Tobold's Blog
Friday, March 09, 2012
 
D&D and the passing of time

The 2nd edition of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons came out in 1989. I was at university, and those years probably constituted the peak of my previous dungeon mastering activity. Even if memory fades it is hard to miss the fact that times have changed. Fortunately many things changed to the better, but not everything.

One big factor, and obviously outside a discussion of game systems, is that the environment for the game changes. 20 years ago I had lots of time and very little money, now I have a lot less time and my disposable income has gone up significantly if you compare it to the price of game books and supplements. These days I consider spending $10 on a poster map reasonable, 20 years ago I would have drawn that map by hand. Of course technology changed a lot too, 20 years ago I didn't have access to software drawing beautiful maps in color, nor the option of sending the map via the internet to a poster printing shop. And I didn't have a fancy color laser printer. So, apart from only playing every other week these days, I'd say the environment changed for the better.

On the game system side I think most changes to Dungeons & Dragons have been for the better as well. The rule system these days reads as if it was written for a game called "Dungeons & Dragons Tactics", but previous editions didn't have all that many rules dealing with situations outside combat either. And I like tactical roleplaying games like Tactics Ogre, Final Fantasy Tactics, or the Disgaea series, even if they have mostly been released on consoles and not the PC. 4E combat is tactical, a bit more difficult to set up than in previous editions, but far more balanced, and overall more likely to result in fun fights. I still remember 2nd edition combat, where when asked what he wanted to do, the fighter inevitable shrugged his shoulders and said "I hit the monster with my weapon", because he rarely had any other option. The 4e system is much better in that respect. And in a way the tactical combat is a return to the roots of D&D, which started its life as a medieval miniatures wargame called Chainmail.

Where I think that a similar return to the roots has occured to the detriment of the game is in the official adventure modules. I bought a number of them now, because I thought I could at least always use the maps and some encounters. But when reading through these adventures, I am very much reminded of the bad old days of the early AD&D 1st edition adventures, with huge dungeon crawls through places that just don't make any sense. Over time the AD&D adventures got better, with adventures offering more coherent places, more roleplaying, more non-combat solutions to problems, and a lot less hack'n'slay. But these improvements appear to have been reversed again, and we are back to pure hack'n'slay with very little story behind it. Maybe it is just nostalgia for the "good old days" of 2nd edition, or the cynicism that comes with age, but many of the official adventure modules I bought I would consider completely unplayable as such. Weak story hooks, no story at all during the dungeon crawl, and forgetable villains at the end. And the adventures you'd think would fit together to form a campaign (e.g. H1, H2, and H3) in fact only have extremely weak connections between the adventures, like finding a map leading to the next adventure in the pocket of the slain villain from the previous one.

So, unfortunately not everything has become better with time. But in the end the weakness of the official adventures solves another problem I didn't have 20 years ago: Players able to look up your adventure on the internet. As I will have to massively rewrite any material I use, there is less of a danger of somebody finding spoilers on the web.
Comments:
I wonder how the Pathfinder Adventure Paths are? Sometimes I'm in a hurry and just want to have some friends over and play something and a good canned adventure would be great. Have you looked at those?

I also wish Wizards would release more than 1 Eberron module. Seekers of the Ashen Crown had a lot of problems.
 
For what it's worth, I've found some of the adventures that are NOT on the main H1-E3 series to be quite good. Two that have stood out for me are Reavers of Harkenwold (I bought the DM's Kit just for this adventure) and Madness at Gardmore Abbey (lots of fun so far). Still official D&D adventures, but much more open in structure - and better written.
 
I wonder how the Pathfinder Adventure Paths are?

The Zeitgeist one looks good, but would be extremely difficult to convert to a 4E medieval fantasy setting.
 
Take a look at some of the Goodman Games Dungeon Crawl Classics modules. While they talk about being a jaunt back to when monsters were there to kill and dungeons to crawl, I find that their adventures are far more detailed and interesting than most of the older modules I've read. (And I'm not big on dungeon crawls.)

I've read numerous and run quite a few of the modules. I find them well read, with interesting things happening in the adventure, with a story behind what's happening, and with solid handouts and puzzles.

They have two different intro modules that are about $2 US. "Dungeon Crawl Classics #31: The Transmuter's Last Touch" is my favorite. You may not be able to find it locally in print, but you can also pick up the PDF online for the same price.

For your style, Tobold, you'll probably still be eliminating combats in some of them. There will also be some conversion of monsters because they're for 3E not 4E. (However, most of their monsters are core monsters, so you can just use the stats from the new books and adjust numbers as needed to challenge the party.)
 
Would you call the current edition of D&D playable without minis and grid maps?
 
Would you call the current edition of D&D playable without minis and grid maps?

I wouldn't. You need at least a blank grid map to draw upon, and some sort of markers for figurines.

Many of the character abilities refer to who is adjacent to your character, and if you don't know that, it gets very complicated.
 
Do you realize how tough it is NOT to look up the Keep on the Shadowfell adventure? I'm given the job of recapping our adventures and it would be SO EASY to just look up some details I missed... sigh.
 
I see. It's no longer the game I used to play (Red Box). I wonder if the game changed the players or the players changed the game.
 
Do you realize how tough it is NOT to look up the Keep on the Shadowfell adventure?

You'd be disappointed. I think your DM's version is much better than the original. You'd be searching the original for a long chapter on Splug and just find one lousy paragraph.
 
You mentioned ZEITGEIST as a Pathfinder adventure path; it also exists in a 4e version. If you mean that you don't like the somewhat "steampunk" aspects of it, I understand. But there's no conversion required if you want to run ZEITGEIST in 4e - I'm in the process of doing so right now!
 
Oh, I'm sure the stats can be converted. But events like the exploding steam boiler episode is hard to do in medieval fantasy, and the social aspect of playing the medieval CIA even more so.
 
Post a Comment

<< Home
Newer›  ‹Older

  Powered by Blogger   Free Page Rank Tool