Last week saw the release of the AD&D 1st Edition Core books in POD at DrivethruRPG.
Monster Manual
Players Handbook
Dungeon Masters Guide
This is a pretty big deal really. This means for the first time ever 1st Edition will remain perpetually in print.
Today even more 1st Edition goodness was released.
A1 Slave Pits of the Undercity
A3 Assault on the Aerie of the Slave Lords
H4 The Throne of Bloodstone
Soon every adventure of my "Come Endless Darkness" campaign will see print.
Looking at H4 it is only $12 for a POD version. No idea if it has the giant fold out map (I highly doubt it), but you get the PDF with it and can printout the map on multiple pages if you need.
Throne of Bloodstone has always gone for top dollar on eBay. I am not sure what this will do to the aftermarket since there are many that will want that map. I do know that in many cases when PDFs of TSR/WotC products first came up the aftermarket took a hit.
I still have have a copy of H4. I had a couple in fact adn sold one a while back for 30 bucks.
I played Throne back in the day. Soon after it came out in fact. It is a killer module and it took us all summer to complete it but it was worth it. I played it the first summer I was back from college. So in between working two jobs I tried to squeeze as much gaming in as I could.
I would love to use this as the capstone to my Come Endless Darkness game, but I need to figure out how to get the characters there.
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
Monday, January 30, 2017
Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge: Promises, Promises & RPG Blog Carnival
"You know, going on adventures sound great. Until you actually do it." Drusilla, dispossessed princess of an oppressed people.
Promises, Promises is one of those books that people have been telling me I need to read for years. It features witches, oracles, a Red Sonja-like warrior woman, and, as the cover proclaims, plenty of dykes.
But more importantly, it is a fun story with some great and memorial characters. This is L-J Baker's first foray into comedy and it's a ton of fun.
In the pages of this book she lampoons and satirizes: Star Wars, Dune, Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever, Princess Bride, Shrek, the Valdemar Books, Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit, Eragon, Narnia, every fairy tale, Buffy, Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (many times), Harry Potter, Monte Python and the Holy Grail, Conan, and of course lots, and lots of D&D.
Not all her jokes hit the mark, but there are so many you don't really care. This is not, as others have claimed. a Xanth-like novel, but the comparison is a fair one.
I honestly believe that L-J Baker had to have been (or still is) a gamer. The references are too well done and actually too lovingly well done to be anything else other than admiration. Yes she is poking fun at some long-held tropes but in such a way as only someone who has loved these tropes can.
If you love stories of adventures or games of them, then I would suggest getting this for those reasons alone. It points out some of the most ridiculous situations adventurers often find themselves in, but again does it in such a way as never to ridicule, but have light fun. The lack of proper hair care products, insect repellant, steady wages and sleeping accommodations are only the tip of the iceberg. You quickly learn that every adventuring company needs a "Ruth".
A couple of nitpicks. Sometimes the book tries to be too clever. Especially when talking about anachronistic details like flushable toilets and advanced cartography. BUT even these are meant to poke fun at modern biases you see in many fantasy books, especially ones based on game worlds.
Also, I picked up the audio-book for this and the narrator really has an odd way of pronouncing some of the words. Not sure what was going on here, but I cringed every time she would say "talons". Other words she just didn't know how to pronounce. I picked up the Kindle version too just to make sure I was not mishearing something.
All in all, though the book was extremely fun and enjoyable. There is a good story here and even a message about not having to go out to seek something that you already have.
It's no spoiler that there is a Happily-Ever-After (it's on the cover) but like all adventures, most of the fun is getting there anyway.
Thank you my internet minions for suggesting this book to me! Now go forth and find me more!
(Or...if I take the lesson from this tale, I should just go over to my tower of "To Be Read" and tackle that.)
2017 Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge
Books Read so far: 4
Level: Initiate
Witches in this book: Miss Sandra Sybil Blunt, first rate wooer of women, but only a third rate witch.
Are they Good Witches or Bad Witches: Sandy is good. She doesn't always know that.
Best RPG to Emulate it: So easy. This book SCREAMS "Play me in Pathfinder!"
Use in WotWQ: Given all the cameos of so many fantasy characters in this book Sandy, Ruth, Dru, Mavis and Bob will have to make a guest appearance in my adventures someday. Dru will have to say something appropriately anachronistic.
