Showing posts with label The Dark Tower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dark Tower. Show all posts

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Gunslingers, Astonishing Swordsmen & Sorcerers of Hyprborea, & More Commentary On Steve C.'s 'Arthurian Twist' Campaign & Actual Play Events

So last night about four A.M. after I got back from my regular game of Astonishing Swordsmen & Sorcerers of Hyperborea I got an email from Steve C. and he wanted to talk about Arthurian mythology and Celtic legends. Sometimes that how these things begin small & work themselves into a bit of an OSR  frenzy. Steve had  seen the Steven King Dark Tower movie trailer that came out last week.I'm surprised that it didn't get more attention in the OSR but there you go.


You see way back in 1987 or so it wasn't that easy to get a hold of any H.P. Lovecraft or some of the other Appendix N fiction from the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Dungeon Master's Guide. But everyone's mom, grandma, dad,etc. had a copy of Stephen King's The Stand. And since I was both the Arthurian guy & the Stephen King fanatic I knew that the Dark Tower: Gun Slinger stories were connected with 'The Stand'. My adopted uncle had made damn sure that I had copies of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction sent from New York State after he finished with them. There are five stories that constitute the original novel heres' the Wiki breakdown:
The five stories that constitute the novel were originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction:


All of this would come in handy for the 1987 Stephen King games. My uncle also sent me the first edition of The Dark Tower :The Gunslinger by Stephen King. The Dark Tower first edition novel with the great Michael Whelan cover that I had for many years in Boston. Now gone the way of so many treasures as ash in an apartment fire. 


The blurb from Wiki contains a bit of information on the first edition cover.
This is the front cover art for the book The Dark Tower - The Gunslinger written by Stephen King. The book cover art copyright is believed to belong to the publisher, Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc., or the cover artist, Michael Whelan.

So what's this got to do with old school gaming? Everything because even back in middle school we knew that there was a connection between the Arthurian legends & the Gunslinger stories. So if it was good enough for Stephen King & Gary Gygax then it was good enough for us. You see way back when after reading Dragon magazine we knew that Gary Gygax & his players were mixing in cowboys from first edition Boot Hill into Greyhawk. So we took it to the next step & mixed in Book Hill with the Arthurian NPC's in Deities & Demigods turning King Arthur & his knights into gunslingers. There was also a healthy mix of Gamma World second edition thrown into the mix as well. So what does all of this have to do with Steve C. and his recent Arthurian Twist?


Well, Steve C. had questions about an NPC from that old game at the library way back in Torrington. It seems the players have run afoul of a certain time traveling gunslinger villain from our old days. Now they need to find a very special shooting iron from an abandoned ghost town that time sort of moved on from.
Now 'Merlin' has sent this party of of Roman cataphracts , Hyperborean thieves, Amazon warriors, outlaws, wizards,Keltic necromancers,warlocks, & cut throats after that shooting iron that we left in that abandoned ghost town so many years ago.
But that place is a half world location under the direct control of the 'Fey' forces of evil and the deserts around the ghost town are the playground of demons, specters, & worse. All of these under the control of  a very nasty version of Morgan Le Fey drawn directly out of Deities & Demigods.

Its been her group of mercenary trolls and their captain troll giant captain  that the party has endless trouble for. This has led directly to several PC deaths at the hands of this evil bastard and the backs of several Hyperborean warriors being broken. Will the PC's ever return to Hyperborea & England? Only the wily Merlin & the fiendish DM Steven C. knows the answers to that. If the recent Dark Tower movie trailer had this kind of inspiration on Steve then I can only imagine the types of horrors the players are in for.

Giant troll (Russ Nicholson, AD&D Fiend Folio, TSR, 1981)

Keep em rolling folks.

This blog entry is for entertainment & educational  purposes only. This is not an attempt to violate any of the copyrights or trademarks of the properties written about. This is for a table top role playing campaign & none of the game systems or publishers there in are responsible for the content. Artwork is used without permission and comes under the terms of fair use. Concepts and ideas are copyrighted to the author.

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Saturday Shoot Out - Eighties Stephen King DYI D&D Memories Or Post Apocalpytic Gaming Without Tears

With huge apologies to Stephen King & his publishers, this is the recollections of a very despite dungeon master way back in the bad old days of the Eighties. The winds of Fall blow in some unique memories of another time and DYI Dungeons & Dragons campaign. Well sort of.



