Dragon Reflections #97

This issue features gorgons, improvised weapons, and more pages from the mages!
Dragon Publishing released Dragon #97 in May 1985. It is 100 pages long and has a cover price of $3.00.

DragonMagazine097_Page_001.jpg

The cover is titled "Music Lover" by Robin Wood, a whimsical piece showing an old silver dragon listening to a bard. It was the first of many covers Wood painted for TSR. The interior artwork includes contributions from Roger Raupp, Larry Day, Jim Holloway, Dave LaForce, Larry Elmore, Dave Trampier, Julius Shell, and Tony Moseley, with a few pieces from the Marvel Bullpen.

This month's special attraction is a convention pre-registration brochure for GEN CON 18. Unfortunately, my digital version of the magazine does not include an image of the brochure.

Gary Gygax kicks things off with a bold article titled "Deities and their faithful," which proposes a system for determining the power of gods based on the number of their mortal worshippers. In essence, the gods gain 1 hit point for every 1,000 worshippers and also 1 hit point for every 1,000 beings on the current plane that share their alignment. It's an attempt to wrap mechanics around that old fantasy trope of the gods getting their might from the faithful. In practice, it would require the DM to track religious demographics for each plane, and that scarcely seems worth it.

In "Sticks, stones, and bones," Stephen Inniss presents an extensive system for improvised weapons in AD&D. It's impressively detailed, covering everything from broken bottles to bowls of soup, including modifiers for size, weight, and material. As with several of the Inniss articles, there is a lot of detail to crunch through, but the impacts on gameplay are relatively minor. Then again, perhaps some tables want to know how exactly much damage a skillet of boiling soup would do (1-2 points, with a saving throw versus breath weapons allowing for half damage, rounded down).

"Only train when you gain" by David B. Reeder notes that training costs (1500 gp/level/week) disproportionately impact low-level characters in AD&D. Reeder suggests that training costs should only apply when the new level grants the character a significant new skill, such as a new spell level or additional weapons. His proposal makes sense, but it avoids the more obvious solution of making the training costs more affordable at lower levels. This article was Reeder's only RPG contribution.

"For a fuller background" by Paul Montgomery Crabaugh proposes a revised approach to determining character heritage in the DragonQuest game by introducing race-specific social status tables and modifiers for experience and wealth based on background. These changes aim to prevent implausible heritage combinations and encourage more consistent character origins. It was the ninth and final DragonQuest article published by Dragon, with about half of them authored by Crabaugh.

Ed Greenwood appears twice in this issue. First is "The ecology of the Gorgon," written in character as Elminster and referring to a notebook of the naturalist Djaril Phylapur. Along with the typical details about biology, ecology, and combat behaviour, there are some fun snippets, such as noting the creature's ongoing rivalry with rust monsters. It's a strong entry in a strong series.

Greenwood also contributes "Pages from the Mages IV," presenting more spellbooks from the Forgotten Realms, with such titles as Bowgengle's Book and Brief's Book of Shadows. Each entry includes the tome's appearance, its history, and a list of new spells. There are also some delightful touches, such as a complete homunculus recipe in the Book of Shadows. It's another excellent entry in a beloved series.

"The Only Good Captive…" by Lew Pulsipher starts by describing a recent game where half the party were captured by monsters and subsequently executed before their companions could rescue them. He explains plausible ways for Dungeon Masters to preserve captured player characters from execution, including ransom, slavery, and irrational behaviour. Although it's a pretty specific situation, it's not an uncommon one, and the suggestions are helpful.

"Blueprint for a Big Game" by Jim Dutton is a detailed guide to designing large-scale AD&D campaigns drawn from the author's experience building a play-by-mail world for hundreds of players. Dutton emphasises the importance of clear goals, detailed mapping, and, above all, organisation. There was nothing really new in his method, but it was interesting to hear about such a large-scale AD&D campaign running years ahead of Living City and Living Greyhawk. Dutton was president of Entertainment Concepts, Inc.

"Authentic Agencies, Part I" by Merle M. Rasmussen presents a detailed breakdown of real-world American intelligence agencies for use in Top Secret campaigns, blending publicly available data with creative extrapolation. The article profiles the mission, structure, and activities of major organisations like the CIA, NSA, and DIA. It's a terrific resource for espionage games.

