While the blog and I have languished together in torpid stupor for quite some time now, the blog's silence did not originate in or from wordslessness, but for good reasons that I will delve into soon. And in case you missed it, this is not in fact my first post in the past ten months ;)
In the meanwhile, we have some catching up to do!
The Recent Past and Near Future
GaryCon XVII - 18 to 24 March 2025
GaryCon was, as always, a mixture of a lot of work and lot of fun. The fun, as usual, overweighted the work, which is always a good thing and helps me know that it continues to be worth the effort to attend while juggling our Black Blade Publishing booth, playing games, and catching up with friends: the balance still tilts the fun to the positive for all three, which is a very good thing indeed.
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GaryCon 17 badge and pins |
As always, we appreciate the assistance from Rich Franks and Victor Raymond while running the booth, and from fellow gamers and volunteers in setting it up and tearing it down too. This year, Gilbert Ganse, and Joe Mac helped us set up and tear down in record time!
This year, I played West End Games' Star Wars d6 game for the first time (and using its first edition, in case that matters):
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Star Wars d6 (West End Games) - 1987 original edition |
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Star Wars d6 (West End Games) - 1996 revised & expanded 2nd edition |
While I own both the 1987 original edition and the 1996 Revised & Expanded 2nd edition (which is, I admit, the default I see in my mind's eye), I've never had the pleasure of playing either version before, and I've never played on the same of the screen in the esteemed company of Handy Haversack and his NYC crew---Ross Peabody, Rob Skarbek, Chris Kusel, Jim Lohman, Richard Keene---and the rest of the table of diehard gamers on Saturday night at GaryCon in Bluegnoll's "Star Wars: I Got a Bad Feeling About This" event:
Rumors are quietly circulating of an Imperial admiral wanting to defect, but their identity is a well guarded secret. Alliance Intelligence has sent your group to infiltrate an outer rim Imperial base where an unusual meeting of Imperial Navy, Army and Intelligence officials is under way. A local Hutt Cartel smuggler, receptive to Alliance overtures for assistance, has made for strange bedfellows.
My character---anagrammished from my names as Nallorg Godor---was an outlaw (I didn't fix his name on the PC sheet until after snapping the picture, seemingly, and I didn't think to shoot the PC sheet again at the end of the session either, alas:
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grodog's first Star Wars character--- an Outlaw named not-Amos! |
David used miniatures and scatter terrain with a 1950s road-atlas-sized-, comb-bound book of SF battlemats that admirably set the scene:
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The grodog's first Star Wars game!--- our finale battle! |
We had a great time, and many thanks to David for finding room for me in the game, and to Handy and crew for letting me crash their party, quite literally!
In addition to playing Star Wars, on Wednesday night I also returned to Greyhawk's Perrenland in Carlos Lising's ongoing The Wolves of St. Cuthbert campaign, which was fun as always. I really enjoy gaming with this crew, which features a fun mix of heady role-playing, tactical chaos, and Greyhawk shenanigans.
On Friday night, I helped to DM Paul Stormberg's Friday night Legends of Rolepaying tournament. This year's scenario was a sequel to Allen Hammack's C2 Ghost Tower of Inverness, and was, as usual, quite fun to DM. The crew at my table (one of 16 tables, for a total count of about 144 players this year) included several folks new to playing AD&D 1e, which is always a treat :D
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grodog hard at work, DMing "Dungeons of the Ghost Tower" |
On Sunday night, my business partner Jon Hershberger ran Paul Reiche III's "The Temple of Poseidon" from Dragon Magazine #46 (February 1981) for our Legio V crew of miscreants, which was also fun. Jon's not only an excellent DM, but he wrangles the Legio crew like a pro!
