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  TEXT View source
       
       # 2025-04-18 - Dungeons & Dragons & Rogues, Oh My!
       
       Today i am writing about Dungeons & Dragons.  D&D is open-ended
       enough to be different things for different people.  It can be a
       tactical dungeon crawl where the objective is to kill monsters and
       take their stuff.  It can be story telling and improv theater where
       you get to make-believe and escape from a mundane day-to-day world.
       In any case it is intended to be a creative, social experience,
       giving the participants a chance to exercise their imaginations,
       try out new ways of being, and have fun with their friends.  In my
       not so humble opinion, those are important.
       
       The first computer game i played was Dungeon (AKA Zork), and it was
       influenced by D&D.  This game was a solitaire exercise in exploration
       and puzzle solving.
       
   DIR Dungeon, Zork, etc. (1978-1981)
       
       Later, when a "mini mall" opened in my neighborhood, one of the
       stalls was rented by people who handed out Chick tracts, including
       Dark Dungeons.  Cheap entertainment for a broke kid.
       
  HTML Dark Dungeons (1984)
       
       One of the local pawn shops sold shareware on 5-1/4" floppy disks.
       They charged $1 per disk.  It was often a gamble.  You read the title
       and a short descriptive sentence on the disk label and crossed your
       fingers that it would be worthwhile.  I bought a floppy labeled
       Ring Wielder, which turned out to be a print-your-own RPG ruleset.  I
       printed it on tractor-feed paper and tried to play it with my brother
       and sister.  We didn't really grok it.
       
  HTML Ring Wielder (1989)
       
       In high school, i discovered Rogue and played it a lot.  After that
       came Hack, both from sneakernet.  Then a group of us pitched in $1
       each to order a copy of Moria from a mail-order catalog, and we
       shared it with each other.  I spent hours playing Moria.  Finally,
       a friend and i downloaded Larn & NetHack over a modem.  Moria grew up
       to become Angband.  I think of Angband and NetHack as emacs and vi:
       different yet the same, both having important contributions.  Also,
       they can both be considered solitaire versions of D&D.
       
       In high school i had friends who played 2nd Edition AD&D.  I even
       tried to join in during a group sleepover.  They wanted to watch TV
       and didn't even begin creating characters until about 10 PM.  I am
       an early bird, and suffice it to say, i fell asleep during the first
       hour of gameplay.  They stayed up all night.  I had a few more false
       starts creating characters but never really playing the game.
       
       All of my high school D&D friends were soundly in the "nerd" camp.
       Most of them liked books, programming, and Trek.  None of them were
       into art, sports, or theater.
       
       Speaking of books and storytelling, i checked out every D&D themed
       book i could get my hands on in the school library, which includes
       many Dragonlance and Forgotten Realms novels.  I remember Drizzt,
       Elminster, Raistlin, etc.
       
  TEXT TSR D&D Bibliography
       
  TEXT List of Dragonlance Novels
       
  TEXT List of Forgotten Realms Novels
       
       It wasn't until 2011 that i finally played a real game of D&D, this
       time using 5th Edition.  It was my good fortune to play in a campaign
       led by an experienced GM and most of the other players were also
       experienced.  I had a great time!
       
       During this time, D&D retro clones had become popular.  This movement
       became known as OSR (Old-School Renaissance).  I created a campaign
       and played Labyrinth Lord with my sister and a few friends.  My
       setting was named Aldea.  It featured classic Tolkien races in a
       basically steampunk setting.  It was set on a world just coming out
       of a global ice age in an era of optimism and growth.
       
  TEXT D&D Retro Clones
       
  TEXT Old School Renaissance
       
  TEXT Labyrinth Lord (2007)
       
       These days if i am feeling nostalgic, i'll fire up my DOS PC and play
       a classic roguelike.
       
   DIR Angband
       
   DIR NetHack
       
   DIR Angband (32-bit)
       
   DIR NetHack (32-bit)
       
       tags: article,bencollver,fantasy
       
       # Tags
       
   DIR article
   DIR bencollver
   DIR fantasy