The Computer Age is not a victimless crime
With all of this technology at my fingertips, I still find the most productive tool in my arsenal is still the notebook and pencil. I do use the web, in the past I'd have been stuck in places, and either have to invent things or head to the local library to do some research, which was a pain because I tend to do my best work late at night.
I am frustrated because I'm working within the confines of our own planet, telling stories which take place in 1890, which makes it easier to research, yet at the same time, it makes it harder as well. In fantasy settings, if I want to invent a town, then POOF! There it is! But this can't really be done in the Victorian setting. Unlike fantasy, Gothic earth is one of Science Fiction and the Science has to be, in a sense, plausible. It is very easy to destroy the players ability to suspend their disbelief. One one hand, during prep I can actually see these places where I am tinkering. While I don't have to be all that accurate, I like to keep things believable. I've never been to London, nor have my players, however we've read and we've spent lifetimes in London through fiction, or nerdist history books. I can translate Victorian London into AD&D terms so that everybody who has ever picked up a copy of Oliver Twist, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, or have read about Jack the Ripper can understand and relate to, and say, "This is London!" it has a different feel to it than Paris or Berlin. This is a hard game to prep because it is one of both History, stereotyping, literature, and lies. One would assume that there would be lots of resources available, but there really isn't. No RPG system related resources anyway. Okay, I'm whining.
I find the web to be a wonderful tool for research, but things that I had taken for granted in fantasy settings, are now rocks which serve no purpose but to stumble over, and one can't see them until they trip over one.
Maps! One should find it easier to work using Real world maps, but that isn't the case at all. It is one of those things that bugs me about the Educational System. Parents who have helped their children with homework know exactly what I am talking about, I am sure. Common core math makes no sense, they don't teach the kids how to write, and they don't teach geography. Well, they do, but it is computer based and I wonder if modern kids even know how to use a real map?
I'm frustrated because I need a little student Atlas, something that they used to sale all over the place, and dirt cheap, and is no longer readily available. I find lots of little sourcebooks which I had taken for granted, and are now a thing of the past. Once in a while one of my kids will ask me what a word means, so I'll tell them to go look it up in the Dictionary, and I was shocked to know that my 5th Grader had no idea what a dictionary even was. I suppose that google is good enough while the web is available, but what about when it isn't?
Perhaps my skill set has just been replaced and I am resentful of it. A few years back the Missouri River flooded and it took out huge stretches of the Interstate. You would be shocked as to how many people had to pull over and ask for help, all because they didn't take a map with them. I didn't think that anybody was that foolish! When you drive cross country, you always take a map with you. These people were all relying on their phones to get them where they need to be, and in this case, the data on their phones was so inaccurate that it couldn't plot a new course. And do you think that any of these people bought a Road Atlas? They didn't, maybe because they had no idea how to actually use one.
For gaming, those online Distance Calculators aren't as handy for me to use as a physical map and ruler is. Yes, I can calculate the distance between two places, but it isn't all that handy. With a ruler, I can easily plot where the party will have to stop and rest, it is easy! A chore that normally takes seconds, now takes three times as long because I'm guessing. How is that better than a paper map with a scale on it?
I also find myself overthinking stuff. Movement rates that are uncharted territory from those in the AD&D handbooks. Is a Victorian horse drawn carriage faster than one from the middle ages? You'd think so because it is constructed with materials which weigh less; so do I still cut the horses MR in half, or do I reduce it by a lesser number, and if so, by what? How does the speed of a steamer ship compare to a sailing ship? The train changes everything, even those old hulking steam engines could cross entire countries in hours. Figuring out a MR for them, factoring in stops and terrain is akin to creating your own MR system. All of this before I can even begin to sit down and write actual content. Maybe I'm just over analyzing things, but it still bugs me.
Sunday, July 31, 2016 | Labels: rants | 0 Comments
Campaign Sourcebook and Catacomb Guide: Review
One of the greatest 2nd Edition books, and
perhaps RPG books, to ever be released was Jennell Jaquays’ and William W.
