Work has me crazy busy, but this is a good thing. The downside is I have not had the time to blog as much as I want or even get in the campaign prep in at night. So I thought I would kill two birds today and see where I am in my games.
Active Games
The Dragon Slayers
A 3.x game that was briefly 5e and now fully converted to 1st Edition AD&D. The characters were trapped in Baba Yaga's Hut for nearly a year. They freed the Old Crone and her daughter Elena the Fair. Up next the final battle. I am using the Tom Moldvay adventure Twilight Calling for this.
Next are my three interlinked 5th edition games collectively known as Come Endless Darkness. Tharizdûn is returning to the multiverse and the PCs of the three campaigns need to stop him.
The Order of the Platinum Dragon
The Order has defeated all the giants and are now wandering the Underdark looking for the Drow. The big bads here are Lolth and Graz'zt. Graz'zt is setting up Lolth much like he is described doing in Expedition to the Demonweb Pits (for 3.5e). I try to focus on classic monsters in this one.
Second Campaign
The Treasure Hunters of the Second Campaign have just entered the Forbidden City. Here the big bad is Demogorgon. Here the focus is on other creatures that might not see normal games.
Into the Netir Vale
Known by my kids as the Orcus campaign. This is my revived and converted 4e campaign brought over whole cloth. I might lessed the involvement with the Raven Queen and play up Shar since this is part of the Forgotten Realms in my house.
All three games will meet up at the Temple of Elemental Evil to battle it out with the risen Tharizdûn. So roughly 18 characters of 18th to 20th level. It's gonna be wild.
Inactive/On-hold Games
These games are all inactive for a number of reasons.
Star Trek: Voyages of the USS Protector
This game is will be using White Star with my own "Black Star" rules modifications. I have the first adventures ready to go, "The Stars Are Right" and "These Are the Voyages". I have two more nearly ready "Ghost Ship" and "Abraxas Down". I want to do two more. I have been scribbling notes on rule changes and feel like the rest I can do while the game is moving along.
What is really slowing me down is the wiring of the LED lights I want to put into my USS Protector Model!
Spirit of '76
On indefinite hold.
Hero's Journey to Middle Earth
This one is requiring some significant reading on my part. As my first REALY foray into Middle Earth as a game world I want to do it right.
Magic School
This one is on hold till I am done with Come Endless Darkness. Since this one will use D&D Rules Cyclopedia and I really want it to feel like a separate game. Plus things that happen in CED will change the world of the Magic School and I don't know what those are yet!
War of the Witch Queens
This is the higher level version of the Magic School kids. What happens here will also be determined by what the PCs do in CED. I have all the adventures for this, just not the end game.
The Incredibly Awesome (and Not At All Made-Up) Adventures of Booster Gold and Blue Beetle!
Huh...ok this one was a little bit of a joke, but I keep getting asked about it. I do have one adventure worked out that introduces the PCs to the world. Called "Damn It Barry Allen!" it sets up Booster and Blue as the true heroes of the DC world, it's just that no one can remember them.
I still have to get my new Blue Rose campaign going. I ran the first adventure, Kingdom of Rain, and it went great.
Wednesday, March 21, 2018
Monday, March 19, 2018
Weekend Gaming: On the Doorstep of the Forbidden City & Monster Monday
Worked in a couple of gaming sessions over the weekend. Only about two hours each day, but the Treasure Hunters of the Second Campaign managed to sneak into the Forbidden City. Here they had their first encounter with the evil Yuan-Ti.
Now for those of you that still belabor under the assumption that 5e is "easier" let me just say that Yuan-Ti under 5e are much deadlier and one Yuan-Ti Abomination and one Pure Blood nearly took out the entire party of seven. They are now hiding out and have no more potions of healing.
I have not even tricked out the Yuan-Ti at all. These are by-the-book deadly.
This adventure will introduce a bunch of new monsters to my players. If Order of Platinum Dragon/Come Endless Darkness game is about revisiting all the classics, this one is about the near classics. So a lot Fiend Folio and Monster Manual II monsters.
I also considering having there be a lot more involvement by Demogorgon. To that end, I am going to re-import some of my ideas from the time I used Demogorgon for the WitchCraft RPG.
This will include the Blood Apes.
Blood Apes
One of the largest cults of Demogorgon is a cult of intelligent apes. They are often referred to as Blood Apes due to their habit of bathing in the blood of fallen enemies and comrades. These cultists actively worship Demogorgon as their god and attribute to him all spoils. The doctrines of the cult emphasize destruction and violence. All blood apes are voracious carnivores and keep human or (where appropriate) chimpanzee slaves. It is even whispered among the human populations that some humans are kept in an attempt by Demogorgon's Hierophants to breed true a race that features the most terrible qualities of both ape and man. Others claim they have already succeeded.
Every tribe of blood apres will have a CR 5-6 tribal leader and a CR 6 blood ape, fiendish-pact warlock.
Once they get out of the city then things will get REALLY dangerous.
Now for those of you that still belabor under the assumption that 5e is "easier" let me just say that Yuan-Ti under 5e are much deadlier and one Yuan-Ti Abomination and one Pure Blood nearly took out the entire party of seven. They are now hiding out and have no more potions of healing.
I have not even tricked out the Yuan-Ti at all. These are by-the-book deadly.