The Problem With Oracles
Consequently, this book also ties in nicely with this month's RPG Blog Carnival, Prophecies & Omens. It really illustrates how and why Oracles, Omens, and Prophecies are such a pain in the ass (and often very fun to use).
In "Promises, Promises" we get two oracles of a sort. The first is "The Infallible Oracle of Ring" that has stated that Drusilla, dispossessed princess of an oppressed people, will go on many adventures with the Great Obtuse Mage, and survive to get her kingdom back. This is great since it gives Dru plenty of motivation to go on this otherwise ridiculous adventure, sadly everyone else thinks she is insane.
The second oracle is the previously mentioned Obtuse Mage, also known as Sandy Blunt herself.
She is the one that gets everyone in trouble. She tries to hit on a princess in disguise (another princess) and commits the capital offense of Prophesizing to one of Royal Blood. She has a year and day to make all her alcohol and lust-fueled boasts come true.
"Promises, Promises" plays on the setup of prophecies in fantasy fiction quite well. Several others are mentioned such as various farm-boy turned chosen ones (read Star Wars, Dune, Eragon and Harry Potter). Dru will often throw herself right into danger because of the Infallible Oracle of Ring.
While fun for a book, even a book based more or less on RPGs, it is a bit harder to pull this off for RPGs in play. So if I was the DM and I had a party that included a witch, a princess, a warrior woman, a clueless paladin, an ogre druid and a highly resourceful shop girl (first I guess I'd question what the hell was I playing) I would not let my princess jump feet first into the deepest part of the ocean because the Oracle said she would get her crown back.
Prophecies have to be vague, Omens have to be hard to read. The Prophecy in Harry Potter, for example, was vague enough to mean Harry or Neville. Or in the case of Anakin his "bringing balance back to the force" meant killing every Jedi until there were only two Jedi and two Sith left.
In my own games, I had set up a situation where a child was going to be born who would essentially become the "Messiah of Witches". This was during my "Willow & Tara" game in Season 2, "Season of the Witch". Season 3, "Generation Hex", would fast forward a bit (the child was born in 2005) to deal with the children born then in high school now. One of those characters was going to be this new power in the world. I didn't know who yet, I wanted to keep that much vague even from me, but I knew it was going to be one of them.
What I could not foresee (though it should have been obvious) was my Season 2 taking forever, so much that the game's future became the real-world's past and Season 3 never getting started.
Who was going to be the new Witch Messiah? No one knows now.
So here is my advice for Prophecies and Omens in your games:
1. Keep them Vague
Just like the prophecies of Nostradamus are ret-conned to mean or justify anything today, keep your's vague so they might mean anything at all.
2. Have the Players Give them Meaning
Let your player decide what the prophecies mean for their characters. Along with being vauge, this gives you an "out". Plus they might come up with something much more interesting than you did and they will find ways to make it come true.
3. Use them Sparingly
Omens, Prophecies and the like have more punch when they are a rare thing. No considers the weather app on your smart-phone to be magical, but it has a far better success rate than what Nostradamus has said. Part of that reason is well, science, but also I can get a weather report anytime I want one. Back in the early days of the internet (the 80s) I was dumbfounded when I logged in and could get a real-time weather map. Why? Because it was rare and new.
Prophecies can be a lot of fun. Or like for the poor Obtuse Mage and 3rd rate witch Sany Blunt, they can be a real pain in the ass!
Promises, Promises is one of those books that people have been telling me I need to read for years. It features witches, oracles, a Red Sonja-like warrior woman, and, as the cover proclaims, plenty of dykes.
But more importantly, it is a fun story with some great and memorial characters. This is L-J Baker's first foray into comedy and it's a ton of fun.
In the pages of this book she lampoons and satirizes: Star Wars, Dune, Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever, Princess Bride, Shrek, the Valdemar Books, Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit, Eragon, Narnia, every fairy tale, Buffy, Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (many times), Harry Potter, Monte Python and the Holy Grail, Conan, and of course lots, and lots of D&D.
Not all her jokes hit the mark, but there are so many you don't really care. This is not, as others have claimed. a Xanth-like novel, but the comparison is a fair one.
I honestly believe that L-J Baker had to have been (or still is) a gamer. The references are too well done and actually too lovingly well done to be anything else other than admiration. Yes she is poking fun at some long-held tropes but in such a way as only someone who has loved these tropes can.
