This past weekend I went downstate to see my family and celebrate my Dad's 95 birthday. Yeah, he still doing great at 95! I also stopped by my old friend Michael's house, where his widow gave me a bunch of his old D&D stuff.
There is so much here. That black grocery bag is filled with character sheets dating back to 1981. There were a lot of duplicated books too. Much to my surprise and delight, a few of them were mine!
I have always talked about here how in the 1990s I lost a lot of my Basic and 1st Ed AD&D collection in various moves. I know where some of it went. I guess I lent some of it to Grenda back then. There was my Fiend Folio, Manual of the Planes, Tales of the Outer Planes adventures, a bunch of other modules, and more. My oldest got my replacement copies, and I reclaimed my originals.
There is so much more here too.
In addition to a bunch of city books, I found a ton of his notes on our house rules for playing in cities and urban environments. By the way, other than some box damage, that Haven set is in fantastic shape.
Maybe our "Urban Survival Guide" will see the light of day.
There are also hundreds of characters here—so many that I don't even know what to do with them all. Some of the main ones, the ones I remember from our time playing, are going to get some airplay here.
I found maps of our shared world, maps (so many!) of his city, the Riddlemaster, Shadowmaster, Beastmaster, and Starmaster classes—they were so overpowered, but it was a blast when we were teens. Details of his Greyhawk campaigns into CY 800—just so much stuff.
It is also sad. I would have loved to have gotten this stuff out there for others to enjoy while he was still alive. I could have asked him about these complex family histories and the differences in these maps.
There is so, so much here. It is like walking into a past I only vaguely remember. It is also a reminder of how long ago some of this actually was.
I tend to think of my University days as being "not that long ago." Maybe because I am still hanging out with the same girl I was then (best friend. totally married her). But it really was. There is sadness in that. It is sad to know that Warluk, Adnerg, Danis, Finn, Tali, and Alix will never have their stories continue. Well, they can, with me I suppose, but that is really not the same is it?
I do take comfort and joy in the fact that my oldest has been converting over to AD&D 1st ed and will use all of this stuff and my own stuff with his group.
I'll spend more time with all this material and see where it takes me.
So great you were able to find your old papers and books! Like a time capsule.
ReplyDeleteWhile I concur with the sadness of it all, that is a unique and remarkable legacy to leave. I'll keep an interested eye out for anything you pull from those old notes and character sheets.
ReplyDeleteFinding old gaming notes and records is always a fascinating experience even when it's completely unfamiliar. I've gotten stuff at garage sales over the years that included character sheets and dungeons and campaign material from total strangers and looking through them made for quite a bit of entertaining speculation.
ReplyDeleteAn amazing treasure! Otherwise my condolences to you and his family.
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