This adventure will introduce a bunch of new monsters to my players. If Order of Platinum Dragon/Come Endless Darkness game is about revisiting all the classics, this one is about the near classics. So a lot Fiend Folio and Monster Manual II monsters.
I also considering having there be a lot more involvement by Demogorgon. To that end, I am going to re-import some of my ideas from the time I used Demogorgon for the WitchCraft RPG.
This will include the Blood Apes.
One of the largest cults of Demogorgon is a cult of intelligent apes. They are often referred to as Blood Apes due to their habit of bathing in the blood of fallen enemies and comrades. These cultists actively worship Demogorgon as their god and attribute to him all spoils. The doctrines of the cult emphasize destruction and violence. All blood apes are voracious carnivores and keep human or (where appropriate) chimpanzee slaves. It is even whispered among the human populations that some humans are kept in an attempt by Demogorgon's Hierophants to breed true a race that features the most terrible qualities of both ape and man. Others claim they have already succeeded.
Every tribe of blood apres will have a CR 5-6 tribal leader and a CR 6 blood ape, fiendish-pact warlock.
Stat block from Statblock5e. |
Once they get out of the city then things will get REALLY dangerous.
Saturday, March 17, 2018
All Hail the Prince of Demons!
Wide on the wasteful Deep; with him Enthron'd
Sat Sable-vested Night, eldest of things,
The Consort of his Reign; and by them stood
Orcus and Ades, and the dreaded name
Of Demogorgon
— John Milton, Paradise Lost II. 961-965
Ever since I first picked up the Monster Manual way back in 79 (or 78, I started playing in 79) there were some names that jumped out at me as an invitation to use them in some way; Orcus, Tiamat, Asmodeus, and Demogorgon.
Back when 4e was the new hotness I picked up the Orcus mini. No surprise, he is the bad guy of not one, but two campaign capstone adventures. He is also the "mascot" of both Necromancer Games and Goblinoid Games. So yeah, he is pretty popular.
Before that, I picked up the Mage Knight Apocalypse Dragon to stand in for the full Tiamat. Works well.
For Asmodeus, I figure just about any devil will do really. He doesn't even really need to be big.
I have my Tharizdûn and my Lolth.
What I didn't have was a good Demogorgon.
Until now.
Last year I picked up a Demogorgon last year at AdeptiCon. Earlier this year I grabbed the Classic Creatures Collection from WotC which had two Demogorgon figures; a full size and an aspect.
I was ok, though I wished all of them were bigger. THEN I discovered the Loot Crate DX Demogorgon. Well, I wished I hadn't because I became obsessed with finding one.
Finally, this weekend my quest ended.
He is huge!
As you see he compares nicely to 4e Gargantuan Orcus.
He compares even better to his smaller "aspects". That is my demon-hunter paladin there. I hope he is ready!
None are exactly the same and that is a good thing. Demons, especially this demon, should have shifting forms.
Right now I have him hidden. My kids know all about the older Demogorgons (and Orcus and Tiamat), but this one will be a surprise.
My wife saw it too and I told her what I was doing and she is very excited. I can't wait to pull this bad boy out!
Now I all I need is a good Graz'zt mini.
Sat Sable-vested Night, eldest of things,
The Consort of his Reign; and by them stood
Orcus and Ades, and the dreaded name
Of Demogorgon
— John Milton, Paradise Lost II. 961-965
Ever since I first picked up the Monster Manual way back in 79 (or 78, I started playing in 79) there were some names that jumped out at me as an invitation to use them in some way; Orcus, Tiamat, Asmodeus, and Demogorgon.
Back when 4e was the new hotness I picked up the Orcus mini. No surprise, he is the bad guy of not one, but two campaign capstone adventures. He is also the "mascot" of both Necromancer Games and Goblinoid Games. So yeah, he is pretty popular.
Before that, I picked up the Mage Knight Apocalypse Dragon to stand in for the full Tiamat. Works well.
For Asmodeus, I figure just about any devil will do really. He doesn't even really need to be big.
I have my Tharizdûn and my Lolth.
What I didn't have was a good Demogorgon.
Until now.
Last year I picked up a Demogorgon last year at AdeptiCon. Earlier this year I grabbed the Classic Creatures Collection from WotC which had two Demogorgon figures; a full size and an aspect.
I was ok, though I wished all of them were bigger. THEN I discovered the Loot Crate DX Demogorgon. Well, I wished I hadn't because I became obsessed with finding one.
Finally, this weekend my quest ended.
He is huge!
As you see he compares nicely to 4e Gargantuan Orcus.
He compares even better to his smaller "aspects". That is my demon-hunter paladin there. I hope he is ready!
None are exactly the same and that is a good thing. Demons, especially this demon, should have shifting forms.
Right now I have him hidden. My kids know all about the older Demogorgons (and Orcus and Tiamat), but this one will be a surprise.
My wife saw it too and I told her what I was doing and she is very excited. I can't wait to pull this bad boy out!
Now I all I need is a good Graz'zt mini.
Thursday, March 15, 2018
This Old Dragon: Issue #65
Dragon Magazine #65 from September 1982 might, in fact, be the very first Dragon I had ever laid eyes on. It is, without a doubt in my mind, one of the more pivotable issues in my gaming career. Given that it is a perfect "first issue" of a NEW collection of Dragons sent to me by Eric Harshbarger. Eric contacted me a few weeks back to ask about some extras and gaps in my collection. I mentioned that most of the Dragons I have are collected from larger lots of game materials I buy and most times they are in pretty sad shape. So he offered to send me some. There are some duplicates with my collection, but these are in much better shape. So if you can pop on over to his website. Thanks, Eric! Now it is time for your contribution to This Old Dragon!