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Jon Hershberger DMing Sunday night's Legio V game, "The Temple of Poseidon" |
North Texas RPG Con 17 - 4 to 9 June 2025
LEGIO V – Operation: Prism Shards and Unbound Chains
Explore Kiradúvi Mancalënómirond – The Dark Markets, grodog’s new Greyhawk underworld setting: a flourishing drowic trading hub at the conjunction of subterranean, riverine, and planar travel routes. In Operation: Prism Shards and Unbound Chains, you are an allied crew of drow minor clan merchants scouring The Undersell—the Dark Markets’ annual secrets auction—to find and rescue a Tormtor turncoat on the run before assassins slay the renegade, or she sells her secrets to the highest bidder. If you succeed, you will elevate yourselves and your clans in power, and perhaps rise to head new noble houses, while aiding the downfall of the reviled Eilservs-Tormtor coalition; should you fail, your souls will pounded from your bodies by Abyssal goristroi—or worse!
Bring your hex and graph paper, dice, and a Machiavellian dose of paranoid courage! 3rd-5th level pregen drowic PCs will be provided.
Content Warning: Gary Gygax’s seminal introduction of the drow to Advanced Dungeons & Dragons portrays their culture and society as chaotic and evil—drow are demon-worshipping villains who actively engage in slavery, torture, and human sacrifice. The setting in this scenario leverages and extends that baseline depiction into the underworld markets that support and slake their lusts to demonstrate that drow are the antithesis for all that is good in the world: in both our—real—world, as well as in the World of Greyhawk fantasy game setting. This includes the pregen PCs and their masters.
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The Lake Geneva Legio V began as a handful of gamers who have attended Gary Con and North Texas RPG Con since their inceptions. We have grown over the past few years to include like-minded individuals united by a respect of Gary Gygax and his legacy. We are the dedicated attendees who love NTX for the camaraderie it establishes, the Game Masters who run games from across the decades, and the committed gamers who spend these four days in a fervor of dice rolling and old-school good times. Although events run as LEGIO V Presents will use a variety of rule systems, our focus is on games authored by Gary and his contemporaries as well as those systems whose designers pay homage to these pioneers.
My three events run on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights from 7pm to midnight. I will likely reprise them at Virtual Greyhawk Con #6 in the fall, as well, in case you missed out on them this time around.
New Toys and Reviews
A detailed run-down on these must await another follow-up post, but that should also land sooner vs. later. (I do discuss the Greyhawk-related titles a bit below).
In the meanwhile, here's my loot-fan from the convention to help tide you over!:
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Loot captured at GaryCon by the grodog--- did he level up yet?? |
This includes a host of excellent tomes and wondrous sundries, including:
- A cornucopia of Greyhawk- and Blackmoor-related riches from Rob Kuntz, Lenard Lakofka, Carlos Lising, Will Dvorak, Michael Mossbarger's reproduction of Eric Shook's rendered Castle Greyhawk level 1 map (which he DM'd this year and provided with as a historical handout), Paul Stormberg's tournament (I worked for this one ;) ), and a pile of seven new-to-me, 3e-era Greyhawk novels gifted to me by David "diaglo" Temporado
- New fiction! From the Goodman Games booth across the aisle, I bought two Gardner Fox novels one of which I didn't already own (One Sword for Love), and grabbed of copy of Kurt "thank you for killing my clone" Winter's debut novel, The Hero's Fall.
- The latest and greatest from Alex Bates and Shayla Sackinger: new miniatures (these two resin pieces accompany the huge John Dennet dragon turtle I bought previously, but I apparently forgot to include the new metal goblins I bought too---rats!), the new adventures The Twin Heads of Avarice (a great title!; this is a full module) and The Awful Amber Doom (a one-sheet dungeon|folder-adventure|thingy), and some very yummy birch caramels (which my wife and boys also enjoyed, thanks Alex!)
- And some other curious sundries:
- A nearly-pristine Shure SM57 microphone from David Prata for my older son Ethan, the musician
- On Tyrrany, an all-too-timely gift from Victor Raymond
- A new zine from Noah Davidson, in two different formats; "Welcome to Halishaft" may the title of the zine, or of its introduction, but it looks like a fun project either way!
- A flyer for a new D&D museum being planned by Jim and Debbie Hunton: see https://museumofdnd.com/ for more information
Greyhawk News, Both New and Old
- The Lenard Lakofka Archive published two new modules at GaryCon: LAB1 The Lanthorn of Velzarkis (Dan Boggs finished the adventure from Lenard's notes) and RL1 The Ravages of the Mind.
