Becoming a Grognard


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One should have played OD&D immediately when it came out, though I have to admit that as time goes on that particular point will fail to work for the majority of even the oldest gamers: red box veterans will have died out.

At what point, though, can one be said to be more than simply a gaming veteran, and become a grognard?

When you know, and truly understand, that Red Box D&D is not OD&D. :p
 

But if I were to amble over to Dragonsfoot or especially Knights & Knaves, where folks are standing at perpetual attention in salute of 1e, 0e, and all things "gygaxian", I'm just another youngster without a clue because I arrived on the scene too late to see any real gaming.

A bit off topic, but please, sir, my forum's being misunderstood! ;) Knights & Knaves does welcome grognards of all ages and has more than one prolific poster who started in the 2e era.

But, yeah, we're unashamedly Gygaxian, for a given value of "Gygaxian". (LA doesn't get all that much attention on K&KA.)

Back on topic, I've just looked into how to become a grognard. I always knew that "grog" is Navy rum but I was interested to see that apparently, "nard" is either a Persian boardgame or a kind of pink flower that grows in the Himalayas. The latter option suggests that maybe there could be a Potion of Grognard...
 

The most general definition of being a gronard that I know is a person who plays versions of D&D that were not developed by WOTC. That's the simplest starting point for me.
 



I'm curious to know at what point I can describe myself as a Grognard.

did you serve under Napolean in the artillery?

or did you at least play with Napoleanics before trying roleplaying games?

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Here's my definition slightly adapted from wiktionary....

grognard - Wiktionary

Grognard:
Etymology -- From French Meaning "Old Soldier"

Noun (plural -- Grognards)
1. Old Soldier
2. A gamer who plays historical tabletop wargames or boardgames of similar vein.
3. An RPG gamer who is no longer part of the target market of Wizards of the Coast.
4. A wargamer who will not buy the latest edition of Warhammer 40k or Fantasy Battles because "he's bought enough figs to last a lifetime."
5. A middle-aged person who will never die because he has hundreds (if not thousands) of gaming miniatures he still needs to paint. :p
 

Since I believe "grognard" has its roots in the word "grumbler", my own personal definition of "grognard" is:
Someone who spends more time grumbling about the games he's not playing than endorsing the games that he is.​
 

Since I believe "grognard" has its roots in the word "grumbler", my own personal definition of "grognard" is:
Someone who spends more time grumbling about the games he's not playing than endorsing the games that he is.​

Hmmm... That is a tough definition. I think of myself as a Grognard due to my edition preferences but I am dubious that I'd meet this definition. I see the D&D version as at least partially being a preference for older versions of the game over the newer ones.
 

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