Conners’ book, “Campaign Sourcebook and Catacomb guide” which was published in
March, 1990. It was the first of the Complete Books aimed at Dungeon Masters,
and it covered a wide variety of topics that were taken for granted in the Core
books, but I believe that what the finished product has become, is a system
neutral guide for everyone who decides to host games. Yes, it is aimed at
beginners who have no experience playing the role of Dungeon Master, but, for
advanced users, it describes the basic building blocks needed for forming a
successful group, and keeping it successful, as well as basic structures of
creating original content. No matter what the current name or number that
D&D happens to be calling itself, this information is still relevant. Let’s dive right in, shall we.
CHAPTER 1
Logistics of Play
While the core books give you lots of details in regards to
the rules, they are assuming that you have played before, though, even if you
have, you still may not understand that your role as the DM is that of being a
master of ceremonies as well. This chapter is short, but complete. You hear all
about player courtesy, but this is regarding what a DM owes to his
players. Just because you have a group
of friends gathered doesn’t mean that the game is going to go well. This
chapter forms the very basics of what comes later and spells it out. While only
a couple of pages long, this chapter provides us with a successful formula
prior to play.
CHAPTER 2
Styles of Adventure
Play
There is a lot said about Styles of play on the web, but in
this chapter you’ll find a comprehensive list of them, problems that they may
cause, and how to mix them to keep a game engaging for everyone. Even if we are running a module, we still have
to decide what elements of style would work best. This chapter also gives some
major tips on how, and what, to prep and why we should do it. We don’t need to
prep everything, but there are things that if we don’t prep, then we are in
some serious trouble.
CHAPTER 3
Pacing and Theatrics
Everybody knows that what separates a good DM from a bad one
is that one can pace a game, and one can’t. While proper pacing still must be
learned over time, this chapter offers very sound advice to achieve it quicker
than using trial and error alone. It
also talks about setting a mood that is productive to the drama which you are
trying to achieve. I don’t dress up, nor do I always talk in funny voices, but
I do use Theatrics. Excitement isn’t something that just happens naturally, we
have to make it happen. How does one
project the feelings which one wishes the players to feel? And people say that
DMing isn’t art. Chances are, they really need to rethink their view.
CHAPTER 4
Uses of Judgement
This is a popular theme, even today. I can’t tell you how
many people run to Reddit to beg for help, when the answers are all right here
in this chapter. Not only does it address making game calls, but it also has a
secondary function, how to handle people and their odd quarks. Like DM’s,
players have play styles too, and handling these different play styles, as well
as personalities can be daunting. When two personalities clash, sometimes our
first reaction is to kick them out of the group, but this isn’t always easy or
necessary. It is the job of the DM to direct traffic and be the helmsmen of the
narrative, that is sometimes ignored to a table’s demise.
CHAPTER 5
CREATING THE CAMPAIGN
Here is where the book changes personalities, and becomes a
work horse for experienced users. We aren’t talking simply creating a series of
gaming sessions strung together to form a complete story; we are talking about
creating EVERYTHING! I don’t know how many DMs have tried doing this and end up
just wasting their time because it doesn’t go anywhere; this introduction helps
us form a world more successfully by suggesting tried and true methods of how
to go about it in the most productive way possible.
CHAPTER 6
Creating the World
Once a DM, and the players, decides to make the leap into
the unknown, it helps to have specific questions answered right away, and this
chapter helps us organize our thoughts into highly productive ways which can
help make our ideas more successful. It isn’t bossy, it doesn’t say that this
is how it is done, it just gives you suggestions on how to avoid traps and
pitfalls that can be stumbled over along the way.
CHAPTER 7
Maps and Map-making
What DM doesn’t love maps? It sounds so easy! But when it
comes right down to it, it isn’t nearly as easy as it appears. There are also
lots of different styles of maps that we use, it all depends upon our needs and
why we have decided that we need it. This chapter gives us some tools to making
productive maps, and some tricks and tips to guide us through the process.