"Catacomb" by Henry Melton is about a teenage girl earning money in a deadly online dungeon game, alternating between her in-game adventures and her real-world problems. This story suffers from loose structure, overwritten passages, and a muted resolution. The concept, however, is decades ahead of its time. Melton went on to write many stories and several novels.

The ARES Section returns, presenting about a dozen pages of science-fiction and superhero gaming material. It includes three articles:
  • "Rogues of the Galaxy" by Igor Greenwald expands character options in Traveller.
  • "The Marvel-Phile" by Jeff Grubb profiles Talisman, Box, and Guardian.
  • "New Tools of the Trade" by Peter Giannacopoulos adds new artifacts to Gamma World.
Finally, we have a trio of game reviews. Element Masters by Escape Ventures is a fantasy RPG set in the world of Vinya, where players control element-bound adventurers struggling to restore balance after a magical catastrophe. The system emphasises skills, tactical combat, and gradual character progression. Reviewer Tom Armstrong predicts "a long and healthy future for Element Masters."

Starstone by Northern Sages is a system-agnostic fantasy RPG module offering three interconnected scenarios filled with complex NPCs, dynamic encounters, and deep narrative potential. It provides extensive maps, history, and intrigue across over 200 encounter areas, with a strong emphasis on realism and social tension. Reviewer Eric concludes, "Starstone is one of the best-detailed modules I have examined."

Thieves Guild 10 by Gamelords Ltd. is the latest in a series of thief-centric supplements, offering new rules for bandit gangs and a compact but well-crafted burglary scenario. While the adventure is adaptable and flavorful, much of the book repeats material from earlier volumes. Reviewer Arlen P. Walker notes, "I, at least, have grown tired of the snippets of rules."

And that's a wrap! This issue felt packed, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. My favourite article was, no surprise, Greenwood's "Pages from the Mages IV." Next month is a big one, with dragonlore, new magic items, and apocalyptic monsters!
 

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M.T. Black

M.T. Black


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In theory, the original point was to "give PCs something to spend their money on" but as you pointed out it can easily have the reverse effect as costs skyrocket. Gygax was always worried that there really was no point to adventurers perpetually adventuring if they kept getting rich from their dungeon raids and wanted to siphon off money (training, taxes, all the fun stuff 🙄). Taken to its logical conclusion boy does the game get less fun at higher levels.
The domain game that AD&D was supposed to transition to at higher levels would provide plenty of opportunities for PCs to spend their GP. Rulership is expensive. I've increasingly come to feel that removing this element of late-stage gameplay from D&D was a mistake.

The way I see it, most deities should have infinite hit points anyway.
Agreed. You should not be able to kill a deity through hitting them.
 

I imagine that most people interested in the deity hit points issue just gave them whatever hit points they wanted and then figured out how many followers they would have from there (in other words, doing the whole thing backwards). Considering that most worlds had large areas never covered, I doubt even the most fanatical bean counter would bother with tracking individual worshipers.

I can't find it now, but I could have sworn there was an interview with the cover artist who said the reflections in the scales ended up taking way more time than originally anticipated.
 

I imagine that most people interested in the deity hit points issue just gave them whatever hit points they wanted and then figured out how many followers they would have from there (in other words, doing the whole thing backwards). Considering that most worlds had large areas never covered, I doubt even the most fanatical bean counter would bother with tracking individual worshipers.
I think you underestimate how many fantastical bean counters were playing AD&D, especially among the former wargamers, despite the fact that spreadsheet software was still several years in the future.
 

The domain game that AD&D was supposed to transition to at higher levels would provide plenty of opportunities for PCs to spend their GP. Rulership is expensive. I've increasingly come to feel that removing this element of late-stage gameplay from D&D was a mistake.
I don't know. That's a totally different game experience, in my mind, and unless you were coming to D&D from wargaming, switching modes was inevitably going to turn off many players. I think it's inevitable that domain play has become less and less popular over the decades. Even the OSR movement mostly skips it.
 

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