Ok. Where to start with this one? First, of course, is that cover. It is great to see it here next to me instead of having to go to my CD-ROM to get the PDF (which is good since the PDF scan is not as good). It is a wonderful, and surprisingly thigh-less, effort by Clyde Caldwell. I always loved Caldwell's work and this cover is no exception. I love that Dragon sneaking down on the cross-eyed fighter. Ok, he isn't cross-eyed, but it always looks like he is when I first look at it! At least the dwarf sees it. But my attention is focused on the witch in the background. Is she a witch? Well to me she is and she was one of the subconscious elements I would later use for my own witch character Larina.
So the red hair, purple dress with cloak and hood, the necklace (though different), the bangles on the wrists. Pretty archetypical image items really. But that image stuck with me. I'd say it was Larina's mother, but I always pictured her as a blonde! Maybe my little witch is having adventures I don't know about! So this is what I can say when I have a cover to actually look at!
We are not quite at that "golden age" of Dragon that I think everyone is nostalgic about. OR maybe we are. When I say "Golden Age" maybe you all have a different picture in mind. Anyway. This is the time before I started buying Dragon. I have no doubt however that this is the first one I ever saw.
Out on a Limb covers some letters on Ed Greenwood's article on Firearms a few issues back. Everytime I pick up an older Dragon my mental timeline of Ed's involvement gets pushed back a little bit more. I REALLY did not give this guy enough credit.
Gary is up next with his Guest Editorial. Ok...what to say about this. It is basically a 3-page rant against GAMA and Origins. I am happy to say that things are better between GenCon and Origins, and in about a decade from this original publication Gen Con and Origins will host a co-Con, but for now Gary is really irritated. I don't know what is going on behind the scenes at this point. Back then I would have read this and been firmly on Gary's side, but today it seems like an old man yelling at clouds (and to be 100% fair here, Gary at this point is younger than I am right now!) Ok. Moving on.
Blastoff! gives us all the information we need to know about the brand new Star Frontiers game. We get to see that iconic Larry Elmore cover for what I think is the first time. We learn the about the new races (Vrusk, Yazirians, and Dralasites), a bit on the new character creation system and some of the in-universe background. We also get some background on the game itself. Design work began in 1979 by Dave Cook and Lawerence Schick and spent the next two years in design, development and playtesting. I guess there was a more "hard core" version of the game at one point.
Gary is back and this time with a classic. From the Sorceror's Scroll covers Character Classes to Consider. We learn that there will be an expansion volume to AD&D. This book will eventually become Unearthered Arcana but until then he gives us a sneak peak. We know now that all of these classes did not make it to that book. Some would later go on to be rumored for the 2nd Edition of the AD&D game; or rather the 2nd Edition as penned by Gygax himself. This is one of the main articles that +Joseph Bloch would later use to build his "what-if" version of a Gygax 2nd Edition in Adventures Dark and Deep.
Rob Kuntz is next with another installment of Greyhawk's World. This covers Events of the Eastern and Southern Flanaess. I always enjoyed these articles. It made me feel like the World of Greyhawk was a living place, even though at this point I was still very much entrenched in the Known World of the D&D Basic and Expert sets.
Feel like I am dropping names left and right here, but after that we have Len Lakofka's Leomund's Tiny Hut. This issue Len is focused on Keep(ing) Track of Quality. Or how the quality of the goods affect the price, time to make and how that can play out for the player character. This article covers mostly sheilds, armor, and some weapons. A bit of converting for AC and you have a good article you can still use today.
Almost the counterpoint to weapon quality is character quality. Christopher M. Townsend presents a new proficiency system for use in AD&D in Weapons Wear Out, Not Skills. This system is neither as complicated as the ones will later get nor as crunchy. In fact, this system is light on the crunch and heavy on the role-playing aspects. Or at least insofar as training in general in AD&D was a roleplaying aspect. Now your training has some other purposes and can take longer. Rereading it now I can see using this as a guideline in my D&D 3.x and D&D 5 games.
Gary is back again with some new creatures. These Featured Creatures are considered to be official AD&DTM monsters, so that takes care of that argument (but opens it up for the next batch!). We get two good-aligned monsters, the Baku and the Phoenix. Both of these monsters will appear in the Monster Manual II due out soon. But that is not what grabbed me about them. Flipping the page something burrowed deep, deep into my psyche.
To me, the Phoenix was a god-like creature. They were the natural enemies of darkness and chaos. The mere look of one could destroy a vampire. They were not some giant bird to be hunted for their feathers and beaks, they were divine agents of rightous wrath. In many ways they were the opposite of the Dragons. Yes, we have good Dragons, but the Phoenix (capitalization is mine and for emphasis) opposed the evil Dragons more. I remember reading this issue from friends (sometimes many, many times) and at one point I wrote down "It was a time of great chaos. It was the time of the Dragon and the Phoenix." Yes, yes I know there is a Chinese dish of the same name, trust me, growing up in the deep mid-west in the 70s and 80s the only Chinese I ever saw was "Chop Suey". I would only later the myths and stories behind it. The Dragon and the Phoenix became something BIG in my games. So big in fact that I would later take some of those ideas and adapt to my Buffy the Vampire Slayer game and run a campaign I called The Dragon and the Phoenix. Those games would later be the basis of my Ghosts of Albion RPG.