If you love stories of adventures or games of them, then I would suggest getting this for those reasons alone. It points out some of the most ridiculous situations adventurers often find themselves in, but again does it in such a way as never to ridicule, but have light fun. The lack of proper hair care products, insect repellant, steady wages and sleeping accommodations are only the tip of the iceberg. You quickly learn that every adventuring company needs a "Ruth".
A couple of nitpicks. Sometimes the book tries to be too clever. Especially when talking about anachronistic details like flushable toilets and advanced cartography. BUT even these are meant to poke fun at modern biases you see in many fantasy books, especially ones based on game worlds.
Also, I picked up the audio-book for this and the narrator really has an odd way of pronouncing some of the words. Not sure what was going on here, but I cringed every time she would say "talons". Other words she just didn't know how to pronounce. I picked up the Kindle version too just to make sure I was not mishearing something.
All in all, though the book was extremely fun and enjoyable. There is a good story here and even a message about not having to go out to seek something that you already have.
It's no spoiler that there is a Happily-Ever-After (it's on the cover) but like all adventures, most of the fun is getting there anyway.
Thank you my internet minions for suggesting this book to me! Now go forth and find me more!
(Or...if I take the lesson from this tale, I should just go over to my tower of "To Be Read" and tackle that.)
2017 Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge
Books Read so far: 4
Level: Initiate
Witches in this book: Miss Sandra Sybil Blunt, first rate wooer of women, but only a third rate witch.
Are they Good Witches or Bad Witches: Sandy is good. She doesn't always know that.
Best RPG to Emulate it: So easy. This book SCREAMS "Play me in Pathfinder!"
Use in WotWQ: Given all the cameos of so many fantasy characters in this book Sandy, Ruth, Dru, Mavis and Bob will have to make a guest appearance in my adventures someday. Dru will have to say something appropriately anachronistic.
The Problem With Oracles
Consequently, this book also ties in nicely with this month's RPG Blog Carnival, Prophecies & Omens. It really illustrates how and why Oracles, Omens, and Prophecies are such a pain in the ass (and often very fun to use).
In "Promises, Promises" we get two oracles of a sort. The first is "The Infallible Oracle of Ring" that has stated that Drusilla, dispossessed princess of an oppressed people, will go on many adventures with the Great Obtuse Mage, and survive to get her kingdom back. This is great since it gives Dru plenty of motivation to go on this otherwise ridiculous adventure, sadly everyone else thinks she is insane.
The second oracle is the previously mentioned Obtuse Mage, also known as Sandy Blunt herself.
She is the one that gets everyone in trouble. She tries to hit on a princess in disguise (another princess) and commits the capital offense of Prophesizing to one of Royal Blood. She has a year and day to make all her alcohol and lust-fueled boasts come true.
"Promises, Promises" plays on the setup of prophecies in fantasy fiction quite well. Several others are mentioned such as various farm-boy turned chosen ones (read Star Wars, Dune, Eragon and Harry Potter). Dru will often throw herself right into danger because of the Infallible Oracle of Ring.
While fun for a book, even a book based more or less on RPGs, it is a bit harder to pull this off for RPGs in play. So if I was the DM and I had a party that included a witch, a princess, a warrior woman, a clueless paladin, an ogre druid and a highly resourceful shop girl (first I guess I'd question what the hell was I playing) I would not let my princess jump feet first into the deepest part of the ocean because the Oracle said she would get her crown back.
Prophecies have to be vague, Omens have to be hard to read. The Prophecy in Harry Potter, for example, was vague enough to mean Harry or Neville. Or in the case of Anakin his "bringing balance back to the force" meant killing every Jedi until there were only two Jedi and two Sith left.
In my own games, I had set up a situation where a child was going to be born who would essentially become the "Messiah of Witches". This was during my "Willow & Tara" game in Season 2, "Season of the Witch". Season 3, "Generation Hex", would fast forward a bit (the child was born in 2005) to deal with the children born then in high school now. One of those characters was going to be this new power in the world. I didn't know who yet, I wanted to keep that much vague even from me, but I knew it was going to be one of them.
What I could not foresee (though it should have been obvious) was my Season 2 taking forever, so much that the game's future became the real-world's past and Season 3 never getting started.
Who was going to be the new Witch Messiah? No one knows now.
So here is my advice for Prophecies and Omens in your games:
1. Keep them Vague
Just like the prophecies of Nostradamus are ret-conned to mean or justify anything today, keep your's vague so they might mean anything at all.
