
If you would like information about an open source Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance Item Generation program (coded in VB 6.0), please look at section 6.D. If you sent me anything at the old address, it was not read. My e-mail address, also at the top of the FAQ, is mcleodkw at. For most computers, use CTRL+F to bring up a dialog box that will allow you to find what you desire. There is an excellent Cheats FAQ up at (by the name of the Debug Room FAQ by Fragnarok). Major changes don't occur in other ports of the game, and thus this will also work with the similar ports (Gamecube and X-Box) EXCEPT for the new Cheats section.

This is a Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance Items Guide for the game on the Playstation 2. Introduction |= +-+ ** There are minor spoilers in this Guide ** - Hello. Copy the code of the section that you want to go to (#XXXX) - Press CTRL+F - Press CTRL+V - Press Enter Once to get to that area. It may be a little much in an Item FAQ, but I thought it would be wise to try it out. Copyright.#9(c) Sites that Have Permisson To Use This FAQ: - GameFAQs - IGN FAQs - Using the Search Feature - I have noticed that many FAQs use this format and I believe it is very efficient to find what you want. Information About Item Generation Program.#9VB6 E. Armor Locations, Notes, Quick Reference.#3DET ii. Ljubljana: Scientific Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2019.|Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance Item FAQ v3.2 | |Written by Keith McLeod | |upon 2003.12.23 | +-+ +-+ | Table of Contents | #0TOC +-+ 1. “Gifts from the Sky: Yezidi Sacred Objects and Symbols of Power, Tools of Healing and Seals of Divine Favour.” In Charms and Charming: Studies on Magic in Everyday Life, edited by Éva Pócs, 213-236. London: Nour Foundation in association with Azimuth Editions and Oxford University Press, 1997, part 1, 72–100. Yezidism : Its Background, Observances and Textual Tradition. Survival Among the Kurds: A History of Yezidis. Budapest: Eötvös Lóránd University, 1990. Amulets from the Islamic W orld: C atalogue of the E xhibition held in Budapest, in 1988.

London: Luzac and Company, 1938.ĭrower, Ethel Stefana. The Wild Rue:A Study of Muhammadan Folklore and Magic in Iran.