Ok, speaking of those dragons. Richard Alan Lloyd gives us The Missing Dragons. Based on the "color wheel theory" he decides that there must be more dragons, the Yellow, Orange, and Purple. Now few articles were as controversial in my early days as this one! There were people that hated the idea of more dragons. There were people that hated the idea of these colors for dragons (this group though usually let the Purples in) and there were those that liked them but would not include them since they were not "official" AD&D monsters. And of courses there those that liked them and used them. Myself, I liked the idea. I thought the logic was faulty. I mean are there Draconic Evolutionary theorists of the RGB sort versus the CMYK ones? I did use the Purple dragons once or twice. I used an orange one once and I said the yellow had all died out. The biggest issue with this article is Tiamat. She has five heads, not eight. If we limit it to five, then the green head needs to become yellow. Now there are many, many (MANY) other dragons in D&D now and Tiamat is still just five-headed. So maybe I need to bring these back to my games.
An ad for the RPGA.
Dropping more names Lew Pulsipher is next with a new NPC character class, Timelords. These are not your two-heart, regenerating Time Lords. These are more like Time Protectors or Time Guardians. They are fighters with some basic time manipulation magic that gets more powerful as they go up in level. When I first read it I hated it. I also used to have a pretty hard core rule in my D&D games of "No Time Travel!" I have loosened up a bit on that over the years.
Next is Monsters of the Midway, BUT I don't have it in my copy. So the rules state I must move on.
Ah, here is something else that wormed it's way into my psyche. Robin Emrys Atkinson presents the Tuatha De Danaan, A revised Celtic Mythos. Withamateur drunk day Saint Patrick's Day in a couple of days, this is another reason why this is a good choice. This is designed to replace and add to the section on Celtic myths in the Deities and Demigods book. And it is much better. It was here that I went into a HUGE Celtic myths kick that I never really got out of.
And the hits keep comming! Ed Greenwood (I feel like I am the MC of a Night of Thousand Stars) is next with Law of the Land. A six page article on the legal system and political systems of the AD&D world. Or as I like to think of it, the PCs do not live in a vacuum. Also a great system-free article and something to help curb the influx of Murder-Hoboism in your games.
Lew Pulsipher is back again (!) and takes a D&D (not AD&D) perspective on War! and how it can give the characters reason to "live". Again this is a very system free sort of article and covers the types of wars that PCs might find themselves in. Very usuful stuff.
Some Top Secret information from James "Pong" Thompson. It covers recon and assassinations.
An editiorial of sorts from Lew Pulsipher in Up on a Soapbox. In this, he discusses the difference between the Classical Role-player and the Romantic. Lew is coming from a solid Wargamer point of view here. I don't get the feeling that either of these types are bad, just they have certain ways of playing. More the point in a Wargame if you can identify their style you will know how to defeat them since you know what risks they are likely to take.
The Dragon's Augury has some reviews including one of the first Computer games I can recall being reviewed. WIZARDRY costs a then princely sum of $49.95 and you will need an Apple II computer with 48k and DOS 3.3.
Tom Watson reviews some books for Traveller while Gary Gygax himself reviews Empire Builder by Mayfair games (he loves it).
Comics are next.
Phil and Dixie talk about how much Fantasy and SciFi are alike.
Wormy is only one page.
An ad for Chaosium's Trollpak takes half of Dragon mirth's page. I always wanted that. It looked cool.
Back cover has an ad for Grenadier Models and flip over for Gang Busters.
Wow. What a packed issue. Not just name after name of the whos who of the early RPG scenes, but great content as well.
Want to know what I thought of White Dwarf from the same time? Check out White Dwarf Wednesday #33. It was also a good issue.
Ok. Where to start with this one? First, of course, is that cover. It is great to see it here next to me instead of having to go to my CD-ROM to get the PDF (which is good since the PDF scan is not as good). It is a wonderful, and surprisingly thigh-less, effort by Clyde Caldwell. I always loved Caldwell's work and this cover is no exception. I love that Dragon sneaking down on the cross-eyed fighter. Ok, he isn't cross-eyed, but it always looks like he is when I first look at it! At least the dwarf sees it. But my attention is focused on the witch in the background. Is she a witch? Well to me she is and she was one of the subconscious elements I would later use for my own witch character Larina.
Witch by Clyde Caldwell, Larina by Jacob Blackmon |
We are not quite at that "golden age" of Dragon that I think everyone is nostalgic about. OR maybe we are. When I say "Golden Age" maybe you all have a different picture in mind. Anyway. This is the time before I started buying Dragon. I have no doubt however that this is the first one I ever saw.
Out on a Limb covers some letters on Ed Greenwood's article on Firearms a few issues back. Everytime I pick up an older Dragon my mental timeline of Ed's involvement gets pushed back a little bit more. I REALLY did not give this guy enough credit.
Gary is up next with his Guest Editorial. Ok...what to say about this. It is basically a 3-page rant against GAMA and Origins. I am happy to say that things are better between GenCon and Origins, and in about a decade from this original publication Gen Con and Origins will host a co-Con, but for now Gary is really irritated. I don't know what is going on behind the scenes at this point. Back then I would have read this and been firmly on Gary's side, but today it seems like an old man yelling at clouds (and to be 100% fair here, Gary at this point is younger than I am right now!) Ok. Moving on.
