The company later announced that the game would be discontinued. Delayed by legal issues and then a corporate buy-out of Last Unicorn by Wizards of the Coast, a "Limited Edition" run of 3000 copies of a core rule-book was initially published, pending Wizards of the Coast's conversion of the game to its d20 role-playing game system and a subsequent wider release. Afterwards, the Frank Herbert estate offered to renegotiate the license but they wanted much larger fees from Wizards than they had received from LUG thus Wizards lost the Dune license, and a d20 Dune book that the Last Unicorn team was working on was subsequently shelved. Most of these copies were made available at Gen Con 33 and other overseas conventions, but the limited print run was not enough to satisfy the demand. One of these games was the Icon system-based Dune: Chronicles of the Imperium (2000), which they published in a limited released of just 3,000 copies. When Wizards of the Coast acquired LUG, they agreed as part of the deal to release LUG's remaining projects. LUG finished work on a Dune role-playing game, but the game was not printed due to legal disputes over the Herbert license. Dune: Chronicles of the Imperium is a role-playing game published by Last Unicorn Games in 2000.īrian Herbert entered into negotiations with Last Unicorn Games (LUG) that got LUG a 1996 license to the Dune novels, and they soon completed the design of their Dune Collectible Card Game (1997), which was developed and published by Five Rings Publishing Group.
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