torrent films

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

zondag 22 juli 2012

AD&D Reprints First Impressions

Posted on 10:40 by john maikal
The reprints for the AD&D 1st edition rulebooks arrived at my house on Friday from Noble Knight Games.

If my memory serves, this is not actually the first time the original AD&D books have been reprinted - I seem to recall an Italian publisher got permission to reprint the books in an extremely tiny format back in the late 90s - I remember seeing them at Cambridge's Pandemonium Books & Games. They were more a curiosity, with each page being condensed to something around the size of a playing card. I didn't pick them up and to be honest it's not something I regret not getting.

These newest reprints are designed to be more useful, being back to the original size. I've read on Wizards of the Coast's website that a lot of work went into the reprints - there were no digital files beyond basic scans so apparently each page had to be redone. The effort seems to have been successful - comparing them with my original AD&D books you really can't see any difference in the way each page looks.

Regretfully the paper seems to have changed. The original AD&D books were products of amazing durability. My original books, despite being used for years of gaming, moves to college and back, soda spills, moves to apartments and houses, are still in reasonably good shape - better shape than books I bought twenty years later. (I'm feeling old now - though truth be told I actually didn't get the books when they first came out but rather a few years before they were redone with new covers.) These new books are printed on what I would characterize as a semi-glossy paper - not super shiny, but definitely of a glossy type. The white background looks very white - obviously I don't have new copies of my original AD&D books to compare it to but I'm pretty sure they were never that white. So I'd definitely have to give a preference to the original formats.

That said, Wizards of the Coast has done a first-rate job with the reprints. They clearly took a lot of work to do, visually they look fantastic, and they appear to be well bound. Probably not as well bound as the originals but I'm pretty sure those books could survive a zombie apocalypse.

I'll probably get around to reviewing the AD&D core books at some point so right now I'm only giving first thoughts. The Dungeon Masters Guide has a ton of information in it though looking at it now it seems like could have done with a little better organizing. Though intended to be a complete game I have a hard time imagining what it would be like picking up the Players Handbook without some familiarity with D&D. In my own circles, the older players tended to start with the original D&D while the younger ones like me tended to start with the D&D Basic and Expert rules and then graduate to AD&D. I'm not certain what to make of the "Gygaxian Prose" - it certainly is part of the charm of the game while at the same time it makes the author sound a bit full of himself from time to time. "Again, a word of warning. Many products might purport to be satisfactory for use with Advanced Dungeons and Dragons, but only those noted as OFFICIAL or Authorized AD&D items should be accepted. Do not settle for substitutes or second-rate material in your campaign; ask only for approved AD&D products only!" I've missed prose such as that. At the very least, Mr. Gygax expanded my middle school vocabulary amazingly well.

Overall, I'm overjoyed to see the original AD&D books reprinted (and that at least some of the funds are going to a memorial for Gary Gygax) and pleased to see a first-rate job was done. In the fall Wizards of the Coast will be reprinting the core 3.5 books. I think this is a good move on their parts - they are again making available what were probably the two most popular versions of D&D. I hope at some point they will make these books available in some digital form - I'm primarily a digital consumer now, with my eBooks, Audible audiobooks, streaming video and audio, etc.

I do find myself wanting to get some dice out and do a 1st edition AD&D game...
Dit e-mailen Dit bloggen!Delen via XDelen op Facebook
Posted in adnd, rpg review | No comments
Nieuwere post Oudere post Homepage

0 reacties:

Een reactie posten

Abonneren op: Reacties posten (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • ProFantasy's Campaign Cartographer 3
    As I mentioned last week I view maps as something to be both functional and artistic. Last week I reviewed the Hexographer program which lea...
  • RPG Review: Dungeon Crawl Classics
    The intent of the Open Game License that Wizards of the Coast released with the 3rd edition of Dungeons & Dragons was to encourage other...
  • Delta Green Fiction
    In my last post I spoke a bit about Delta Green. After posting I realized that my familiarity with Delta Green is solely through RPG supple...
  • Hexographer RPG Software
    Fantasy and maps tend to go hand and hand. One need only look at one of the most famous works of the genre, The Hobbit to see that. That wor...
  • RPG Review: Adventurer Conqueror King System
    One of the more interesting D&D variants to come out of late is Autarch LLC's Adventurer Conqueror King System (henceforth referred...
  • Gaming with Black Leaf and Elfstar - D&D in the 80s
    Excerpted from Jack Chick's Dark Dungeons for purposes of illustration For those who entered the gaming hobby after the 80s it is diffic...
  • Remain Calm. Trust in Science. Atomic Robo Overview.
    My gaming group has been experimenting with Evil Hat's Atomic Robo RPG. I've been itching to try out Fate for ages. I'm somewhat...
  • About this blog
    Welcome to my little corner of the internet. So what's this blog all about? It's my attempt to create a blog of things that are of i...
  • A Digital Gamer's Toolkit
    When my wife and I first moved into our house over ten years ago the house seemed enormous. It was just the two of us, with dreams of starti...
  • Geek Gateway Drugs of the 70s and 80s
    For most people my age (I'm 40) and older, their gateway drug into fantasy was  the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. I was a little bit differen...