Blastoff! gives us all the information we need to know about the brand new Star Frontiers game. We get to see that iconic Larry Elmore cover for what I think is the first time. We learn the about the new races (Vrusk, Yazirians, and Dralasites), a bit on the new character creation system and some of the in-universe background. We also get some background on the game itself. Design work began in 1979 by Dave Cook and Lawerence Schick and spent the next two years in design, development and playtesting. I guess there was a more "hard core" version of the game at one point.
Gary is back and this time with a classic. From the Sorceror's Scroll covers Character Classes to Consider. We learn that there will be an expansion volume to AD&D. This book will eventually become Unearthered Arcana but until then he gives us a sneak peak. We know now that all of these classes did not make it to that book. Some would later go on to be rumored for the 2nd Edition of the AD&D game; or rather the 2nd Edition as penned by Gygax himself. This is one of the main articles that +Joseph Bloch would later use to build his "what-if" version of a Gygax 2nd Edition in Adventures Dark and Deep.
Rob Kuntz is next with another installment of Greyhawk's World. This covers Events of the Eastern and Southern Flanaess. I always enjoyed these articles. It made me feel like the World of Greyhawk was a living place, even though at this point I was still very much entrenched in the Known World of the D&D Basic and Expert sets.
Feel like I am dropping names left and right here, but after that we have Len Lakofka's Leomund's Tiny Hut. This issue Len is focused on Keep(ing) Track of Quality. Or how the quality of the goods affect the price, time to make and how that can play out for the player character. This article covers mostly sheilds, armor, and some weapons. A bit of converting for AC and you have a good article you can still use today.
Almost the counterpoint to weapon quality is character quality. Christopher M. Townsend presents a new proficiency system for use in AD&D in Weapons Wear Out, Not Skills. This system is neither as complicated as the ones will later get nor as crunchy. In fact, this system is light on the crunch and heavy on the role-playing aspects. Or at least insofar as training in general in AD&D was a roleplaying aspect. Now your training has some other purposes and can take longer. Rereading it now I can see using this as a guideline in my D&D 3.x and D&D 5 games.
Gary is back again with some new creatures. These Featured Creatures are considered to be official AD&DTM monsters, so that takes care of that argument (but opens it up for the next batch!). We get two good-aligned monsters, the Baku and the Phoenix. Both of these monsters will appear in the Monster Manual II due out soon. But that is not what grabbed me about them. Flipping the page something burrowed deep, deep into my psyche.
To me, the Phoenix was a god-like creature. They were the natural enemies of darkness and chaos. The mere look of one could destroy a vampire. They were not some giant bird to be hunted for their feathers and beaks, they were divine agents of rightous wrath. In many ways they were the opposite of the Dragons. Yes, we have good Dragons, but the Phoenix (capitalization is mine and for emphasis) opposed the evil Dragons more. I remember reading this issue from friends (sometimes many, many times) and at one point I wrote down "It was a time of great chaos. It was the time of the Dragon and the Phoenix." Yes, yes I know there is a Chinese dish of the same name, trust me, growing up in the deep mid-west in the 70s and 80s the only Chinese I ever saw was "Chop Suey". I would only later the myths and stories behind it. The Dragon and the Phoenix became something BIG in my games. So big in fact that I would later take some of those ideas and adapt to my Buffy the Vampire Slayer game and run a campaign I called The Dragon and the Phoenix. Those games would later be the basis of my Ghosts of Albion RPG.
Ok, speaking of those dragons. Richard Alan Lloyd gives us The Missing Dragons. Based on the "color wheel theory" he decides that there must be more dragons, the Yellow, Orange, and Purple. Now few articles were as controversial in my early days as this one! There were people that hated the idea of more dragons. There were people that hated the idea of these colors for dragons (this group though usually let the Purples in) and there were those that liked them but would not include them since they were not "official" AD&D monsters. And of courses there those that liked them and used them. Myself, I liked the idea. I thought the logic was faulty. I mean are there Draconic Evolutionary theorists of the RGB sort versus the CMYK ones? I did use the Purple dragons once or twice. I used an orange one once and I said the yellow had all died out. The biggest issue with this article is Tiamat. She has five heads, not eight. If we limit it to five, then the green head needs to become yellow. Now there are many, many (MANY) other dragons in D&D now and Tiamat is still just five-headed. So maybe I need to bring these back to my games.
An ad for the RPGA.
Dropping more names Lew Pulsipher is next with a new NPC character class, Timelords. These are not your two-heart, regenerating Time Lords. These are more like Time Protectors or Time Guardians. They are fighters with some basic time manipulation magic that gets more powerful as they go up in level. When I first read it I hated it. I also used to have a pretty hard core rule in my D&D games of "No Time Travel!" I have loosened up a bit on that over the years.
Next is Monsters of the Midway, BUT I don't have it in my copy. So the rules state I must move on.
Ah, here is something else that wormed it's way into my psyche. Robin Emrys Atkinson presents the Tuatha De Danaan, A revised Celtic Mythos. With
And the hits keep comming! Ed Greenwood (I feel like I am the MC of a Night of Thousand Stars) is next with Law of the Land. A six page article on the legal system and political systems of the AD&D world. Or as I like to think of it, the PCs do not live in a vacuum. Also a great system-free article and something to help curb the influx of Murder-Hoboism in your games.