2. Have the Players Give them Meaning
Let your player decide what the prophecies mean for their characters. Along with being vauge, this gives you an "out". Plus they might come up with something much more interesting than you did and they will find ways to make it come true.
3. Use them Sparingly
Omens, Prophecies and the like have more punch when they are a rare thing. No considers the weather app on your smart-phone to be magical, but it has a far better success rate than what Nostradamus has said. Part of that reason is well, science, but also I can get a weather report anytime I want one. Back in the early days of the internet (the 80s) I was dumbfounded when I logged in and could get a real-time weather map. Why? Because it was rare and new.
Prophecies can be a lot of fun. Or like for the poor Obtuse Mage and 3rd rate witch Sany Blunt, they can be a real pain in the ass!
Sunday, January 29, 2017
Lazy Sunday Image Dump
Not much happing today. That is good. So here are some things that have attracted my attention.
My son has been playing Skyrim since it came out. Well I guess they have a bunch of mods out for it now on the Xbox so he has been playing more. I told him when I could get a witch hat to let me know. It came out near the start of the year so this is the character he helped me make. The "Elder Scrolls" version of Larina.
Not really the most appropriate adventure gear really. This is the "Witch Armor". The tattoos are actually the armor. I have to admit I like the colors and really dig the pentagrams. The feathers on the cloak are a nice touch as well.
This image appeared on my Tumblr feed.
It reminded me I need to do more with my own Astra, the superhero known as "Justice".
After all, she really could be called the Girl of the Future considering her dad is the "Man of Tomorrow". The history of this character though is something of a mystery. You can read the details here, http://eroticmadscience.com/2017/01/09/tumblr-favorite-2717-the-big-brain-am-winning-again/
I should get my supers game going some more to get Justice some more game time.
My son has been playing Skyrim since it came out. Well I guess they have a bunch of mods out for it now on the Xbox so he has been playing more. I told him when I could get a witch hat to let me know. It came out near the start of the year so this is the character he helped me make. The "Elder Scrolls" version of Larina.
Not really the most appropriate adventure gear really. This is the "Witch Armor". The tattoos are actually the armor. I have to admit I like the colors and really dig the pentagrams. The feathers on the cloak are a nice touch as well.
This image appeared on my Tumblr feed.
It reminded me I need to do more with my own Astra, the superhero known as "Justice".
After all, she really could be called the Girl of the Future considering her dad is the "Man of Tomorrow". The history of this character though is something of a mystery. You can read the details here, http://eroticmadscience.com/2017/01/09/tumblr-favorite-2717-the-big-brain-am-winning-again/
I should get my supers game going some more to get Justice some more game time.
Friday, January 27, 2017
Kickstart Your Weekend: Team Synergy & London Gothic
I have a couple of really fun ones for you today!
First up is a Superhero team of cousins called Team Synergy.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hbcomics/team-synergy-vol-1-spellbound
From their Press Release:
Personally, I think it looks awesome and I love finding Kickstarters like this. For me this why Kickstarter was created; to help out independent creators get their creation out to you.
Switching from comic fun to the dark streets of Victorian London.
A London Gothic
Dark Tales of Vampires, Witches, & Demons on the Streets of Victorian London!
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/415194828/a-london-gothic
As I mentioned to the author, Paul Voodindi, "Vampires, Witches, Demons, London of the Victorian age? Sounds like my Christmas list!"
From the press release for this:
See, sounds like a blast.
First up is a Superhero team of cousins called Team Synergy.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hbcomics/team-synergy-vol-1-spellbound
From their Press Release:
“Team Synergy” Kickstarter Promises New Heroes For Young GirlsThe heroes include team leader Awesome Girl, cheerleader turned superhero Hot Pink, introvert and skeptic punk (and destined to be a new fave here at the Other Side) Scatterbrain, shrinker and anime fan GlitterBug, and finally the hyper social butterfly Pinball. Love these names. I could see these characters EASY in an Icons game.
HBComics' super-hero comic on kickstarter is“For every young girl who never had a hero of her own”
HBComics, a boston based indie comic publisher, has launched a kickstarter campagin for “Team Synergy,” a comic about a super-team of teenage girls, aimed at getting young female readers interested in super heroes.
According to the creators, the book was very much inspired by their own daughters and nieces.
