Let's talk about 1982 for a bit. Over the summer D&D had been thrust into the spotlight again, though this time in a positive way, in the movie
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial. Though the version played on screen didn't look a lot like what we all played, it was still much better than what we would later get in
Mazes and Monsters (Dec. 1982) or on
60 Minutes (1985). 82 was an interesting time for me too. I was deep, deep into my Basic/Expert game and having a blast. I was not reading Dragon yet, so going through these issues is always part nostalgia (for the time) and part new discovery. So why not go back to a simpler time. John Cougar (Mellencamp) is singing a little diddy about
Jack & Diane growing up in the mid-west and on the shelves for November 1982 is issue #67 of This Old Dragon!
This is another issue sent to me by
Eric C. Harshbarger from his collection. It's in great shape too.
The cover is of the silly variety, but that is fine with me. It is something I associate fondly with this time. I guess never ask the barbarian to cut the turkey on Thanksgiving!
Flipping over (since I have the cover this time!) we get that great B/X D&D ad from the early 80s with Jami Gertz and Alan Ruck.
Mike Cook takes on the role of Publisher for the first time.
Letters covers some errors as seen by readers. This includes the infamous example of the lucern hammer being a pole-arm and not a hammer. Also Len Lakofka has some criticisms on the "missing dragons" article that gave us the yellow, orange and purple dragons.
Gary is up first with
From the Sorceror's Scroll. He introduces a bunch of new Magic-User spells of the 1st through 4th level. All of these (and more) will end up in Unearthed Arcana, here just referred too as ADVANCED DUNGEONS & DRAGONS
® Expansion volume.
Seeing these here like this is a bit odd, I am used to these spells being official content by way of UA. But I am sure there were groups that argued that.
Later on Gygax covers some rumors, like TSR buy Grenadier and new sets of Dragon Dice coming out. Neither of these came to pass.
Another Gygax hit is next this time in
Featured Creatures. We get the Grugach elf (based on a Celtic creature if I recall right), the Valley Elf (
she's a valley elf, a valley elf. ok fine fer sure fer sure...) and the Cooshee (based on the Cù Sìth). I joke, but I actually liked the Valley Elf.
Again, all this content will be later added to the Unearthed Arcana and the Monster Manual II.
Spy's Advice is up from Merle M. Rasmussen. With answers to your Top Secret questions.
Not related to this article per se, but if you ever get the chance to talk to Merle about Top Secret, please do so. No one is as enthusiastic about this game as he is and it is quite infectious. You leave not only wanting to play, but wondering why you play any other game!
Gregg Chamberlain has some advice on
Souping up the Spider. A good one for me to hold onto for when I run Q1 this summer.
Gary is back again (!) with the next installment of
The Deities & Demigods of the World of Greyhawk. In this issue we get the stats and backgrounds on Heironeous and his arch nemesis Hextor. Iuz and his rival St. Cuthbert. In an interesting bit, Iuz is described as possibly being some by-blow of Orcus and not of Graz'zt as later revealed.
The big feature of this issue is Roger Moore's treatsie on
The Astral Plane. It's a good read and lot of what is here later found it's way into other books over the years. Though there is still a lot of good stuff to read here. The article is quite long to be honest and filled with great information.
It leads right into an adventure set in the Astral Plane.
Fedifensor is an adventure for 6-8 AD&D characters of level 7 and up and written by Allen Rogers. The characters need to head out to a Githyanki outpost to recover a Lawful Good sword, the titular Fedifensor.
The fiction section is an odd one for me, odd in the sense that I actually read it. I had expected
King of Cats to be about the Gygax Rexfelis (to give you an idea of when I finally got a copy of this) and found it was a much more entertaining story in the style of Celtic myth. I am not sure if this was the first time I had heard of the Hill of Tara or not, but it is something that has been a central feature to many of my games since. The picture of Black Tam Chattan still is a good stand-in for the AD&D Catlord.
The spells continue here.
Gygax has another contribution! This time in the form of the Beauty, or as he prefers, Comeliness stat. To be honest, we never used this when it appeared in the Unearthed Arcana either.
Another article by Gary, this time one of his more famous ones.
Poker, Chess, and the AD&DTM System. Or how I have read it in the past, "The rules are guidelines unless they are rules I wrote and those are RULES!" It covers what is and certainly what is NOT official rules. You certainly get the gist that D&D has rules, and you can experiment with them. AD&D has rules and any deviations mean you are no longer playing AD&D at all. Retrospect tells us a little about why this was going on. The overt reason is tournaments, but the hidden reason was the lawsuit between TSR/Gygax and Dave Arneson. Gary, of course, is making some good points here along with some grandstanding, but in truth we all house-ruled everything. While he makes some good points about the reach of Dragon to all gamers, the same logic could be applied to tournament-level AD&D and all AD&D/D&D players out there. The average player didn't care about that. They wanted to have some fun. He has some more on the barbarian and the Deva, both to be featured in books later.
The Role of Books is up. Lewis Pulsipher covers some of the big names in the realm of mythology publishing and how to use them in your games. Lew really is the academic of this early group of game designers.
Ken Rolston covers the TrollPak books from Chaosium. I was always very curious and little fascinated by these books. I had spoken to other gamers that had moved over to Runequest and used these trolls in their AD&D games (shhh! don't tell anyone!) I still want to find a copy of this. I would drop the trolls I normally use in favor of these. I think it would be fun.
Lots of ads. Wormy and What's New?
The back cover has an ad for the AD&D Action Scenes from the MPC model kit company. Back in this time I had built so many models from these guys. A
couple R2-D2s, a C-3P0, Darth Vader's TIE fighter (my favorite one!). I would have totally bought these. I kind of want them now.
eBay has one for $130. Not sure if that is worth it.
What a fun issue. Lots of material here, though not much I can use today in my games except for the great Astral Plane stuff.
Want to know what I was saying about White Dwarf from the same time? Check out
White Dwarf Wednesday for issue #35.