Likewise, the players have evolved with the game—sort of. I
think that gamer larvae start out pretty much the same: “I kill it with my
sword!” But thanks to the rich vocabulary that has developed to support
role-playing as a cultural pastime, and the highest levels of engagement in the
hobby to date, and also a proliferation of tutorials and op-ed YouTube channels
and podcasts and all of it, gamer larvae grow into gamer butterflies much
faster these days. Or they leave and go back to Grand Theft Auto. But most, I
would venture to say, see the value and the appeal of true freedom in gaming.
My groups all have. They love God of War, but they talk about their table
adventures with the same fervent and reverent tone of voice.
I can’t think of any other game that has tried so hard to
keep up with the times. There’s a reason why D&D rules the roost; they have
put the sweat equity in. Let’s throw a little love out.
This was the awkward, wonky, uneven, crude and strange
version of the game and you know what? I still love it. I think it more for
nostalgic reasons these days, but there is some great stuff still in the
original game system. And there are a lot of old school players who feel that way, because they keep re-re-re-reprinting their version of the game, over and over, changing flavor and updating artwork but keeping all of the charts and tables that seem so quaint in the modern age.
There is still a lot to like about the original game, no matter how tangled its origins. It gets the credit for being the first and it really could not have gone down any other way. The language for role-playing games hadn't been invented yet. The systems for keeping track of things, combat, experience points, even skills--none of it was there. Not until this. And as creaky as it seems, if you sit down with a few friends and start playing it, it'll all come rushing back on you, muscle memory, and you'll be transported again--maybe not to Grayhawk, but definitely back to 1982.
Old gamers, the grognards and the neckbeards, often grumble and kvetch about these kids today not knowing their roots, and my first thought is always, "Oh, you make sitting down with you lecturing them for four hours seem so bloody interesting, it's a mystery why they don't." I get the seed of their frustration, and I sympathize with it, but I don't blame all of the new gamers. Au contraire, I welcome them. For one thing, they are way less grumpy than a lot of the guys my age, so, right there, I'm on board with the new blood. And if my group gets a taste of the "old school" style adventures and classic modules via 5th edition, they are way more appreciative of my age and experience because I'm not talking down to them. But I digress. We were throwing love, not shade.
There is still a lot to like about the original game, no matter how tangled its origins. It gets the credit for being the first and it really could not have gone down any other way. The language for role-playing games hadn't been invented yet. The systems for keeping track of things, combat, experience points, even skills--none of it was there. Not until this. And as creaky as it seems, if you sit down with a few friends and start playing it, it'll all come rushing back on you, muscle memory, and you'll be transported again--maybe not to Grayhawk, but definitely back to 1982.
Old gamers, the grognards and the neckbeards, often grumble and kvetch about these kids today not knowing their roots, and my first thought is always, "Oh, you make sitting down with you lecturing them for four hours seem so bloody interesting, it's a mystery why they don't." I get the seed of their frustration, and I sympathize with it, but I don't blame all of the new gamers. Au contraire, I welcome them. For one thing, they are way less grumpy than a lot of the guys my age, so, right there, I'm on board with the new blood. And if my group gets a taste of the "old school" style adventures and classic modules via 5th edition, they are way more appreciative of my age and experience because I'm not talking down to them. But I digress. We were throwing love, not shade.
Second Edition
Okay, well, we might as well get this out of the way: I felt about this the way most Millennials feel about fourth edition. I didn’t like any part of what happened in Second Edition. Well, except for the artwork. The artwork stepped up, way up, and has stayed great ever since. But I hated the Monster Manual three-ring binder. I hated To Hit Armor Class Zero. I hated the “neutering” of the monsters (no demons or devils—and while I never used them in my games, this was all part of the same campaign that wanted to censor Warner Brothers cartoons and other such nonsense).
By this time I had moved on to other games. We still played AD&D, just not second edition. I did this up until probably 1991 or 1992. Second edition was for the youngsters, with the new math and all of the fancy artwork. What a weird line in the sand to draw, but hey, that's what your twenties are for, right?
Okay, well, we might as well get this out of the way: I felt about this the way most Millennials feel about fourth edition. I didn’t like any part of what happened in Second Edition. Well, except for the artwork. The artwork stepped up, way up, and has stayed great ever since. But I hated the Monster Manual three-ring binder. I hated To Hit Armor Class Zero. I hated the “neutering” of the monsters (no demons or devils—and while I never used them in my games, this was all part of the same campaign that wanted to censor Warner Brothers cartoons and other such nonsense).
By this time I had moved on to other games. We still played AD&D, just not second edition. I did this up until probably 1991 or 1992. Second edition was for the youngsters, with the new math and all of the fancy artwork. What a weird line in the sand to draw, but hey, that's what your twenties are for, right?