CHAPTER 8
Creating the
Adventure
I have read several books on how to do this, but the
simplest and most helpful way is in this chapter. This is a skill learned over
time, creating our own content and telling our own stories. While this chapter
won’t do the work for us; again, it helps us identify our players, and presents
successful methods as well as pitfalls that have been learned over time so that
hopefully, we can avoid them. It provides us with a formula, and there are
formulas for a reason.
CHAPTER 9
Making NPCs Live
Another topic that is still with us today, “How can I get my
players to care about NPCs?” While the
DMG talked about this, and gave a few suggestions, this chapter expands upon
it, and allows everybody, regardless of DM experience, to do this very
important job more efficiently. I don’t know about you, but this is where I get
most of my amusement from while DMing. Once you figure out this formula, it
becomes natural and it continues to mature until you just do it better and
better every time.
CHAPTER 10
Dungeon Settings
One of Gygax’s complaints involved the total abandonment of
the Dungeon setting. There is lots of material out there that helps us create
overland adventures, and the Dungeon was neglected for a very long time.
Experienced DMs know that over-world adventures and under-world adventures are
totally different from one another. This chapter addresses the Dungeon after
many years of neglect. Why do you need them? What do you put down there? While
this chapter can get a bit too detailed, it does serve a purpose. This chapter
represents a shift in design, because, at the time, there were not very many
Dungeons in Dungeons & Dragons.
CHAPTER 11
Dungeon Adventures
This is old-school stuff here, designing a successful
campaign underground where the players may never actually leave? Maybe not, but
it does give lots of ideas on things that can happen in a dungeon that won’t
necessarily happen above. This chapter is far from perfect, but it does give a
DM who has never thought about such things, a couple of ideas to work with.
CHAPTER 12
Generic Dungeons
This is really just an appendix; they give a few examples of
maps, and have keyed them with room descriptions. They are all forced
perspective maps which are really out of date, and with good reason. Not only
are they overly complex to make, they lack the basic details that we truly need
to make our maps functional. I think that this was TSR trying to keep its maps
special from the ones that you make yourself, but there really isn’t much of a
need for that. I know that I have always preferred top down perspectives, and
fancy maps are just that, fancy.
In the back of the book, there is also some symbols which
they recommend using on maps, as well as a photocopy templet for drawing your
own forced perspective maps . . . as if.
OTHER THOUGHTS
This review is much longer than I would normally dedicate to
it; however the written content in this title is so good that it does demand
such treatment. While much of the information within it can be found on this
blog and others like it, it is nice to have all of the information stored in
one centralized place.
One can say that AD&D didn’t actually come with an
instruction manual, but, if it did, then it would be this book. While a few
chapters are dated, the bulk of it is not. It accurately describes issues that
we all experience from time to time, or describes methods to playing at more
advanced levels then we currently are.
Now, much of the artwork in this book is notoriously
hideous. But I don’t recommend buying it to look at the pictures, I recommend
adding it to your reading list because of the content. It is preferred to have
this book in physical form, because it is one that you won’t necessarily have
at the table with you on game day, but it is one that we all should read and
re-read from time to time. If you are working on a large project, it is nice to
have with you for a few years until you find yourself doing it naturally, and
you will! The rating for 1990 as well as for today is still the same: A+.
Wednesday, July 27, 2016 | Labels: Reviews | 3 Comments
Game Day: Gothic Earth Season 2, Session Zero
This was how we started session 0. Because of bad luck and exhaustion, I didn't do any prep, but since we haven't played these characters for so long, and we were all on the same boat, I figure that we could spend the game trying to remember what had happened. I found that my wife had kept a lot of my notes, and I had been able to piece enough together to remember major NPCs, and events. I already knew the part above would happen; prepping for Gothic Earth is harder than Forgotten Realms, as this is a game for History geeks, and plausible lies. Instead of researching English Law in the 1890's, we had a preposterous trial that was clearly just a ruse to reintroduce major NPCs, and give the PCs a chance to talk to them and remember what they had accomplished.