“This book is so important to be, because I have two young girls...we have a lot of girls in our family.” said Chris Hebert, in the campaign's video. “(The young girls at comic conventions) would light up when they saw the book. One girl was literally jumping up and down hugging it. She was so excited there was a book just for her.”
The description of the comic on the kickstarter reads: "Five Teenage Girls. All cousins. All super-powered. Trained by their great grandmother, the original super heroine, to be the next generation of heroes. For every young girl who never had a super hero of their own to look up to, this is TEAM SYNERGY!” The book is written by Alan Hebert (Writer of Lazerman) and has art by Scott Shiver (Fem Force) and colors by Chris Hebert.
The kickstarter is running until February 24th, and can be found here: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hbcomics/team-synergy-vol-1-spellbound
About HBComics™: HBComics™ is an independent comic book publisher, founded by two brothers from Boston. More information on the company, or the titles being produced, can be found at www.hbcomics.com
####
If you'd like more information about this topic, or to schedule an interview, please call Chris Hebert at 781-588-9867 or e-mail info@hbcomics.com
Personally, I think it looks awesome and I love finding Kickstarters like this. For me this why Kickstarter was created; to help out independent creators get their creation out to you.
Switching from comic fun to the dark streets of Victorian London.
A London Gothic
Dark Tales of Vampires, Witches, & Demons on the Streets of Victorian London!
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/415194828/a-london-gothic
As I mentioned to the author, Paul Voodindi, "Vampires, Witches, Demons, London of the Victorian age? Sounds like my Christmas list!"
From the press release for this:
Paul Voodini welcomes you to the dark and Gothic London of an alternative 1888. A dark and Gothic London where the shadow of Jack the Ripper still hangs over the streets of the East End like a malignant memory, fresh in the mind and with the power still to terrify. It is barely a month since Saucy Jack claimed the life of Mary Jane Kelly, yet, as our heroine Little Nell Trent is about to find out, there are more horrors than just old Jack lurking in the grim backstreets of Whitechapel.
Attacked on her own doorstep by a vampire girl, 18 year old Nell is herself transformed, joining the ranks of the East End vampires, known by the human residents as Tooth Fairies, and is plunged into a world of blood, lust, and dark wonder.
Captured by a human gang and forced into servitude, Nell befriends her one-time assailant Sally, the girl who originally turned her from mortal to vampire, and over the Christmas period of 1888, Sally protects her protégé as best she can, and every night recounts to her a Gothic tale from the dark underbelly of London.
“I had so many stories to tell,” explains Paul, “that I didn't know which one to focus on. So then I thought, why not write them all?!”
Inspired by the classic '1001 Arabian Nights', in which a wife successfully manages to stave off her execution by reciting a tale each night to her king husband, 'A London Gothic' features a series of short stories intertwined within the main narrative. And so, amongst others, we hear of Mary Shelley, who in this reality is a witch intent on raising back to life her dead friend, Amanda Frankenstein; Tiny Tim, the vampire boy, who prophecy tells will lead the vampire girls of London's East End out of the shadows and into the glittering heart of the British capital; and the poor, young funeral worker who on Christmas Eve is possessed by the unquiet spirit of Jacob Marley.
“Yes, these are tales of horror and melodrama,” says Paul, “but they are also tales of love and of loss, and although the anti-heroes of my stories are all creatures of the night, the stories they tell are of being cast adrift in a world that shuns them. I think that's a story that we can all, on one level or another, identify with.”
Find 'A London Gothic' on Kickstarter here: http://kck.st/2kwaq9b
See, sounds like a blast.
Thursday, January 26, 2017
More Hero Forge Minis
Got home Monday night to a really nice surprise. My next batch of Hero Forge minis had arrived.
I opted for the new "Premium Plastic" figures this time. They were more expensive (which is why it's been two years since I ordered any) but they are really sturdy and nicely detailed. I picked up two new witches and my son got three for the first time. Two assassins and a dragonborn paladin.
This shot is a bit dark, but this is Skylla and my iconic witch Taryn.
This is Taryn in the premium plastic next to her mother Larina in the nylon plastic (used to be called "strong plastic").
The detail for the premium plastic is night and day difference.
Here is my attempt to make a 28 mm Skylla. Not 100% the same but good enough!
The minis really render nicely from the software.
Once again, just need to get them painted.