While I wasn’t in it at this time, in hindsight, creating
the Open Game License was the smartest thing they ever did. I know that because
I was selling it to game and comic shops at this time, and it was like a whole
new game. Now, did that kinda backfire on them, eventually? Yeah, it did.
Players (and DMs) felt the “keeping up with the Joneses” vibe in that there was
always a new book coming out with new feats and three spells and you just had
to have it all. Might have been great for Wizards of the Coast's bottom line, but it looked
like a cash grab to me (at the time).
There are still a number of people walking the earth that think D&D 3.5 is the superior form of the game, no take backs. I mean, where do you think Pathfinder came from, anyway? I did appreciate what 3.5 tried to do, which was fix stuff that was wrong with 2nd edition. Well, that and the very idea of giving the core game away for free and allowing all of these small companies to prop up and support your product line. I never took advantage of it, but I always thought it was a genius move.
There are still a number of people walking the earth that think D&D 3.5 is the superior form of the game, no take backs. I mean, where do you think Pathfinder came from, anyway? I did appreciate what 3.5 tried to do, which was fix stuff that was wrong with 2nd edition. Well, that and the very idea of giving the core game away for free and allowing all of these small companies to prop up and support your product line. I never took advantage of it, but I always thought it was a genius move.
The dreaded 4th ed. This is so taboo that we’re not even
supposed to talk about it, especially if we liked 4th ed. It’s like how the
Klingons aren’t supposed to talk about the smooth-headed versions from the
original Star Trek series. They acknowledge it with their stony silence.
This was actually my re-introduction into D&D. I bought
the Starter Box for my niece one Christmas and I ran a game for her and my
brother, cold. It was a lot like my initial introduction to D&D in that I
had to stop and stare at the rule book and try and decipher some of the changes
while my two players rolled dice and drew elves on scratch paper.
It wasn’t my favorite, but I did like some of the things
they tried to do. Stepping back from it, I do think that they were trying to
mimic the feel of turn-based video games, and it was a great success, as a simulation of that.
But I think maybe they forgot that they were, at their core, not video games. They were
Dungeons and Fucking Dragons. They don’t copy everyone else, they let everyone
else copy them.
Here we are. The current version of the game; simplified and
also expanded greatly with just a few interesting concepts. Gone is Thaco, and
instead is the elegant armor class that we should have had all along—a target
number. And speaking of “all along” the idea of advantage and disadvantage is
so simple to grasp that it feels like it’s been there forever. I love the idea
of conditions that are hung around character’s necks. Simplified skills are all
folded into proficiencies now. And there aren’t a string of plusses you have to
count up.
The esprit de corps of 3.5 is present, in the DM’s Guild, a
marketplace for anyone to publish their additions to D&D for anyone to try.
Most of these additions are inexpensive and some are even free. This means that
there is support for the game on a daily basis, freeing the developers up to concentrate
on big ticket items.
Looking back, it’s weird to me that character classes like
the Barbarian—a class no one would dream of leaving out of the mix—was a class
I remember being introduced in Unearthed Arcana as a new thing back in the
mid-80’s. There’s a lot of seemingly vintage ideas that are back in, the
biggest of which is the role-playing part of the game. If fourth edition went
too far into skirmish and tactics, fifth edition is practically touchy-feely
with all of the different ways you can make a character part of the overall
story.
And I’m sorry, but the background system is kinda perfect.
The idea that you get to walk onto the stage having already done something is
just brilliant. It’s the thing that keeps your players from rolling up
dead-eyed baby killers who burn down villages. It’s much easier to apply
consequences to actions. It’s accessible and playable as a referee with just a
few tables in your hand.
I really do think it’s the best version of the game we’ve
ever seen. It embraces everything from the last forty years and takes the best
parts of itself and leaves the rest. Few other game systems have the longevity
to even try that as an experiment and the ones that do have the history haven’t
tried to overhaul themselves more than once, maybe twice. I mean, the seventh
edition of Call of Cthulhu is out, and while there are certainly more rules
than ever, the basic game still looks almost identical to the one I first
picked up in 1983.
I don’t know what the sixth edition of D&D will look
like, or when if ever we’ll see it. I can’t fathom what that would be or why
they would need to get away from what they have settled on here. I mean, there
was almost a perfect storm of 5e hitting the marketplace, timed to coincide
with the fortieth anniversary of the game, and the outing of all the
celebrities in geek culture who were “secretly” playing D&D. You couldn’t
make that up.
It brought so many people back to the game, myself included,
in a big way. And with few modifications, I was able to drop my old stuff into
the new game and hit the ground running. Smart design, simple concepts, and a
wide-open game license. It’s no wonder D&D is at the top of the food chain,
the apex predator of role-playing games. And as of this writing, there is no
meteor in sight to topple the old dinosaur’s reign anytime soon.