In reality, it was stupid. This stuff would never had happened, but I needed a transition. There is a module that I really want to run, it is part of the Ravenloft Boxset called The Bleak House, which takes place in a mental asylum, it was just getting the PCs there, and figuring out their role in events.
We only Played for about 3 hours, and most of it was dialog. I had racked my brains on how to accomplish a trial so that it would be interactive, and this is what I came up with. Next session, it can be dismissed as the last traces of whatever Fu Manchu had done to them, but reality is now being easier to grasp.
What really happened, according to the NPC's, there was a mysterious happening, a German agent who had disappeared 6 years ago while investigating a criminal organization called "The Si-Fan" suddenly reappears out of a tiny Opium Den, claiming to had been held prisoner in a cell that doesn't exist.
Something happened down there, but, as is always the case with Fu Manchu, authorities are able to prove nothing. Yet again, good witnesses (the PC's) have been discredited as insane. This has further repercussions, as it was the PC's who were able to acquire the evidence to convict a madman, who must now be set free again.
Their past has also returned to haunt them, the disaster at Lisbon, Spain; where they had accidentally destroyed a quarter of the city, destroying property and killing men women and children, has led to Spain seeking justice, but since they aim to execute the party, England refuses to extradite them.
It was also released that the two PCs who had started this game, Charlotte, a whore in London's White Chapel district, and Sam, an American gun-for-hire are actually descendants of the Weathermay family, and are protected as Lords by a treaty signed in 1612 which states that because of great services rendered, no Weathermay's will ever be imprisoned. The courts, bound by this ancient treaty, instead sentence Weathermay's found guilty of crimes to Mental Asylums, for treatment. The rest of the party was included in this Treaty as they are to be considered Knights and Servants of the Weathermay Estate.
According to the Law, the PC's are convicted of murder, however an ally, Detective Ramses, has proven that the player's had acted in self-defense, but, to kill two birds with one stone, the practices of a German Psychiatrist are in question, and this act may also appease the Spanish Courts, they have been committed to the "Berlin Memorial Hospital for the Mentally Insane", in Berlin, Germany, and placed into the care of Doctor Dominioni. They have been informed that this is a very dangerous mission, and someone will be in place for them to report all of their findings to, but other than that, they are on their own.
For technical notes, I wanted to use our confusion and memories (or lack-thereof) as a part of the game, I also wanted to head in a completely different direction than last time. In last season, the party was in a race with both the Si-Fan and the 6-Fingered Hand, to find a mystic and powerful artifact called the Spirit Blade of Nag Shuba, which had them globe-trotting to ancient sites to uncover pieces of this artifact that possessed terrible powers.
This season will be more personal. We will be delving deep inside of the minds of these characters, exploring themes of madness and pain. We love these characters, but it is time to hurt them in ways that they won't easily bounce back from. In a word, this will be a role-playing focused game, which will really test the player's abilities to embrace that aspect, and challenge them in a way that few players ever are. I wanted to do this a long time ago, but then we were joined by players new to the game, but I think that they now have the technical aspects of the system down and have enough experience to handle this style. This style really isn't for everybody! But for our table, it should be fun as hell!
Sunday, July 24, 2016 | Labels: Ripper's Gaming Sessions | 1 Comments
Personal Updates & Other Worthless Information
To make the game military, I needed characters that could lead armies, thus we started from 10th level. Now, in the past we did lots of experiments with playing at different levels. We played modules only, and the DM would tell us what kind of characters we need and assigned the level to us. This worked at the time, but we were much younger and played a lot more. We wanted different things out of the game. Today, this just doesn't work for us; we really push the role-playing aspect. We don't necessarily act or make funny voices, but we do develop our characters. I had asked the players if we wanted to start out at 1st, and see what happens, but they said no. They know me. If I had a vision, then we best get too it. I should had kept them low level, from the start I had to beef up my orcs. All of them are unique to my table, as I wanted the enemy to be high level as well.
