I’ve been doing research lately, and happened to stumble
over one of my old comments that I had made. I didn’t always play the way that
I do today, I am a 2er, and that reflected in my style. The meta-plot and me
were close companions, and I would get frustrated writing because everything
was so specific, but that was the way that it was supposed to be. Players
wanted a story!
2nd Edition had a specific style, players were
some times expected to do the bidding of NPCs, and then at the end, the NPC
would complete the task and you’d just get to watch as these world changing
events unfolded. That was actually the formula for the perfect game! We enjoyed
doing that. We also enjoyed playing games were we really didn’t have any
influence on the plot what so ever. We’d go to famous places and experience
stuff. Granted, some of these games were actually quite good, even by today’s
standards, it can be fun trying to stay alive while a couple of gods are locked
in combat! But, I wasn’t ever really happy with them. It can be over done, and
a party that consisted of excellent players will often find themselves escaping
the module, which I couldn’t handle because it would ruin the rest of the plot,
so I had to railroad them back on track, or even stop the game and explain to
them that they are doing it wrong.
2e storytelling was very ridged, and domineering, and I
wasn’t always happy with the results that I got. I’d put too much importance to
a specific PC and ignore the others, and god forbid that they didn’t show up
for game day because then I’d have to play their character for them, else we’d
have nothing to do that day.
In those days, I protected my NPCs to the point that they
were gods. I ignored all of the signs that players weren’t happy and would just
tell them to stay with me, because the ending is awesome. This is what we did.
I spoke to other DMs at the time and they played the same way. Protect your
characters, the DM is the storyteller, the players are just along for the ride,
and a successful DM is one who can tell amazing stories. Character involvement
meant that you followed the script. We ignored dice, ran multiple DM PCs, and
generally played very badly and had no idea.
I formed this blog to defend my ideals during the edition
wars. I was right in the middle of the storm too! You had the 4ers vs.
old-school and the one thing that they both agreed on was that 2e sucked. I had
no idea how others played the game, and reading some of the blogs at the time
was eye opening! Thankfully guys like James Maliszewski from Grognardia, and James
Edward Raggi IV of Lamentations of the Flame Princess, among others, though none
so influential than those two. Both took time out of their day to explain a new
way of playing, with advice and the reasons behind it. At first I was arguing
with them, but it is hard to argue with a sound idea, so instead of fighting, I
started asking questions and they were answering. Everything that they did was
different then what I did, but it sounded so interesting, so I began play-testing
it. My players at first kind of rejected the idea off hand, they were used to
having a sense of clear direction in my games, and I was taking that net away
and allowing them to fail. At the end of the night we sat around and talked
about what we had done, and we were very happy with the results. I could put
together an original campaign much faster and easier with this method, I didn’t
have to sit at my computer for months on end writing the thing, and instead
just let it flow naturally and see where it goes.
I contacted Maliszewki and told him what had happened, that
the players were really excited, more excited than they had ever been! He
recommended a list of old-school modules that I should play, which I hid into
my current campaign. They were written in a way that amazed me, these weren’t
the bossy NPC dependant stories which I was used to, I could drop them in any
thing! However this briefness and lack of detail kind of spooked me, there
wasn’t any direction and I’d whine to James and he’d say how that was why they
were so good. Add my own details, but don’t write anything down. The result
was, literally, a game changer. The old modules taught me teaching points which
were never provided in modules again.
Eventually I decided to try it. A full sandbox! I used the
module “Isle of Dread” which would provide a great backdrop to what we were
doing at the time, which wasn’t even true fantasy D&D but a heavily
modified setting set in 1890’s earth, and that module still worked! Now I
stumbled and fell on my face during it, but Raggi saw where I was going wrong
and made it his mission to help me fix it and get back on track.
That turned out to be the greatest, and most rewarding
campaign that I had ever ran. My style is even stronger now, my players are
excited to play again, and I am a total convert, all because I spoke up and
said something, and because I listened. Today I am more apt to try new things,
and go into different directions. I’m not a tyrant at the table . . . well, not
as much of one anyway. It is funny to see an old comment that I made years ago,
and smile at it because I had no idea when I made it, how different I would
become because of it.
I am also a more entertaining DM now, I received the tools
and the advice that I needed to really push the game into the direction in
which it was intended, I can’t stress enough how important that that little
comment window is to this game. It allows us to see past ourselves and what we
are doing, through it we can strengthen our own games and look at others. It
also allows us to help others, not just those that comment, but those who will
read those comments in the years to come. Maliszewki & Raggi never once got
hostile with me, they never said, “You’re doing it wrong”. They just told me
what they do, and what works for them, and why they do it that way. They
reinforced a method of play which allowed me to better express myself, to look
at what I was doing and keep the story telling elements but keep them in check.
They were the loudest voices of their time, and I miss what they had to offer.
You don’t see that much in the loud talking heads of today. Today it is about
shocking the reader, and berating ideas. They offer very little of anything
else, which is sad.
As far as I’m concerned, the Edition Wars are over, and we all
won, and the people who complained so loudly about 2e sucking weren’t really
complaining about the rules, but how TSR taught us how to use them, which did
suck.