Babbling on LL’s “AEC”, Descending AC, and other things.

Here’s my thing: When it comes to retroclones, I mostly only keep tabs on them for when someone is looking for a particular flavor of an out-of-print edition of D&D. Most of the time I point peeps between either Labyrinth Lord or Dark Dungeons; the latter because it’s a clone of my personal favorite iteration (the Rules Cyclopedia.) 

That said I hardly ever play with them, because I own a crap ton of the original old books. And a lot of the peeps I play with have them, too. Usually if I’m printing out or purchasing an OSR-driven title, it’s because it does something new or different that makes it stand out as its own game. A good example?Stars Without Number by Sine Nomine. 

But one book that has caught my attention is Labyrinth Lord’s “Advanced Edition Companion.” I originally wrote it off as “Yay, LL made an AD&D clone” and left it at that. I may have underestimated the cool here by quite a bit.

Advancing a Game Without Being Advanced

Instead of directly cloning AD&D, it presents all the cool options as just that: Options. It was written to be built off of the Labyrinth Lore core rules to expand the system instead of replacing it. Same mechanics, same number scales, same hit charts and everything. Racial classes from the core game can mingle with advanced character Race/Class combos without any changes really. 

Not present are a lot of the complicated fiddly bits they stuck into AD&D. Don’t get me wrong, those fiddly bits can be pretty damn fun, but after a while I’ve learned to appreciate simple combats over some crazy combat maneuvers (I get frustrated every time I see a Fighter with 18/00 strength throwing shit tons of darts as multiple attacks and killing off half the room.) 

I also love the presentation and order of the rules in the AEC. Instead of binding it as a single, solid book…I printed out the whole thing and stapled them together in packets of sections. Character creation and equipment is one packet, spells are a couple other packets, magical items, monsters etc….doing it this way was perfect since it allowed me to label and quickly grab parts I wanted as they were needed.

So in short: The ability to tack in races, classes, and more spells like they had in AD&D but keeping the simple, easy and loose mechanics of “Basic” D&D. Hot damn, I found my sweet spot. Even better….despite the fact that LL was based on a different iteration and scale (the B/X rules) than the Rules Cyclopedia (Mentzer’s BECM), I’ve had no real problems using it instead of the core LL rules. 

Some Little House Tweaks

We’ve also started playing a house rule to speed up combat. It’s inspired by the combat mechanics from Stars Without Number, and it works quite awesomely with old D&D. Essentially, all characters get an Attack Bonus equal to the difference between their THAC0 and 20. When attacking an opponent, the roll is now 1d20+Attack Bonus (and any modifiers)+Opponent’s Armor Class. Any rolls of 20 or higher is a hit. This makes it a LOT easier for new players (or players of modern editions) to grasp the idea of a lower AC being better, since it’s pretty much lowering the bonus to attack. It also gives a static difficulty/target number to beat.

If anyone who is running Labyrinth Lord would like to give this variant a spin, I whipped up a quick reference chart and a modified character sheet that I’m using for my campaigns. Feel free to download these suckers for personal use:

Advanced Attack Table for Labyrinth Lord (uses the same to-hit as core LL)

Modified Advanced Sheet for Labyrinth Lord

Gaming Resolutions for 2012

2011 was an interesting year in gaming for me. I played a LOT more old-school D&D, ran the D&D Encounters program for our new local game shop, have become a tablet-PDF junkie, and have managed to hack together a cyberpunk RPG that I’m satisfied with.

Granted, I also took a summer Hiatus this year, from game blogging and playing. I almost killed the blog completely (and then some lame ass hackers did that for me.) I stepped away from the vitriol and flame wars, and took a much needed breather. In real life, I wanted to free my schedule and free time up for having kick ass adventures in real life. Mission accomplished. 

So looking ahead in 2012, I’m eager to get my dice rolling again, as well as continuing to write up some fun stuff to share with peeps. While I’m usually not a big fan of resolutions, I think there’s a few gaming related ones I plan on keeping this year:

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Rev. Laz gets off his ass and makes another Youtube update.

Breaking “Encounters”

So last week, we took a vote at our D&D Encounters night:
It was decided that while we enjoyed the game so far, that all of us were there to play D&D and didn’t really care about the incentive rewards (even though they are pretty cool.) Our Wednesday Night crowd is kind of a double edged sword…..we have just enough people involved that we can usually keep one table going; but not enough regulars to bust out a 2nd table. But, we have been known to decline a few stragglers because “our table is full.” For those unfamiliar, the D&D Encounters setup requires one DM, minimum 4 players, maximum 6 at the table. Which sucks when we have 8 people total show up.

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Review of “Neverwinter Campaign Setting”

Originally posted on Loremaster.Org

I’m going to be up front about this: I was never really big into the Forgotten Realms…

….I think I developed an aversion after a while because it became so popular, and so much was put out for it, it became daunting to even consider running it. To me it would be like trying to run Star Wars without ever seeing the movies.

…Last week, a copy of the Neverwinter Campaign Setting came in for me. This has been an interesting time for me, since I’ve been returning from not only a summer-long gaming hiatus, but also a quite lengthy hiatus from 4thEdition. My time back behind the DM screen has been experiencing the D&D Essentials line for the first time, as well as running my first season of the weekly Encounters program, which just happens to take place in Neverwinter. Coming into this already having a taste of the setting and political backdrop of the campaign from the Wednesday night games, I was eager to crack open the book and see not only what it could provide to my gaming table – but how it stands for someone with little investment or interest in the Forgotten Realms setting.

Read My Full Review Here.