My son noticed that these mins are much sturdier than what we get from Wizkids (D&D 5 and Pathfinder) now. Also if you put a texture on the base they are even sturdier still.
Now I just need to find someone who can paint them for me.
I opted for the new "Premium Plastic" figures this time. They were more expensive (which is why it's been two years since I ordered any) but they are really sturdy and nicely detailed. I picked up two new witches and my son got three for the first time. Two assassins and a dragonborn paladin.
This shot is a bit dark, but this is Skylla and my iconic witch Taryn.
This is Taryn in the premium plastic next to her mother Larina in the nylon plastic (used to be called "strong plastic").
The detail for the premium plastic is night and day difference.
Here is my attempt to make a 28 mm Skylla. Not 100% the same but good enough!
The minis really render nicely from the software.
Once again, just need to get them painted.
My son noticed that these mins are much sturdier than what we get from Wizkids (D&D 5 and Pathfinder) now. Also if you put a texture on the base they are even sturdier still.
Now I just need to find someone who can paint them for me.
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
Retro Revival Blog Challenge Week 3: Toys
Today I am joining the Retro Revival Blog Challenge. Seem like a good fit, they talk about a lot of 80s and so do I. This is Week 3 and the first one I wanted to chat about.
This week's topic is on Toys. Now the original post was about favorite toys. But instead, I want to talk about the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons toy line from LJN.
I was never a big collector of these, to be honest. I had a few figures that I thought were cool, Kalek for example, but that was about it. My brother had collected some and I bought some myself, but always said they were part of his collection. I was 13-15 at the time and was not into buying toys anymore.
So a few years back I got the whole collection given back to me by my brother with bits my youngest brother added to it. I remember buying the Ogre and the Umber Hulk. The others were new to me.
You can see all I have left of Kalek is his spellbook. Maybe I'll put that in my witch figure display in my game room. I really like the ogre and the hook horror. That hook horror looks like he walked out of my Fiend Folio and I still prefer this look to the "revised" one we get today.
Of course what my son was most psyched about is the Tiamat figure. She does not have her wings anymore, but he quickly said "she is the god of dragons, she can fly without wings if she wanted to". Plus he has been coveting my aspect of Tiamat D&D mini for a very long time. So this is a nice little prize for him.
When I first got these from my brother I thought I would not use them in my games, but recently I have used the Ogre as a proto-Orcus demon and the Troll as Vaprak the Destroyer.
In the adventure, the boys were transported back to the Dawn War where He Who Was was killed by The Destroyer (who will become Demogorgon) and Dis, the god that dies and then becomes the demon Orcus.
I am not sure if finding the other toys in this line is something I want to pursue. It would not be easy and it would not be cheap. I hit plenty of swap meets, flea markets, and second-hand-stores though that when I find one, I pick one up.
Of course, no discussion of these toys is complete without mentioning Skylla.
I have taken my obsession with this character to, well, my typical levels of obsession.
She is the evil magic-user/with from the LJN Advanced Dungeons & Dragons toyline and Basic/Expert modules. So there is a lot of reason for me to like her. So I made witch stats for her for every game I currently play.
I even made a Hero Forge mini of her to use in my games now (more on that tomorrow).
There you have it! There is a great listing and discussion of all these toys at The Toy Archive.
Check out the other posting this week at Retro Revival.
http://retroramblings.com/retro-revival-blog-challenge-week-3-toys/
http://retroramblings.com/retro-revival-blog-challenge/
This week's topic is on Toys. Now the original post was about favorite toys. But instead, I want to talk about the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons toy line from LJN.
I was never a big collector of these, to be honest. I had a few figures that I thought were cool, Kalek for example, but that was about it. My brother had collected some and I bought some myself, but always said they were part of his collection. I was 13-15 at the time and was not into buying toys anymore.
So a few years back I got the whole collection given back to me by my brother with bits my youngest brother added to it. I remember buying the Ogre and the Umber Hulk. The others were new to me.
Of course what my son was most psyched about is the Tiamat figure. She does not have her wings anymore, but he quickly said "she is the god of dragons, she can fly without wings if she wanted to". Plus he has been coveting my aspect of Tiamat D&D mini for a very long time. So this is a nice little prize for him.
When I first got these from my brother I thought I would not use them in my games, but recently I have used the Ogre as a proto-Orcus demon and the Troll as Vaprak the Destroyer.
