I want to share a few books with you today. Not reviews, but I do want to talk about them.
Most everyone reading this blog likely knows about this book.
The Grimtooth Traps books were not official AD&D books, but nearly everyone back in my gaming groups in the 1980s had one or access to one.
These next two are less well-known.
They are the Game Master's Book of Random Encounters. The large hardcover (brown) we got my son for Christmas from Amazon. The smaller green "magazine" style one I bought last week. At a grocery store in South Carolina.
All three books share the same origins and goals. They are third-party products designed for "any RPG" but obviously for their respective current editions of *D&D. They fill a niche market of DM's tools, so a small number of people will buy these.
The biggest differences?
For the Traps Too book, my then-DM and I had to drive to Springfield, IL, to get it. It was 35 miles away, and then we had to go to a store downtown (Black's Hardware) because our regular D&D stores (Waldenbooks and B. Dalton's) didn't carry this.
I found the magazine Gamemaster's Book of Random Encounters in the periodical rack in the checkout line at a grocery store next to copies of People, Us, and whatever holiday cookbook magazine America's Test Kitchen was selling.
This is just one more example of how ubiquitous RPGs are getting.
Hell, even at my sister's funeral people from a side of my family I barely know were talking about how great Baldur's Gate 3 is. (Spoilers. It is great.)
Sometimes, it is easy to forget how great we have it now. Sometimes it is easy to forget how scarce or rare things used to be.
We are really in a Golden Age of RPGs now and sometimes it is nice to sit back and soak it all in.
3 comments:
I can't say I've seen anything like that but I rarely even look at magazine racks in grocery stores. It makes me think they should try selling comic books in regular stores more.
You have way better grocery stores than I do.
I believe I have all the Grimtooth books. Humor in RPGs seems to be a lost art.
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