I've not had a chance to dig into LAB1 yet, but I playtested RL1 when Josh Popp ran it at Virtual GaryCon #3, in 2002.
Many thanks to Troy Alleman of Caanibaal Publishing for kindly gifting me a print copy of RL1 at the show! - Rob Kuntz's new adventure, Into the Wild Blue Yonder: A Journey Through Blackmoor’s Dark Realm, which he designed for and ran at DaveCon 2 back in the fall of 2024, was published by Griff and Chris, The Fellowship of the Thing crew behind the excellent Secrets of Blackmoor documentary.
Unfortunately I missed Rob's first visit to the USA since his departure a decade ago, but I hope to catch up with him when he returns next :D - Trent "TFoster" Smith just published his new campaign, Brink of Calamity via his Storm Fetish Productions publishing imprint. (My print copy arrived finally on 16 April 2025!).
In the sandbox style of Griffin Mountain, Brink of Calamity is set in and around Warnell (Narwell in the Wild Coast of Greyhawk). I'd hoped to playtest some of its scenarios in my current Greyhawk campaign, but the PCs' excursions to Dyvers didn't lead to entanglements I expected, so that opportunity didn't arise quite yet!
Trent also has the new campaign book available in a bundle with his Heroic Legendarium book, which we've been using for a few years now in the current campaign: we have both a single-classed bard and a savant among the PCs. - I finally met William “Giantstomp” Dvorak, and he graciously gave me a copy of his Wicked Studios' Ravensrook sourcebook, and provided several copies to share with other Greyhawk fans who came by the booth, too!
I love helping other Greyhawk fans find books and resources for their games, and several of the folks who walked off with Will's book hadn't been aware of his work yet :D - Vince Garcia continues to publish his monthly zine Gary's World in the files section of the First Edition AD&D (Gygaxian AD&D) Facebook group. The group is private, so you'll need to request membership to join, and Vince publishes the zine PDFs to the files section for a week or so, then removes them. But they're worth the wait!
The Crews: They Keep Me Going
The gatherings of friends and my immediate and extended "gamer family" at GaryCon remind me of how much I love the company of fellow gamers. I had planned to take more pictures while wandering around the con, the exhibitor hall, in my games, and of games that caught my eye, but I did little photoging, as seems usual these past few years....
I enjoyed wonderful, but always too-short, conversations this year with Doug Waltman, Erik Mona, John O'Neill, Jon Peterson, Matt Finch and Suzy Moseby (including the almost-conversation on Monday morning, had we only known!), and Jay Scott: they refract among my memories throughout the con. Longer and deeper ones with Victor Raymond, Paul Stormberg and Doug Behringer, Carlos Lising and Jeremy Breazeale, and Kit at GreyhawkOnline rise above the haze, demanding follow-up....
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L to R: Keith Sloan, grodog, and Tony "Wheggi" Rosten |
I was an unexpected delight to discover and meet Rick Meints at the Chaosium booth---we've corresponded together on YSDC, The Acaeum, and Facebook for years, but this was the first time we met. I was somewhat dazed from my walk through the hall at the time, but we managed through that. Rick graciously gifted me a Chaosium 50th anniversary pin, which will I will proudly add to my badge lanyard for North Texas in June :D
Thank You!
My thanks to Luke and Bouchura Gygax, Josh Popp, Dave Conant, Gilbert Ganse, and the innumerable volunteers who bring GaryCon to life each year. You're keeping the flame alive, and the con vibrant and filled with fun!
To Rich Franks and Victor Raymond for helping out in the booth so that Jon and I could step away from it, and Joe Mac and [another kind person I've lost track of in my hazy memory :( ] for their help in packing up the booth on Sunday.
To the many friends from online forums, discords servers, publishers, communities, previous conventions, and the games I've played in and DM'd who I look forward to catching up with each year: you are why I keep coming back!
Allan.