Just starting at 10th level is hard as hell! For spell casters, it was a nightmare, they ended up reading and unable to focus on the game, which is something that we had previously eliminated by following the AD&D rules of choosing spells before play, but with the expanded spell lists for such characters, it took forever and they didn't have these spells memories as players yet, they were all new to them. The slow advancement really aids the spell caster, it gives them time to really get a feel for their spells and what they can and can't do.
It is really hard on the DM! It took me forever to properly challenge the players, but now it isn't about challenge levels, or spells, but about not really giving a crap about your character. It's been 6 months and nobody really knows who they are playing. Not to say that we didn't learn a lot, because we did. If I could go back and start again, I would lower the levels to 1st and play from there. The idea is still festering, but for now it goes back on the shelf.
What the players really want to do is get back to Gothic Earth. Prep is much harder, and it was me that needed to take a break, but if this 10th level excursion has taught me anything, it is how to prep large areas very quickly. I feel that I have grown stronger as a DM, and I definitely feel more at ease using magic, which is something that I've always had problems with in the past. The hardest characters for me to play have always been wizards and clerics. Especially high level clerics, at least mages have specific spells that they can use, but a cleric is still a problem, as they have access to all of the spells in their spheres.
Now, my normal method of prep is to brainstorm for a couple of days, and then start prep, but I didn't get to start prep, on Monday, my bathroom floor started leaking downstairs so my father and I had to rip out the floor and we are in the process of fixing it. Game-night is Saturday and I have nothing prepared beyond the thoughts in my head, and I hate doing that but it is what it is.
This will be the start of the second chapter, and I've had a few years to figure this stuff out, so I should be okay. I started the first chapter much the same way. I actually was drawing a map of a house that they were in while I was DMing a murder mystery. I had to go back and fix a couple of details when I had time to make a proper map, but my players forgave my inconsistencies. To be honest, I was in a much harsher position last time we started this game. I am excited, I was having some difficulty with the direction that it was going, and with some old errors that I had made and just had to live with, but now I can go back and correct them.
As far as the Blog goes, I do like doing the retro-reviews, and we'll be starting on 1990 very soon, I've also discovered a few more technical issues that can be added to the Mechanic Series, so I am not without ideas for new content.
That is what has been going on this week! Wish me luck with this weekends game, because I'm gonna need it. Thankfully, once I get going again it will get easier.
Thursday, July 21, 2016 | Labels: rants | 8 Comments
1989 A Year in Review
I found this to be interesting, and thought that I would
share it. As far as I know a list like this has never been published on the Web
before, I had to look it all up, namely from Amazon and old issues of Dragon
Magazine: when the two did not agree, I always went with Dragon’s release date.
I had been mistaken that The Complete Thief’s Handbook was an 89 release
as well, but my original source was incorrect; it was actually released in
early 1990.
1988
2023 Greyhawk Adventures (Hardcover) August
1989
9243 Module DLE1 In Search of Dragons (soft bound) February
9253 Module WG8 Fate of Istus (soft bound) March
2101 Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd Edition PlayersHandbook (Hardcover) April
2100 Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd Edition DungeonMaster’s Guide (Hardcover) June
2102 Monstrous Compendium Volume 1 (Binder) July
REF1 Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd Edition DungeonMasters Screen (soft bound) August
2103 Monstrous Compendium Volume 2 (Loose Leaf) September
9264 REF2 Character Record Sheets (Soft bound) September
1049 Spelljammer: Adventures in Space (Boxset) October
9266 Battlesystem 2nd Edition (soft bound) December
2104 Monstrous Compendium Volume 3 (loose leaf) December
2110 The Complete Fighter’s Handbook (Soft bound) December
MC3, a monsters appendix
for the Forgotten Realms setting, mysteriously isn’t available on PDF, and I
think that the Monstrous Compendium actually works best on PDF. It would be
nice to get all of them on file, but alas, as far as I know, this product does
not exist.