Lew Pulsipher is back again (!) and takes a D&D (not AD&D) perspective on War! and how it can give the characters reason to "live". Again this is a very system free sort of article and covers the types of wars that PCs might find themselves in. Very usuful stuff.
Some Top Secret information from James "Pong" Thompson. It covers recon and assassinations.
An editiorial of sorts from Lew Pulsipher in Up on a Soapbox. In this, he discusses the difference between the Classical Role-player and the Romantic. Lew is coming from a solid Wargamer point of view here. I don't get the feeling that either of these types are bad, just they have certain ways of playing. More the point in a Wargame if you can identify their style you will know how to defeat them since you know what risks they are likely to take.
The Dragon's Augury has some reviews including one of the first Computer games I can recall being reviewed. WIZARDRY costs a then princely sum of $49.95 and you will need an Apple II computer with 48k and DOS 3.3.
Tom Watson reviews some books for Traveller while Gary Gygax himself reviews Empire Builder by Mayfair games (he loves it).
Comics are next.
Phil and Dixie talk about how much Fantasy and SciFi are alike.
Wormy is only one page.
An ad for Chaosium's Trollpak takes half of Dragon mirth's page. I always wanted that. It looked cool.
Back cover has an ad for Grenadier Models and flip over for Gang Busters.
Wow. What a packed issue. Not just name after name of the whos who of the early RPG scenes, but great content as well.
Want to know what I thought of White Dwarf from the same time? Check out White Dwarf Wednesday #33. It was also a good issue.
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
The Importance of the *Correct* Research
I have been fairly quiet here I know. Not by choice, but I have some projects I want to get done and get out to you all. Today is the tale of woe of one such project.
A few weeks back I had this GREAT idea. No, it really it was. It was a game that I really wanted to play and write. I am going into a lot of detail about here now because the game will not happen now, or at least not in it's current draft.
See I did my research. I have a Ph.D. (two in fact, but I am ABD) so research is something I know well and love. And I did do my research. I looked into economic issues of the time to try to get a good idea of a monetary system. I reread news items that I thought would give me better insight. I also put together a must-read list of fiction and a must watch list of movies that fit the genre.
I even prototyped some characters.
What I *DIDN'T* do was see if this game already existed.
Which, as you can guess, it does.
What really sucks is that this game is also really, really good. They went with a different vibe than I was going for, but what they did is fantastic.
Well. Shit.
So now I have notes, drafts and a cool name. Some friends suggested I go ahead and make it, but I don't want to field questions of "Hey have you seen BLANK?" or "How is this not a copy of BLANK?"
So the ideas will go into ... well, I don't know yet really.
After talking with my kids I think I have some ideas for this stuff, but the focus will have to change. So goodbye economic data. Book lists will need to be revised. I think the movies are fine though.
A few weeks back I had this GREAT idea. No, it really it was. It was a game that I really wanted to play and write. I am going into a lot of detail about here now because the game will not happen now, or at least not in it's current draft.
See I did my research. I have a Ph.D. (two in fact, but I am ABD) so research is something I know well and love. And I did do my research. I looked into economic issues of the time to try to get a good idea of a monetary system. I reread news items that I thought would give me better insight. I also put together a must-read list of fiction and a must watch list of movies that fit the genre.
I even prototyped some characters.
What I *DIDN'T* do was see if this game already existed.
Which, as you can guess, it does.
What really sucks is that this game is also really, really good. They went with a different vibe than I was going for, but what they did is fantastic.
Well. Shit.
So now I have notes, drafts and a cool name. Some friends suggested I go ahead and make it, but I don't want to field questions of "Hey have you seen BLANK?" or "How is this not a copy of BLANK?"
So the ideas will go into ... well, I don't know yet really.
After talking with my kids I think I have some ideas for this stuff, but the focus will have to change. So goodbye economic data. Book lists will need to be revised. I think the movies are fine though.
Monday, March 12, 2018
Strange Brew: Skills & Feats
The next book in the Strange Brew series is now out.
Strange Brew: Skills & Feats is everything you need for your witch character in the Pathfinder game.
I will check with my editor, but I think this means the full book will be out soon.
Strange Brew: Skills & Feats is everything you need for your witch character in the Pathfinder game.
I will check with my editor, but I think this means the full book will be out soon.
Thursday, March 8, 2018
This Old Dragon: Issue #80
Issue 80 is one of those issues I have some very fond memories of and one that made it's way into my gaming life in odd and interesting ways. So enough preamble, let's get going. It's December 1983 and this is Issue #80 of This Old Dragon!
This time around I have two copies of this magazine, but neither is complete. Both are missing the cover, both are missing the city-based adventure and one has large sections cut out.
Let's talk about the cover. This is a Clyde Caldwell work. I always loved his work and this one is no exception. A purple-haired (I think it is blonde really with odd lighting) magic-user over a crystal ball? What's not to love?
Kim Mohan is up with the editorial. First is plea for people sending in computer programs. Long story short, they want BASIC programs that people that have 16k and 32k systems can run (as opposed to those 'power users' at 48k and 64k). This is a prelude to the AD&D combat program later in this issue. The next part of the Editorial covers material in this issue.
