We have a cool cover from Carol Heyer. It features a little faerie in a faerie ring. It is an appropriate cover to our theme this issue.
Some ads for Spelljammer and a couple of TSR board games, The Hunt for Red October and Red Storm Rising. I had forgotten about those last two, to be honest.
Letters are first. We get a request for the Witch from #114. The eds remind the reader what issue it was in and no, it should not be used as a PC. Don't worry, mine was almost done at that time.
Skip Williams is up with Sage Advice. Mostly covering questions from the new Monstrous Compendiums. Ah. We get to the Demons and Devils issue in AD&D 2nd Ed. The answer they give is:
The answer, in short, is at present there are no plans to include devils, demons, and similar creatures in the AD&D 2nd Edition game. ... The demons and devils in the old MonsterAnother letter points out the error on the Vampire sheet, front and back are the same.
Manuals were a prime weapon in the campaign of misinformation directed against gaming, so they were dropped from the new edition. It's possible that demons and devils will be revised into a format that preserves their usefulness in adventure design and does not give the game's detractors cheap ammunition, but that format hasn't been found yet.
Next is our feature "Realms of the Faerie".
He had the Grugach elves introduced last week (Issue #67) now 7 years and 4 months later we get Wild in the Wood: The Point of View of the Grugach-Wild Elves by Eric Oppen. The article is actually pretty cool talking about life amongst these almost primitive elves.
Denise Lyn Voskuil is next with four new deities in The Elfin Gods. They are Araleth Letheranil, lesser god of light. Kirith Sotheril, lesser goddess of magic. Melira Taralen, lesser goddess of fine arts and finally Naris Analor, lesser god of healing, suffering, and death. All these gods made to the present day.
Up next is the article I remember the best, In the Frost and Snow by David S. Reimer, introduces the Snow Elves. I had also created a snow elf race back in the day, and there are some similarities here. All of which are due to the similar material we were drawing from. But my snow elves were smaller than regular elves, his are taller. Also, mine tended to be pale-blue. Still. A fun race that I like to use every so often.
Other Side favorite Vince Garcia is back, this time with The Folk of the Faerie Kingdom. I must-read article if you ever plan on doing anything with the Faerie realms. It is a nice long article and one I wish I could keep! A little bit of Quest of the Ancients leaks into AD&D here with the inclusion of Rhiannon the Faerie Queen goddess and his "Druids of Rhiannon". I appreciate Vince's obsessions here.
Gordon R. Menzies has The Ecology of the Satyr. It's also good stuff. Now I want to play a half-Satyr bard!
Thank You for Your Cooperation is a survey for Top Secret/S.I. game by Jon Pickens. I don't know enough of Top Secret history to know if this lead to something else.
The Game Wizards tries something new with Anne Brown, TSR previews ala gossip column. It doesn't really work for me.
Another Other Side favorite Bruce Heard is back with another episode of The Voyage of the Princess Ark. This time Part 3: To seek out new life and new civilizations. Love the maps, but the maps have always been kind of a key feature of these articles.
Didn't read the fiction. Plus this issue is really getting on my allergies.
Gamers Guide covers all the small ads. There are a few Play by Mail games and ads here too.
Marvel-Phile has a couple character I know pretty well. Captain Britain and Roma. Captain Britain is a character that I always felt would translate well into a modern Ghosts of Albion game. Roma is a Protector in all but name too.
Ah. Here are the TSR Previews. Lots of Forgotten Realms stuff. But this the Age of the Settings.
Jim Bambra reviews a few of the new Star War's games.
The Convention Calendar gives us the best cons of March and April 1990. I swear there were more back then than now.
John C. Bunnell gives us some reviews of books.
Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser cover what's new for Macs in The Role of Computers. Most Macs were still monochrome at this point. Though I thought for sure there were some color ones.
Dragonmirth has a few artists and comics I am not all that familiar with.
Through the Looking Glass is completely soaked. Eww.
So what do I have, save a huge mildew colony? Well in truth a pretty cool issue. Lots of great information on the fey and stuff I can still use today.