
The publication of expansion sets was then split between the Europe & Australasian markets and the North American market. Released shortly in the same years was Return of the Witch Lordwhich extended the undead with more skeletons, mummies and zombies. Kellar's Keep added new quests, new items and artifacts and a further batch of monster figures (more Orcs, Goblins and Fimir). Many expansions for the game were published, starting with Kellar's Keep, released in Europe and Australasia in 1989, and The United States & Canada in 1991. The protagonists were 4 heroes ('Barbarian', 'Dwarf', 'Elf' and 'Wizard') who faced a selection of monsters: Orcs, Goblins, Fimir, Chaos Warriors, a Chaos Warlock/witch Lord (which represented many of the named characters for the various quests), a Gargoyle and a number of Undead: skeletons, zombies and mummies. The game consisted of a board and a number of individual miniatures and items.

In 1992, HeroQuest won the Origins Award for 'Best Graphic Presentation of a Boardgame of 1991'. It was released in America and Canada in 1990 in a slightly different version. The game was released in Britain, Europe and Australia around 1989. HeroQuest was created by Stephen Baker, who worked for the UK division of Milton Bradley (MB). Games Workshop worked with Milton Bradley to produce HeroQuest (1989), an adventure game where the players cooperated against a single adversarial Games Master. Several expansions were released, each adding new tiles, artifacts and monsters to the core system.
Trap quest wiki manual#
The game manual describes Zargon as a former apprentice of Mentor, and the parchment text is read aloud from Mentor's perspective. The game was loosely based around archetypes of fantasyrole-playing games: the game itself was actually a game system, allowing the gamemaster (called 'Zargon' in the United States and Canada) to create dungeons of their own design using the provided game board, tiles, furnishings and figures.

HeroQuest, sometimes written as Hero Quest, is an adventure board game created by Milton Bradley in conjunction with the British company Games Workshop.
