As for tnt novels, I have never heard of them. . . I don't know where you saw these words.
Dnd's works in the game are, of course, Dungeons and Dragons itself, as well as neverwinter nights and the Gate of Bode. In fact, online games are also using some dnd rules now. Among the novels, the foreign ones downstairs are right, and the best is the chronicle of the dragon gun. In fact, domestic novels do not deliberately pursue dnd system, but famous novels in other places, such as charming stories and boiling animal blood, all use some dnd rules more or less, especially online games.
In addition, the formulation of dnd novels is very non-mainstream, which may be just the names given to some novels by some students who like dnd, so it is meaningless to find out the representative works of novels, because no author claims to write novels with dnd rules, which is too huge (speaking of which, I remember that Kyushu series published by Science Fiction World Magazine is a very suitable representative work, but Kyushu is not an online novel. ) is terrible for an author.
Tnt explosive. . . . I really don't know where it was mentioned. I have never seen this in that novel. I know this abbreviation, one is explosives, and the other is the abbreviation of a company (it seems to be express delivery). If you remember where you saw it, you can give me a link to have a look.
That post you sent. . . Tnt on the second floor is a joke, right? Tnt (explosive) is used to describe being hit by the landlord, not a novel type.