Out on a Limb covers this months letters. Couple issues back had another program that ran a Chi-Square (x2)analysis to determine if your dice were biased. One reader has issues with this, but it seems like the editors came to the same conclusion I did; that the reader went through all the work to find a fault in the procedure and not his dice. I'll be on the lookout for that article. Now you can run even complex Chi-Squares in Excel. Somewhere I have a sheet for checking dice.
Nice big ad for James Bond 007. 1983 was a good Bond year. Back in the summer, Octopussy with Roger Moore (no relation to Dragon's Roger Moore) hit the screens and this fall and winter we got the non-Eon Never Say Never Again with Sean Connery. Of course only Octopussy of the two would make it into an adventure for the game (along with Goldfinger and one of my favorites Dr. No). I have been a huge Bond fan ever since I saw Live and Let Die but I have never played this game. IF I were to do it, I might use the Doctor Who rules just for fun.
Up next is Fraser Sherman and The Psychology of the Doppleganger. An interesting little read about these (in my mind) under-used creatures.
Big ad for the new Intellivision AD&D cartridge game, Treasure of Tarmin.
David F. Godwin has an article that has plagued DMs and Players since time out of time (or at least since 1975). In How many coins in a coffer? He discusses the weight and the value of the coins of each type. It's the type of gritty analysis that was really popular at the time. It can still serve some good use today, the numbers still work and if you want to adapt it to current precious metal prices that is your choice. Personally, I prefer to handwave this and use the old Basic D&D standard of 1 coin = 1/10 a pound. It keeps the math easy. Yess, yes I know...someone will ask "what about resource management and encumbrance?" That is fine, if I wanted to make D&D more like Economics or Supply Chain Management. And I don't.
Ah now here is something everyone can use. The Five keys to DMing success by Mike Beeman is essential reading for any DM, regardless of edition they play or experience they have. These keys are 1. Continuity, 2. Character (the Player Character), 3. Competence (rules knowledge, but not memorization), 4. Creative, and 5. Cooperation. Most of this advice is of the common sense sort, but good to have in one place. OR maybe it is only common sense to me now on the other side of nearly 40 years of running games. It is worth checking out if you wish to expand your art as a DM.
Ah here we go. John Warren gives us the Dungeon Masters Familiar, a computer-based AD&D combat simulator. Going over the BASIC code makes me wonder why we didn't move to the Ascending Armor Class of D&D 3 sooner. At line 2070 and on list data tables to replicate the attack tables for characters. When my old DM and I created our own software we found a mathematical way to recreate this. It was not 100% of course, but it was close enough. I checked my CD-ROM version to see if the code had been converted to text and sadly it was not. Pity, since I wanted to run this but I have no desire to type it all up.
Who lives in that castle? by Katharine Kerr covers what should be one of the most basic bits of information that every person living in a quasi-Medieval society would know. Castles, who lives in them and how they are run AND who does that running. Do your characters have a castle? Who is your master of hunt? Who makes sure the larders are stocked? These questions are ones that this in-depth article can help you figure this out. At seven pages it is also a longer one.
Ed Greenwood gives us one man's trash and another man's treasure. Treasures rare and wondrous is a collection of various treasure items characters are likely to find. Some are utterly mundane, like a silver belt buckle, others are more unique like a 30,000+ gp bejeweled garter.
Up next is Barnacus: City in Peril.
That is it is what should be here. But neither of my copies have this.
So. Moving on.
We get some revised AD&D charts (damn! and I just entered it all in BASIC!!) based on something called the "5% Principle" by authors Len Lakofka and Gary Gygax. Again, I am seeing the future here and the DC-type of AC we see in D&D 3.0. Naturally, I have the supreme advantage of hindsight here.
Cool ads for Star Fleet Battles and Fantasy Games Unlimited.
Ken Rolston has some guides for reviewing games in A set of rules for game reviews.
He covers three types of reviews. 1. The Capsule review, a review that comes out when the game is new and wants to let people to know the basics. 2. The Feature review, a more extended review tht covers the main details. Rolston this type of review is only good for "significant" games, but I largely disagree. Any game can now have a feature review. 3. The Critical review is the detailed review that takes on many aspects of the games. He also spends some time on discussing who the audiences of the reviews are.
Taking his own advice on Timeship. He likes the simplicity. We also get reviews for Illuminati and Privateers and Gentlemen. Ken Rolston also reviews Man, Myth, & Magic which he refers to an ambitious failure. Despite all the bad reviews I have read (and there are a lot of them) I still find myself curious about this game. But I have to take his final words on the subject in mind.
Nice big ad for some future TSR products including the World of Greyhawk boxed set.
The book reviews are next, but some of the pages are cut in half.
More small ads. The con calendar.
We get to the comics with What's New, Wormy, and Snarf Quest.
So this issue is smaller (well, mine is , I think it is missing more), but it also has a lot really useful material that you can still use today regardless of your system of choice.
It makes me sad that my copies are so mildewy (and missing pages).
Want to see what I was saying about White Dwarf from the same time? Check out White Dwarf Wednesday for issue #48.
This time around I have two copies of this magazine, but neither is complete. Both are missing the cover, both are missing the city-based adventure and one has large sections cut out.
Let's talk about the cover. This is a Clyde Caldwell work. I always loved his work and this one is no exception. A purple-haired (I think it is blonde really with odd lighting) magic-user over a crystal ball? What's not to love?
Kim Mohan is up with the editorial. First is plea for people sending in computer programs. Long story short, they want BASIC programs that people that have 16k and 32k systems can run (as opposed to those 'power users' at 48k and 64k). This is a prelude to the AD&D combat program later in this issue. The next part of the Editorial covers material in this issue.