In the adventure, the boys were transported back to the Dawn War where He Who Was was killed by The Destroyer (who will become Demogorgon) and Dis, the god that dies and then becomes the demon Orcus.
I am not sure if finding the other toys in this line is something I want to pursue. It would not be easy and it would not be cheap. I hit plenty of swap meets, flea markets, and second-hand-stores though that when I find one, I pick one up.
Of course, no discussion of these toys is complete without mentioning Skylla.
I have taken my obsession with this character to, well, my typical levels of obsession.
She is the evil magic-user/with from the LJN Advanced Dungeons & Dragons toyline and Basic/Expert modules. So there is a lot of reason for me to like her. So I made witch stats for her for every game I currently play.
- Introduction, base stats
- Spellcraft & Swordplay: Eldrtich Witchery
- Dragon Magazine Issues #5 and #20
- Astonishing Swordsmen & Sorcerers of Hyperborea
- Pathfinder
- BECMI + Glantri Gazetteer Witch
- Castles & Crusades
- Adventures Dark & Deep
- Dragon Magazine #114
- The Complete B/X Adventurer
- Dungeons & Dragons, 5th Edition
- Dungeons & Dragons, 4th Edition
- Adventurer Conqueror King & Players Companion
- Fantastic Heroes & Witchery (Occultist)
I even made a Hero Forge mini of her to use in my games now (more on that tomorrow).
There you have it! There is a great listing and discussion of all these toys at The Toy Archive.
Check out the other posting this week at Retro Revival.
http://retroramblings.com/retro-revival-blog-challenge-week-3-toys/
http://retroramblings.com/retro-revival-blog-challenge/
Tuesday, January 24, 2017
New Releases Tuesday: Black Box BECMI Supplements
The mid 90s were an odd time of gaming for me. I started out very excited about the new AD&D 2nd Edition game, moved completely over to Ravenloft and in the end had left D&D completely in favor of games like WitchCraft and Mage. Consequently, I started the 90s as a college kid and ended the 90s a house, a wife, a kid and ABD on my first Ph.D. so I saw a lot of change.
What that all adds up to is that there were a ton of D&D-related releases that I not only didn't experience or play but also never even heard of till much later. "Black-box BECMI" was one of those. Again, as I mentioned, I was into AD&D2 pretty hard and then left D&D, so BECMI was not something I paid attention too. Fast forward to the mid-late 2000s I started to discover these boxed sets. In some ways they seem so retro; a boxed set with board-game like pieces in a world edging towards glossy (and thick) hardcovers.
At a +Games Plus auction I was able to pick up these,
They are a ridiculous amount of nostalgia and I REALLY want to use them some time as the start of a pure BECMI campaign.
Well today we got two new releases in this line on DriveThruRPG, The Dragon's Den and The Goblin's Lair.
I have no idea how the scans are. The box interiors have quite a lot of pieces.
So it will be interesting to see how they scanned all of this. At $5 a piece, that is not too bad of a deal really. The "Black Box" is not available on DriveThru yet, so you will need to use the Rules Cyclopedia for these.
I don't have a campaign in mind for this at all, outside of knowing I want to use Quest for the Silver Sword as the next adventure after these. I am always a sucker for a haunted house adventure.
What that all adds up to is that there were a ton of D&D-related releases that I not only didn't experience or play but also never even heard of till much later. "Black-box BECMI" was one of those. Again, as I mentioned, I was into AD&D2 pretty hard and then left D&D, so BECMI was not something I paid attention too. Fast forward to the mid-late 2000s I started to discover these boxed sets. In some ways they seem so retro; a boxed set with board-game like pieces in a world edging towards glossy (and thick) hardcovers.
At a +Games Plus auction I was able to pick up these,
They are a ridiculous amount of nostalgia and I REALLY want to use them some time as the start of a pure BECMI campaign.
Well today we got two new releases in this line on DriveThruRPG, The Dragon's Den and The Goblin's Lair.
I have no idea how the scans are. The box interiors have quite a lot of pieces.
So it will be interesting to see how they scanned all of this. At $5 a piece, that is not too bad of a deal really. The "Black Box" is not available on DriveThru yet, so you will need to use the Rules Cyclopedia for these.
I don't have a campaign in mind for this at all, outside of knowing I want to use Quest for the Silver Sword as the next adventure after these. I am always a sucker for a haunted house adventure.
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