   This is the front cover art for the book The Dark Tower Book II: The Drawing of the Three written by Stephen King. The book cover art copyright is believed to belong to the publisher, Grant, or the cover artist, Phil Hale.

 
So its Saturday, the cold November winds are blowing through the streets of Torrington, Ct.. And I'm standing in front of the Torrington library on a Saturday morning thinking about the 'Last Stand of The  Jameson Ka-tet '.




This was another time & place folks come with me now back down the annals of history to 1987 when Stephen King's The Dark Tower series entry
The Dark Tower II: The Drawing of the Three ruled the book stands.
Way back when I would get together with friends on a Saturday morning to play at the library. This was under the pretense of 'studying' of course but we'd be playing D&D or AD&D hardcore. Of course this Saturday they were looking for something different either TSR Marvel Super Heroes, Gamma World (a Torrington favorite btw), or AD&D 1st Edition or D&D (there really was no difference in these kids minds). But this Saturday the only thing I had was my copy of Stephen King's The Stand, The Dark Tower, The Drawing of the Three,  Boot Hill, The AD&D Player's Handbook & my AD&D Dungeon Master's Guide. I grabbed the wrong pile of books!? I had left Gamma World at home!?
  Little did I realize that I was about to embark on one of the longest running campaigns ever. I had about fifteen minutes to come up with something new, dangerous, and playable. I spied my copy of Boot Hill & the conversion rules & guidelines in The First Edition Dungeon Master's Guide.


I had the players take on the roles of a party (Ka) of gunslingers (each one was a traditional D&D character class with the addition of a weapon of their choice) who were on a holy mission into the wasteland after the disappearance of Roland so many years ago.  The party woke up on the trail to Los Vegas where Randal Flagg was holding court.
The party made their way into the ruins of Los Vegas which Captain Trips had done its work and needed to avoid the armed minions of Flagg in order to recover the Colt Navy Excalibur from an abandoned gun shop.  The PC's didn't know that they were on the clock as Vegas was going to go up in a nuclear fire ball that night.


Photo by
Hmaag
They made their way through the dust choked streets in an abandoned part of town and ran straight into a series of roachstrotities who poured up from the sewers & a party of slow mutants who had made their home within the remains of the gun shop.
They did everything in their power not to fire their guns lest they attract the attention of the city guards whom they had observed upon arrive were far better armed then them.
Did they get Excalibur? Yes they certainly did but they were cut down after getting into an extended fire fight with the Vegas city watch! Except that the wizard survived and made his way to New York City but that kids is another story. The damn wizard had survived & the adventure was a hit, suddenly I had to spin whole cloth another campaign. The players went home and rolled up new PC's & I was committed to another Saturday campaign!?!

So what did I learn about this little foray into the deep end of DYI D&D & AD&D? Well first thing I did was check out some books from the library on Arthurian legend and lore then grabbed a stack of Time Life Old West books! Then I calmed down & reread the Stand "The Stand is a post-apocalyptic horror/fantasy novel by American author Stephen King. It expands upon the scenario of his earlier short story "Night Surf" and outlines the total breakdown of society after the accidental release of a strain of influenza that had been modified for biological warfare causes an apocalyptic pandemic which kills off the majority of the world's human population."
I also learned that on Monday that one of the seniors in my school system who ran a complex Greyhawk campaign said," That I had ruined Dungeons & Dragons." Yeah it was one of my third or fourth encounters with one of 'those' guys. It would not be my last folks.  This campaign lasted some ten years and would see numerous PC gunslingers of every description known to man come in and out.  This blog entry isn't an attempt to violate the trade mark nor copyright of any of the properties of Stephen King's work, nor the trade mark nor copyright holders, or the publishers for that matter. This is merely a blog entry for entertainment and educational purposes.
This was one of my favorite campaigns & taught me how to manage both a D&D and AD&D first edition campaign on the fly. The fact is that your abilities to think on your feet and go with the flow of where the players take you as a DM will allow you to build upon what they create for you during play. This was one of the greatest things that the players taught me.
Thankee, Sai