andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2005-05-02 08:56 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Some answers - part one - Where my love of games comes from.
My love of games started with my parents, who introduced me to board games (Snakes & Ladders, Draughts, Reversi, Chess, Monopoly and Risk spring immediately to mind), which I played fairly frequently as a child. We also played card games a lot - Whist and Rummy being the most common ones - with excursions into Bridge when I got a little older (I'm far too excitable a Bridge player, with a tendency to overbid).
Somewhere around the age of 9 I saw an advert on the back of a comic for The Awful Green Things From Outer Space which, although I never managed to actually track down and play a copy, led me to my local games shop, where I bought a copy of Dungeons and Dragons (from the look of the pictures on this page the 8th-11th printing). I had _no_ idea what was going on, having never even heard of roleplaying games before, but I knew that whatever it was was extremely exciting. Luckily about a year later I encountered someone else who _had_ played before and could tell me how you actually _played_ this marvel I'd discovered (Roman Serafinowski was his name - I'm astounded I can still remember it). I distinctly remember the thrill of visiting him - travelling by train by myself for the first time ever - and gaming in his room halfway up a block of flats (the first time I'd ever been in a flat too).
Anyway, I progressed from there, still sticking with D&D, but picking up more bits and pieces until I had a fair stack of rules-books and modules for it, running games for the next 7-odd years until I left for university - always for my two brothers and a few friends of theirs (not having any gaming friends of my own at that point). At which point I went to university, wheremy world exploded. Suddenly I had quite a few friends who gamed (in fact, damn near all of them, as I'd colonised the gaming group). My second year was when Vampire was first released, and there was a game running on a constant basis, _at least_ 8 hours a day for the next 9 months. People dropped out of it to go to lectures or (occasionally) work on essays, but it was always there, with a rotating group of players.
That group also introduced me to Cthulhu, Mage, Kult, Ars Magica, Warhammer and a host of other RPGs, as well as a variety of boardgames. And it's still the bits and pieces of that gaming group I play with (as well as my brother Hugh, thus taking me back to my near-original gaming group), as I'm now based a mere 30 miles away from there.
Wow. You have _no_ idea how wierd it was remembering the feeling when I first read a D&D manual.
Somewhere around the age of 9 I saw an advert on the back of a comic for The Awful Green Things From Outer Space which, although I never managed to actually track down and play a copy, led me to my local games shop, where I bought a copy of Dungeons and Dragons (from the look of the pictures on this page the 8th-11th printing). I had _no_ idea what was going on, having never even heard of roleplaying games before, but I knew that whatever it was was extremely exciting. Luckily about a year later I encountered someone else who _had_ played before and could tell me how you actually _played_ this marvel I'd discovered (Roman Serafinowski was his name - I'm astounded I can still remember it). I distinctly remember the thrill of visiting him - travelling by train by myself for the first time ever - and gaming in his room halfway up a block of flats (the first time I'd ever been in a flat too).
Anyway, I progressed from there, still sticking with D&D, but picking up more bits and pieces until I had a fair stack of rules-books and modules for it, running games for the next 7-odd years until I left for university - always for my two brothers and a few friends of theirs (not having any gaming friends of my own at that point). At which point I went to university, wheremy world exploded. Suddenly I had quite a few friends who gamed (in fact, damn near all of them, as I'd colonised the gaming group). My second year was when Vampire was first released, and there was a game running on a constant basis, _at least_ 8 hours a day for the next 9 months. People dropped out of it to go to lectures or (occasionally) work on essays, but it was always there, with a rotating group of players.
That group also introduced me to Cthulhu, Mage, Kult, Ars Magica, Warhammer and a host of other RPGs, as well as a variety of boardgames. And it's still the bits and pieces of that gaming group I play with (as well as my brother Hugh, thus taking me back to my near-original gaming group), as I'm now based a mere 30 miles away from there.
Wow. You have _no_ idea how wierd it was remembering the feeling when I first read a D&D manual.
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
And Roman Ser...etc is a name you *would* remember imho.
no subject
On another note anybody sad enough to admit to playing the old Steve Jackson "Fighting Fantasy" books? I still have a few somewhere. Forest Of Doom, Creature Of Haoc, Warlock Of Firetop Mountain, Rebel Planet... Memories...
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
Steve Jackson
no subject
Advanced Dungeons and Dragons, Second Edition: The Player's Handbook kept me up, in all honesty, until three in the morning. And it was well written too - not like the 3e tosh; by the time you read all of the 2e PhB you know (a) world; you knew of the other worlds, you know who would be you; how your character - you - would perform; mental images, and greatly orchestrated scenes far greater than any other media could convey. Before that, I'd grown up on computers, so good 'ol platformers and action games mainly, as well as poker, roulette, craps, and baccarat with my father (from a strangely early age...), and the odd game of monopoly with my mother.
Hotel. Mayfair. 'Go to mayfair' card. :D
Pen & Paper
Re: Pen & Paper