It was a strong year! While many dismiss the 2nd
edition as a bastard, I stand by my stance that a second edition was needed,
and I think that it was released not just to save the company from financial
failure, but to provide an improved product. They had set specific goals for
2e, the biggest being to cut down on the books required to play, and they did
that. While prep can require a lot of books, if you are properly prepared for a
game, you only need the DMG and PHB at the table, with these two books a DM is
prepared for anything! The system was also sanitized for political reasons,
however all of that stuff can easily be put back into the game if the table
wishes it. Overall, I think that 2e is the stronger ruleset; it cuts down the
drama and arguing about what a player can or can’t do, but it is still freeform
enough that a DM hasn’t been reduced down to simply an organizer of material.
When Gygax published AD&D, his original goal was to
create a universal system that would be played the same regardless of what
table you were sitting at, while this never actually happened, it was always
something that could be recognized as AD&D and I feel that 2e succeeded at
this goal. It is definitely Advanced Dungeons & Dragons: It plays well, it
stays true to the original source material but organized it and revised it into
a much stronger product which allowed more to be done quicker. The DM still has
the freedom to make specific calls, he can alter the core system without
breaking the game, and even playtest new ideas without having to worry about
what will happen if they just don’t work out.
Once there was enough 2e source material available, TSR
successfully convinced people that the game was no longer compatible with 1e by
publishing articles in Dragon Magazine specifically for those who either couldn’t
afford or just had no desire to move on. This was the last year that 1e was
supported, and I would like to say that this was the only time in history that
it was ever recommended to combine two different systems. Even today you get
better results if you do combine the two. By taking what you love from original
AD&D and carrying it over to the second edition, you get a very complete
rule system that you can always fall back on.
In the years to come, TSR would write entire books based
upon a single chapter in 1e, or even
just a table in one of the books, and while it was expanded, one can ask if it was really
necessary. By the end of 1989, TSR was
making money again, and not just making money, but actually earning it! While
the quality of the modules suffered, the 2e reference guides during
this year, were far superior to anything else out there at the time. Not to
understate the work of Gary Gygax, he created something from nothing. He
invented a brand new medium which we could use to express ourselves. Gygax,
while fun to read, wrote contradictions and personal feelings to his work, and
these were removed. I think that Cook was a stronger writer, but then again, it
was all based upon the work blazed by its creator.
This industry has always had two faces, the face that wants
to give you the resource that allows you to create, and the other face which
seeks to convince you that they can create better adventures than you can. If
TSR hadn’t changed their business practices, and catered to those incapable of
finding their own voices, AD&D would now be gone. A game played by old men
until the license went into the public domain, and then, maybe . . . maybe it would
be active again. Once the market was created, there were lots of games out
there, but none, in my opinion, as well done as AD&D. They were simply
clones and copies that never had the pop culture status of the original which
had allowed the AD&D system to mature, rather than be thrown away at the
end of the 70’s when the videogame markets were taking huge bites out of the
entertainment industry.
2e was successful enough to still be a valuable property
when TSR shut their doors. I am not sure if that would had happened if it was
still under the control of Gygax, he was so convinced that a movie deal would
fix everything that he was blinded as to what he should be doing, and history
tells us that a movie deal fixes nothing at all! TSR did end up making a fatal
mistake along the same lines, but at this point; in 1989 they had laid a new
foundation over the old one, and with these books, were able to begin building
a stronger empire that would better weather the test of time. For a new
generation which includes myself, Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd
Edition IS D&D, for better or worse.
Monday, July 11, 2016 | Labels: Reviews | 0 Comments
REF2 Character Record Sheets . . . ARRRRR!!!!!
In September of Advanced Dungeons & Dragon 2nd
Edition’s maiden year, 1989, product 9264 was released as REF2 Character Record
Sheets. Now, this is still the most
bootlegged product which TSR ever put out! With a suggested retail price of
$8.95, many at the time felt that this was too expensive, especially when you
could easily make them yourself at home. Those who did buy it, typically took
it to a photocopier and did it that way. It is surprising how many whole and
complete copies of this product are still available, especially for a product
that was designed to be destroyed.
Back when this product first came out, there was no World
Wide Web, desktop printing was no where near as advanced as it is today; I
think that the only use that one ever got from their printer, if they even had
one, was to print of these ugly banners. The photocopier was king! I remember
going to the local library and paying fifteen cents per page!
