Doing a bit of research last night on the Rpgeek site last night I came across this entry which really crystalized the importance of Greyhawk for me; "In 1974, Dungeons & Dragons (oD&D) was first printed. It came with three booklets: "Men & Magic", "Monsters & Treasure" and "The Underworld and Wilderness Adventures". The combat rules were based on the miniatures game Chainmail (which you needed to play), but an optional set of combat rules were given which more people ended up playing. Alignment was Lawful, Neutral or Chaotic. There were three classes "Fighting Man", "Cleric" and "Magic-User", and four races: "Human", "Dwarf", "Elf" and "Halfling". The rules for elves - who could be both Fighters and Magic-Users - were terribly unclear.
For 1975-8, five supplements were released for oD&D. The most important of those, Supplement I: Greyhawk, changed the game around a lot. Ability Scores became a lot more important, damage and hit dice became diverse, and it added a lot of other material (like the Thief character class)."
This changed everything at the table top level for original Dungeons & Dragons especially fighters who were supposed to portray the grand heroes of myth, legend, & literature.
Flash forward to the publication of The Dragon magazine issue #2 ; ARTICLES: Monkish Combat in the Arena of Promotion (D&D); Gnome Cache, ch. 2 (fiction); Gen Con IX Update; Hints for D&D Judges - Part 3: The Dungeons; Shadow of a Demon (Niall fiction) by Gardner F. Fox; Feathered Serpent (Quetzalcoatl); Creature Features - The Remorhaz; D&D Character Class - The Alchemist; D&D Option - Weapon Damage; more.
Notice the article D&D option - Weapon Damage, this article brings the fighter into the world of heroes. By heroes I mean those broke & down out individuals who could become heroes if they were given the opportunity. After a while on the path of the stoic warrior they become something much more.
Information & article break down from 'The Dragon magazine from Wayne's Books.
These aren't simply your run of the mill adventurers these are men & women whose minds & bodies have been forged in the fires of war of the most unusual & dangerous types. This thread on Rpg net bares this out with all of the options being used for the fighter PC class ;
"Fighters were always immune to Fear, etc. starting at 4th level, we always used multi-attack options and/or granted scaling damage, always granted morale bonuses to associated men-at-arms, etc. A high level fighter would always generate morale checks for a bunch of lower level monsters/NPCs, though I tended to grant it more organically than just starting it at 8th level.
The only one I don't recall was explicitly granting the detection of invisibility at higher level. OTOH, we always accepted that a fighter at that level has superhuman sense in general."
Excellent uses of these abilities can be found in a myriad of sources but an excellent example of exactly the sort of abilities possessed by the fighter can be found in The Master Mind of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Free download of
Amazing Stories Annual v01n01 (1927) available here
Once Ulysses Paxton is on Barsoom then the mad scientist wizard uses him as a body guard, assistant, & full on confident in all of his super science endeavours. In fact whist all of his is going on Paxton is assembling his own party from the stores of bodies within the elderly mad scientist Ras Thavas's ranks. Everything about how the fighter goes about is calculated & his expertly handled. In fact this is where Paxton begins to split his class with levels in the mad scientist/ wizard class;
'Days ran into weeks, weeks into months, as day by day I labored at the side of Ras Thavas, and more and more the old surgeon took me into his confidence, more and more he imparted to me the secrets of his skill and his profession.
Fighters are literally able to make or break a party of adventurers. When coupled with other party members if the player's party balance is correct then we a very successful campaign. A great example of an Original Dungeons & Dragons fighter who has made it to epic levels from mythology is Beowulf. All of the instincts & abilities are there in the character.
Gradually he permitted me to perform more and more important functions in the actual practice of his vast laboratory. I started transferring limbs from one subject to another, then internal organs of the digestive tract. Then he entrusted to me a complete operation upon a paying client I removed the kidneys from a rich old man, replacing them with healthy ones from a young subject The following day I gave a stunted child new thyroid glands. A week later I transferred two hearts and then, at last, came the great day for me--unassisted, with Ras Thavas standing silently beside me, I took the brain of an old man and transplanted it within the cranium of a youth.'
Paxton has many of the finer qualities of the fighter. He knows how to plan, use the resources at his disposal, can carry out a complex plan, & still fight his way out of a situation. Fighters are both the knives & shields of adventuring parties capable of setting up a defense in a dungeon or hunting down in the depths of the lowest ruins. Indeed the treasures & relics of a dungeon seem to call to fighters & yet seek to destroy them. The treasure of the dragon in Beowulf a solid example of this.
Paxton has many of the finer qualities of the fighter. He knows how to plan, use the resources at his disposal, can carry out a complex plan, & still fight his way out of a situation. Fighters are both the knives & shields of adventuring parties capable of setting up a defense in a dungeon or hunting down in the depths of the lowest ruins. Indeed the treasures & relics of a dungeon seem to call to fighters & yet seek to destroy them. The treasure of the dragon in Beowulf a solid example of this.
Fighters are literally able to make or break a party of adventurers. When coupled with other party members if the player's party balance is correct then we a very successful campaign. A great example of an Original Dungeons & Dragons fighter who has made it to epic levels from mythology is Beowulf. All of the instincts & abilities are there in the character.
"Now he belched forth flaming fire."
An illustration of Beowulf fighting the dragon that appears at the end of the epic poem.
- Marshall, Henrietta Elizabeth (
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