Out on a Limb covers this months letters. Couple issues back had another program that ran a Chi-Square (x2)analysis to determine if your dice were biased. One reader has issues with this, but it seems like the editors came to the same conclusion I did; that the reader went through all the work to find a fault in the procedure and not his dice. I'll be on the lookout for that article. Now you can run even complex Chi-Squares in Excel. Somewhere I have a sheet for checking dice.
Nice big ad for James Bond 007. 1983 was a good Bond year. Back in the summer, Octopussy with Roger Moore (no relation to Dragon's Roger Moore) hit the screens and this fall and winter we got the non-Eon Never Say Never Again with Sean Connery. Of course only Octopussy of the two would make it into an adventure for the game (along with Goldfinger and one of my favorites Dr. No). I have been a huge Bond fan ever since I saw Live and Let Die but I have never played this game. IF I were to do it, I might use the Doctor Who rules just for fun.
Up next is Fraser Sherman and The Psychology of the Doppleganger. An interesting little read about these (in my mind) under-used creatures.
Big ad for the new Intellivision AD&D cartridge game, Treasure of Tarmin.
David F. Godwin has an article that has plagued DMs and Players since time out of time (or at least since 1975). In How many coins in a coffer? He discusses the weight and the value of the coins of each type. It's the type of gritty analysis that was really popular at the time. It can still serve some good use today, the numbers still work and if you want to adapt it to current precious metal prices that is your choice. Personally, I prefer to handwave this and use the old Basic D&D standard of 1 coin = 1/10 a pound. It keeps the math easy. Yess, yes I know...someone will ask "what about resource management and encumbrance?" That is fine, if I wanted to make D&D more like Economics or Supply Chain Management. And I don't.
Ah now here is something everyone can use. The Five keys to DMing success by Mike Beeman is essential reading for any DM, regardless of edition they play or experience they have. These keys are 1. Continuity, 2. Character (the Player Character), 3. Competence (rules knowledge, but not memorization), 4. Creative, and 5. Cooperation. Most of this advice is of the common sense sort, but good to have in one place. OR maybe it is only common sense to me now on the other side of nearly 40 years of running games. It is worth checking out if you wish to expand your art as a DM.
Ah here we go. John Warren gives us the Dungeon Masters Familiar, a computer-based AD&D combat simulator. Going over the BASIC code makes me wonder why we didn't move to the Ascending Armor Class of D&D 3 sooner. At line 2070 and on list data tables to replicate the attack tables for characters. When my old DM and I created our own software we found a mathematical way to recreate this. It was not 100% of course, but it was close enough. I checked my CD-ROM version to see if the code had been converted to text and sadly it was not. Pity, since I wanted to run this but I have no desire to type it all up.
Who lives in that castle? by Katharine Kerr covers what should be one of the most basic bits of information that every person living in a quasi-Medieval society would know. Castles, who lives in them and how they are run AND who does that running. Do your characters have a castle? Who is your master of hunt? Who makes sure the larders are stocked? These questions are ones that this in-depth article can help you figure this out. At seven pages it is also a longer one.
Ed Greenwood gives us one man's trash and another man's treasure. Treasures rare and wondrous is a collection of various treasure items characters are likely to find. Some are utterly mundane, like a silver belt buckle, others are more unique like a 30,000+ gp bejeweled garter.
Up next is Barnacus: City in Peril.
That is it is what should be here. But neither of my copies have this.
So. Moving on.
We get some revised AD&D charts (damn! and I just entered it all in BASIC!!) based on something called the "5% Principle" by authors Len Lakofka and Gary Gygax. Again, I am seeing the future here and the DC-type of AC we see in D&D 3.0. Naturally, I have the supreme advantage of hindsight here.
Cool ads for Star Fleet Battles and Fantasy Games Unlimited.
Ken Rolston has some guides for reviewing games in A set of rules for game reviews.
He covers three types of reviews. 1. The Capsule review, a review that comes out when the game is new and wants to let people to know the basics. 2. The Feature review, a more extended review tht covers the main details. Rolston this type of review is only good for "significant" games, but I largely disagree. Any game can now have a feature review. 3. The Critical review is the detailed review that takes on many aspects of the games. He also spends some time on discussing who the audiences of the reviews are.
Taking his own advice on Timeship. He likes the simplicity. We also get reviews for Illuminati and Privateers and Gentlemen. Ken Rolston also reviews Man, Myth, & Magic which he refers to an ambitious failure. Despite all the bad reviews I have read (and there are a lot of them) I still find myself curious about this game. But I have to take his final words on the subject in mind.
I strongly recommend that the game be carefully examined by any prospective buyer; there is a good chance that the purchase will be a disappointing one.I think I need to reconsider my morbid fascination for this game.
Nice big ad for some future TSR products including the World of Greyhawk boxed set.
The book reviews are next, but some of the pages are cut in half.
More small ads. The con calendar.
We get to the comics with What's New, Wormy, and Snarf Quest.
So this issue is smaller (well, mine is , I think it is missing more), but it also has a lot really useful material that you can still use today regardless of your system of choice.
It makes me sad that my copies are so mildewy (and missing pages).
Want to see what I was saying about White Dwarf from the same time? Check out White Dwarf Wednesday for issue #48.
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