So, there you are, you killed your character doing something
stupid, and you are officially out of the game until you are finished with a
new one. First thing first, you get out your binder of loose-leaf note pad
paper, a ruler, a pencil, and some dice. While everybody else is playing, you
are rolling up stats, so that you know what your character will be, and then
you get your ruler and start drawing all of the slots that you wanted. Then,
once you had drawn your own player character sheet, it was time to fill it out!
Just the basics, but this process typically took the rest of the night. Once
you get some free time, you’d go back over the character sheet with a pen so
that you can see it better.
We really loved our characters too! We’d get eraser burns in
our hp slots and on our own, we would just draw up a new Character Sheet to
play with next time. I have drawings that I’ve made of my characters, and ones that
were so special that I marked them out in pen.
Going through my Father-In-Law’s stuff, he had a variety of
different character sheets, everything from basic notes written down on scratch
paper, highly artistic drawings, to saving a blank drawing and photo copying
that! The benefit of drawing up your own, was that you could add stuff that
was important to your class, or individual to that character. Yes, they took a
lot longer to draw up, but if you are playing a thief, a homemade PC Sheet is
far superior to the published variety. You could also tell, at a glance, just
whose character is whose because all of them were different. We don’t do this
anymore either, I think that I made a custom PC sheet on the computer the last
time I played, but it took even longer than just drawing my own by hand would
be. For the most part, we use this book. We are much better about keeping
characters alive, but back in the day, we’d really burn through this thing if
we had one. To have a character go from 1st to 7th was a
big deal! It was then that we’d feel confident enough to really get special
with it.
The generic PC sheets, while they take some of the flavor
away from the character itself, does allow us to play faster, and it is easier
on the DM because he can quickly find the information that he’s looking for
because it is always in the same place, however I don’t think that, when we use
them, we are as intimate with our characters as we normally would be. I would
get all kinds of ideas while drawing and redrawing them things up. When copying
items that I had collected through my adventures, I’d remember each one and how
I got it. It was fun!
It is funny, how people will look down on you for playing
with bootlegged material, however they go right to Dragonfoot to download a copy
of these PC sheets to print off without even thinking about it. Are they free
to use? Do we have permission to photocopy them? The answer is NO! We can
photocopy the special PC sheets found in the Complete Series for personal use,
but as far as the original Character Record Sheets go, there was no permission
ever given; at least not on the product itself. The copy on Dragonfoot and
other locations around the web have been there for years! Wizards of the Coast definitely
knows about them, but since they say nothing, it can be assumed that we can
print off our own. Can you imagine a lawyer trying to bust all of the people
who have pirated these things over all these years?
The product itself is one of convenience, it is not
necessary to play the game, and it never was! Yes, it looks good and is fast to
use, but the information that it contains is subpar at best. Besides the PC
Sheets, you also get a good collection of spell sheets which you can fill out
as you go, they work for both the mage, cleric, and all other spell casters,
and those are pretty convenient! Looking up spells and reading those
descriptions to the DM can take time, this product allows us to have all of the
basics right at our fingertips! But, again, you can download these for free or
make one yourself with you computer.
This book has been republished through the years, but as far
as I know was never modified until the Player’s Options series was published.
Collectors are interested in this product, but as far as the casual gamers go,
if they find a cheap copy then they might pick it up. I know that I still use
mine and it has lasted a really long time! The sheets are a lot stronger than loose
leaf paper, and resist eraser burns, spilled drinks, cheezy poof stains, and
cigarette ash. They aren’t overly detailed, but you can keep them in a folder
with all of your PC memorabilia and it will last for years! It Is kind of fun
finding a character sheet from decades ago that you had forgotten about and is
still looks the same as when you last played it, so maybe there was more to
this product than meets the eye?
I personally give it a D+, there is definitely worse stuff
out there, but it isn’t nearly as useful as it claims to be.
Monday, July 04, 2016 | Labels: Reviews | 0 Comments
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