Let's go all the way back to April of 1984 to issue 84 (the only time that the year and the issue were the same) for an April issue I don't hate. So put on a copy of Van Halen's "
1984" cause it's April 1984 and this is "This Old Dragon"!
Dragon 84 is an interesting one for me. It was almost my first Dragon. I was going to go buy it at my local bookstore, but the agreement was I had to buy D&D books with my own money. So instead of this I got something else. Can't remember what. I wanted to go back and get it, but by then Dragon #85 was out so I got that one instead. Yes, folks the very first Dragon I owned was issue 85. But more on that later.
Kim Mohan's editorial discusses the lack of "foolish" content in this issue. He also discusses how this is the LAST issue with Phil & Dixie! But it is also the first issue featuring the Ares Sci-Fi section, that is cool.
The first full article up is
A cast of strange familiars by Stephen Inniss. Back then I tended to stick to more traditional familiars; owls, cats, bats and the like. This was a great article since it expanded on the lists of potential animals and benefits for the Magic-User. My own witch class was still a bit off from happening at this point.
An interesting ad appears on page 13. Riddle of the Ring claims to use names from an "uncopyrighted" work of J.R.R. Tolkien. I wonder how that worked out for them in the long run? Contrast that with a panel later in "What's New!"
Ed Greenwood and Elminster are back in
Ecology of the Trapper. Interesting article, but I always wanted them to do more interesting monsters. We get that later in the issue.
Never the same thing twice: Filling out facts and figures on the rakshasa family by Scott Bennie is the sort of thing I was hoping for! Rakshasas are really interesting and this article expands on that considerably. I do remember making a Xerox copy of this article because I wanted to do something more with these guys. I never did really, but I did end up adding them to the ranks of the devils for my own games.
Interesting ad for the Little Wars convention. I guess in 84 it used to be really close to where I live now. The Willow Brook Inn is no longer there, but Little Wars is still going strong.
There used to be so many cons. In April to June there are 25 listed here.
Ah. Now a bit of history.
And then there were three is a "preview" by
+Frank Mentzer of the new D&D Companion rules. The article starts off with a bit of history on how the "Companion" rules were hinted at in 1980 (yeah we know!) and it was not till 1982 the go ahead was given to create it. Reading the article you certainly get the feeling that Gary (oddly misspelled as "Garry" at one point) anoints Frank and hands him the UR-Tablets of D&D and tells him to spread the Gospel to his people. Or something like that.
Frank details the design and gameplay assumptions behind the Companion rules. This includes more epic quests and even outer planar play. The Masters and Immortal Sets are also teased here as well as the War Machine large-scale battle system. What the four classes can do after 15th level is discussed with options such as the Druid, Paladin, and Magist.
The centerfold is Part 1 of a two-part RPGA adventure "
The Twofold Talisman". I ran this back in the mid 80s and had a good time with it, but the Star Wars puns in it felt old to me even then. I thinkI'd like to run this again someday.
In the
Reviews section by Ken Rolston, they cover some FRPG classics. A new edition of Chivalry and Sorcery, a game I always wanted to try, is first up. The big one is a review of the Basic and Expert sets of D&D, the B and the E in BECMI. I was not a fan of these editions, having firmly come off of the B/X versions before moving (at this time) to AD&D. Of course, now I appreciate what was done here, but I should have read this review back then. I might have been a little less quick to judge these set unfairly.
Next is the
Ares Science Fiction section, a new feature for Dragon and one I always enjoyed reading. This section only gives us a taste really of what is to come.
First up is one of the articles I most associate with Ares; their series on detailing the Moon for all the major Sci-Fi systems out there. It had everything I love. Science, RPGs, sci-fi and an obsessive compulsive need to do something to the Nth degree. This first one covers the Moon for the Spae Opera RPG. I always wanted to collect all of these and put them in a binder or something.
Ed Greenwood has another article this time it is
The Zethra An NPC race for the STAR FRONTIERS game. I get the feeling, reading this, that Elminster is out there somewhere in the Star Frontiers universe and Ed was just waiting for an excuse to use him in it.
No Marvel-Phile yet. But there is a full page ad for the upcoming Marvel Superheroes Game!
Lots of really cool old ads.
So for the comics we have Snarf Quest #9, What's New? with Phil and Dixie, Talanlan, and Wormy all in the same issue.
We touched on this, but this is the last What's New until some special one-shots later on. Phil & Dixie decide to finally find out WHY they can't do "Sex and D&D" and they get fired in the process. Still though, one of the funnier issue of this with plenty of cameos of Dragon and TSR employees.
This panel makes the Fellowship Games ad above look all the more odd.
We end with natually an ad for I.C.E.s Middle-Earth Roleplaying and a product that to many signified the end of old-school D&D.
I supposed I belong more the Silver Age than the Golden Age even though I had been playing for more than 4 years at this point.
1984 was a turning year for D&D. We can see it here in the ads and the articles. We can see the turning in Dragon and in TSR in general with the publication of the BECMI sets, Dragonlance and Marvel Super Heroes.
At the time though it felt exciting, like we were entering a new age of gaming. It STILL feels like that's what it was. Sure we can read about how Gary was getting pushed out by this time and how in 85 the finacial toll was beginning to really harm TSR. But as fans we never knew that. We never saw that side of things. Dragon was our insight to the hobby and the sights were good.
What do you recall from this time? How did you see all these changes?
Want to see what I Was saying about White Dwarf magazine from the same month? Check out
White Dwarf Wednesday for issue #52.