Categories

  • 007
  • 13th Age
  • 1880s
  • 1980s
  • 1990s
  • 3.x
  • 4e
  • a game of thrones
  • aaron allston
  • about
  • ACKS
  • adnd
  • alien
  • Ancient Rome
  • animation
  • Appendix N
  • ASSH
  • Astonishing Swordsmen and Sorcerers of Hyperborea
  • atomic robo
  • balance
  • basic dnd
  • Boston Marathon
  • brp
  • bullying
  • call of cthulhu
  • capes cowls and villains foul
  • cc3
  • ccvf
  • children
  • chromebook
  • Clark Ashton Smith
  • clerics
  • cloud
  • Cold City
  • cold war
  • comics
  • computers
  • continuity
  • Corrin Empire
  • cthulhu by gaslight
  • dark dungeons
  • Dark Tower
  • DCC
  • Delta Green
  • dice
  • digital products
  • dnd
  • Doctor Who
  • dresden files
  • dungeon crawl classics
  • dying earth
  • eberron
  • education
  • espionage
  • Fantasy America
  • FASA
  • FATE
  • fiction
  • Fiction Review
  • film
  • film reviews
  • Firefly
  • gamma world
  • gaslight
  • gateway materials
  • geekiness
  • geology
  • godlike
  • grimjack
  • gun control
  • hackmaster
  • heroines
  • historical gaming
  • history
  • home campaign
  • house rules
  • HP Lovecraft
  • humor
  • jack vance
  • John Le CarrĂ©
  • Judges Guild
  • jules verne
  • Lankhmar
  • late antiquity
  • location-based adventures
  • Lord of the Rings
  • lotfp
  • maps
  • Marvel Super Heroes
  • metamorphosis alpha
  • music
  • musings
  • mutant city blues
  • narnia
  • narrative play
  • Native Americans
  • new rules
  • new school
  • new york city
  • nexus
  • non-fiction
  • oe dnd
  • One-Roll Engine
  • ORE
  • palladium
  • player control
  • politics
  • post-apocalyptic fiction
  • prometheus
  • ravenloft
  • real world
  • recruiting
  • religion
  • retcons
  • retro-clones
  • review
  • rolemaster
  • rpg review
  • rpg review world of grewyhawk
  • rpgs
  • runequest
  • Saga System
  • sandbox
  • science fiction
  • Session Writeup
  • skills
  • slavers
  • software
  • song of ice and fire
  • speed factor
  • spirit of knowledge charter school
  • star trek
  • star wars
  • Stars Without Number
  • steampunk
  • Stephen King
  • story-based adventures
  • superhero rpgs
  • superheroes
  • superman
  • swords and wizardry
  • swords and wizardry appreciation day
  • techie
  • television
  • Thanksgiving
  • the big crime
  • The Laundry
  • Tim Powers
  • time travel
  • Top Secret
  • Traveller
  • vampire: the masquerade
  • vampires
  • virtual tabletop
  • vtt
  • wild talents
  • worcester
  • world building
  • world of darkness
  • world of greyhawk
  • zombie apocalypse

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (8)
    • ►  juni (1)
    • ►  maart (2)
    • ►  februari (2)
    • ►  januari (3)
  • ►  2013 (39)
    • ►  december (4)
    • ►  november (1)
    • ►  oktober (1)
    • ►  september (1)
    • ►  augustus (7)
    • ►  juli (3)
    • ►  mei (2)
    • ►  april (8)
    • ►  maart (5)
    • ►  februari (3)
    • ►  januari (4)
  • ▼  2012 (81)
    • ►  december (2)
    • ►  november (3)
    • ►  oktober (3)
    • ►  september (7)
    • ►  augustus (10)
    • ▼  juli (14)
      • RPG Review: Wild Talents
      • Actual Play: The Shrine of Pluto Part II [DCC]
      • See You at Munden's
      • The Superhero Blues
      • AD&D Reprints First Impressions
      • Non-Fiction Review: "Superman: The High-Flying His...
      • RPG Review: The Palladium Book of Weapons and Assa...
      • Actual Play: The Shrine of Pluto Part I [DCC]
      • Fiction Review: "Lamb: The Gospel According to Bif...
      • DCC: Actual Play Impressions
      • RPG Review: D&D Expert Rules (1st-3rd Printings)
      • Religion in Fantasy Settings
      • Developing a New Campaign Setting: Tagentium Map F...
      • Developing a New Campaign Setting: The Town of Tag...
    • ►  juni (14)
    • ►  mei (18)
    • ►  april (10)
Mogelijk gemaakt door Blogger.

Over mij

john maikal
Mijn volledige profiel tonen