Midhir

Midhir is a fantasy play-by-mail (PBM) role-playing game. It was initially hand-moderated, with a later version shifting to mixed moderation (computer and hand). It was published by Timewyrm and WORG PBM in the United Kingdom. Players ruled kingdoms in the game, with various factors of gameplay including combat, politics, diplomacy, intrigue, economics, and religion. The game received some strong reviews in gaming magazines of the 1990s.

History and development
Midhir was hand moderated. In 1996, Timewyrm (UK) released a version called Cities of Olynthus. Also in 1996, Midhir: Realms of Israa, was available as a mixed-moderated game. By 1997, WORG PBM (UK) was also publishing the game.

Gameplay
Midhir was a fantasy role-playing PBM game, "vaguely Viking/Celtic in flavour" according to reviewer Martin J. Dougherty. Players acted as a ruler over a kingdom. Combat, politics, diplomacy, intrigue, economics, and religion were all factors of gameplay.

Reception
In the September 1997 issue of Games Without Frontiers, Ken Spencer stated that Midhir was "probably the best PBM game ever conceived". Martin Dougherty reviewed the game in a 1995 issue of PBMZine, stating "Midhir is the best game of its type. No, it's the best game there is." In the Flagship Summer 1995 game ratings, Midhir placed No. 11 in the Fantasy Role-Playing category, tying for first in "Value" with Land of Nevron.