I've been doing a lot of writing this past week and it got me thinking about different tastes or styles in RPG adventures and how what is popular has changed over the years. It's not a question of better or worse, it's really just about different. Personally I really like current generation game rules, but if I'm being honest I still really prefer the style of adventures and game content that were published when I first got into D&D. It got me thinking about my first year playing D&D and the first few products that shaped my view of how the game is played.
When I first got into D&D I was 11 years old. I had basically no money of my own and my family was tight enough for money that I couldn't just go out with my parents and get the things I wanted (or knew of for that matter). I ended up doing what every 11 year old focused on one thing they want does; I asked for nothing but D&D stuff for Christmas. I don't remember in detail a lot of Christmases from my youth, but I remember Christmas 1983.
My younger sister used to get up CRAZY early on Christmas morning to open presents. After a couple of years of ridiculously early December 25ths my mom had set down a rule that when we woke up we could open and play with everything in our stockings, but no presents under the tree, and no waking her up before she got up on her own. So on December 25th 1983 at about 3:30am my sister came busting into my room with her stocking (mine was leaned up against my bedroom door) to go through our stockings. Every year since my mom had started this practice my sister had come into my room, gone through stockings, and then we would fall back asleep after she got bored, this year would be the first time I stayed up. My stocking was full of fruit, nuts, candies, and toiletries (the usual for us) but tucked in behind my stocking leaned up against my bedroom door was my first ever D&D book; The Fiend Folio.
I was thrilled! Not only was the artwork AMAZING but a ton of my early gaming was playing through Fighting Fantasy books Warlock Of Firetop Mountain and Citadel Of Chaos. Getting a D&D book that was filled with monsters with the same aesthetic and sensibilities excited me more than any other D&D book I could have gotten at the time would have. My sister fell back asleep and I sat up in my bed reading the Fiend Folio from cover to cover while everyone else in the house slept.
Hours later we all went downstairs and started opening presents. My mom obviously knew which way my interests were going as the first two packages I opened were a JRR Tolkien box set and a CS Lewis box set. That was awesome! I had 11 books to read that couldn't wait to get into, but the next package properly kicked off and interest that is still going strong 39 years later...
This was unbelievable! I was overwhelmed that I had both a Player's and a Dungeon Master's book! I'd never actually seen this box set before, I had only seen the the AD&D hardcovers before. And in 2022 I can't accurately convey what a big deal it was to have my own dice, at that time I didn't even know where I could get polyhedral dice from! I remember thinking I couldn't wait to get together with my friends after Christmas to start playing with my new stuff, and that was before I opened the Player's book and realized it had a solo adventure I was going to be able to play through that day. That old D&D box combined newness and completeness in a way that still informs my view of what a good starter set for a game should be.
My final gaming present from that first Christmas was another showcase of how great gaming content was at the time. My first issue of Dragon Magazine.
How could one magazine have; an entire city setting, an complete adventure, a piece of fiction, and a TON of background articles, and even ads (seriously ADS!) that had tons of amazing original artwork?
Christmas 1983 was my first deep dive into fantasy role-playing. Next up I'll cover summer 1985 when my philosophy of adventures and adventure writing started to take shape.
-Jay
WOW. What a fantastic start Jay. The Fiend Folio as your first D&D book. ICONIC!
ReplyDelete