and Clay, along with their teen children Archie and Rose, are happily enjoying the house they’ve rented in the Hamptons. She’s filled the fridge, the adults have had sex, everyone’s gone to the beach. Then, on their third night, there’s a knock at the door. Ruth and GH, who own the house, have come from NYC- fleeing a blackout. It’s an uncomfortable situation for everyone but they eventually buckle in until odd things happen – a large group of deer, a flock of flamingos, and worst of all- a loud loud noise. Much has been made about the fact that one couple is black and the other white. What resonates more is the incredible level of privilege for all of them. The writing is meant to be amusing and there are several times where there are lists, such as at the grocery store and in GH’s supply closets, but occasionally, such as the reference to car salesmen in Men’s Warehouse pants, it grates. Alam does a nice job of ramping up the tension and the reader might feel this veers from thriller to horror story. Thanks to the publisher for the ARC. A good read that has a lot for you to chew on.

  4. dctphoto

    Best fiction I’ve read this year.

  5. Bchack

    I became aware of this book via an L.A. Times book review and ordered it for it’s sci fi feel. An easy read that took me about 5 hours total. I don’t have issue with third person narration but at times I had to reread to understand who was expressing their thoughts. Thoughts that could run on and on in a disjointed manner.This short novel is highly relevant today as it explores society’s ills regarding class. culture, distrust and division, and most notably our fears of what’s to come in the future. The Amandas and Clays of the world represent upper middle class white couples who have been content to care only about their little bubble of life until they are confronted with a sudden thrust into a cataclysmic world. A world they are forced to share with a wealthier elderly black couple who happen to own the vacation rental they are occupying. At every turn they are confronted with protective maternal instincts, survivalist independence versus dependence, to racial and class biases and stereotypes. You have to ask yourself all throughout the story, what would I do? How magnanimous would I be? Is their safety in numbers? How ugly can this get?This short novel doesn’t define the actual disaster itself yet readers are given many nuggets of information that they can conclude their own personal theory. More importantly, this story delves into human reactions during unexplainable events that flow from a major blackout on the East coast. It highlights different human reactions. espe.

  6. Laura

    This book was unique and chilling. The real terrifying thing about the book is that what really happened is unknown and what the future holds is also unknown, even though it is certainly not going to be pleasant. I don’t think I’ve ever read a book like this. It makes you feel completely helpless and on edge, knowing that things will never be the same, but not even sure why things changed. Listening to it on audio was especially entertaining. The book is very well written and imaginative, and truly like nothing I have ever read before.

  7. Soldier Girl

    Other than incomplete sentences, the book is descriptive and well-written. The story hooked me but was a diappointment at the end. I feel the author owes readers another two chapters to wrap up the story. It’s rude to leave readers hanging after gaining their interest. I’ve read several books lately that just stop instead of ending. Is this a new trend or do authors just write themselves into a situation that cannot be explained. Maybe the authors get bored with writing? Read at your own risk.

  8. Linda McCutcheon

    There are many days this past year that I wanted to close my eyes and be in another place and time. Leave The World Behind by Rumaan Alam really hits home with its multi layered story from prejudice to paranoia.Clay and Amanda and their two kids are an almost upper middle class family living the American dream. They treat themselves to a week on Long Island and rent an isolated vacation home. All seems normal and mundane until in the middle of the night there is a knock on the door. An older black couple, G. H. and Ruth, claim they are the owners and have left Manhattan because there is a blackout and they couldn’t get to their high rise apartment. Are they who they say they are? Can they trust them? Are they safe? Is the power loss just New York? Just the U.S.? Is the world ending?This book is my first by the author and I am excited to read his other work. The beginning is a slow burn. The narrator lets us see how typical the lives of these people are from their shopping list to their kids’ obsession with their phones. Slowly the narrative turns as we see their fear of this unknown couple, then the pace quickens as they are cut off from outside communication. The narrator gives us glimpses of what is going on but not enough that I ever felt anyone was safe.This book is a bit horror, a bit thriller but mostly gut wrenching suspense. The ending is a bit open ended and I wanted more detail but that is me. If you are feeling isolated or paranoid with the world right now this st.

  9. B. Cerio

    ⁣Thank you to NetGalley for the advanced copyWow! This book was so hard to put down! I’m honestly still a little upset that I reached the end and realized that there isn’t any more. I would have gladly read 100 or 200 pages more to find out what happens next.I loved the author’s writing, from her detailed character descriptions to hinting at the horrors lurking behind the scenes. I felt like I was eavesdropping on conversations; each of the characters and their actions felt real. I could see myself acting like Amanda at times, for example. I shivered with anticipation each time a strange event occurred or was mentioned, and imagined it happening in real time and how I would react. ⁣This is certainly an eerily timely book, what with the events of the world happening and how some are choosing to react to it. Do you prepare, or do you carry on as normal? What makes this book heightened in tension is not only the not knowing the true cause of the events outside, but the loss of the access to 24/7 news and information, and how both families choose to forge ahead with little information, each one believing they are in the right. It proposes a great discussion point: if you were in the same situation, would you choose to stay and wait it out, or would you leave and seek help elsewhere? ⁣

  10. Kristi

    Amanda and Clay are vacationing in Long Island with their two teenage children, it’s a beautiful rented home, remote and isolated; a perfect escape from their normally busy lives in NYC. When the owners of the home, G.H. and Ruth arrive one night to tell them there’s a black-out in the city, and want to stay in their own home to ride it out, both couples learn there’s more to others than meets the eye.LtWB is one of the most suspenseful engrossing audiobooks I’ve listened to this year. The feeling of impending doom is insidious and sinister, almost a character within itself. To me, it’s strangely reminiscent of an M. Night movie because while there is a vivid picture playing out in my mind, there’s still so much left to the imagination. This is what I liked the most, that Alam painted such an eerie portrait of potential doom so beautifully that the strong pervasive feeling stayed with me long after I finished.LtWB is strongly character driven, all of them flawed to some extent but none so much as Amanda- in my mind, at least. Alam exposed racial prejudice, class and privilege, even interspersing some interesting prose with humor but at its core, it focuses on basic human nature in the face of crisis.Marin Ireland is the narrator and a joy to listen to, she has a beautiful voice and lovely cadence, moving seamlessly between characters.

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